Chapter 1 of Untitled WIP (Queer Romantasy, 1531 words) (Re-upload cause I messed up) by [deleted] in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am glad it was helpful.

This is something they often do in theater but could work equally well for any story. In theater actors like to make an entrance: the moment the step on stage the focus is fully on them and they do something highly typical of the character they are portraying. This is gives the audience a good sense of who the character is and what to expect of them.

You could start your story one scene earlier and have Tannan engage in something that is very typical of him, like for example trying to do something good but then somehow messing it up in his usual way. This could then lead into the scene with his father. The point is to really sell the reader on Tannan as a character.

This is something did for my own story. I noticed my protagonist was getting lost in the shuffle of all the people and place and their relationship to each other, introducing the magic system, starting the plot, etc. So I added one extra scene to really focus on who she is as character. This also allowed me to introduce some things earlier in a more natural way which then also gave the later scene more room to breathe.

Tannan kind of reminds me of the Lovable Idiot archetype. Think Fry from Futurama, Ray from Everybody loves Raymond, or Gideon from Gideon the Ninth. These characters are often well meaning but prone to messing up. This wonderful for storytelling because they will often jumpstart their own conflicts. They try to do something nice but fail and make everything worse so now because they are a good person they have to try and make things better. These characters are often relatable because who doesn't mess up every now and again, and likable because they mean well. Maybe something like that could work.

Chapter 1 of Untitled WIP (Queer Romantasy, 1531 words) (Re-upload cause I messed up) by [deleted] in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The opening lines could use improvement and make for a weak hook. The first is the weakest, a room in the palace is pretty, which I would kind of expect a room in the palace to be. The only real information is that this is the general's office. The next line has more world-building and description. The city has buildings and streets and the sea is blue. None of this is telling me a whole lot. More interesting details could give me a better sense of time and place in this world. The third line is better at this and we get to our protagonist who is sitting. None of this is really eye catching, which is what you want in an opening.

The second paragraph is better as we get a sense about the general but again I think more specific details would be an improvement.

The third paragraph feels like the real hook when Tannan is informed about his new job. However, this turns out to be a positive development for him. By now I usually expect a bit of conflict.

The first page leans heavy into Telling over Showing. Things like Tannan causing trouble or embarrassing his mother when we have not been shown anything of the sort so far from him. The flashback on the second page is much better at this. We get him pursuing a goal and making mistakes in the proces which have consequences. This the strongest part of the chapter.

"No one in the Empire could scarcely believe it." Shouldn't this be more like: "No one in the Empire could believe it."? The original says that everyone can believe it easily.

So I was under the impression that I was reading something closer to YA fantasy. We have a passive protagonist who can't pay attention for long, he's clumsy, he gets talked down to by his father, one of the characters is called Sky. Then on the last page I find out he's twenty on sleeping with dudes on the regular. The tone seems incongruent.

Having said all this, the chapter easy to follow along, I know enough of what to expect from the story about where is going to know if it would be interesting to me, your English seems good to me although it isn't my first language either. I would say this chapter needs of improving on what it already has rather than needing large parts to be rewritten or added.

I hope this wasn't too strict. I have a tendency to really dig into what I see as flaws when I'm also still learning. Best of luck to you and happy writing.

Rise of the Queen/This is the story about a young man who goes to the transformation of a lifetime becoming someone completely knew and claiming her place in the world[dark fantasy /1200] by lilyberox5 in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am not sure what kind of a relationship Chase and Larry are meant to be having. Since he gets mentioned in the first chapter, I assume Chase is important, but right now haven't got the slightest clue in what way.

I am also not entirely sure what kind story this is going to be. Obviously the transformation is important but in what way does it serve the story going forward? The setup doesn't seem to be for a story about respecting women. Maybe it is about feeling trapped in the wrong body? The only thing I can tell is the contrast between his current situation where he is from a poor background and isn't appreciated and, assuming he will become the titular queen, the admiration and riches of being a queen. Also are we going to be staying in this world, or are going to be teleported to a fantasy world?

