Poll: How good is my writing?

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Ajna

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Mar 19, 2009
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Joselyn said:
Staccato can be quite effective when writing, but I feel you have too much going on- you're sentences are all really short and detached, thus losing the effect of the staccato? Maybe longer sentences and more punctuation would help with your style of writing? I notice you use a lot of commas when a dash would suit better? This is constructive criticism by the way, no offence intended! Good luck with your writing :)
Don't worry, I take pretty much all criticism as constructive, unless it's just someone being rude (E.G.: "Your writing sucks! Do better!"). I'm not a fan of dashes, just as I'm not a fan of semicolons (one of my friends pointed out that I used a comma at one point that should have been a semicolon). I tend to misuse them, and would rather not use one, instead of misusing one.

scifidownbeat said:
It's really a matter of style. Short and sharp sentences work in some instances (action scenes) and long, descriptive ones work elsewhere (calm scenes). I suppose Jomeil has a high-adrenaline "job," so while referring to his perspective, I'd be short and quick. While describing the setting, long sentences are usually the way to go.
That's more or less what I try/tried to do. Good to know I'm not alone.

NewClassic said:
*snip, snip*
About the bold parts: I think you mistook what perspective I'm going for. It's not supposed to be omniscient third, but just "third". I only intend to show one person's thoughts. As for the lock-picking, I tried to make it sound like it was nothing important, to imply that he was used to having to do that type of thing.

As for the non-bolded: Can you give me a book you liked by Pratchett? And dry wit... Depending on your definition, I have a tendency to do that in longer writing. An "acquaintance-I-deem-my-father-despite-him-not-being-so" inspires me in that manner. The "wordiness" bit I find difficult to grasp, as I hate that kind of writing myself. And the comment about my sentences being "blissfully short" is difficult to process because it's the exact opposite of what everyone else has been saying.

And as for the quoted: Basically, that all just reaffirmed things I already knew, though it was a nice refresher, regardless.
 

Pimppeter2

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Dec 31, 2008
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I gave it a two, not that its bad though. Try using more description, methaphors, similies ect.. Also try fixing your lure, its pretty dull
 

Kogarian

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Feb 24, 2008
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Honestly, you should write more. As said, practice helps. Plus having more examples would let people critique your style more.
 

Ajna

Doublethinker
Mar 19, 2009
704
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Bocaj2000 said:
Ajna said:
Sorry, I got excited :p
I was also talking more to myself than you and I didn't realize it haha. But yeah, no amount of advice compares to practice. Keep writing short stories and you'll discover everything that we're telling you on your own. Don't underestimate your intellegence.
I posted this only partially for the constructive criticism. ;) I'm actually looking more for what I'm doing right than what I'm doing wrong. If I can find out what I do well (which, so far, the consensus seems to be is "imagery"), I can try to emphasize that. It's like a book I was reading a while back said. "Focus on your strengths, because then you'll be stronger overall in that area, rather than mediocre in an area you're poor in." I'm unsure as to why I used quotation marks on that sentence when it was a summary. >.<
 

Ajna

Doublethinker
Mar 19, 2009
704
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pimppeter2 said:
I gave it a two, not that its bad though. Try using more description, methaphors, similies ect.. Also try fixing your lure, its pretty dull
Lure being the first sentence, or the cliffhanger I added at the end?

Kogarian said:
Honestly, you should write more. As said, practice helps. Plus having more examples would let people critique your style more.
As I said in the first post: "I've been trying to get a bit better at writing lately". Also, as it said in the same post, I came up with the idea today. I don't have any more examples of my writing on hand. Well, my creative writing, at least. I have a few of my non-creative writing, but nobody wants to hear my horribly written (in hindsight. At the time, I thought it was amazing) essay on why we need to legalize prostitution. >.>
 

Kogarian

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Feb 24, 2008
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Ajna said:
I don't have any more examples of my writing on hand. Well, my creative writing, at least. I have a few of my non-creative writing, but nobody wants to hear my horribly written (in hindsight. At the time, I thought it was amazing) essay on why we need to legalize prostitution. >.>
I meant, maybe you should make more stories and show us.

