Have you ever felt this frustration?
The killer is caught.
The twist is revealed.
And then the book just STOPS.
I love thrillers. Inching clue by clue toward an answer, bonding with characters I love, and then: THE TWIST. AND THE END. I’m kicked out of the world, and don’t even get to celebrate the wins with these characters that I’ve spent so many hours living and fighting alongside.
I get so frustrated with rushed endings, characters that feel forced, and stories that don’t wrap up.
So I did it differently in CRONUS: Team Zeus.
I wrote characters that live and breathe beyond the page.
Characters we get to celebrate alongside.
The cutesy, alongside the thrills.
I want my writing to feel like a window into the lives of fully-rounded beings. Characters who love and laugh and have fun, as well as fight against incredible odds.
If you love an ending that doesn’t just STOP, then try 30 Days for November… the first book of CRONUS: Team Zeus. It’s an expansive storyworld with endless possibilities to keep the thrills coming.
What about you: How do you feel about rushed endings? How long should “the end” be? Let me know!