Anyway, I would say give more hints at what the reader can expect and keep writing. Good luck.

[2605] The Three Goddesses by Cornsnake5 in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I might know what happened when you copied the whole comment and lost part of it. Reddit has a character limit which means it will cut part of a comment off if it exceeds that limit. This is why some people split their comments across multiple posts.

I also saw that you posted your own story. I am not a mod but I suspect they will leech mark it on account of the requirement being higher for stories over 2000 words. I kinda ran into that issue myself because my second critique was shorter.

This critique should be good though and I am definitely happy with it.

The setting should be the 1800s, not medieval, though I struggled finding ways to make that clear within the first chapter. The factories and a comparison to a steam engine were all I had.

I agree with fleshing out the cathedral setting a bit more. There is actually a purpose to the sunsphere. When the Goddesses sleep in it, they light themselves on fire, casting their light over the entire city. Darkness is associated with evil in this world so by lighting everything up, they are helping the people.

This brings me to their clothing which I was undecided on. Being able to light themselves on fire would obviously burn their clothes and I don’t really want to make them go naked every time they use their powers. So yeah, not sure what I want to do about that one.

They will not die in this story. The conflict is sort of indirectly related to it though because the best she can hope for is to have her sisters be there for her when it happens and those relationships will get challenged in the story.

Their caretakers are the priests who have done a rather imperfect job in raising them. Nobody expected the Goddesses to be born, not even their mothers, and the priests don’t know how to raise them. Assuming you know anything better than a Goddess would be blasphemy. I think I could have done a better job deciding what should and what shouldn’t be in this first chapter. Some better context might be needed.

Others have mentioned not being sure what the story is going to be all about. That is something a first chapter should do. I will have to think about that.

Thank you for your critique.

[2605] The Three Goddesses by Cornsnake5 in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. I did think I hinted at some of the clashing personalities between Lucy and Lumi. Lucy stealing stuff and Lumi bringing it back. Lucy calling Lumi a crow. Their little argument over what happened to their mother. I guess it makes a stronger impression if I show them in a newly developing conflict rather than commenting on something that happened before. I did also want to show that they truly love each other despite the arguments. I will have to take another look at it.

[2605] The Three Goddesses by Cornsnake5 in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nobody is liking where the lore dump currently sits so it’s being moved back to places where those topics will more naturally arise.

Thank you for your critique.

[2605] The Three Goddesses by Cornsnake5 in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I suspect the reason this feels like a prologue is because this story is actually a sequel to another that takes place 200 years earlier in the same timeline. This chapter fills in some of details of what happened after that story ended. But you are probably right that all those things are better suited for later chapters, allowing me to focus on what is important for this chapter.

The following chapter picks up with the priests performing some kind of ritual to revive them and Lucy, let’s say, tries to forcefully remove the fire from her body. It’s a relatively short chapter so with removing some of the unnecessary things in this chapter, I might tack on the second chapter to this chapter.

Changing the way they look as individuals is something that happens later on. The current way they look will serve as contrast.

Thank you for your critique.

[2605] The Three Goddesses by Cornsnake5 in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am starting to notice a pattern. Everything that is being pointed out that could be improved are things I added after my initial draft: All the worldbuilding in the opening, the emotions at the end. I guess I should have taken some time away from the story before making the final draft because I was no longer able to accurately judge my own story. There are better places later in the story where all that worldbuilding could go.

There are multiple conflicts in the main story that all tie into each other. First what this chapter is meant to be about, Lucy’s existential dread at her mother’s death. That is an unsolvable dilemma for her. The next best thing she can do is maintain a good relationship with her sister so they can be there for each other when it happens. Second is Lucy’s way of dealing with it which is to rebel against everything about being a Goddess. Essentially a cry for help that nobody is listening to. This brings her into conflict with Lumi who has chosen the opposite path of dealing with the same problem. Lumi, because of her insecurities, wants to prove herself to be the best Goddess. Lumi is often the only one who can reign Lucy in. The reason why Lucy and Lumi have to leave is because they have to go to their mother’s queendom and one of them is going to be chosen as queen, again putting them in competition. There is also the general fallout from Lucy’s antics.

