Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context WhatHappenedToTheMouse / Literature

Go To

1%%%
2%%
3%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order.
4%%
5%%%
6----
7%%
8%%
9%%* 19th century fiction is full to the gills with "What Happened to the Mouse?" scenes, partly because many books of the time were originally written for serialization in magazines. When the writer's on Chapter 24 he might forget or misremember what he wrote in Chapter 1, published two years previously. Dickens was infamous for this.
10%%
11%%----
12
13* The works of Creator/StephenKing have many examples:
14** ''Literature/TheGreenMile'', there's a literal "What Happened to the Mouse?" when Mr. Jingles runs away after Eduard Delacroix is executed. Stephen King wrote in the afterward that even ''he'' forgot about Mr. Jingles until his wife asked him the question, so he wrote in a resolution. [[spoiler:The mouse lived to the age of 60 years - twenty times the normal lifespan of a mouse.]]
15** In his short story "[[Literature/SkeletonCrew The Jaunt]]", the protagonist's daughter almost literally asks this question when the protagonist tells the family the story of the eponymous teleportation device's invention. To wit, the inventor ran down to the pet store and tested some white mice out on the machine. Slightly subverted when he euphemistically explains that they "didn't feel so good the first time" after being sent through awake. [[spoiler:And by now you've probably guessed why he was being euphemistic with his family about what happened to those mice.]]
16** At the end of the flashback section of ''Literature/WizardAndGlass'', Roland's mother gives him a belt. He promises to tell his ''[[TrueCompanions ka-tet]]'' the story of how he lost the belt, "for it bears on my quest for the Tower." Whether he tells the ''ka-tet'' or not, he never tells the reader; the belt is never mentioned again either in the main series or in any of the side materials.
17* In the sixth book of the ''[[Literature/The39Clues 39 Clues]]'' series, [[spoiler:Isabel Kabra]] mentions that [[spoiler:Amy and Dan's parents visited, among other places, Karachi, Pakistan, and also thought Amy and Dan visited there, although they never did.]] This does not go unnoticed by Amy and Dan, but it is soon forgotten and never brought up again. There was even a SequelSeries, and still nothing mentioned.
18* Early in ''Literature/SixteenThirtyTwo'', a young woman runs into Grantville pursued by soldier who want to rape her. The uptimers kill the soldiers, but one of them is wounded in the process and once he's stabilized the girl is long gone. She doesn't appear again in the novel, but thanks to the opening of the universe to many authors, there is a short story on the subject in the first ''Grantville Gazette''.
19* ''Literature/AboveTheTimberline'': The villainous Wilkes kidnaps Wesley Singleton's mother Elizabeth to ensure that Wesley will cooperate in locating Galen Singleton (Wesley's father and Wilke's old exploration partner) and the mythical lost city Galen was searching for. Wesley sabotages his own radio and cuts off all communication with Wilkes in retaliation -- and when Wilkes shows up to confront Wesley and Galen at the end of the book, there's no mention of Elizabeth's whereabouts or status.
20* In 'The Literature/ActsOfTheApostles, 23:16-22', the nephew of St. Paul informs the Roman captain of a plot to murder Paul. This is the only mention of St. Paul's family anywhere in 'Acts', and the nephew is never mentioned again.
21* The riddle from ''Literature/AliceInWonderland'': "Why is a raven like a writing desk?" was left unsolved by Creator/LewisCarroll...
22** An odd [[SubvertedTrope subversion]]. While the answer is never given in either of the books - as Dodgson meant for the riddle to be a riddle without an answer - enough of his fans pestered him about the riddle that he made up an answer: [[spoiler: "Because it can produce a few notes, though they are very flat, and it is 'nevar' put with the wrong end in front"]]. There is also the story a copyeditor 'corrected' the word [[spoiler: 'nevar' to 'never']] and the joke was lost.
23** Among suggested answers, Sam Loyd's "Poe wrote on both" is probably the best-known.
24** Another suggestion of Dodgson's was "Because there is a B in both."
25* ''Literature/AnimalFarm'':
26** The cat (who never did anything of import while he was present) ceases to exist about halfway through the story. Orwell just stops mentioning him. This could be intentional, as the cat was already mentioned to be mysteriously missing every time the animals needed to get work done, and disappears right when the pigs are beginning to institute their crazier forms of tyranny.
27** Snowball is never seen again after Napoleon's dogs chase him off the farm, though some of the MaliciousSlander that ensues implies he may have been living in exile for a while after this. His RealLife counterpart, Trotsky, was assassinated during the timeframe allegorized in the story, but Snowball's actual fate is never mentioned; the passage mentioning the deaths of several other animals during the TimeSkip merely notes that "Snowball was forgotten."
28* There's a fair number of these in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}''.
29** Joe Bob Fenestre from ''The Warning'' (who, to be fair, faced UncertainDoom), Derek from ''The Extreme'', & Mertil and Gafinilian from ''The Other'' are all one-shot characters who are set up to be bigger players but then never appear again.
30** There's also the unexplained fates of recurring characters, namely StarterVillain Chapman and Loren. The latter is especially odd, since she was [[UnexpectedCharacter unexpectedly]] brought back to reunite with [[spoiler:her son Tobias]] but then vanishes.
31** Melissa Chapman disappears from the story after the second book painstakingly shows her as a victim of Yeerk cruelty and indifference. She's last mentioned in book 51 after Marco flattens her house (without her or her pet cat in it, thankfully).
32** One mouse in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' ''is'' addressed, though - literally. The SixthRanger David, [[spoiler:condemned by the team to live out the rest of his days as a rat ''nothlit'']], has a book dedicated to his return, the aptly titled ''The Return''.
33** In a very early book in the series, just before losing consciousness, Prince Alloran manages to gasp out a warning that the Yeerks are infiltrating the Andalite home world. To quote Blog/CinnamonBunzuh, "Well, there's an extremely crucial piece of information that we will never, ever hear mentioned or discussed again." The author admitted in a later interview that she forgot about it.
34** You never hear very much about Cassie and Jake's parents and the being that caused Jake to see the alternate future in book ''The Familiar''.
35** Jake's parents are said to be freed after the war was over, and Rachel's mother was at her funeral. None of the parents, or Rachel's sisters, are mentioned again.
36** The Time Matrix was a legend among Andalites, who believed that it was somehow connected to the Ellimist(s); Elfangor theorizes that it must be what caused him/them to become [[SufficientlyAdvancedAlien Sufficiently Advanced]] in the first place. Certainly the Ellimist and his EvilCounterpart Crayak are shown to be invested in keeping it out of mortal hands. However, the {{Prequel}} book that gives their origin story doesn't mention the Time Matrix at all, so we never find out who or what created it.
37** The fate of AlwaysChaoticEvil race the Nartec from ''The Mutation''. At the end of that book, the kids vow to expose the Nartec's crimes (and existence) to the world after the Yeerk invasion ends, but no mention of them is made in the final book, leaving it unknown whether or not the Nartec qualify for KarmaHoudini.
38** Elena, the blind girl who was recruited to be one of the Auxiliary Animorphs, is only mentioned as having escaped her school while morphed into Rachel and taken to the Hork-Bajir valley. It's never mentioned if she joined the team or not.
39* In the ''Literature/AnneOfGreenGables'' series, Anne's adoptive guardian, Marilla gets this treatment. As the ''Anne'' series continues, Marilla gets less and less mention, being mentioned briefly in several of the books. In the final book of the series, ''Rilla of Ingleside'', it's mentioned in passing that Marilla had died many years back.
40* At the start of ''{{Literature/Banco}}'', Papillon JustGotOutOfJail with a friend named Picolino. Picolino is partially paralyzed from injuries he received in prison and Papillon is looking after him, while also resisting the urge to delve back into the criminal underworld while supporting a friend. He eventually sets Picolino up in a hospital in Caracas and sends friends and money to him while he recovers. Papillon's adventures take him across the country for nearly twenty years, he heard Picolino was released from the hospital but couldn't get back in contact with him. Papillon never sees or hears from Picolino ever again and he always regrets that he waited too long to invite him to join his new family and business in Maracaibo.
41* ''Literature/BazilBroketail'': Nothing is revealed about General Kreegsbrok's fate and whereabouts following the events in book four, he just disappears from the story entirely.
