Omenainen
Finnishing
- Joined
- May 5, 2020
- Posts
- 1,632
EarlyMorningLight
Juxtapositions
Link
This story is a wonderful little snippet of life. It is short and sweet, well thought out and lovely. It is a description of casual meeting, one evening in life, and as such, it is complete and perfect. Your descriptive writing is strong and compelling. You can create tension, and your sex is hot. Technically you have all you need.
Now, because "I loved this" isn't very interesting feedback, especially when "what I love" certainly doesn't translate to "you will have great mass appeal", I want to say a few words that go a little outside of this story's scope. In your bio you mention that you are working on longer pieces, and this will hopefully come in handy with that. I'm gonna talk about two things from Juxtapositions, and hopefully you’ll be able to take those things and expand on them.
***
The first is scenes. Juxtapositions doesn’t really have scenes. There are lots of scene breaks, but they don’t always seem to be breaking anything up, and sometimes there are short time skips where there isn’t a scene break. Mostly, I just started to ignore them and form my own mental image of how time is flowing.
While you, as the author, can’t control everything I, as the reader, understand about your story, this is one of those things that should be avoided. You don’t want your readers ignoring the signs you’re giving them. You want to be purposeful with them, and let the reader know that they are safe in your hands. They can kick back, slip a hand in their panties, and just enjoy whatever you’re about to unfold. That’s the goal.
I think, fundamentally, the bigger issue is that you didn’t really conceptualize what any of these scenes were. A scene (every scene) should have a beginning, a middle, and an end. They should all have a point. They should all be going someplace as part of the larger story you’re trying to tell. I think it’s telling that we got through several scenes before I knew anything about the narrator, whereas when one stops down to think about “How do I write my first scene?”, introducing the narrator and the setting are obvious boxes that need to be checked. Specifically with erotic stories readers expect to be told whose head they're in very early on, especially when writing in first person. This being published on Gay Male probably helped with that, because at least the readers could guess the gender and orientation of the POV charcater.
I’ve seen this kind of thing happen a lot with stories that are based on real events. The authors fall into this trap of trying to retell certain steps with accuracy, like you’re trying to honor the original event, and include things that felt very important at the time but in hindsight (or if scrutinized from the viewpoint of writing fiction) maybe didn’t really matter at all. There are always some chunks of the story that meander in unnecessary details, and ultimately slow down parts of the story where you want to go fast.
Scenes are like microcosms of stories, because they are both an entire short story unto themselves as well as being parts of the larger picture. Figuring out how to make each scene do what it’s supposed to do, in exactly the right amount of time and get out with exactly the right amount of information reveal, stinging dialog, or partners fucked to a cross-eyed haze, is an artform unto itself.
You can build so much momentum in a story by getting that pacing right, and it starts with figuring out scenes.
***
The second thing I want to talk about is Lisa. Holy crap, how much do I love Lisa?
This story was puttering along, and there was tension, and I was into it, and things were right on target for a good little wank story, and then Lisa pulled back that curtain by accident, and the story took off like a rocket. Suddenly there’s both a break in the tension, but also a massive uptick in ‘holy shit, aren’t these two together?’ There are light hearted moments, there’s levity, and there’s genuine comedy, and you’re pulling all of that off at the same time that things are getting hot as hell between Seth and the narrator.
Lisa is such a wonderful addition. Her personality is so different from Seth and the narrator, and it wasn’t until she showed up that I realized that I’d wanted her there. I would have wanted to be her friend. Hell, I would have wanted to be her, given the situation.
Not every story would benefit from having this Lisa, but every story needs a Lisa. Some balance among the characters, and some places where the dialog can be lively, and colorful, and interesting, and surprising, and holy shit I’m gushing because I liked Lisa so much…
…and I have this sinking suspicion that when you were writing her, you didn’t think very much of her inclusion. The real Lisa was in the room, and you’re doing a (more or less) faithful recreation of her presence. End of story.
Not every story needs a wacky sidekick. Sometimes, the wacky sidekick is the love interest. Sometimes, the main character is the wacky one. In stories where there is one, it is often said that villains define the hero. An amazing villain requires an amazing hero, and I think there’s a similarity herein where Lisa’s presence adds contrast. Contrast makes things so much more lively and interesting.
While I suspect that her inclusion was almost incidental (and what the hell do I know), what I know for sure is that her presence elevates everything around her. I think you have a knack for characters, or characterizations, or giving very varied voices to your characters, and if you can find a way to harness that for yourself to suit the specific needs of your future stories, you’re going to be flat out amazing.
