Why Some Endings Feel Empty

Some endings disappoint not because nothing happened, but because closure was never structurally earned.
A story can reach its last page, cut to black, resolve its visible plot-lines, and still leave readers or viewers with the unmistakable feeling that the ending was hollow, thin, or strangely incomplete. We often describe that feeling with vague language: rushed, flat, unearned, anticlimactic. But those words usually point to a deeper structural problem.
This short book explains what that problem is.
Why Some Endings Feel Empty is a compact guide to closure, legitimacy, and the structure of narrative completion. Instead of treating dissatisfaction as a matter of personal taste, it shows how endings fail when they stop the story without earning the kind of closure the story itself has taught the audience to expect.
This is a preview. Read the full post for the complete text.