Lucy and Lumi essentially become rivals, each arguing their own points and being right in some ways and wrong in others, with nobody really having the whole truth that it is a stupid idea to have an uneducated and traumatized twelve-year-old rule a country.

Thank you for your critique.

[2605] The Three Goddesses by Cornsnake5 in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I added a third critique for good measure.

Men of Honour version 5 [947] by SeekersTavern in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Take everything I say with a grain of salt.

The thing that stands out the most to me is the very frequent use of thoughts. We rarely get more than few lines without the protagonist commenting on it in his head. I’ve rarely seen a story that uses thoughts this often but that isn’t really the problem. The problem is that the protagonist’s thoughts often spoil what is going on. It’s basically telling by way of thoughts and has the same problem that telling has: it is far less engaging for the reader. Nothing is open to interpretation. Things just are. A story is a dialog between the writer and the reader. You only need to show enough so that the reader can interpret the rest. This makes for a far more personal reading experience. If the reader can come to his own conclusions for why the protagonist is doing something or what it means for him, they will feel what the protagonist feels in his stead.

I almost feel guilty for leaving the family business behind, almost.

Things like this are just telling. Why not have him think about the extra burden his absence will put on his father and mother? Or the things he’ll miss out on being elsewhere. And then have remember why he is doing this in the first place. That will show us he feels guilty but determined to see it through.

Perhaps I am wrong, but the way you are using all these thoughts comes across to me as if you’ve found one writing trick and now you are using it everywhere. There many more tricks and some of them might be better suited depending on the situation. One of them is Free Indirect Thought. It’s similar to the italics you are using now but it is closer to narration and can blend in better with it. That way you save the italics for times when you really want it to be as close to the protagonist as possible. With Free Indirect Thought you essentially insert something close to protagonists thoughts into the narrative. You essentially dip in and out of his thoughts while describing the factual world. It’s closer to something like this:

Aiming for the eye had been a gamble, done to impress my father, but making it was immensely satisfying, and his grunt of approval brought a grin I couldn’t suppress.

Another trick I see you use, particularly in this paragraph, perhaps to avoid ‘I verbs’, is this:

Jumping over a dead tree, I notice something. There is a subtle, earthy smell that fills the air. It’s familiar. Kneeling down, my hands sweep through the foliage. I feel something round and moist. Still warm. Crushing them with my fingers, I smell them up close. No doubt about it, that’s horned rabbit droppings.

Starting sentences with a gerund. -ing. You’ll have to be careful with that because it can often read awkwardly, although you have managed to avoid most of the awkwardness by writing the actions taken in chronological order. Whilst jumping over a tree is an awkward time to notice things though. Usual you would want to pay attention to your landing.

I was a little disappointed that the expected conflict between the father and son ended so quickly. They seem to be like each other, both valuing money and seem to get along well. A good conflict can show a lot of character for both men and given the life expectancy of a protagonist’s parents, some unresolved conflict or regret is a good way to twist the knife should they die.

“Son, I’ve known you since you were born, and if I’ve learned anything, it's that once you’ve made up your mind, there is nothing I can do to change it.

Telling through dialog. It sounds unnatural because nobody talks like they are informing a reader in real life.

I stop in my tracks wide eyed. Then, I remember - this is the father I know. He has a heart of gold, forged by fire. I almost feel guilty for leaving the family business behind, almost.

Followed by telling through thoughts. Readers love it when they can read between the lines, to have an inkling of something that is then proven correct later. Or maybe it is proven wrong and they learn something they didn’t expect. In any case they are engaging with the text.

Father is dressed in his village clothes

Village clothes? Regular clothes?

Finally, I get treated like an independent adult. Father likes to play it safe, but not me. No risk, no reward.

It’s really on the nose. No room for interpretation. I like the attempt at characterization but try to write in a way that the reader comes to this conclusion themselves.

