sr71plt
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2006
- Posts
- 51,872
I think your ability to help new readers is great, but I have to buy into Sk's grandiose and self-serving comment with these extracts from Story Feedback;
Detailed critical analysis;
I haven't read the chapter so I don't know how realistic it is in this regard,
Grammatical and editorial advice to new writer;
Also, full sentences aren't required for fiction, and incomplete sentences can often be used to good effect
Full review on new writer’s story;
Oh, Lord, yes. Nothing scares off potential readers faster than beginning by telling them the reasons they may not want to read the story.
I rest my case;
Actually, you've said it a bit too often. ALL stories don't have to follow a set formula. There are lots of ways to skin the short story mode; if there were only one, what a dull literary form it would be. Technically (in what is being taught in creative writing programs today), all a short story need have is a dilemma and some form of change--but the pro writers even mess around with that idea in search of fresh approaches to the medium. (And no, the characters don't have to have names for the story to succeed, either.)
Remind me not tobuy your books.
Umm, yes. If you are suggesting that these are bad or unuseful comments for me to have made (regardless of having taken them out of context), then guilty as charged.
And if you wouldn't want to buy my books based on that last snippet (which would be dumb, anyway, wouldn't it, as the comments are on short stories, not books), I'd suggest you not buy novels being written now at all--and certainly not try to read any of them.
Apples and oranges on the naming of characters, however. As I've posted before not naming characters is sustainable only in brief short stories. Let's not claim I've made a connection on that with books.
You seem to have a bee up your nose on this. I suggest some calming tea.