And I'd post that essay if I were you; the Escapist would love it.
 

Ajna

Doublethinker
Mar 19, 2009
704
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Cylem said:
I really liked this. :) Your description of the house was a good balance of thoroughness and simplicity. The action moves at a good pace too.

The only thing that really stood out for me negatively, was the weird, clipped flow of sentences. Jumping from topic-to-topic is reasonable once in a while, especially in a story told in first person. Used too many times in succession, though, it makes it difficult to concentrate. The first paragraph had only six sentences, yet mentioned the light, the moon, Jomeil's stealthiness, and blinking--and I ended up missing the first part of that on the first read-through. Once you get into it, though, you seem to hit your stride and things are gravy from there-on-out. :D
Thanks for that. I've been getting the idea from several comments on this piece that I need to make my characters think like most people, and not like me. When I gave it to a friend of mine in real life, her comment was "You need to make the sentences longer, they're all too short." When I asked her if she thought in long sentences, she said "Yes.". I don't think in long sentences. Hence why my writing on the boards is broken up into short sentences and by commas...
 

Ajna

Doublethinker
Mar 19, 2009
704
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Kogarian said:
Ajna said:
I don't have any more examples of my writing on hand. Well, my creative writing, at least. I have a few of my non-creative writing, but nobody wants to hear my horribly written (in hindsight. At the time, I thought it was amazing) essay on why we need to legalize prostitution. >.>
I meant, maybe you should make more stories and show us.

And I'd post that essay if I were you; the Escapist would love it.
I actually summarized it in a different thread that was about prostitution. I'll edit it in to this post in a minute or two. It's saved on my flash drive (I think)... I also have another I made on Civil Rights that I botched (again, in hindsight), mainly because I had enough material for 14 paragraphs, but only enough time (my fault, not the teacher's) for seven.

My essay ("Legalization of Prostitution") said:
Prostitution is, quite simply put, one of very few crimes that are made illegal by taking a legal act (sex) and making it illegal due to the exchange of money. One of the simpler reasons that prostitution should be legal is that anti-prostitution laws are ineffective. The prostitution education network states that: ?Arrest figures range over 100,000 and over 1 million people in the US have worked as prostitutes, or about 0.5% of the US.?(www.kuro5hin.org and www.bayswan.org). Anti-prostitution laws have little effect on the frequency of prostitution, but they do drive it underground, resulting in unfair treatment to prostitutes, who are often afraid to speak up about this treatment, because they will be punished by the law for being prostitutes. Many feminists speak of how ?prostitution is degrading toward women? (to paraphrase many arguments, such as that of Andrea Dworkin who states that: ?The only analogy I can think of concerning prostitution is that it is more like gang rape than it is like anything else? The gang rape is punctuated by a money exchange. That?s all. That?s the only difference.?) (Wendy McElroy, ?Prostitution?, Everything You Know is Wrong, Russ Kick, 160), however, depending on the resource, anywhere between 20-30% of arrests of prostitutes are men. Also, anti-prostitution laws are biased, and approximately 90% of arrests based on anti-prostitution laws are of prostitutes, whereas 10% are clients. These statements alone are not the only reasons to legalize/decriminalize prostitution.