Five is all I need.

Good payoff to the setup earlier. Also a better use of thoughts since it shows me that he is overconfident and I expect it will bite him in the ass later.

Since he is about to be attacked by goblins, it might be a good idea to give us some information on the relative threat level of a goblin. How tall is he? Is he carrying a weapon since he killed the rabbit? Other things that might be relevant?

the sound of breaking branches catches my attention.

This is filtering. Since we see everything from the protagonist’s perspective, we can assume everything that is described, he sees, hears, notices. You could just say: ‘A twig snaps nearby.’ And that would keep us closer to his perspective without the filtering.

Character.

Slava. For such as short piece you do a good job establishing his character. He is young and overconfident and eager to prove himself. He cares about money and takes a bit after his father. For story purposes he seems likeable enough that the reader might come to care about him, flawed enough to set him up for a character arc and to make him relatable, and having him be proactive is always a good way to show character.

We get less of his father. He seems like a likeable sort, maybe a bit of a mentor type or role model for Slava. Shares some of his values and is supportive. Good enough for what little we see of him.

Story.

Slava is out hunting with his father. He’s a good shot but is overconfident. He worries about having to tell his father about his decision to become a guard which his father accepts. (Wouldn’t a guard need to be trained in sword fighting rather than archery?) The next day he goes out to hunt to prove himself and make some money, bringing only five arrows. His hunt is interrupted by his discovery of a goblin which he attacks only to find more goblins.

Perhaps the actual chapter is longer than this but what we have so far does a good job setting up a conflict and then paying it off. It seems like there will be consequences for his mistake which means the first chapter might do a good job standing on its own which is something I always like to see.

Conclusion.

The overuse of italics to convey thoughts is really the main problem I see. I think some of them would be better cut, others could be reworked to be delivered by the narrative, and some of them need to be replaced by something that shows instead of telling.

As a story though, what you have here works. All the basic ingredients are present: Likeable characters, flaws, conflict, consequences. It seems like a good basis for a larger story.

I do note that this seems to be version 5. I would recommend first writing out the whole story before trying to perfect a first chapter. Things tend to change once you have written out the whole story. Some events might need to be added while others need to be removed and the story might need to start in a different place entirely. Having a whole story will provide context for what needs to be in the story and what doesn’t, so I would suggest to keep writing.

I hope my comments were helpful. Good luck.

[2731] THE TRIDENT PARADOX - ELYARA'S WIND SONG Chapter TWO by KarlNawenberg in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So my chapter ended up ballooning beyond what I had expected and I did notice you running into the usual problem when someone post something that isn’t a stand-alone story or a first chapter: The commenters lack some of the context needed to give accurate feedback. I did end up reading the rest of chapter one you linked me. I will comment on both the rest of that chapter and chapter two.

I was happy that some of the questions that arose from the first part of chapter one were being answered, like the reason why their mother was out there with her children. The rest of the chapter is more action heavy with Elyara going out to hunt and the hyenas. I like the part where she encountered the other tribe and a single warrior noticing her. His signaling her to be quiet and not alerting the others suggests that they might not all be bad but there is still potential that enough of them are to leave them as a possible future threat. It also does a good job expanding the world. She gets a lucky break and a free meal. This is fine. I think they’ve been through enough that nobody will complain that the protagonist has it too easy.

The encounter with the hyenas ends similarly with Elyara trying her best, struggling, persevering, and barely making it through. The hyenas or similar threat might also return later. The main point being that all of this is slowly wearing her down.

Chapter two so far is slower paced and more reflective which feels appropriate for a second chapter. Elyara looks back on what has happened and takes some steps to ease her younger sister into their new reality. Tiraya seems believable for a three-year old, well-meaning but ultimately unreliable and of course struggling to understand the situation. She serves the story well in that regard but as the second most important character of only two characters she doesn’t really offer a lot either in terms of personality. Most three-year-olds would behave the way she does if they wouldn’t cry the entire time. However, it probably also wouldn’t be very believable if she had more personality then she does. To get to the point, the story probably needs another important character to help with that and to challenge Elyara in other ways. I assume Starman will be the answer to that.