42* ''Literature/BernieRhodenbarr'': In ''The Burglar in the Library'', the cause of the cook's death is never revealed. Carolyn complains that if someone dies in an English country-house mystery, you always know whodunit by the end of the book, and Bernie replies that events are left unresolved all the time [[ThisIsReality in real life]].
43* In Thomas Harris's ''Literature/BlackSunday'', Lander gave his pregnant ex-wife two tickets to the Super Bowl. No mention is made on if she went or what happened to her.
44* In the ''Literature/BlandingsCastle'' novel ''[[Literature/{{Psmith}} Leave It to Psmith]]'', it's eventually revealed that [[spoiler:one of the maids is an undercover detective hired by Baxter in case there's an emergency]]. This is never brought up again.
45* In ''Literature/BrokenVeil'', the question of where [[spoiler:Mjolnir]] ends up after Dillon Maxwell is able to cast it away is never answered, which is particularly glaring because it was made into a big deal, only to be lost before the true climax. Dillon's claim that it's flown all the way to Mongolia could just be hyperbole.
46* In ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'', there is [[spoiler: Balin Brindle]]. He's only a minor off-screen character, but some readers would like to know whether he [[spoiler: really [[ParentalIncest "serviced" his mothers]], whether [[RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil it was consensual]]]] and whether he was able to marry well.
47** Some readers would also like to know who changed the court docket to interfere in the Wakecliff inheritance case and why. Finding out which claimant won would also be of interest.
48* In Creator/AnthonyTrollope's ''Barchester Towers'' from ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfBarsetshire'', it's stated repeatedly in the first nine chapters that the new bishop will spend most of the year with his wife in London, leaving the actual running of the diocese to his assistant Mr. Slope. But the bishop and his wife never actually leave. (The reason is that Trollope put the book aside for a year, and when he returned changed his mind about what would happen without bothering to rewrite the first nine chapters.)
49* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia: Literature/TheLionTheWitchAndTheWardrobe'':
50** The animals having a dinner party before being turned to stone by the Witch (leading to Edmund's HeelFaceTurn) are never mentioned again. Aslan being omniscient and all, or perhaps Edmund told him, he probably gave them a visit to restore them. Lewis got a What Happened to the Mouse? letter from one of his readers (or the reader's mom) about the matter, and hastily wrote back a WordOfGod that ''of course'' the animals at the dinner party got turned back, just not on stage, and he was very sorry the child was distressed about the issue.
51** The servants Ivy, Margaret and Betty - though it's stated up front that they "do not come into the story much," it's more to the point to say that they don't come into the story at all. At which point it might have been better not to mention them in the first place.
52* In ''[[Literature/LordPeterWimsey Clouds of Witness]]'' by Creator/DorothyLSayers, Wimsey visits Mr. Grimethorpe's farm at Grider's Hole, and meets Grimethorpe's daughter, 'a little girl of about seven, very dark and pretty'. The child is never mentioned again, and when Mrs. Grimethorpe leaves her abusive husband she apparently does not take her daughter with her.
53* In ''Literature/CodexAlera'', [[BigGood First Lord Gaius Sextus]] is married to a woman named Caria, who is actually the lover and co-conspirator of Sextus's rival, Aquitainus Attis. She barely appears in the series, and her last appearance is near the end of book five, when it's revealed that she was poisoning Sextus and had been for years. She then vanishes from the story and is never mentioned again. [[spoiler: WordOfGod ended up confirming that she died when Alera Imperia blew up]]. In the same series, the Windwolves are major characters in the first three books, barely mentioned in the next two, and are last seen forming up for a battle against the Vord at the end of the last book. No mention is made of their ultimate fate, though some people they were about to fight alongside appear in the epilogue.
54* In Creator/RobertEHoward's Franchise/ConanTheBarbarian story "Literature/BlackColossus", the princess is in command because her brother the king is being held captive and might be either ransomed or handed over to their enemies. While discussing what to do, the ''first'' point brought up is whether to enlarge the offer of ransom; only then do they discuss the attacking army, and that, partly because the captor won't take them seriously while they might be overrun. But they deal with the army, and the captive king is never even addressed again.
55* W.E.B. Griffin's ''Literature/TheCorps'' series has many viewpoint characters simply vanish from the narrative, especially when the series timeskips into Korea. While a couple are at least given some resolution, many simply vanish between books.
56* Some readers of the ''Literature/DanShambleZombiePI'' series would like to know what became of [[RodentOfUnusualSize dump rats Spot, Fido, and Rover]] after the dump foreman who played with them was re-killed.
57* ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKid'':
58** In ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidTheLastStraw'', Greg is seen spraying a cat with a squirt gun in a FlashBack to about two years ago. It is unknown who that cat is.
59** In ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidCabinFever'', Greg has two sort-of friends: a virtual dog named Gregory's Little Friend (he didn't pick the name) and a baby doll named Alfrendo, who looked a bit beat-up due to being left in the basement for years. Manny accidentally managed to change Greg's password on the virtual pet and it's unknown whether he got the password back or whether the doll got repaired.
60** In ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidTheThirdWheel'', a prankster nicknamed the "Mad Pantser" goes around the school. The kids are afraid to even stand up in gym class, thinking they'll get pantsed. While the Mad Pantser does return later in the book, his or her exact identity is never revealed, and it's unknown if they faced any punishment.
61** In ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidHardLuck'', Manny befriends a child named Mikey, who likes drinking grape juice. Greg says that they don't talk much, but their friendship works somehow. After his introduction, Mikey is never mentioned again, giving him exactly one page in the book.
62** Also cat-related, in ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidTheLongHaul'', Greg has a FlashBack of being scratched by Grandma's cat about eight or nine years ago. It is unknown if the cat is still alive or where the cat is, or [[NoNameGiven what his/her name is.]]
63** Again in ''The Long Haul'' is Greg losing the key to a locker at a water park, where his parents kept all their important items. He thinks he remembers the locker number, but when they get the staff to open it, it's empty. When they return home, his parents have to cancel their credit cards and get new phones. As Greg is unpacking, he finds the key to the locker. He isn't sure what to do with it, but [[DownerEnding he knows it'll end badly]]. This plot thread is dropped by the next book.
64** In ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidDoubleDown'', Greg is forced into a playdate with a strange child named Maddox, who isn't allowed to play computer games. It's unknown which school Maddox goes to and he lives out in the woods, and after his playdate with Greg (in which Greg gets accused of "stealing" a LEGO brick), he's never discussed again.
65** This trope is discussed in ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidWreckingBall''. Greg reads a ''Preston Platypus'' book where Preston's best friend, Pelican Pete, moves away. He thinks it's fine until the ending in which Preston makes new friends and forgets about Pete, and that it's never shown if Pete is happy in his new neighborhood. Greg considers writing the author an angry letter over this.
66** A series-wide example: In ''The Long Haul'', the Heffleys adopt a pet pig. In ''Old School'' and ''Double Down'', it sticks around and even learns how to walk and communicate. ''The Getaway'', being a VacationEpisode, doesn't mention the pig at all. ''The Meltdown'' explains that the pig ran away during the vacation, and Greg shrugs this off by the end of the book, saying it's probably having the time of its life wherever it is. The pig isn't seen or talked about in the next two books, and what ultimately happened to it remains unknown.
67* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
68** ''Literature/{{Eric}}'' ends with Rincewind and Eric [[EscapedFromHell escaping from Hell itself]]. The next time we come across Rincewind, in ''Literature/InterestingTimes'', he is marooned on a desert island. Eric is nowhere in sight and is never mentioned again.
69** In ''Literature/ReaperMan'', Windle is introduced to members of the Fresh Start Club, including someone called "Brother Gorper". All the other members are specifically identified as various types of undead, and most have dialogue or subsequent references, but Gorper (whatever he is) never gets mentioned again.
70* ''Literature/{{Divergent}}'':
71** ''Insurgent'' introduces the reader to Jack Kang, the leader of the Candor faction. However, he completely disappears from the narrative after the Dauntless trials and, rather strangely, is never seen or heard from again for the rest of the series despite the important roles played by the other faction leaders. The film series seems to rectify this a tad by giving Kang a larger role.
72** In ''Literature/{{Allegiant}}'', [[spoiler: after the peace treaty is formed, Marcus leaves Chicago and no one knows what happens to him]]. Four notes that he simply disappeared, and he's fine with that.