Also, there is a popular, yet flawed, image of ?The Prostitute?. The popular image of a prostitute is that of the ?streetwalker?. That is, a prostitute who walks the streets in search of clients. According to a survey by Melissa Farley and Norma Hotaling of 130 prostitutes, which included some male and transgendered ones, Farley and Hotaling, 82% of them reported being physically assaulted since entering prostitution, 75% said they have or have had a drug problem, and 88% wanted to leave prostitution. However, this survey almost only (if not only) included the ?streetwalker? portion of prostitutes, which, though they account for 90% of all arrests, only account for (depending on the resource) 5-20% of prostitutes as a whole. According to a survey of 60 members of COYOTE (Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics-A national sex workers? rights organization) by Wendy McElroy, 71 percent reported having experienced no violence over their years of sex work, while 29% had experienced violence, often from the police or a coworker, rather than from a client. None of the women stated, or appeared to have, a drug problem. 17 percent wished to leave sex work, with 24 percent being unsure. Wendy McElroy?s survey was of women much less likely to experience the negatives, part of the eighty to 95 percent in-call (e.g. escort services) or outcall (e.g. massage parlors) portion of the prostitute community. This is not meant to discount the fact that some prostitutes are abused by clients or their pimps/johns, but to show that the portion that are is comparatively small, and a large portion of that abuse would be removed if the prostitutes had the option of going to the police.

Some (often radical feminists) may the claim that women?s choices under capitalism are limited to wage slavery, domestic slavery, or ?sexual slavery? (prostitution). These people say that no one ?chooses? prostitution, they merely say ?no? to the first two choices and ?choose? the third instead. One feminist (Evelina Giobbe) stated that the men in the conservative right, and liberal left both work together to keep women in prostitution: ?The right by demanding that women be socially and sexually subordinate to one man in marriage, and the left by demanding that women be socially and sexually subordinate to all men in prostitution and pornography.? (Wendy McElroy, ?Prostitution?, Everything You Know is Wrong, Russ Kick, 160). Hopefully, this statement shows that they are grossly misinformed, however, if their quote alone does not show how prejudiced they are, perhaps I can convince you otherwise. Other than the fact that female/male wage ratios are becoming closer, at approximately 82% now (the highest in several years (?Slowdown in Male Earnings leads to smaller gender wage gap?, www.epi.org. January 5, 2005, Economic Policy Institute)), there is little that can refute the fact that there is still ?wage slavery? (women being paid less in the workplace than men), however ?domestic slavery? is happening less and less, with men staying home rather than women, day care centers, babysitters, etc. on the rise. The referral to prostitution as ?sexual slavery? is a not-so-subtle way of showing prejudices. ?A woman doesn?t ?choose? prostitution, she is coerced into it?, these people claim. This claim is difficult to refute, not because it is true, but rather because it is so obviously prejudiced. These people claim that pimps coerce and beat women into prostitution. According to the (legal) definition of a pimp, it is anyone who lives off of the wages of a prostitute. This can include anything from children, to a stay-at-home husband, to a parent in a ?home?, or even a husband with a job that shares household expenses. Anti-prostitution and anti-pimping laws punish innocents far more often than men who do beat, rape, and assault women. These men would be punished under ordinary laws for assault, kidnapping and rape, making the need for anti-pimping laws moot. If prostitution becomes a business, that means that it must also be legal for there to be customers (clients), and third-party members in the transaction (pimps and madams).

Hopefully, this essay has done something to help convince you of the support statistics show for legalization of prostitution. We need to legalize or decriminalize prostitution as soon as possible, and stop the assault of women who can?t speak out for fear of legal persecution. It doesn?t matter how it is done (red-light districts, complete decriminalization, etc.), it merely must be done.
Probably not formatted correctly anymore, as I noticed some italicized text and such in the version I copied this from. I'm just too lazy to format this the right way... God. I wrote that essay ages ago. I barely remember it... >.<

Oh, yes, and I intend to write more and post them on here. Maybe once or twice a week. Again: I want to get my juices flowing. I only have this piece because I happened to have a notebook and a pencil on me at the time the idea hit me. And it hit me as "morse code with a flashlight", so don't ask how I got this out of it. >.>
 

MusicalFreedom

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May 9, 2009
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I'm currently in a creative writing course, and so far I've learned about showing and telling. Only first year, so I don't have too much experience. Anyway, showing and telling.

For those who don't know, showing is where you imply something, whereas telling is explicitly stating. The difference can be difficult sometimes, especially when a sentence says many things. Most of the time, showing is more effective.