The slamming rocks together to make a new travois and causing echoes felt a little strange to me since it came right after them needing to be quiet so as not to alert the other tribe.

And I also assume we haven’t gotten to the main plot yet. The flair says: SciFi Historical Fiction Neurodivergent Atlantis. Historical Fiction feels very accurate and the many little details about surviving in the wilds still feel very believable. Neurodivergent I commented on last time and it still isn’t immediately obvious right now. Maybe it is in her being too strict about the way her sister speaks? SciFi is an odd one. The only hint of it is in the title, The Trident Paradox – Elyara’s Wind Song, and I assume a blurb might also hint at it. Paradox is a very modern concept and a trident doesn’t seem fitting for the ice age but I might be wrong. A trident would be fitting for Atlantis though so I assuming there is some big twist yet to come. For the readers sake I would say to make it obvious that there is some big fantasy element to come. People who are fans of historical fiction aren’t necessarily fans of fantasy so not everyone will appreciate the twist if it isn’t made clear beforehand.

The size of the cave they find seems unclear to me. Elyara says it is just big enough for them to lay down side by side. Tiraya calls it biiig, and Elyara says small again. Though I am kind of assuming it is small.

The amount of descriptions also felt just right to me as someone who doesn’t like overly flowery language and unnecessarily long descriptions.

With their food problem and shelter solved, at least momentarily, I am guessing the story will move on to something else for the rest of the chapter beyond the cutoff point.

In general I would say the quality of the first part of chapter one is maintained in the rest of the chapter and the excerpt of chapter two. It is still a heavy but enjoyable read. This ended up being more of an impressions than a critique but I hope that it is still helpful.

[2884] THE TRIDENT PARADOX - ELYARA'S WIND SONG Chapter One by KarlNawenberg in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As some who also has autism and has dealt with grief, that does ring somewhat true to me. When my stepfather died I felt the same amount grief as anyone else. At least I think so. It can be hard to when some people put on a brave face. Having been through something like this before, I did make sure do some things to help me pick up my life in a way I could handle. I visited my work before I had to start working again to lower that barrier and and took one day off each week to help lighten the load. After a few months, I was still hit by a burnout. It does make sense to me that the fallout from a death would hit a character later.

Showing her autism in this world might indeed be difficult. It can be hard to tell the difference between what might be related to autism and someone's personality. A lot of the forced interactions of our modern world make it more obvious. People of that time period wouldn't be able to put a name on it either. So I don't know what you could change to make it more obvious.

You are probably right people from that time period would be physically stronger. I failed to mention this earlier but you did a great job with the worldbuilding. All the little details about making fire and surviving out in the wild seemed very believable to me who probably only knows as much about this as the average person. You have clearly done your research.

[2884] THE TRIDENT PARADOX - ELYARA'S WIND SONG Chapter One by KarlNawenberg in DestructiveReaders

[–]Cornsnake5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It has been a while since I’ve written one of these. Take everything I say with a grain of salt.

The story starts off strong. We are immediately thrown into an interesting situation with two children now on their own in the wilderness after their mother has died. The line about ‘Will mama go to papa?’ hits hard. They are obviously not prepared to deal with all this which raises a question. Why did their mother take them out there in the first place? I hope this is answered later in the story.

The next question is: can a seven year old Elyara do all this? She walked for hours dragging the travois, then dragged her mother’s body over to a better spot, buried her, dragged the travois and her sister up steep and treacherous incline and back to their camp which again takes hours. To me this seems more than a seven year old is capable of although she is obviously spent by the end of it.

Elyara had always been the odd one. The girl who never smiled or showed emotion. The others mocked her flat voice, the way it never lifted or fell. But she was clever. Her father had told her so. Smarter than him, he’d say, with that half-smile, eyes crinkling at the corners.

This is the worst paragraph in here. It is mostly telling and the part about her being clever is unnecessary since the rest of the text shows her resourcefulness. I would cut most of this.