73* ''Literature/TheDivineComedy'':
74** After literally going through Hell with Dante, Virgil vanishes without saying good-bye at the top of Purgatory. We already knew he wouldn't be taking Dante through Heaven, but it remains unclear how he's going to get back to the First Circle of Hell from the opposite side of the world.
75** Statius is released from Purgatory as Dante passes through, so he joins Dante on his ascent to Heaven. Problem is, the last place Statius appears is at the top of Purgatory, so the reader is left to assume that Statius makes it to Paradise and to speculate where in Paradise he eternally resides.
76* ''Series/DoctorWho'' [[Franchise/DoctorWhoExpandedUniverse Expanded Universe]]: By fifty novels in, these had built up in the ''Literature/DoctorWhoNewAdventures'' series. Just a few examples: What happened to the "eight-twelves" from ''The Highest Science''? What happened to the Charrl from ''Birthright'', last seen living in the back of the TARDIS? What happened to that TARDIS, last seen in a tarpit on a parallel Earth, following which the Doctor took the one belonging to his dead counterpart? And back in the first trilogy, didn't the Doctor leave an insanely powerful alien in the body of a human baby? The fiftieth novel, ''[[Recap/DoctorWhoNewAdventuresHappyEndings Happy Endings]]'', despite having a wedding to organise, manages to [[ContinuityPorn resolve an awful lot of them]]. Several of the ones it missed got picked up a few books later in ''Return of the Living Dad''.
77* ''Literature/{{Dragonlance}}'':
78** Specifically the end of ''Autumn Twilight''. It's revealed early on that hoopaks are a kender's birthright (implying they inherit them from their parents) and Tasslehoff's fighting style incorporates the hoopak heavily. He uses it both as a weapon and a distraction. Then, in the Tomb of Kith-Kanan, he says he loses it and leaves it behind in the tomb, and vows to return to get it. The sequel, Winter Night, takes place a few months later, yet for the rest of the trilogy (and the following trilogies) the hoopak is never mentioned again.
79** The sword of Kith-Kanan itself. Tanis comes by the sword in a very fantastic way (apparently the skeleton of Kith-Kanan "gave" it to him), yet the sword doesn't do anything extraordinary in "Autumn Twilight", and then when the fellowship is broken in "Winter Night" Laurana makes a choice to leave the sword behind with the elves so she can carry the dragon orb[=/=]dragon lance. About sixty years later, in Lost Star, Laurana raids the Qualinesti treasury and pulls out another CoolSword, Lost Star. What happened to the Sword of Kith-Kanan?
80* While every other brain in the Council of Egos is named, the actual identity of the titular Sinister Brain Mollusk deals with throughout ''Literature/EmperorMolluskVersusTheSinisterBrain'' is never revealed. The only clues we ever get is that he was brought into the Council for his skills in espionage and, in lieu of a name when Mollusk asks for it, asks to be addressed as "Omega." Not liking the name, Mollusk decides to call him "Buddy."
81* In ''Literature/EndersShadow'', Bean is shown drawing up Ender's army. He decides to add a girl named Wu to his group. He mentions that she was a brilliant tactician, a great shooter, and did well in her studies, but as soon as her commander assigned her to be a toon leader, she filed for transfer and refused to play. No one knew why. In the rest of the book (and in ''Literature/EndersGame'', which takes place at the same time), not only do they never mention her again, they even make it clear that there are no girls in Ender's Army.
82* Amoret's and Scudamour's parties eventually meet up, but Spenser forgets to rewrite the epic reunion scene he cut from the first draft of ''Literature/TheFaerieQueene'''s third book.
83* When the narrator of Creator/EdgarAllanPoe's "Literature/TheFallOfTheHouseOfUsher" arrives to visit his childhood friend, he's greeted by a footman and valet in Roderick Usher's employ. There are no other mentions of household servants in the story, and no hints as to whether or not [[spoiler: any of the staff live in the House and are killed when it suddenly collapses at the end.]]
84* ''Literature/TheFaultInOurStars'':
85** In-universe: The main characters love a CutShort novel and want to know what happened to, amongst other things, the pet hamster.
86** Ironically, the same thing happened to Creator/JohnGreen by readers of the actual novel, even after explaining in an author’s note in the novel and several times [[http://onlyifyoufinishedtfios.tumblr.com/ on this blog]] that he doesn’t know anything more about the plot or characters than that which is contained in the book. Effectively, he knows exactly no more and no less than his readers. Even when they don't believe him.
87* Joe Abercrombie's ''Literature/TheFirstLaw'' universe has an excellent backstory centering on the sons of Euz and how they created the modern world. The issue is that, of Euz' four sons, Juvens (the first), Kanedias (the second), and Glustrod (the fourth) all have the important moments of their lives and deaths detailed. The third son, Bedesh, is mentioned only once, and his eventual fate is not elaborated on.
88* At the end of ''Literature/{{Frankenstein}}'', the doctor mopes that everyone he loves is now dead. However, Shelley never mentions what happened to his brother Ernest.
89* In the original British printing of ''Literature/GoodOmens'', it is never revealed what happened to Warlock the false Antichrist after he is taken to the fields of Megiddo by the forces of hell and revealed as a sham. For the American edition the authors added about 700 extra words revealing that he is alive and well, understandably perplexed by his experiences, and heading back to America thanks to some reality-manipulation by Adam.
90* ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'':
91** At the end of the book ''Literature/NightOfTheLivingDummyII'', [[KillerDoll Slappy]] is given a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown by Dennis (the protagonist's old dummy) which results in Slappy's head getting cracked open, and a large white worm-like creature crawling out of it, then escaping through a crack in the wall. Seeing as Slappy is the franchise's most iconic and recurring antagonist, it seems a bit odd that this was never explained nor brought up again. Also one of the rare literary examples of a DiabolusExNihilo.
92** In ''Literature/CallingAllCreeps,'' some disguised aliens are looking for their leader, who came to Earth separately, and incorrectly believe that it's the protagonist, Ricky. We never find out why their real leader hasn't joined up with them. Also, Ricky's friend Iris finds out about this situation and tries to help Ricky stop the Creeps, but we don't learn her reaction to the TwistEnding, as she's simply not mentioned for the last few pages. The [[Series/Goosebumps1995 TV adaptation]] has her looking on in horror.
93* The Tousle-Head Poet from ''Literature/TheGreatDivorce'' simply disappears after his scene on the bus, with no indication of whether he chooses to stay or go. The audience doesn't get to see the final decisions of the possessive mother, or the woman caught in the unicorn stampede, either, although there's slightly more closure in these cases, since [=MacDonald=] gives educated guesses on what their final decisions might be (he thinks the possessive mother ultimately won't stay, but that the other woman may have a chance, providing the stampede distracts her enough to stop obsessing over herself and listen to her Guide.)
94* ''Literature/TheGreatGreeneHeist'': Keith's ex-girlfriend Katie and Jackson are caught breaking into Dr. Kelsey's office in the prequel short story and they kiss to taunt Keith, who informed on them (which makes Gaby mad at Jackson). Afterward, Katie is frequently mentioned but never seen, and it's unclear what, if any, punishment she faced or if she has any further interactions with the main characters.
95* The sheer amount of detail in the ''Literature/HarryPotter'' books leads to a number of these, too. In the first book, Harry pulls a cracker and out come, among other things, several live mice. But mice are not throwaways like the other things in the cracker. Neither Harry nor anyone else is ever mentioned as keeping pet mice. Harry muses that Mrs. Norris got to them.
96** Ludo Bagman is forced to flee from goblins at the end of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]''. He is never seen or heard of again.
97** Cornelius Fudge, the Minister of Magic for most of the series. His last official position is at the start of ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince Half-Blood Prince]]'', where he's ResignedInDisgrace as Minister, but is kept on as liaison between the Ministry and the Muggle Prime Minister. No word at all of him or how he reacted to Voldemort taking over the Ministry in ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows Deathly Hallows]]''.
98** Sturgis Podmore, a member of the Order, is put under the Imperius curse by Death Eaters and is made to break into the Department of Mysteries in ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheOrderOfThePhoenix Order of the Phoenix]]''. He is sentenced to Azkaban. Upon learning about this, nobody shows any concern for him or the fact that he's going to the [[Room101 most awful place on Earth]]. After he is presumably released, he is never mentioned again and is not even seen in the Order.
