sr71plt
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2006
- Posts
- 51,872
Just a few comments, because I don't want to assess a story until theres' a complete story; this is just chapter one. Also it looks like it's getting lots of comments already, some of it becoming contradictory. (So, why comment at all? Because I was asked directly to comment).
It would open fine for me if all the bad day stuff was integrated better into what followed and was given meaning to have been used for an opening (echoing what someone else posted, I think). I much prefer the "working into it" opening you provided than the one Moore suggested, though. Trying for an "everything" opening is seen as much too busy and premature overload in literature being written in this century. The prevalent technique now is to start in action and a bit of confusion and bring the reader along with you in a buildup of the background when/as/if necessary.
Blake's party comments were much too jarring for me. If there was foreshadowing of that attitude, I missed it, so when it came it was like whiplash for me. I'd want to think "oh, yeah, I was given a hint he's a bit off kilter earlier." Maybe on the basis of the entire story I'd understand better how he worked this way.
There is some wordiness and repetition in it, yes. An example is the concrete driveway. When you first said the driveway was concrete, my thought was, "I'm either going to watch for why it's important that it's concrete"--which means you've lost some of my attention--"or this is extraneous information that can be tossed." Then you later talk about her heels clicking on the concrete of the driveway. It's OK there, then--and the earlier reference is just extraneous; toss it and anything like that.
I agree (sort of) with the complaint about "litany of protagonist's looks by mirror" and thus disagree with you on that. That is both a worn out technique and a lazy one. The reader should discern for her/himself whatever needs to be known about the protagonist's looks and personality from showing elements and the conversations of other characters around and about them. The mirror trick is just lazy writing, unless a clever take can be employed with it. What I disagree with on Dream_Operator's version of the complaint is that you don't just "fuckin' tell them." You show them.
It would open fine for me if all the bad day stuff was integrated better into what followed and was given meaning to have been used for an opening (echoing what someone else posted, I think). I much prefer the "working into it" opening you provided than the one Moore suggested, though. Trying for an "everything" opening is seen as much too busy and premature overload in literature being written in this century. The prevalent technique now is to start in action and a bit of confusion and bring the reader along with you in a buildup of the background when/as/if necessary.
Blake's party comments were much too jarring for me. If there was foreshadowing of that attitude, I missed it, so when it came it was like whiplash for me. I'd want to think "oh, yeah, I was given a hint he's a bit off kilter earlier." Maybe on the basis of the entire story I'd understand better how he worked this way.
There is some wordiness and repetition in it, yes. An example is the concrete driveway. When you first said the driveway was concrete, my thought was, "I'm either going to watch for why it's important that it's concrete"--which means you've lost some of my attention--"or this is extraneous information that can be tossed." Then you later talk about her heels clicking on the concrete of the driveway. It's OK there, then--and the earlier reference is just extraneous; toss it and anything like that.
I agree (sort of) with the complaint about "litany of protagonist's looks by mirror" and thus disagree with you on that. That is both a worn out technique and a lazy one. The reader should discern for her/himself whatever needs to be known about the protagonist's looks and personality from showing elements and the conversations of other characters around and about them. The mirror trick is just lazy writing, unless a clever take can be employed with it. What I disagree with on Dream_Operator's version of the complaint is that you don't just "fuckin' tell them." You show them.
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