Author:
I saw a blog about the lull of stories during the summer , just a hint go to the series link at the top and check out some of the great series of the past by great authors . There is something for everybody
whateley
spell r us
the center
dark realms and other stories by E O F
morfs
bikini beach
comic retcon
Julie verse
little kids kamps
altered fates
ovid may need to go to sapphires place , use top other links
Andersonville may need to go to sapphires place , use top other links
that's just to name a few great story series from the past
have fun the rest of the summer and some great reading for times gone bye
HUGS RICHIE2
P.S I missed a few here is up date
M.A.U. (a favorite)
Sensational Swimwear
Gaby /Drew
Hugglebugs
Comments
Few others to look into...
You missed a few:
M.A.U. (a favorite)
Sensational Swimwear
Gaby /Drew
Hugglebugs
And the ever expanding "Bike" (bike is in the thousands chapter)
The only thing to come close to bike is Ellen Hayes' work on Tuck.
Tuck is both a story and a story world, you can read her work many places, including Barking duck.
"Sometimes you need a little space to grow up or start over"- Me
Epic series?
I'm really surprised that no one mentioned Penny Lane's "Somewhere Else Entirely". Mention has been made of Ellen Hayes' "Tuck" series and Maddy Bell's "Gaby" and what large volumes of work they are. Yes, Tuck had a very long run (and maybe yet there will be more?) and Gaby is, IIRC, up to episode 448 on free access for a total of about 5M bytes. But Gaby chapters average about 10K bytes of content versus an average of 47K per chapter for SEE. At 131 chapters, SEE comes in at 6.1 MB of content, and every chapter is a good read.
Moreover, much like "The Lord of the Rings" or the Bible, every time you re-read a chapter, you'll likely find something you missed (or missed the significance) on previous reads. I'd also compare it to watching the anime series "Kanon" - many seemingly insignificant details that one realizes on review aren't just background noise.
What? You think I like the Anmar tales? You betchum, Red Ryder!
Thank you!
This gives me a place to look for good stories!
Saeka