99** It was never explained what was behind the veil [[spoiler:that Sirius fell through when dying]] in ''Order of the Phoenix'', though as it is in the Department of Mysteries, it is likely that no-one knows. Even though in the movie [[spoiler:Sirius was dying as he fell]], in the book it's obvious that [[spoiler:the fall through the arch is what killed him]]. So, it's fairly clear what lies behind the arch, especially when you take into account what Harry heard from it. Luna's comments to Harry at the end of the book would seem to confirm this theory, but then again, [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} consider the source]].
100*** It's pretty clear when you remember that "passing beyond the veil" is a common euphemism for death. Clearly the Department deals with the Big Questions: Prophecy, Death, Thought (the room full of brains in tanks, whose scroll-tentacles are specifically described as "thoughts",) et cetera.
101** When the characters visit Diagon Alley in ''Half-Blood Prince'', it's mentioned that Ollivander the wandmaker and Florean Fortescue the ice cream parlor owner have disappeared, assumed to be dragged off by Death Eaters. While Ollivander is found imprisoned in Malfoy Manor in ''Deathly Hallows'', Fortescue is never mentioned again. His fate was only confirmed when Creator/JKRowling revealed in an interview that he was killed. Rowling intended for Harry and his friends to find Fortescue and have him give clues about the Elder Wand and Ravenclaw's diadem, but decided to give that information to other characters.
102** It is never revealed what happened to Lavender Brown at the end of the seventh book. She is seen attacked by Greyback, then Hermione saves her, she was seen "feebly stirring" and never mentioned again. There is no evidence she lived or died. The movie resolved this by making her die.
103** Also Winky, who was last seen as an [[TheAlcoholic alcoholic wreck]]--which was probably not helped by finding out that [[spoiler:Barty Jr. killed Mr. Crouch]]. She's briefly mentioned afterwards but not in the final book, though WordOfGod says she (somehow) got over her problems and took part in the Battle of Hogwarts. WordOfGod said she would never fully recover.
104** Neville's pet toad, Trevor, was already subject to ShooOutTheClowns, but he isn't even ''mentioned'' in the final book. According to WordOfGod, he escaped into the lake outside of Hogwarts and Neville simply decided not to look for him anymore.
105** The letter Harry finds from his mother to Sirius Black mentions that the toddler Harry, riding on a toy broom Sirius gave him, is terrorizing the family cat. There's no hint of what happened to the cat when Harry's parents were killed and Harry was sent to live with his aunt, though Harry speculates in-universe that it was either killed along with his parents or ran off after the house was left abandoned.
106*** A relatively popular WildMassGuess is that the cat is none other than Crookshanks (who himself barely appears after book 3).
107* ''Literature/HerCrownOfFire'': Yasmin, Petre's destined soul mate. It's not clear if the two of them had actually bonded before his death, but if they had, what happened to her is not explained.
108* Reiko from Creator/JamesMichener's ''Literature/{{Hawaii}}'' simply disappears toward the end. She's a secondary character with an interesting plotline, but after [[spoiler:her husband dies]] she's never heard from again, leaving the reader to wonder whether she ever accomplished her thwarted dreams.
109* ''Literature/{{Holes}}'': At one point, one of Stanley's dorm mates appears to be crying at night, yet he claims that he's fine; he just has allergies. We never find out if this is true or just a SandInMyEyes excuse, and if he ''was'' crying, it's never revealed why.
110* David Weber's [[Literature/HonorHarrington Honorverse]] is usually rife with {{Continuity Nod}}s that are [[{{Infodump}} explained in excruciating detail just in case you're new to the series...]] but for some reason, the hoopla raised in ''Honor Among Enemies'', in regards to [[spoiler: the Peeps landing five bomb-pumped-laser hits on a ''passenger liner'']], is never referenced again. Though Weber did indicate several times that [[spoiler:the passenger liner was nearly empty.]]
111* ''Literature/HowNotToWriteANovel'' discourages this in the section "Oh, Don't Mind Him" (''Where a character's personal problems remain unexplored''). In the example given, this character is the protagonist's brother, an alcoholic war veteran who seems to exist only to provide the protagonist with an inspirational conversation before he (the protagonist) goes to Yale. "The Gum on the Mantlepiece" is similar, a kind of unintentional RedHerring.
112* ''Literature/TheHungerGames'' trilogy leaves quite a few questions unanswered:
113** We never learn ''why'' Cinna requested District 12 (as he says he did in book 1) and we never find out if Portia did the same. We also have no clue why Cinna doesn't have a Capitol accent or the Capitol sense of style, despite that not making much sense if he's a fashion designer who's lived in the Capitol for his entire life.
114** In ''Catching Fire'', Johanna says [[spoiler:everyone she loves is dead.]] It feels like it's going to be important for her CharacterDevelopment, but.... Elaboration? Explanation? Don't count on it. There's a popular guess in fanon, though: most likely Johanna's [[spoiler:family was murdered by the Capitol, likely for refusing to be used by the Capitol after she won like Finnick was.]] Based on her personality and what Finnick says about his family being threatened, this seems the logical explanation.
115** In ''Mockingjay'', Katniss gets a bow with "special properties." She never once mentions them again, uses them, or even explains what those properties are, besides the fact that it can vibrate to say hello. This could be the reason it's able to shoot down planes, though.
116** What happened to Old Cray? He somehow disappeared when [[spoiler:Thread took over.]] It's not pointed out what exactly happened to him.
117** Why were Lavinia and her companion fleeing the Capitol to District 12? It's likely they may have been [[spoiler:trying to get to District 13]] for some reason, but how did a couple of Capitol kids come to be running away when most adults never develop the courage, or even the inclination in most cases?
118** Bonnie and Twill were also [[spoiler:trying to get to District 13]] in ''Catching Fire'', and wound up being fairly close to where Lavinia was when she was captured. The last Katniss sees of them, they're successfully hiding out and planning their next move, but when Katniss and co. [[spoiler:reach District 13 in the final book]], Bonnie and Twill are nowhere to be seen. Katniss briefly {{Hand Wave}}s their absence, commenting that it must be incredibly rare for those who flee to actually [[spoiler:reach District 13]]... then they're never mentioned again.
119** Commander Lyme is introduced in ''Mockingjay'' as a former victor and leader of the rebels in District 2. She's built up as if she's going to be important somehow, but when the surviving victors have their meeting towards the end of the book, she's nowhere in sight and is never mentioned (though the reader must assume she's been killed at some point in the interim, as it is stressed that ''all'' surviving victors are present).
120* OlderThanFeudalism:
121** Creator/{{Homer}} did this in ''Literature/TheIliad''. He went to the trouble of describing the battle between Aeneas (mortal son of Aphrodite) and Achilles. The Gods saw that Aeneas was about to be killed, and, since he was such a good servant, decided that he didn't deserve to be killed, and took him away from the battle, declaring that he would be the future king of all Trojans yet to come. Homer never mentions him again, and even the other authors of the [[Literature/TheTrojanCycle lost epics]] only said that he either fled Troy after a bad omen or was captured and spared by the Achaeans. Later Greek authors said that he went to Italy. It took ''eight hundred years'' for [[Literature/TheAeneid Virgil]] to turn this into a BrickJoke. An [[StealthPun Epic]] BrickJoke, at that!
122** A man called On, son of Peleth, is named prominently at the start of story of Korach in ''Literature/TheBible''. You'd think he plays a critical role in the story. He's never mentioned again. (The Rabbinic explanation for it is ''absolutely wild''.)
123* Dan Simmons's ''Literature/{{Illium}}/Olympos'' cycle. What happened to that mice colony? What happened to that humongous tentacled brain? Where did Caliban go? Did moravecs manage to get rid of those 768 black holes? Can the remaining firmaries be turned on or not? Why didn't anyone care for more than seven years? Who the hell was Quiet and did (s)he actually do anything? Has the quantum stability problem been solved? If yes, then how? Aaargh, so many questions...
124* ''Literature/TheIlluminatusTrilogy'': Joe Malik's dogs. They were heard barking around the time he disappeared but were never mentioned again...
125** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] in the appendices.
126* ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'':
127** In book four Eragon and Arya wind up captured by a group of evil priests. A young novitiate appears and agrees to help them escape. He fails and winds up unconscious, while the more competent Angela comes to the rescue. Eragon insists that they take their would-be rescuer's comatose body with them as they escape the cathedral, however after this the boy is promptly dropped off in an alley and never mentioned again.
