insecure writers support group, writing

Hanging Off the Cliff #IWSG

Join us for the Insecure Writers’ Support Group, hosted by Alex Cavanaugh!

(I realize this image says “newsletter”, but it was too cute for me not to copy/paste! Hope the IWSG creator doesn’t mind. (Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay))

Many thanks to the co-hosts for the December 4 posting of the IWSG: Ronel, Deniz, Pat Garcia, Olga Godim, and Cathrina Constantine!

December 4 question – Do you write cliffhangers at the end of your stories? Are they a turn-off to you as a writer and/or a reader?

I have mixed reactions to cliffhangers. Mostly I feel robbed from a satisfying ending, but sometimes I think they’re brilliant. One of my novels ended in a major cliffhanger, and some readers were angry with me!

I strived to present an unbiased view of both political parties until the very end of the story, which featured the results of the presidential election. Therefore, it didn’t feel right to choose a winner, and my story ended, “The next president of the United States is…”

Some readers were furious, whoops!

I hadn’t intended to write a series, but I felt motivated by reader feedback (a mix of love/hate, haha). I eventually chose a winner for the rest of the trilogy, Aced and Spiked.

How do YOU feel about cliffhangers?

19 thoughts on “Hanging Off the Cliff #IWSG”

  1. I think it’s good you made decisions for future books based on readers’ reactions to your first one. But cliffhangers have a place in some genres.

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    1. Yes, romance probably isn’t a typical genre for cliffhangers, and I did make sure to wrap up the love story. When I included a blurb for the sequel at the end of book one, I had to hide the winner of the election.

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  2. Always tough when politics is involved, so I understand why you left that as a cliffhanger, but as a reader, I’d feel cheated. I expect all major plotlines to be tied up at the end of a book–even a book in a series.

    I love the premise for your series, though. I might have to check it out.

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  3. Okay, that might be a rare case where I’d be okay with a cliffhanger. Although I’m not sure I’d even consider that a cliffhanger. It sounds to me like whoever wins the Presidential election isn’t important. What matters is the love story.

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  4. Years ago I went to a theater to see a film with a very ambiguous ending (“Limbo” directed by John Sayles) and people all around me walked out in disgust and anger because of the way it “didn’t end”. I thought about that film for days. Now I’d list it as one of my favorite films. But it was the nature of the story that almost demanded the cliffhanger ending.

    Lee

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    1. Well, that’s true, Ronel–readers get ticked off for all kinds of reasons that the author can’t predict. One time I wrote a teetotaler character who happened to get drunk and acted obnoxious (in a funny way, at least I thought so), and a reader thought I was minimizing problematic alcohol use. *shrugs*

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  5. Dare another alien join in ? For someone living in a fairly small upland village – well under 90 residents, including kids but not sheep. ( the majority. then cattle, then humans ) , we’re blessed with quite a few U.S, households, and have tried very, very hard to keep the old rules – no religion, sex or politics. Never works…

    But cliffhangers…..Sometimes,, despite all the pre-broadcast BBC hype, they aren’t even real, just a clip, delivered in a misleading tone, with equally misleading backing .

    Beginning, middle and end please, especially just before Christmas. – friend facing delicate eye surgery, afte MRSA.

    So many storms with names, so many power cuts and floodwarnings, prefer, until everything calms down, a truth universally acknowledged,, etc.

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