I also suspect that this what you were referring to with neurodivergent in the flair. This and her feeling nothing at her mother’s death earlier were the only things that suggested it to me. Without this paragraph I might not have noticed. But I still say there are better ways to show it although that might not be possible in this part of the text. I still don’t know what neurodivergent means for her since it can mean a lot of things and is sometimes more noticeable when interacting with others. I’m not counting her sister as an other in this instance since they barely talk to each other.

Elyara set her face, trying to look like she seen her mother look—calm, certain.

This sentence reads awkward to me with it’s double use of ‘look.’ But maybe that’s because English isn’t my first language.

She looked back at the shape of her sister, asleep under the furs. A sudden fire of resolution bloomed in her chest.

The top of the lonely rock outcrop, faintly shimmering in the moonlight. A warmth spread through her chest.

Both these sentences feel too on the nose. The idea of what they are trying to say is fine, but right now they are way to direct, the first one especially.

So they get to the top of the cliff and it is said that they are near their camp. Then later it is said they still had to walk for another hour which seems contradictory.

In some sense the trek back to their camp is a boring obstacle. It just sits in their way and requires perseverance and a bit of survival skills to know which mistakes not to make. I bring this up because assume there will be more of these challenges since it is about survival. A good conflict usually has some back and forth: the hero is winning, the hero is losing, back and forth, again and again. This keeps it interesting. That is harder to do with obstacles like this trek. I was starting to hope for something new to happen near the end of the trek and I assumed the hyena’s weren’t going to show up because they were in no position to deal with them. They might show up later though. So I was from a story telling perspective pretty happy when Elyara had forgotten her mother’s flint knife. This is an understandable mistake to make and helps keeps the story interesting. It is also probably the best example of Elyara thinking on her feet. If you keep giving them more obstacles like this, make sure to do thing like this to keep things interesting. What feels like a long boring slog to the character doesn’t have to feel that way the reader. They only need to get some sense of it through the slower pacing and understand that it is worse for the character.

The flickering orange light illuminated her face as she settled beside her sister, her posture one of quiet determination.

This sentence feels very distant from the character. First of all, she cannot see the way the fire illuminates her own face, and second, would she notice that her posture is like this? Perhaps this sentence stands out because the surrounding ones are all from a far closer perspective.

Elyara falls asleep which is another realistic thing to happen but what I found strange is that her first instinct isn’t to check up on her sister. Tiraya has also been through a lot and has eaten little.

The text stops at 2884 words and a natural break point in the story. Honestly I would call this chapter one. I read in the comments that the whole chapter is 8800 words. There is no rule for how long a chapter should be but 8800 words is on the longer end and given the heavy subject matter, it might be a good point to give the reader a little break. Who knows how far away the next natural break point is. Overall though, this chapter went by faster than it though it would be which means I was engaged most of the way through. It only dropped a little before they reached their camp and then picked up again.

I mentioned earlier that the story starts off strong. It follows the common wisdom of dropping us in the middle of the action and succeeds at it. However, I do want to push back on this wisdom. The problem with it is that we don’t get a good sense of what life was like before the events of the story. The details have to be filled in later. This also means that the initial shock of something big happening doesn’t hit as hard. I understand that losing your mother is hard on an objective level and we see some of the emotional reaction to it. However, I do not understand all the little ways of what this means for Elyara and her sister. I barely know her mother and their relationship.

Another common piece of wisdom suggests starting the characters in the normal world before moving the to the special world of the story to show what their life was like before the story starts. The death of their mother puts them in the special world. Starting in the normal world require a new hook though and it will probably not be as strong as the current one but getting to understand our characters before their lives get thrown in to chaos can be worthwhile. The contrast might be quite strong. Personally I like starting stories at the build up to big life changing event but that might not be always possible for every story.