128** The blind Varden soldier who mysteriously turns out to be able to see magic energy disappears after being put in under vigil by Du Vrangr Gata and is never mentioned again, not even in the saga's GrandFinale.
129* In ''Literature/{{Julian}}'', a secret agent happens to see an imperial robe in a dyeshop. The [[TheCaligula increasingly insane]] Gallus has an innocent man executed for it, but it's never explained who the actual buyer was or why they wanted it.
130* ''Literature/LatawnyaTheNaughtyHorseLearnsToSayNoToDrugs'':
131** The beginning establishes that Latawnya has seven sisters and one brother named Gregory, however, the only siblings who we see in the book are two of the sisters, Daisy and Latoya.
132** Latawnya's EstablishingCharacterMoment shows her demonstrating her copycat tendencies by imitating a noise she heard, yet it's never revealed what made the noise.
133* One of the many things wrong with ''Literature/TheLegendOfRahAndTheMuggles'' by Nancy Stouffer is the sheer number of mouse plots in the story. The mother of the twin protagonists, having been recently widowed at the start of the story, enters a very heavy flirtation with the palace butler before shipping her kids off to save them from impending doom; what becomes of the mom and the butler, you we never know. Later, the twins are deeply involved in the search for a specific treasure chest; when it's found, the bad twin insists on claiming it, to which the good twin consents. Not only is it never mentioned again, but the reader never even finds out what was ''in'' the chest that was so important.
134* Speaking of treasure chests, Charles Tazwell's ''The Littlest Angel'' mentions that among the angel's gifts to the Christ Child is an old collar that had belonged to [[CanineCompanion his mongrel dog]] "who had died as he had lived, in absolute love and infinite devotion." Where is this faithful creature now? The 2001 edition with lavish illustrations by Paul Micich, showing all kinds of animals in paradise, serves to reinforce this. The 2011 animated film makes heaven explicitly a SpeciesSpecificAfterlife and he's told he can't ''have'' a dog there.
135* In ''Literature/LucifersHammer'', Doctor Charlie Sharps leads a group of highly intelligent (not to mention prepared and supplied) scientists out from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, headed toward the San Joaquin Valley and shelter. Not only are they never seen or heard from again, they are only mentioned ''once'' in passing by another character, and then forgotten.
136* It happens a number of times in ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' tie-in novels. Due to the novel line being written by many different authors, characters can vanish between books, but sometimes it even happens within a single novel:
137** In ''Literature/TheBrothersWar'', Rusko completely vanishes after the Yotians' surprise attack on the Fallaji, getting only a single mention afterward revealing that he survived but "would not be returning again to Kroog anytime soon". Tawnos also qualifies for this, as unlike the war's other survivors his post-war activities are unknown and it is never said how or when (or if) he died.
138** High-ranking Phyrexian Croag is plotting Urza's death at the end of ''[[Literature/BloodlinesMagicTheGathering Bloodlines]]''. He is never seen or mentioned again afterwards.
139** After the power of the Primevals is broken in the ''Literature/InvasionCycle'', Treva and Dromar are never seen again. As they are last seen being pursued by an army of their former followers, they are commonly assumed to have perished during the invasion, but this has never been confirmed.
140** Squee gained immortality during the events of the ''Literature/InvasionCycle''. He survived the invasion but has not been seen since.
141** The final fate of Mishra is an infamous case of this. Originally thought to have been KilledOffForReal at the end of ''Literature/TheBrothersWar'', he later made a surprise re-appearance in the ''Literature/InvasionCycle'' novel ''Planeshift'', seemingly still alive in Phyrexia after thousands of years and being tortured eternally by Yawgmoth for failing him. He begs Urza to save him, but as Urza is BrainwashedAndCrazy he walks away from his brother. TheReveal that Yawgmoth has powerful MasterOfIllusion abilities makes it unclear if Urza actually met Mishra, or if it was all just a Yawgmoth illusion. Further, it is also possible that the Mishra Urza killed in the Brother's War wasn't actually the real Mishra either, in which case his fate is completely up in the air.
142* In ''Literature/MalpracticeInMaggody'', every member of the rehab clinic's staff eventually deserts the place or is called away except for Dr. Stonebridge, who's passed out drunk in his apartment, and the guard dog that's last overheard barking in its kennel. It's implied that Stonebridge will end up doing cut-rate face lifts in Mexico, but nothing's said about the dog's fate.
143* Many, many things are wrong with the ''Literature/MaradoniaSaga'' books, but this one is particularly obvious. Several apparently important characters--including Maya and Joey's parents and brother, the grasshopper Hoppy, and their dog--show up at the beginning and then are forgotten about for the rest of the novel. Some "forgotten" characters do make brief cameos in the ending, but it's never stated what they were doing in the meantime. Was Hoppy just hanging out in Joey's pocket the whole time or what?
144* ''Literature/{{MARZENA}}'': The unnamed TAR Kernel, he just disappears after his RousingSpeech and is never heard of again with no concrete explanation as to where he went or what happened to him.
145* ''Literature/MaximumRide'':
146** In ''The Angel Experiment'', the main characters (who are winged humans, part bird, part human, created by some {{Mad Scientist}}s) have gone years without seeing another genetic experiment like them. When they get to a secret facility in New York, they find several experiments caged up. Naturally, they set them free. You'd think they'd want to talk to them or interact with them, maybe help them find a safe place, but it never goes anywhere. Over 5 books later, said experiments don't even get a passing mention, they're never thought of again, so it's a plot thread that went nowhere and contributed nothing to the story.
147** ''School’s Out -- Forever'', the Flock runs into two kids in the woods in Florida. The kids claim that they were both kidnapped by scientists, both were clearly starved, and Angel claims to get strange images of water from the minds and knows that neither are ordinary children (though she doesn't think they're mutants). The kids later confess that they were held captive by Itex and were sent to find the Flock and told that if they didn't succeed, something in the woods would eat them. These kids are never mentioned again.
148** ''Saving The World and Other Extreme Sports'':
149*** The book has an entire facility full of successful experiments, including clones of Max (introduced in the book prior and herself having fallen into this trope until that point), Nudge, and Angel. It's never revealed what happened to the experiments after the facility is captured, and again the group never thinks anything of it.
150*** Fang starts a worldwide revolution via the children that read his blog. You'd think that something like that would get a mention in the next book, but it might as well have not happened for all the aftermath there was.
151* The ''[[Literature/TheMazeRunner Maze Runner]]'' series has the following examples:
152** Shortly after arriving in the Glade, Thomas befriends a dog named Bark which "has always been there". However, Bark plays no further role in the story and is never even mentioned again.
153** Also, what happened to the kids (besides Newt) who made it through the Scorch Trials but were not immune to the Flare? Their fate after the escape from WICKED's headquarters near the beginning of ''The Death Cure'' is never revealed. Presumably, since no cure was ever found, they ended up as Cranks - unless they died from something else.
154** And then there's Beth, Billy, Clint, Hank, Jeff, Leo and Miyoko. Of the seven of them, only Clint is shown to still be alive when Thomas and co enter the Maze to rescue the Immunes who have been sold to WICKED. But, when it comes to the final showdown with WICKED, he's nowhere in sight. Has he already gone through the Flat Trans? Or was he among those killed trying to escape from the collapsing Maze? Either way, at least two of the boys mentioned must have died somewhere down the line since there can't have been more than seven members of Group A left at the end and Thomas, Minho, Frypan and Gally already account for four of them. In addition, there is no indication of whether or not the surviving members of Group B include Beth and/or Miyoko.
155* In Creator/AstridLindgren's book ''Literature/MioMySon'', the evil of Sir Kato is so pernicious, such a blight on body, mind and spirit, that the mere mention of his name causes the sky to darken and men and animals to weep. The little prince sees a number of butterflies lose their wings. [[spoiler: When Kato is defeated, the land, animals and people are all healed and one of Kato's servants who died to help the children even comes back to life. You can ''assume'' that the butterflies were healed too, but the author doesn't mention it.]]
