I'd buy this, but I wouldnt put 5 stars
Hard to decide in that department. I don't expect everything I read and buy to be superb, otherwise I'd probably not read anything.
Computer-Noob said:So they spell practice differently in UK/Australia/Canada/somewhere else?Internet Kraken said:Actually...I think that has to do with where he lives.xmetatr0nx said:Funny. You point out that he spelled "real" wrong, and then you misspelled "practice".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.
Well then I apologize for my incredible ignorance.
Ajna said:Lure being the first sentence, or the cliffhanger I added at the end?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
The lure is the first sentence, at least that's what we call it here
"The light flickered on and off. Jomeil watched from on top of the hill, silent."
Its good because your intro tries to paint a picture in out mind of the setting, but you have to make something more fascinating than light flickering, you could describe what Jomeil is seeing.
For example You could describe how who he is watching is completely oblivious to him. Or how he feels about 'doing his job'
Also as floppylobster said try clearing up some of the awkwardness
The narrator is supposed to be the same person. It's third person perspective, not omniscient...floppylobster said:You've got a long way to go but you've come further than most, and it seems you want to write so stick at it. Keep in mind the narrator and author's voice (they are different). Also consider who is the audience (who is narrator speaking to, who are you trying to reach as an author?).
Stuff like "Speaking of his job...", who is this directed to? It seems to confuse the author/narrator boundary.
"unsurprised when it failed to turn" / "surprised to find that there was someone in his way."
This is also a bit awkward. It would probably work better as a complete sentence using comparison.
Find writing you like, then read it over and over. Try to work out why you like it, how it works, and how it's doing it. Then, either be very critical of your own stuff and do lots of re-writes, or concentrate really hard as you write to make sure you're expressing exactly what interests you about your idea in an interesting, but not too contrived way. Keep at it, your stuff will only get better.
pimppeter2 said:That's what I figured you meant by "lure". Thanks.Ajna said:Lure being the first sentence, or the cliffhanger I added at the end?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
The lure is the first sentence, at least that's what we call it here
"The light flickered on and off. Jomeil watched from on top of the hill, silent."
Its good because your intro tries to paint a picture in out mind of the setting, but you have to make something more fascinating than light flickering, you could describe what Jomeil is seeing.
For example You could describe how who he is watching is completely oblivious to him. Or how he feels about 'doing his job'
Also as floppylobster said try clearing up some of the awkwardness