With Groo, I try to do one story every book. Sometimes the stories are better if they go a little longer, and I choose to do it in four issues.
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It's easier to come up with new stories than it is to finish the ones you already have. I think every author would feel that way.
I don't finish every story, but I probably write and send out three out of five of them.
I actually enjoy writing longer books because you have even more to get your storytelling teeth into.
If you could have a book called My Favorite Six Stories, I don't think I'd have trouble doing that.
As a writer, I challenge myself not to tell the same story - to tackle different characters with different issues.
I used to tell my three younger siblings stories because that was my household chore, and I told long stories in installments because it was easier and more fun than making up a new story every night. I loved it.
I wouldn't like to just do one story or one type of stories all the time.
I can write two scripts concurrently, but I usually prefer to do one at a time. However, I also usually have 5 or 6 story ideas that are percolating in my head at any one time, so it can get a little crowded in there.
I get tired of stories that keep going and going and never get anywhere. It's like a promise that's never fulfilled. Stories need endings. Otherwise, they aren't really stories. Just pages.
I like all kinds of stories, and I usually work on several stories at once. When I run out of gas on one, I start work on the other.
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