Juxtapositions
Link
This story is a wonderful little snippet of life. It is short and sweet, well thought out and lovely. It is a description of casual meeting, one evening in life, and as such, it is complete and perfect. Your descriptive writing is strong and compelling. You can create tension, and your sex is hot. Technically you have all you need.
Now, because "I loved this" isn't very interesting feedback, especially when "what I love" certainly doesn't translate to "you will have great mass appeal", I want to say a few words that go a little outside of this story's scope. In your bio you mention that you are working on longer pieces, and this will hopefully come in handy with that. I'm gonna talk about two things from Juxtapositions, and hopefully you’ll be able to take those things and expand on them.
***
The first is scenes. Juxtapositions doesn’t really have scenes. There are lots of scene breaks, but they don’t always seem to be breaking anything up, and sometimes there are short time skips where there isn’t a scene break. Mostly, I just started to ignore them and form my own mental image of how time is flowing.
While you, as the author, can’t control everything I, as the reader, understand about your story, this is one of those things that should be avoided. You don’t want your readers ignoring the signs you’re giving them. You want to be purposeful with them, and let the reader know that they are safe in your hands. They can kick back, slip a hand in their panties, and just enjoy whatever you’re about to unfold. That’s the goal.
I think, fundamentally, the bigger issue is that you didn’t really conceptualize what any of these scenes were. A scene (every scene) should have a beginning, a middle, and an end. They should all have a point. They should all be going someplace as part of the larger story you’re trying to tell. I think it’s telling that we got through several scenes before I knew anything about the narrator, whereas when one stops down to think about “How do I write my first scene?”, introducing the narrator and the setting are obvious boxes that need to be checked. Specifically with erotic stories readers expect to be told whose head they're in very early on, especially when writing in first person. This being published on Gay Male probably helped with that, because at least the readers could guess the gender and orientation of the POV charcater.
I’ve seen this kind of thing happen a lot with stories that are based on real events. The authors fall into this trap of trying to retell certain steps with accuracy, like you’re trying to honor the original event, and include things that felt very important at the time but in hindsight (or if scrutinized from the viewpoint of writing fiction) maybe didn’t really matter at all. There are always some chunks of the story that meander in unnecessary details, and ultimately slow down parts of the story where you want to go fast.
Scenes are like microcosms of stories, because they are both an entire short story unto themselves as well as being parts of the larger picture. Figuring out how to make each scene do what it’s supposed to do, in exactly the right amount of time and get out with exactly the right amount of information reveal, stinging dialog, or partners fucked to a cross-eyed haze, is an artform unto itself.
You can build so much momentum in a story by getting that pacing right, and it starts with figuring out scenes.
***
The second thing I want to talk about is Lisa. Holy crap, how much do I love Lisa?
This story was puttering along, and there was tension, and I was into it, and things were right on target for a good little wank story, and then Lisa pulled back that curtain by accident, and the story took off like a rocket. Suddenly there’s both a break in the tension, but also a massive uptick in ‘holy shit, aren’t these two together?’ There are light hearted moments, there’s levity, and there’s genuine comedy, and you’re pulling all of that off at the same time that things are getting hot as hell between Seth and the narrator.
Lisa is such a wonderful addition. Her personality is so different from Seth and the narrator, and it wasn’t until she showed up that I realized that I’d wanted her there. I would have wanted to be her friend. Hell, I would have wanted to be her, given the situation.
Not every story would benefit from having this Lisa, but every story needs a Lisa. Some balance among the characters, and some places where the dialog can be lively, and colorful, and interesting, and surprising, and holy shit I’m gushing because I liked Lisa so much…
…and I have this sinking suspicion that when you were writing her, you didn’t think very much of her inclusion. The real Lisa was in the room, and you’re doing a (more or less) faithful recreation of her presence. End of story.
Not every story needs a wacky sidekick. Sometimes, the wacky sidekick is the love interest. Sometimes, the main character is the wacky one. In stories where there is one, it is often said that villains define the hero. An amazing villain requires an amazing hero, and I think there’s a similarity herein where Lisa’s presence adds contrast. Contrast makes things so much more lively and interesting.
While I suspect that her inclusion was almost incidental (and what the hell do I know), what I know for sure is that her presence elevates everything around her. I think you have a knack for characters, or characterizations, or giving very varied voices to your characters, and if you can find a way to harness that for yourself to suit the specific needs of your future stories, you’re going to be flat out amazing.