Loading, please wait...

Just a prologue... Mind giving it a read?
Started By
I walked into the floral room, my nerves spiralling around my brain like a swarm of bugs. It had been a year now, and the stress was almost gone. Of course, it would never leave. No kid should have gone through that, ever. I looked at he eager young reporter, her eyes shining with the prospect of being first to interview the “leader” of my little group. It was the first time I’d spoken about it publicly, I mean sure, the others spoke. They gave their stories. Hell, Trish wrote a freaking PLAY. But I, the “survival expert” (pfft.) was giving HER side. Woo. Eversince the told me “Oh, there’s no way to get poisonout of your blood,” I’ve been pretty grumpy. I sat in the uncomfortable salmon colored chair and started drumming my freshly painted black fingernails on the wooden arm. I wanted to turn back, go back to my therapist and over protective parents. I heaved a sigh and looked up at the twenty-something reporter, who’s smile had faded into something like a minor grimace. I narrowed my bright red-wood colored eyes and with the voice of a fourteen year old, but the wise tone of a fifty year old, I spoke. “Let’s this over with.”

04-16-2011 at 7:50 AM
Thank you! I'll use your advice well. I'll also have my mom look at this when she gets home. She writes.

04-16-2011 at 7:46 AM
In writing a novel, even when you're doing it in the first person with the sort of in slang style you have going on, you need to make things readable. (I'm always a fan of doing things in the style of the character. I do that myself.)<br /> <br /> Putting things in ( ) when it's someone's thoughts, is really not the way to go. You can convey disgust in a different way, one that alludes more to the situation and sneers more. Like instead of "(pfft.)", you could do. "I was the survival expert, supposedly. I never wanted that label and I never wanted to do this. Give my side of a story I'd rather forget."<br /> <br /> The other thing is try not to overuse fragments and " " to convey sarcasm as it can interrupt flow of the story. Instead of caps, use italics. Look at the styles you see in well written book and try to copy that. (Or I had a teacher who said fragments should be less than 1/5 of a paragraph.)<br /> <br /> Or to change it up start less sentences with I and more with actions. Like "Heaving a sigh, I looked up at the reporter..."<br /> <br /> Really it's a nice lead in to a story, and the first sentence has that gorgeous simile, very nice use there.<br /> <br /> I know it's a lot of crit, I wouldn't give it anything if I didn't think this had places it could go. And I know from writing my own story that an outside view helps me fix things. Good luck, it sounds interesting.

Login

Username:
Password:
Signup
Username: *
Password:
confirm:
Email:
Birthday:
Referrer:
  • = required field
  • two accounts per person
  • email verification necessary
  • the secret question is in case you forget your username or need to reset your email address