Hello All,
Dale and I have been communicating about the recent problems with the Forum here at pspowerbooks.com. It has been decided to retire the Forum and move all author & conversational interactions over to Patreon.
Over the next week or so, I'll be closing down the Forum and creating redirects to start funneling visitors of the Forum over to that URL (the main website showing all the books will be staying).
Thank you everyone for your participation on the Forum these past several years! See you on Patreon!!
Brent / Argy / ArgyrosfeniX
p.s. Sorry about all of the coding errors. They reset nightly these days and I can't keep up with changing the code that often...
Dale and I have been communicating about the recent problems with the Forum here at pspowerbooks.com. It has been decided to retire the Forum and move all author & conversational interactions over to Patreon.
Over the next week or so, I'll be closing down the Forum and creating redirects to start funneling visitors of the Forum over to that URL (the main website showing all the books will be staying).
Thank you everyone for your participation on the Forum these past several years! See you on Patreon!!
Brent / Argy / ArgyrosfeniX
p.s. Sorry about all of the coding errors. They reset nightly these days and I can't keep up with changing the code that often...
What's next for Tony?
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Re: What's next for Tony?
Yeah, but that's not the type of reader you have. The majority of your readers probably have the expectation that "the story will go on forever".
For me, if I see a book on amazon, no matter how well reviewed, if I don't see an indication that it's part of an open-ended series, it's very unlikely that I'll even look at it. Even ones that are described as part as a trilogy or otherwise fixed size series with no indication that they are part of a larger universe only very rarely attract my attention.
Sure, an individual story thread has a beginning and ending, but as long as you don't destroy the universe at the end of the last book, something is going to keep happening, no matter if someone writes about it or not. And frankly, I don't what to have to imagine what that something is myself, that's what authors are for.
For me, if I see a book on amazon, no matter how well reviewed, if I don't see an indication that it's part of an open-ended series, it's very unlikely that I'll even look at it. Even ones that are described as part as a trilogy or otherwise fixed size series with no indication that they are part of a larger universe only very rarely attract my attention.
Sure, an individual story thread has a beginning and ending, but as long as you don't destroy the universe at the end of the last book, something is going to keep happening, no matter if someone writes about it or not. And frankly, I don't what to have to imagine what that something is myself, that's what authors are for.
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Re: What's next for Tony?
Maybe. Don't get me wrong though, if Dale is calling it done then I'm not out to pressure him to write something he has no interest in continuing and it's not like he's short on options of other works. I agree with him that you'd just be writing the character into more success and probably giving the "TW is a MS" more fodder - but I'm very not opposed to that.
I guess everything else is "headcanon" for me on this thread now And in one alt reality it's totes what happens. Suck it, Trebek.
I guess everything else is "headcanon" for me on this thread now And in one alt reality it's totes what happens. Suck it, Trebek.
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Re: What's next for Tony?
I admit, I have taken to NOT showing all the weddings. There have been enough that I would find them boring to read about. People stand up, they say "I do" and then eat some cake. Maybe a fight breaks out, or someone gets shot...
Not all that interesting.
*I honestly doubt their wedding was epic at all. It was just another wedding.
Televised though, if that impresses you?
I loved that book series and honestly think it is one of the best that I have written so far. (Fletcher is right up there too, in my estimation.) I just don't think that Tony is calling out for more yet. In my head he moves on, graduates from school, goes to college, becomes a doctor, does a long tour with Doctors Without Borders and eventually has a return to fighting, in order to generate money for a clinic in a poor area...
That's as an adult though, so doesn't fit with the first section that well. I might write it some day, but if so, it will be at least a year. I have too much going on for the next while to commit to that one as well.
Not all that interesting.
*I honestly doubt their wedding was epic at all. It was just another wedding.
Televised though, if that impresses you?
I loved that book series and honestly think it is one of the best that I have written so far. (Fletcher is right up there too, in my estimation.) I just don't think that Tony is calling out for more yet. In my head he moves on, graduates from school, goes to college, becomes a doctor, does a long tour with Doctors Without Borders and eventually has a return to fighting, in order to generate money for a clinic in a poor area...
That's as an adult though, so doesn't fit with the first section that well. I might write it some day, but if so, it will be at least a year. I have too much going on for the next while to commit to that one as well.
- Rob Thompson
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Re: What's next for Tony?
Laura Smart: She was a "typical" blue haired, metal faced and man hating feminist (based on a real person for that part) who grows from being near Tony. It isn't an overt growth or one that showed Tony as being a superior being. She simply saw him being brave and good and learned to accept others a little bit more because of it.
*It's a bit unfair to use stereotypes for things like that, but call it a hope on my part? That ideologues, when exposed to good people, might see that as valuable too?
*It's a bit unfair to use stereotypes for things like that, but call it a hope on my part? That ideologues, when exposed to good people, might see that as valuable too?
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