156* In ''Literature/LesMiserables'' and its adaptations, whatever happened to Valjean's sister and her kids that he stole bread for in the first place? Granted, 20 years have passed and he's now on the run, but one could imagine he'd find some way to check up on them if he could. They are given some mention later on -- Valjean gets some news that reveals that all but the youngest kid are gone, the sister works constantly to support them, the little boy trudges to school every day and waits for it to open, and in winter a kind lady who lives near the school lets him come in and sit next to the stove to warm up until it opens. Beyond that, they don't come up, and Hugo says he will not mention them and doesn't know what happened to the rest of the children. Some productions avoid this by having Valjean steal the bread for himself instead.
157* ''Literature/TheMister'' has a really horrific example. We never find out what happened to the other women Alessia was trafficked with. She at one point hopes they were able to escape too, but we never know for sure, mostly because the story is more concerned with Alessia and Maxim's developing romance.
158* ''Literature/MountainOfMirrors'' has a dragon shown early on. In the winning path, it's only mentioned for a food call, and isn't present in the climatic battle.
159* In ''Literature/TheMovingFinger'', nothing is said about what happens to Megan's two young half-brothers after her mother is murdered and [[spoiler: her stepfather is arrested for the crime]]. This is especially disturbing because she is almost definitely their closest remaining relative.
160** She's also not quite 21 yet (mentioned in-story), and is not yet married. By the standards of that time, she might not have been deemed a suitable guardian, and custody might have gone to an aunt or uncle of the boys.
161* In ''Literature/{{Musashi}}'', a novel based on the life of UsefulNotes/MiyamotoMusashi, the title character learns that his sister has been arrested as a ploy to lure him out of hiding. He's about to play right into the officers' hands when he's stopped by the kindly priest Takuan, who then imprisons Musashi himself for three years so he can study the classics and become a more thoughtful person. The story promptly forgets all about his sister, except for a brief mention at the end that she's moved to another region and is happily married, with no mention of how she got out of jail.
162* In ''Literature/TheNightmareFactory'', Dan is scarred by a creature called a Septaurus and slowly begins to transform into one (basically a family-friendly version of FaceFullOfAlienWingWong ). Oran gives him a potion that suppresses this transformation, even though it tastes terrible. In the sequel, ''Rise of the Shadowmares'', there is no mention of this transformation whatsoever. There isn't even any mention of the potion, despite the fact that some of the time intervals Dan has to spend between drinking it would [[MagicAIsMagicA canonically be long enough for him to start transforming again.]]
163* In Peter F. Hamilton's ''Literature/TheNightsDawnTrilogy'', a fairly major character in Book 1, Kelven Solanki, vanishes without a trace at the end of the book after being promoted and assigned as a liaison and advisor to Admiral Meredith Saldana on his flagship. Despite Saldana and his taskforce playing major roles in Books 2 and 3, Solanki is nowhere to be seen. The author later admitted in a Q&A on his website that he had simply completely forgotten about him, but his overall importance to the story had been fulfilled. Given that the ending was so comprehensive that even the fate of a minor car thief who appeared for one paragraph is wrapped up, Solanki's abrupt disappearance seems a bit unfair to the character.
164* In Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/OrdealInOtherwhere'':
165** Charis is sold into [[MadeASlave an indefinate term labor contract]] because of the fanatics seizing control of the colony on Demeter. By the end of the book, she's in contact with authorities, but no mention that they are even sending news.
166** Jagan's post is attacked by Jacks, but not all the people there are killed -- the Company men specifically mention retrieving Sheeha. No mention of them is made in the end.
167** Shann is able to tell that something is wrong at the post because a man working there is not in his garden. You do not learn whether he was prisoner, killed, or escaped.
168* The final volume of ''Literature/TheNeapolitanNovels'', ''The Story of the Lost Child'' introduces [[spoiler: Doriana]], a young woman whom [[spoiler: Pietro]] hooks up with after he and [[spoiler: Elena]] split up. They live together for many years, without any reports of any sort of conflict between them, until one day we are suddenly informed their relationship is over, with him claiming that she turned out to be "an untrustworthy person, completely without ethics". We never find out what she did to deserve such strong condemnation.
169* Marcie, a girl in the first ''Literature/OrigamiYoda'' book, is mentioned once and never again in the entire series. Given that the series takes place in a middle school and Marcie was in 8th grade, it's likely she moved on to high school and forgot about the whole incident.
170* The ''Literature/PaladinOfShadows'' book ''A Deeper Blue'' has three:
171** Jay shows up briefly early on and then disappears.
172** [[spoiler: Kurt Schwenke]] somehow gets away again.
173** Colonel Olds is gradually built up as having a disdain for Mike that he tries to act on, but nothing seems to come of it.
174* In ''Literature/PaperTowns'', nothing is said of Margo's third friend Karin, the one who had informed Margo that Jase was cheating on her with Becca, after Margo and Q leave Flowers at her house as an apology by Margo for calling her a liar.
175* Averted in ''Literature/{{Perfume}}: The Story of a Murderer'', which always pauses the narrative to explain what happens to characters that drop out of the plot. Because the main character is a DoomMagnet, everyone he associates with dies soon after they part company.
176* ''Literature/PeterPan'': In Wendy's personal imaginary world, she owns a wolf pup abandoned by its parents. Naturally, when she gets to Neverland the wolf appears and becomes her constant companion--or so the narration claims, since it never gets mentioned again. (There was at least one set of illustrations (Trina Schart Hyman's) which didn't neglect the wolf and showed it hanging around at Wendy's feet in the "Home Under the Ground" scene.)
177* In ''Literature/ThePhantomTollbooth'', Faintly Macabre, King Azaz's aunt, is imprisoned for having once abused her position as [[ItMakesSenseInContext "Offical Which"]]. She tells Milo the history of the kingdom, noting that she would only be freed once the Princesses Rhyme and Reason were restored from exile. Yet, we never see Faintly Macabre again at the end celebrating the princess' return (nor the Whether Man either, for that matter). Hopefully, she was let out soon thereafter.
178* In ''Literature/PleaseDontTellMyParentsImASupervillain'', the origins of the jade statue are never explained, particularly not why it's guarded by an EldritchAbomination. Penny maintains that it's super dangerous but this is never elaborated on and she later uses pennies to transfer its curse to other people (hence, Bad Penny) without any indication of the aforementioned danger.
179* In one page of ''Literature/{{Ratburger}}'', Zoe is described as being "hungry, thirsty and desperately needing a wee". The thirst got resolved by buying a bottle of water from Raj, but the hunger and the PottyEmergency were never mentioned again.
180* The fourth book in Pierce Brown's ''Literature/RedRising'' series introduces a mysterious, tongueless obsidian only named (appropriately) Tongueless. His backstory and reasons for having his tongue cut out are not revealed, but are hinted to be important. Ultimately it all amounted to nothing when he was abruptly removed from the story via [[spoiler: being cut into pieces by Ajax]]. Prior to this fan speculation as to his true identity was widespread, with theories emerging that he was secretly Ragnar's father, that he was the Jackal carved into an obsidian, or that he was [[spoiler: somehow related to Lilath, leader of the Syndicate]]. Brown later confirmed in a Q&A that the latter theory was correct, and that he'd decided to [[spoiler: drop it and kill him off to showcase Ajax's power]].
181* Early in Creator/TomClancy's ''Literature/RedStormRising'', Iceland is conquered by the Soviet Union to allow their submarines and bombers a clean shot at convoys ferrying war material and American reinforcements to Europe, where the ground war is raging. In the course of this operation, the ship carrying the Soviet invasion force is Harpooned and strafed by American fighters, seriously wounding the captain. Much buildup is done about whether or not the captain will survive. As soon as the ship is run ashore (most of the line handlers had been killed, so it couldn't dock) the General of the invading army takes him below to the surgeon, thinking "Maybe there's still enough time." The captain is never mentioned again, leaving the reader to wonder as to his fate.
182* One of the very most infamous examples there is comes from ''Literature/{{Remnants}}''. D-Caf - a major character - ''completely disappears'' after he [[spoiler: accidentally kills Animull]], never to be mentioned again.
183* Towards the middle of ''Reset -- Literature/NeverAgain'', the two villains, who are Asian, try to hire a detective to find the whereabouts of the heroes. It turns out, however, that the detective is a member of the Oriental Exclusion League, and says that she is going to tell their leader, one Tveitmoe, about what had happened. Neither Tveitmoe nor the detective are ever mentioned again, and the villains do not appear to be hampered by any bigots after that.