A few empty planter boxes outside spoke of someone who was self-absorbed, and didn't remember to water their plants.
Why remember to water plants when the planter boxes are empty?

This is telling rather than showing. You have the imagery of someone who doesn't bother with plants, yet you go on to explicitly state it. What I would say is "Dead plants wilted over the sides of the planter boxes just by the door, hanging down to a filthy watering can lying on its side." or something similar. The idea is to convey the idea that the guy doesn't give much of a shit about gardening without actually saying it, making the imagery more effective.

Moving on to a more general point.

He tried the door, unsurprised when it failed to turn, and quickly picked the lock. He slipped inside and was surprised to find that there was someone in his way.
I think this could really be developed further. As it stands, it seems rushed. Perhaps the picking the lock bit is okay - it is quick, after all - but that last sentence seems weak. How about "He opened the door and stepped through - into someone's shadow.", only much better.

The writing just seems to come across as slightly dry to me. A little more vividity could make this good idea into a great story! There's a good basis here, just needs developing.
 

DrunkenKitty

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Nov 20, 2008
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I agree with what other have said about the vocabulary. Every writer should have a thesaurus handy during his rough editing process. You also use very few adverbs. I see a few spots where an adverb would improve the flow.

Another thing is the separation of information into paragraphs. Ask yourself what you're trying to convey in each paragraph and focus on it. I used to make an outline before I even started writing. For your first two paragraphs I would have had one that described the setting ending with the character and then started the second one with the character taking action.

Another simple concept to keep in mind is "show, don't tell". My writing improved once I really embraced that idea. For example: in your first paragraph, you have a sentence that starts with "It was night...". Once you mention the moonlight and the darkness, your reader will pick up on that.

Aside from the plot and character development, your goal in fiction should be to immerse the reader into the world. To do that, you have to first immerse yourself in the world. You don't acknowledge many of the senses. What did the air feel like? Was it damp and cold?.. or warm and dry? Is it windy? What are the ambient noises? Crickets? People? If there's no sounds, then say something about the silence.

Try to use colorful verbs. Verbs can subtly deepen the reader's view of a character as well as an adjective without making your writing seem bloated or overly direct. Don't miss those opportunities.

Consider:
"He walked down the street."(Says almost nothing about the character.)
"He strut down the street."(He's confident or at least faking it.)
"He limped down the street."(He's possibly old or injured or gansta.)
"He shambled down the street."(He's depressed or maybe a zombie.)

Having said all that, there's certainly nothing wrong with: "The man sat in the chair." if that's the sort of pacing the story needs at the time.

After you write something, read it outloud to yourself. If it seems awkward to say it probably isn't going to flow well in the reader's mind.
 

Deacon Cole

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You lost me with the dry eyes comment. Oh, I plowed through the rest of it, but I wanted to stop at the dry eyes. That line was lame.

You do need more work on making things flow. I suspect you're young or at least new to writing because your description is unsure. Unsure description, of both objects and actions, tends to overcompensate. You are unsure of how to communicate things, so you do so with as much detail as possible, hoping this gives the reader a clear, accurate picture. In fact, it does no such thing because the verbose description tends to confuse and/or encourages people to stop reading altogether. The problem with giving so much information is that it makes it easier for the reader to miss any important information or it makes it easier for you to forget to write down the important information

The action also does not flow very well. It almost feels like RPG turns. The brief amount of action here flows somewhat like this:

He was sitting in a chair.
He decided to stand up.
He lifted himself up off the chair and stood on his feet.
"My word," he said. "That was exciting. Now I am standing on my own two feet."


Yes. It reads a lot like this. Particularly here:

"Jome started down the hill, trying not to stumble and fall. He reached the bottom of the hill, and crouched down. "

Basically:

He walked down the hill.
He reached the bottom of the hill.

Kind of moment-to-moment right there. This could have been better combined into a single sentence with much of the extraneous information omitted.

I mean, why do we care that he was trying not to stumble and fall? Isn't that a given? Or is stumbling and falling something he's likely to do? Is he a cripple assassin? What gives?

