+1 to being extremely careful. Either in parallel or in series, there are pitfalls that can bite you very fast. In series, the weakest cell always runs out of power first, its cell voltage drops through zero volts, then it actually winds up being REVERSE CHARGED by the current being pushed through it by the stronger cells; there's no quicker way to kill a battery and even make it catch on fire. In parallel, if one of the batteries fails short (whisker formation between anode and cathode is a pretty common way for a battery to fail), it can wind up drawing large currents from all the other batteries it's paralleled with, which again can cause a lot of heat and eventual pain for the owner.
Proper battery handling with a well-designed BMS is really one of the secret sauces the manufacturers of EVs have created. Unless you think you can do as good a job as the guys at Zero, Brammo or Tesla, let them handle that end...or at least see if you can find a commercial BMS that suits your usage. Remember that an 11kWh battery pack has as much energy in it as 1/3 gallon of gasoline, and it is possible to get them to release it all at once.