184* In Lauren Myracle's ''Literature/RhymesWithWitches'', the main character's best friend's older sister is described in detail in the first few chapter. However, she is rarely mentioned after that.
185* ''Literature/RomanceOfTheThreeKingdoms'' raises numerous mouse questions, as might be expected of a semi-historical narrative with a massive cast. To quote the book's 17th-century editor, "A beloved commander, a beloved son, lost for the sake of a woman... but what happened to lady Zou?"
186* Creator/PamelaDean's ''Literature/TheSecretCountry'' has a "What happened to the relatives" in it: The older cousins, with whom the game was usually played, had emigrated to Australia: the younger cousins were left in Illinois with other relatives while ''their'' parents were spending the summer in Australia without them, and thereby hangs the tale. At the end, [[spoiler: after the Illinois children show up in Australia via a magic mirror, their parents decide to accompany the children back to the Hidden Land. It's a one-way trip; they know they'll never come back. The parents cook up plausible explanations for their "disappearance", pretending they're going to emigrate to Australia also and then "just lose touch". In the middle of all the preparations, no one suggests that the Illinois relatives might like to know how the kids disappeared from what was supposed to be an afternoon trip to the library, and how they got to Australia.]]
187* Happens quite a bit ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents''. The Quagmires, Friday, and the rest of the island inhabitants in The End, Mr. Poe, and many, many more. Curse you, Lemony Snicket, you psycho author you. Knowing the author, this was probably [[LemonyNarrator completely]] [[NoEnding intentional]].
188* In ''Literature/{{Seveneves}}'', midway through the book JBF sends an expedition to Mars. They are never heard from or mentioned again, except a passing reference that it's assumed they all died.
189* In the first ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' story, ''A Study in Scarlet'', Watson mentions that he "keeps a bull pup" before moving in with Holmes. Once he moves in, the bull pup is never mentioned again. Maybe it died between two adventures? Though an explanation that's seen print is that "to keep a bull pup" is slang for "to have a short temper"--or that [[http://www.sherlockpeoria.net/StanleyHopkins2006/Hopkins100806.html it's a revolver]].
190** In one story from the non-canon 2017 omnibus ''The Further Associates of Sherlock Holmes'', Watson and the "associate" guest-starring in that story (reporter Langdale Pike) confront and kill the villain and one of his accomplices before beating a retreat, but it's never mentioned if any of the numerous heavily tortured and absued kidnapping victims on the estate were found and released afterwards, nor what happened to the BigBad's second accomplice after they overpower him (although he might have fallen victim to a DoWithHimAsYouWill fate).
191* ''Literature/TheShortSecondLifeOfBreeTanner'':
192** Freaky Fred runs away before the newborn army is sent to fight the Cullens. He is never mentioned again in the series, even though the novella ends with Bree mentally begging Edward to be kind to Fred if they ever meet.
193** This happens pretty bad in regards to that novella. For a pretty good stretch of time, there have been numerous abductions, disappearances, violent murders, suspicious fires and explosions, several residents being killed for their houses, a mall getting broken into and robbed, and an ''entire ferry of people getting murdered and sunk''. One would think that this would get national attention under suspicion of a terrorist attack, but in ''Breaking Dawn'', everyone has apparently forgotten about the insane amount of death and destruction that happened in Seattle. Of course, given that the story is told from the point of view of [[ItsAllAboutMe Bella]], that might explain the absence of such details...
194* ''Franchise/TolkiensLegendarium'':
195** In some of Creator/JRRTolkien's older works such as ''Literature/TheSilmarillion'', there are several minor characters that are simply never mentioned again with no resolution, although this can be forgiven since he never completed those works in his lifetime.
196** ''Literature/BerenAndLuthien'': After getting beaten by Lúthien and Huan, Morgoth's lieutenant Sauron flees and is not seen heard of again for the remainder of the First Age.
197* A scene near the beginning of ''Literature/SmallGame'' shows Mara at her job, checking in on people camping in the wilderness. One of them has simply disappeared. She calls her boss but he glosses over it.
198* ''Literature/TheSonOfTheIronworker'': At the beginning of the novel, Martin's family is forced to flee to the north of the country, leaving him behind, and they are not seen again. Although Martín's plan was to emigrate to the Indies and bring his parents and siblings over the ocean, it is unknown whether he carried it out after becoming established.
199* Played irritatingly straight in Jodi Picoult's novel ''Literature/ASparkOfLight'', where any character not named Wren, Hugh or Bex is ignored in the epilogue - including the person who arguably kicked off the entire plot (albeit unwittingly), [[spoiler: Beth - aka, Lil, the shooter's daughter.]]
200* This was extremely common in ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'' due to the [[DependingOnTheAuthor varying focuses on different characters]]. It was occasionally resolved later on, but just as often wasn't.
201** This was recently resolved with [[Literature/XWingSeries Wraith Squadron]] due to the book ''Mercy Kill'', but earlier the fate of most of the members of the squadron and what they had been doing for the past couple of decades was left up in the air.
202** The ''Literature/BlackFleetCrisis'' trilogy ended with [[spoiler:formerly enslaved Imperials stealing their fleet back from the Yevetha and heading for the Empire's backup capital, [[ComicBook/DarkEmpire Byss]]]]. They then completely disappeared from the canon, a state of affairs only rectified in ''The New Essential Chronology'' which stated that [[spoiler:the Black Fleet ended up at Byss]] to discover [[spoiler:it had been obliterated by the Galaxy Gun. The fleet fractured, with some ships defecting to the New Republic, some heading for the Imperial Remnant, and SSD ''Intimidator'' disappearing. The New Republic ran across its wreck a few years later.]]
203** ''Literature/MaulLockdown:'' Almost literally. Coyle, a mouse-like Chadra-Fan, is with Radique when he reveals himself to Maul, then vanishes from the story. However, he likely dies offscreen in the climax.
204** Somewhere between this trope and AbortedArc, several books of ''Literature/GalaxyOfFear'' end with a stinger where the horror of the book is still around, or ThereIsAnother, or something of the sort. Exactly one of these is followed up on.
205*** ''EatenAlive'': [[spoiler: D'Vouran is in another part of space being stumbled upon by spacers.]]
206*** ''City of the Dead'': Zak [[spoiler: was injected with the reanimation serum and may either be an intelligent zombie now, or will become one as soon as he's killed.]]
207*** ''The Planet Plague'': [[spoiler: A cure for early stages of TheVirus has been distributed. The lost natives of this planet recorded that cure, so they were good at coping with diseases - but it was some worse disease that wiped ''them'' out. And as he flees, the villain has some new lethal vial with him.]]
208*** ''Ghost of the Jedi'': the villain is NotQuiteDead. Even one of the heroes suspects it, despite Tash saying NoOneCouldHaveSurvivedThat.
209*** ''Army of Terror'': [[spoiler: [[UltimateLifeForm Eppon]] collapsed when its [[YourHeadASplode head exploded]], but [[FingerTwitchingRevival a finger twitches hours later]]]], though the narration does say perhaps it's the wind.
210*** ''TheSwarm'': two ExplosiveBreeder bugs are on the heroes' ship, though ''that'' is maybe more a nuisance since as fast as they breed, they can only produce ten eggs a day and will be noticed before it gets dangerous.
211*** ''Spore'': [[spoiler: Spore's tiny central pod is floating free through the AsteroidThicket, ready to endure for centuries until it's picked up again, as [[VideoGame/DarkForcesSaga Jerec's forces]] look for it.]]
212*** ''The Doomsday Ship'': [[spoiler: SIM [[ContagiousAI downloaded itself into the memory banks of a nearby space station]] and plans to try again.]]
213*** ''Clones'': [[spoiler: Darth Vader's forces are gathering up the clones, and he thinks the ones of the ShapeShifter and those of the Arrandas - one of whom is Force-sensitive - could be studied before they were [[ExpendableClone destroyed]], and the Emperor would be interested in this cloning technology.]]
214* Literature/TomRobbins's ''Literature/StillLifeWithWoodpecker'' hangs a lampshade on this, when Leigh-Cheri's reaction to the story of the Princess and the Toad is "Whatever happened to the Golden Ball?" (that the princess was chasing when she first found the Toad.)