Incidentally, I had no idea that this was supposed to be a medieval setting until I read the comments. I thought the flickering light was a florescent bulb on its last legs.
 

dmase

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Mar 12, 2009
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Ajna said:
dmase said:
There are people that can wright and then there are people that can make stories... that are good, to be what you want you have to have both. The writing is good but i have no idea what type of story this is and I don't think you can accurately gauge someone on a few paragraphs a chapter or two would be better, to see how the story will go and if its going to be a futuristic assasin's creed rip off... don't pull a twilight/ slash harry potter except with a popular franchise, thats really asking for a good kick in the ego.
I'm not trying to write anything large enough to require chapters at the moment. I want to get a few solid short stories under my belt before I even consider the idea of starting a book of any sort. As for assassin's creed... >.> I really need to figure out a way to emphasize what my character is doing. He's supposed to be a thief, not an assassin.

Also, can you clarify what you mean about twilight/harry potter?
Well J.K. Rolling and twilight's... she who shall not be named... were both accused of plagerism after wrighting popular novels(which i thought you were going for with this one). I mean that ubisoft would sue if you had a popular novel that had a assasin's creedish character. Just speculating on the way the story was going from that point... yes that was a bit of a stretch for a relation between your story and ubisoft's.
 

Dahemo

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Aug 16, 2008
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Thought I'd pick it apart as I'm in the mood to distract myself from dissertation. Ok, let's see what we got:

Ajna said:
The light flickered on and off.
Right, what light? I see what you're doing here, using alienation for atmosphere, but give the reader something to latch on to descriptively. I'd prefer:

As he watched, the light from the old house flickered

Ajna said:
Jomeil watched from on top of the hill, silent. It was night, and the moon was a waxing gibbous, casting enough light to see by, but not enough to make his form obvious.
Immediately, the sentence "the moon was a waxing gibbous" gives me the image of the narrator with a white beard smoking a pipe. You're giving us too much information (especially giving us his name so early), the trick to storytelling is simplicity:

from the hilltop, the dim moonlight was enough to see by, but would not betray him to watching eyes

Ajna said:
Jomeil stared at the house, watching closely. He kept reminding himself to blink. Dry eyes wouldn't help him.
Your sentence fragmentation is killing your flow, you clearly write from a stream of consciousness but you need to express that with more developed syntax. Adopt your own, non-standard way of structuring your prose, for example:

As he watched, the light from the old house flickered

From the hilltop, the dim moonlight was enough to see by, but would not betray him to watching eyes. He forced himself to blink, momentarily breaking his vigil


By seperating fragments and not using periods, you heighten the sense of fragmentary thought without irritating staccato, but not everything can be written this way, embrace the art of punchy sentences: readable brevity!

Ajna said:
The light went out. That was his cue. Jome started down the hill, trying not to stumble and fall.
Stick with his full name, you've only just introduced him so don't introduce the nickname until, I don't know, another character calls him by that name.

Ajna said:
He reached the bottom of the hill, and crouched down. The house was just a few yards off. Jome paused to catch his breath, and took his first real look at the building. It looked like what Taresk had said it would.
Firstly, avoid conversational tone "looked like what" is sloppy english. Be clear, concise and clean, try looked exactly how for a better impression. Secondly, if you're going to introduce other characters without them being present, maybe wait until they appear, call him the contact or something appropriate. Thirdly, "yards off" is awkward because "off" coupled with distance tends to mean great distance, try to side with "away". Finally, if he's been staring at it for a while, he knows what it looks like. Watch out for flawed logic, it catches the readers attention and breaks their immersion, even though I know what you mean, you haven't said it right, I'd try:

this was his first chance to inspect the building at close range

Ajna said:
A single storey tall (Taresk had said there was a cellar), three or four rooms, and a small porch with a modest wooden shade over it. A few empty planter boxes outside spoke of someone who was self-absorbed, and didn't remember to water their plants. Or who didn't care for gardening. No need to look too far into it. That wasn't Jomeil's job.
Don't use brackets, you aren't writing a school report, word it so the character is 'inner monologuing' i.e.:

it was a squat building, although the contact had informed him of a cellar

Remember to avoid modern measurement in a fantasy style (I assume that's what this is) as this breaks immersion again, just describe the building. Also the description starts well but is very overwritten, simplicity is king. You're also reaching the wrong conclusion, if they're empty then they're unused, if the plants are dead the owner hasn't seen them as they never go out (dead pehaps?) or no longer live in the house. Planter boxes are also very modern for Jomeil and Taresk.