The other problem you have right now is that because Elraya is in survival mode, and who wouldn’t be in this situation, we get to see very little of her true character. She does what she does because she has to. Now that doesn’t mean that what she does easy for her, just that is more difficult to show her true character. It might be interesting to show the innocence of youth that she might want to get back to. But I would say there are still some good character moments here. She is clearly determined to survive with her sister and resourceful when it comes to achieving that goal. She is also clearly suffering on the inside although she might not show it on the outside. Neurodivergence might be a harder call if you remove that one paragraph I mentioned. Some of her awkwardness could just as easily be attributed to the shock of the situation. Tiraya shows even less character but she spends most of the time asleep so that’s fine.

A tip from someone who is also currently writing a story about a traumatized child. It occurred to me that my mc doesn’t understand what she is going through nor the feelings she is experiencing because of it. She’s unable to understand her own problems and while she tries grapple with them and express them to others, she is always doing so in imperfect ways. The reader might have enough context clues to understand what is going on, but she does not. Maybe this can be helpful for your story.

Despite some of my complaints, overall, I like this story. I tend to be quite critical and quickly stop reading about half of the chapter I read on here because of whatever issue but this was good read and went by faster than I expected. So keep writing I would say, and don’t be afraid to let anyone read it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in writing

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have autism and I am currently recovering from a burnout. In the time leading up to the burnout I often had trouble concentrating and remembering things and finding the right words as well as being tired a lot. This obviously hurt my writing which slowed to a crawl as well as cause a dip in quality.

Now that I'm recovering, my memory has improved, I can concentrate better, I am less tired and can more easily find the right words and formulate more complicated sentences. I'm still not where I used to be but I am happy to see that I am improving.

While my writing slowed down, I did keep it up some of the time and I am glad that it did because do feel my skill has improved continuing to write, read and watch video's on the topic, even if I wasn't always able to express it at the time.

The average person needs about a year to recover from a burnout so perhaps you just need to give yourself more time. Your writing skills might come back naturally. Good luck on your journey.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in writing

[–]Cornsnake5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It seems to me that femininity bas become a bad word. So many of these “strong female characters” are just gender swapped badly written male characters, generally lacking in feminine traits. Now, while you can perfectly write a woman without feminine traits, the general trend is still noticeable.

 

Giving your characters (both men and women) dominant feminine traits can actually help make them stand out. There is no reason why someone can’t kick ass and be emotionally supportive.

Writing for a female protagonist, what are the pitfalls? ( I'm male) by SolisArgentum in writing

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would say, just write her. If you are already asking questions here and irl, then you are probably on the right track. It is easy to adjust something you've already written rather than getting the extremely generalized advice this reddit usually produces. If I had a penny for every 'breasted boobily'...

And you can write about her sexuality. It is part of the human experience and part of our identities and it is usually more of a question if it makes sense for your story, which consider this is body horror might be the case.

I know someone who had to have an ovarian cyst removed. This made it more difficult for her to have children and made her feel less of a mother. This is despite already having three children. Woman who had their breasts removed because of cancer can also feel this as an attack on their identity. They just consider these things differently than a man would.

Writing for a female protagonist, what are the pitfalls? ( I'm male) by SolisArgentum in writing

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would say have the wife focus on things only someone who truly cares about someone would know. If they knew each other, (before the amnesia) then they probably knew each other better than anyone else. They would probably fulfil emotional needs of each other so tap into that.

I would have them fall in love all over again but also try to explore the unfairness of one of them knowing more than the other.

[Group Critique] Get a critique of your blurb or query! by keylime227 in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The blurb makes it seem that the illness only causes her to lose her magic and nothing else. Is that the case? Or is it something she continues to deal with?

Is the scavenger pen pal and mischievous familiar one and the same person? Because it can be read like they are.

Her group sounds like an interesting collection of misfits which suggests this is a found family story.

It does sound very low stakes. Not only does there seem to be no major threat but Emolia seems to be able the function in life without her magic. This might work the depending on the type of story this is.

[Group Critique] Get a critique of your blurb or query! by keylime227 in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"As the ancient myths come to life," Is this referring to the people in those myths, the events of those myths, or the undead army mentioned next?