215* ''Literature/{{Stinger}}'': Rick, two of his gang members, and one of the local priests go to the scrapyard not long after the spaceship hits it to look for the missing father of one of the gang members. They find him and two others alive, pinned under debris, but Stinger attacks before they can do anything and it's never confirmed whether or not anyone rescues the three workers
216* ''Literature/AStoryWithDetails'' by Grigoriy Oster is built around multiple aversions. In the first chapter an amusement park manager starts to tell a short fairy tale to the carousel horses. The second chapter is a story about a misbehaving boy at a zoo. Then horses start asking questions about unimportant characters, like the policeman the boy threatened or the rhinos who looked at the boy disapprovingly. The following 42 chapters are the manager's answers that create more questions and more answers. When he finally finishes and leaves in the morning, one horse recalls they forgot to ask about a she-elephant with a calf, and should ask next night.
217* ''Literature/SwordOfTruth'':
218** Richard's two hulking bodyguards Ulic and Egan disappear from the narrative entirely after ''Temple of the Winds'', and no reference is made to where they are, or what they're doing. Their sudden and conspicuous return to the plot in ''Confessor'' seems to suggest Goodkind actually forgot about them entirely.
219** There's also Jebra, the seer who first appears in ''Stone Of Tears''. In the final trilogy, she's brought to the heroes by Shota to tell them about her experiences being caught in city conquered by the Imperial Order[[note]]surprisingly, she manages to avoid [[RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil the usual fate of women]] in such situations[[/note]]. Shota leaves her there, but in the next book she's mentioned as having wandered off, and there's almost no effort made to find her, and she's never referenced again.
220** This happens with a lot of minor characters/villains/etc. throughout the series. Goodkind tends to bring in stuff strictly to serve as a plot device or MacGuffin, and then forget about it after it's served its purpose, or dismiss it with only a cursory mention.
221* ''Literature/TeaShopMysteries'':
222** After a brief mention in ''Gunpowder Green'', Brittany Shepard is never seen or referenced again. She was stated to be a close friend of the main character, so the fact that she basically disappears from the series seems kinda odd.
223** Charlie Lynch is set up in ''Dragonwell Dead'' as a potential addition to the Indigo Tea Shop's staff. Come the next book, nobody mentions her at all.
224* ''Literature/ThirdTimeLuckyAndOtherStoriesOfTheMostPowerfulWizardInTheWorld'': Magdelene's son is [[FountainOfYouth de-aged into an infant]] when she beats him at the end of the "Third Time Lucky". It's unsaid what is done with him after that, but he isn't in her care later with the next stories.
225* Just before the timeskip in the ''{{Literature/Thoroughbred}}'' series by Joanna Campbell, Ashley reveals she's pregnant with her second child and "due in January" (incidentally, the scene plays out almost exactly the same as did the one in which she revealed her first pregnancy). The next book (and the timeskip) comes around, the series now follows Ashley's now teenaged daughter, and...the daughter is an only child. No mention is made of Ashley's second pregnancy.
226* In ''Literature/{{Tolivers Secret}}'', redcoats Higgins and Dow disappear from the narrative after Ellen runs into them on their march in Perth Amboy, [[spoiler:and there's no mention of what happened to them in the Battle of Trenton in the epilogue.]] Somewhat {{lampshade|Hanging}}d by Ellen, who notes that she'll never see Higgins again after her mission because he's on the enemy side.
227* ''Literature/TortallUniverse'': It was because of this trope that author Creator/TamoraPierce eventually wrote a short story, [[Literature/TortallAndOtherLands "Elder Brother"]], about what happened to the tree that became man as a result of the mage Numair turning his EvilCounterpart into a tree in the second book of ''Literature/TheImmortals''.
228* ''Literature/TrappedOnDraconica'': After serving [[UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom his role in the plot]], Yusef disapears and is never heard from again.
229* ''Literature/VampireAcademy'':
230** The school is mentioned to have Psi-Hounds. They are never brought up again after the first book.
231** Rose's Strigoi hunters in Novosibirsk never appear again after she is abducted by [[spoiler:Strigoi-Dimitri]].
232* In the ''Vitae Sanctorum Britanniae'', or "Lives of the Saints of Britain", which [[OlderThanPrint predates the 9th century]], warfare breaks out when a lovely maiden is kidnapped by King Maelgwn's soldiers. St. Cadog approaches the king and convinces him to repent and recall his army - [[DisposableWoman but never asks for the maiden back]], despite her father being an official in Cadog's church. She is never mentioned again.
233* ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga: Literature/TheVorGame'':
234** Early on in the novel, Miles is assigned to Kyril Island as the new Weather Officer. The officer he is replacing has been there so long that he has developed a "nose" for predicting the weather, especially the deadly wah-wahs, which is far more accurate than the available equipment. Miles is briefly terrified that everyone else will notice a sudden drop in the accuracy of reporting when he takes over, but soon has a major confrontation with the commanding officer and is transferred off the island. Presumably the poor patsy who replaces him will be no better at predicting the weather than Miles, but the island is mentioned just once more in a later novel, a decade later in book time, and it's implied that nothing has changed there.
235** Test readers of the book were so distracted by the potential plot relevance of some money being hidden as a relatively minor plot point that the finished novel uses illicit cookies for the same plot purpose to avert this trope.
236* Several ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'' ExpandedUniverse novels mention princess Calia Menethil, the older sister of BigBad prince (and now Lich King) Arthas Menethil. Calia's fate has never been revealed; in each book, she simply drops out of sight and is never mentioned again. She is the subject of several EpilepticTrees in fan circles. That is, until she began appearing in World of Warcraft in the sixth expansion, Legion. Since then, she has had important developments in both the ongoing MMORPG and the novels.
237* ''Literature/WarriorCats'' has a massive cast (over 1000 by the fourth arc) but most are filler extras who sometimes don't even appear in the text. Many of these characters [[OneSteveLimit share names with other characters]] as well. As a result, genders get mixed up, designs change, ages change, and some cats just ''disappear'' without any mention. One early example would be with Mistlekit. Speckletail's deaf son Snowkit was taken by a hawk so that Speckletail could get sent into the Elder's den. But, whatever happened to her daughter Mistlekit? No one ever mentioned her having died.
238* At one point in ''Literature/WatershipDown'', rabbits tell the story of "The Black Rabbit of Inlé". At the end of story, god Frith waits for the hero and his trusty companion with the bag of gifts. The hero gets replacement ears, nose and tail. The reader never finds out what hero's trusty companion got.
239* In ''Literature/TheWildOnesMoonlightBrigade'', Basil the snake doesn't show up or is even mentioned by any of the Flealess. Which is strange, considering almost every other side character from the first novel (including Mr. Peebles, whose role was ''far'' less important compared to Basil) shows up again at least once.
240* ''Literature/WizBiz'':
241** In ''Wizard's Bane'', an Earth programmer TrappedInAnotherWorld creates a compiler to write spells like computer programs. This allows any human to cast spells to protect themselves from magic creatures, and even should allow many to write their own spells. But locals lack the proper mindset for programming, and by the start of ''Wizardry Compiled'' there's only one case of a local genius improving Sparrow's program. Besides, that patch creates half of the novel's problems. The patch creator is never mentioned again. Somebody that good would eventually join or challenge Sparrow. Maybe he or she was in one of the villages that disappeared without a trace when immortals retaliated.
242** Another example appears in ''Wizardry Cursed''. Wizards steal a powerful meteorological computer (from KGB agents smuggling it to USSR) and leave a pile of gold in exchange. The readers are left to wonder about smugglers' fate, but desertion seems a likely option. Years later they appear in ''Wizardry Quested'' as important supporting characters. They are shady businessmen who "put together aviation-related 'deals' of much import but vague content".
243* ''Literature/WolvesOfMercyFallsSeries'':
244** In ''Shiver'', three teenagers [[spoiler:are infected with lycanthropy by Beck]]. One turns out to be [[EarlyBirdCameo Cole]], the second his friend Victor, but the third never shows up again.
245** In ''Forever'', chapter fifty-eight: Did [[spoiler:Isabel ask Cole in?]]
246* In Robert Bloch's ''Literature/TheYougoslaves'' (sic), a gang of murderous, {{brainwashed|AndCrazy}} boys is shown [[{{Squick}} raping a little girl]]. The boys are eventually killed. No mention is made of what happens to the girl.
247* ''Literature/ZaraHossainIsHere'': We never learn if Alan Benson was convicted or not for shooting Zara's father, though given it seems there was significant evidence that looks probable.

Top