I'm caught in a quandary. The series I'm writing, "The Architects," is Christian romantic suspense. All four books (as projected) deal with the relationship of one particular couple. The suspense plot in all of them is or will be high-stakes and confront them with matters of life and death. In each of the novels, the protagonists are faced with major spiritual and moral issues that can make or break their Christian growth.
Moreover, all of them have titles that are direct or indirect quotations from the King James Version of the Bible. All of them have main theme verses quoted at the start of the book and subordinate verses quoted at the beginning of each division.
And all of them have a secular classical work and a Christian hymn that run through the plot. The characters acknowledge these works and alternately draw inspiration from or react against them.
But there are stories I want to write in the same world, where the rules I've set up for the main series don't fit.
Some would have spiritual crises, but no life-threatening suspense or happily-ever-after romance. Or we'll have suspense, but the threat is economic destruction, and there'll be no love story or spiritual crisis. Some would involve my main characters, but separately, before they met, and some would have side characters as their heroes.
My question is, how do I present these side stories as part of the same world without raising the wrong expectations as to genre, etc.? How similar or different should the covers be? What about titling? Should I keep some kind of musical leitmotif, even if it isn't classical or religious?
I'm asking now because one of these stories overlaps the timeline of the second novel of The Architects series, and I'd like to get it written while the events of that story are fresh in my mind.
All thoughts welcome!
Moreover, all of them have titles that are direct or indirect quotations from the King James Version of the Bible. All of them have main theme verses quoted at the start of the book and subordinate verses quoted at the beginning of each division.
And all of them have a secular classical work and a Christian hymn that run through the plot. The characters acknowledge these works and alternately draw inspiration from or react against them.
But there are stories I want to write in the same world, where the rules I've set up for the main series don't fit.
Some would have spiritual crises, but no life-threatening suspense or happily-ever-after romance. Or we'll have suspense, but the threat is economic destruction, and there'll be no love story or spiritual crisis. Some would involve my main characters, but separately, before they met, and some would have side characters as their heroes.
My question is, how do I present these side stories as part of the same world without raising the wrong expectations as to genre, etc.? How similar or different should the covers be? What about titling? Should I keep some kind of musical leitmotif, even if it isn't classical or religious?
I'm asking now because one of these stories overlaps the timeline of the second novel of The Architects series, and I'd like to get it written while the events of that story are fresh in my mind.
All thoughts welcome!