Multiple Parts of a story

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May 29, 2024
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I have a long story, perhaps 15,000 words. There are several obvious places to break it up into chapters, published sequentially. What I can't figure out is slightly different. Stories usually extend to several parts for each chapter, numbers say 1 to 5, clicked on at the bottom of each part. Does the AI determine where these breaks are or can I set them?
 
You mean site pages? There's no AI that determines this. Each site page is, I think, 3,500 words long. I don't believe there's any limit of how long a story can be, but they'll be split into pages of that length no matter how long they are.
 
No, you have no choice about where the page breaks come.

15,000 words is not particularly long for a single submission by the way. I'm not saying you shouldn't split it into chapters if you want, but at that length there's no real need.
 
There's no AI to choose the best spots for page breaks. Once I published a story whose entire final Lit page was nothing but the copyright notice ('The End' was even written at the bottom of the second-to-last page), which was a shame. I'm sure it meant a couple less votes and comments, but there's not much to be done about it.

The best you can do is try to prevent your final word count from being a near-multiple of ~3,700. I don't think it's worth it most of the time, though.
 
I have a long story, perhaps 15,000 words. There are several obvious places to break it up into chapters, published sequentially. What I can't figure out is slightly different. Stories usually extend to several parts for each chapter, numbers say 1 to 5, clicked on at the bottom of each part. Does the AI determine where these breaks are or can I set them?
I'd publish that as a single story - it's around four Lit pages (I use 3750 words as my page metric).

It's not a long story, not by Lit standards.
 
I think it's more of a character limit. As far as I can tell, about 19,500 characters (including spaces) per Lit page.
 
I think it's more of a character limit. As far as I can tell, about 19,500 characters (including spaces) per Lit page.
I'd always figured 20,000 characters, including spaces. It makes sense that each data box would be a round number. On Blogger, for example, a comment has a 4,000 characters limit. Posts, so far as I've seen, are unlimited. Another site (which I no longer go to), the data box was 5,000 characters. A prick of a thing for stories, you had to load page by page. Tedious.

Lit does the whole cabundle for you, and joins the pages up.
 
If you're talking about chapters, they're created by the author submitting each chapter as a separate story, just with the later ones called "Same Title ch.2" etc. There is now a way to link stories with separate titles into a series, too.

A 3-4 page story (10-16k words) is probably the most popular length with readers, so I wouldn't split it unless there's one obvious point in the middle.
 
I agree with others who recommend that you finish the story, and then submit it as a single published entry.

I can share my experience as an example.

My stories average around 45,000 words, with my longest here being almost 180,000. I originally submitted stories in chapters or parts but reader feedback was overwhelmingly opposed to this. When I resubmitted each of the stories as a single submission and had the chapters/parts removed, comments and scores both improved dramatically.
 
I'd always figured 20,000 characters, including spaces. It makes sense that each data box would be a round number.
Sounds about right, with the page cutting off before a new paragraph that would tip it over the limit.

I'm not sure if things like italics and other formatting affect the character count, though.
 
Don't split it up. The story is likely to do better with readers if it's kept as a single story than if split into separately published chapters. For whatever reason, Lit readers tend to like 4 page stories (15,0000 is 4 pages) more than they do 1 or 2 page stories. Your best bet is to keep the whole thing together.
 
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