Ajna said:
Speaking of his job, it was time to go to work. Jomeil slipped around the house and crept up the porch, conscious of every creak the wood made under his feet. He tried the door, unsurprised when it failed to turn, and quickly picked the lock. He slipped inside and was surprised to find that there was someone in his way.
A bit better but still needs work. "Speaking of" is our old friend conversational tone. If he can see the porch he would slip up to the house rather than around it. Be a bit more descriptive here: Gently, he tried the door though that's a small problem. Take more time describing his need for silence, you've established he doesn't want to be seen, build it here, and add the lockpicking to this. It's a noisy task and should be more tense, given his need for stealth. You want to shock the reader with this last line, so "surprised" is a terrible choice of words, it conjurs up 'pleasantly', I imagine the guy is holding a balloon. The whole thing needs better structure for more of a cliff-hanger ending. If I may:

He slipped inside, carefully and quietly closing the door.

He had not expected the dark figure to be in his way


Bit more description, bit more tension, jobs a good one.

Who do you remind me of? You need to find your own voice more before you can really be compared to anyone. If you're going to keep up the staccato malarkey then I'd go for Mark Haddon, though he only used that for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime because the narrator had Aspergers, so that's not technically his style. Actually, if you had slightly better structure, you could do a very poor man's Brett Easton Ellis impression. You're not really comparable to any big fantasy writers I know as they've got a great storytelling voice, embracing the long, rambling paragraph to take you on a wonderful journey to another world. Read Stephen Donaldson or R.A. Salvatore for how to write fantasy properly...
 

Ajna

Doublethinker
Mar 19, 2009
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dmase said:
Ajna said:
dmase said:
There are people that can wright and then there are people that can make stories... that are good, to be what you want you have to have both. The writing is good but i have no idea what type of story this is and I don't think you can accurately gauge someone on a few paragraphs a chapter or two would be better, to see how the story will go and if its going to be a futuristic assasin's creed rip off... don't pull a twilight/ slash harry potter except with a popular franchise, thats really asking for a good kick in the ego.
I'm not trying to write anything large enough to require chapters at the moment. I want to get a few solid short stories under my belt before I even consider the idea of starting a book of any sort. As for assassin's creed... >.> I really need to figure out a way to emphasize what my character is doing. He's supposed to be a thief, not an assassin.

Also, can you clarify what you mean about twilight/harry potter?
Well J.K. Rolling and twilight's... she who shall not be named... were both accused of plagerism after wrighting popular novels(which i thought you were going for with this one). I mean that ubisoft would sue if you had a popular novel that had a assasin's creedish character. Just speculating on the way the story was going from that point... yes that was a bit of a stretch for a relation between your story and ubisoft's.
Why on earth do people think I'm going with assassin's creed? For the love of hojo, the idea this originally stemmed from was the practice of using a flashlight to convey morse code!

Fact is, why do people think he's an assassin? I'd think an assassin wouldn't stumble down a hill...
 

Computer-Noob

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Mar 21, 2009
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Internet Kraken said:
xmetatr0nx said:
Ajna said:
and took his first reall look at the building. It looked like what Taresk quote]

"real". Writing isnt too bad, needs polishing. Try taking creative writing classes at your local college or JC. Barring that just keep it up, practise makes perfect.
Funny. You point out that he spelled "real" wrong, and then you misspelled "practice".
Actually...I think that has to do with where he lives.