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Three Ingredients for Writing a Successful Sequel



Guy Harrison is a Phoenix area-based author raised in Philadelphia. Once an aspiring sportscaster, Harrison has worked in public relations in higher education for the past six years. Agents of Change is his debut novel. He currently lives in Chandler, Arizona with his wife Lindsay and their two cats.


Thanks again to Lorhainne for having me.

As I embark down the road of plotting a Sequel to Agents of Change, I must say that I am officially stumped. There are so many directions in which I could take the story; how do I plot and, therefore, write a sequel as good as the first installment?

In doing research, and in thinking of what my sequel must have, I have compiled a brief listing of three main ingredients I think all sequels should possess if they are to be just as good, if not better, than their predecessors.

#1. Up the Ante - In a sequel, the conflict that arises in the first installment needs to escalate. Simply put, there needs to be more at stake in the sequel than there was in the original, especially if your plot is a continuation of the first Book.

Some sequels can get away with not doing this because they’re simply a standalone story involving characters brought over from the first book. Most of us, though, like ongoing sagas or trilogies (think Twilight, Harry Potter, and Star Wars).

In the original Star Wars trilogy, for example, the conflict escalated in The Empire Strikes Back from a band of rebels battling an evil empire to a son trying to reconcile his own fate with that of his father’s. The central conflict goes from your basic good against evil to a conflict with many more layers.

You have to raise the stakes in a sequel. Otherwise, the story feels stale as a rehash of the first book. I would venture to say that this is perhaps the most challenging element of Writing a sequel.

#2. The Sequel Should End on a Sour Note - This one is especially true for those of you writing trilogies. Obviously, if you’re just writing a sequel with no plans to write more than two books, you can kindly disregard this element if you so choose.

If you think back to some of our favorite trilogies, both in film and print, usually the second installments are the darkest of the three, ending in a more dour tone that carries the story into the third book.

At the end of The Empire Strikes Back, Luke loses a hand and finds out the bad guy is his father. Also, Han Solo is captured and taken back to Jabba the Hutt. The simplest way to put it is that the bad guys won in Empire. In Back to the Future II, Marty McFly and Doc Brown succeed in their mission to retrieve the sports almanac from Biff in 1955. Unfortunately, before they can celebrate, the time machine (with Doc inside) is struck by lightning sending Doc back to the Old West. Although Doc isn’t dead, it feels as though he is. Both of those saddening turn of events carry these sagas into their respective third installments.

If you’re not at least strongly considering killing off one of your characters in the sequel, then you’re not doing your job as a writer.

#3. Don’t Be Afraid to Introduce New Characters, Settings, etc.

It has been suggested that when you get stuck while writing a standalone novel, you should never be afraid to introduce a new character or a new item. We call these plot devices; they help the author move the story along.

When writing a sequel, it’s almost inconceivable that you can write a good story while simply carrying over all of your plot devices from the first book. As your characters continue their journeys, they’re bound to meet new people or encounter new roadblocks and solutions. Adding new plot points helps keep the story fresh as well. This, as I stated in the first ingredient, is vital.

One caveat about introducing new plot devices: they must be consistent with everything you wrote in your first book. It sounds obvious and should go without saying but it’s easy, I think, to add something without considering its consistency with a previous work. So, if you wrote in your first installment that one of your female characters has never had a boyfriend, don’t try and build tension in the second book by bringing in her long-estranged high school sweetheart…unless she lied in the first book, in which case it would still feel quite cheap.

Those are the three key ingredients to a successful sequel. Writing such a story can be daunting, but the successful writer isn’t one to back down from a challenge.

What do you think? Are there any other key ingredients that should be added to this list?

Guy Harrison is the author of Agents of Change. Available on Amazon.
 
An amiable corporate manager by day and a fledgling matchmaker whenever he can get around to it, Calvin Newsome’s new dream job falls into his lap when he’s recruited by a secret worldwide organization whose agents use uncanny abilities to empower and influence everyday downtrodden individuals. Disaster strikes, however, when an elaborate scheme leaves Calvin as a prime murder suspect…and his new employer is presumably to blame.

With the authorities on his heels and his life left in ruin, Calvin uses his new powers to blend in until a journey for freedom becomes a quest for peace. As the agency’s rival organization threatens the security of all of earth’s inhabitants, Calvin teams up with unlikely allies and battles startling enemies hellbent on unleashing their power in a twisted version of justice, innocent lives be damned.




This post first appeared on Lorhainne Eckhart ~ My, please read the originial post: here

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Three Ingredients for Writing a Successful Sequel

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