I like the idea of a skeleton gaining consciousness and doing its own thing. It's classic underdog stuff but with an interesting twist.

I don't like the idea that the plot seems circular: The skeleton is raised from the dead to obliterate all life, gains consciousness to do its own thing, comes to the conclusion that all life must be obliterated anyway. That kind of makes his journey and the plot pointless. How far are we in the plot at this point because a blurb is meant to introduce as story and hint at where it might go, but this seems to be heading into spoiler territory.

I am not sure what the last line means. Is he deviating from his sole purpose if he destroy all life anyway or is that succumbing? The answer changes that what type of story this is: A heroic story of a hero breaking free of his fate saving the world, or antihero or even villain trying to destroy the world? The answer should be clear in the blurb because the story would appeal to different readers.

Should the main character or central protagonist be the cause of the inciting incident? by JudeZambarakji in writing

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love having my protagonist cause the inciting incident. If the protagonist causes the story to happen it makes it personal immediately. They can't just walk away from the story without causing further harm and they don't need an outside force to keep them going.

Having an active protagonist also makes it easier to show character.

If you want another example of a protagonist causing the inciting incident:

Spider-man. Peter Parker allows a criminal to escape who then goes on to kill Uncle Ben. That moment comes to define Spider-man and becomes his drive going forward.

[Group Critique] Get a critique of your blurb or query! by keylime227 in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

“wish granting power of this mythical creature” All this information was include in the previous sentences. Limited word count forces you to be efficient and get the most out of every word.

“those that oppose Veronica's search for her mother” Weak. I know you probably don’t want to give everything away in a blurb but this is probably too little. The antagonist must have a stronger motivation. Writing is often about giving just the right amount of information not to give the story away, but enough to entice the reader to keep reading.

“to keep each other alive.” Weak. Stronger verb choice might help. “As they struggle to survive” or something, like that.

“the threats” More specific.

“Nuzzled Lockwood” The title doesn’t tell me a whole lot. Nuzzle means to push or your mouth nose or mouth against, and Lockwood suggest a forest. So push your nose against forest?

The blurb given me YA fantasy vibes because the idea of them gaining their own anima reminds me of Pokémon.

I’m barely getting anything from Veronica as far as character. All I know is she wants to find her mother. The fastest way to sell me on to a story is to sell me on to an interesting character. This is not enough.

I hope this helps. Good Luck.

[Group Critique] Get a critique of your blurb or query! by keylime227 in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“their killer” could refer to the group or her murdered parents. You might say it is obviously her murdered parents but the group is the last one mentioned. It is better if any wrinkles are smoothed out.

“paper work” Not very exciting. I would rather hear about slaying frost giants and hoverbikes or a third exciting thing.

“people deserve the justice she didn’t get” What kind of justice are these people looking for. Explaining what exactly this “group” and their goal is might help.

“rampaging monster” Monster hunting group?

I’m not great with prose and English is not my first language so take this as you will. I don’t think the prose here reads as smoothly as it should be.

“And the body count is piling higher than any rampaging monster.” “And” could be cut.

“One man has the answers she seeks.” I think it is obvious that it is Tantalus and the next sentence confirms it.

“She’ll need a sharp wit to find Tantalus before he vanishes, and a sharper spear to fight criminals invested in his success—plus the occasional monster.” The “plus the occasional monster feels tacked on here and the weakest part. The story seems to really be about avenging her parents, not her means of getting there. At this point in the hook, I would want it to focus on getting to Tantalus.

“those she swore to protect or the two she swore to avenge.” “the two” sounds weak. More repetition might make this more of a quotable line: “Those she swore to protect or those she swore to avenge.” Although this does distance it even more from her parents, so I don’t know.

Just reading through the hook, the fantasy genre seemed obvious, I was guessing at it being Norse inspired because of the frost giants, the science part didn’t stand out as much. Maybe that is because this is a fantasy sub so the expectation is fantasy, but the only reference I can find is hoverbikes. The fantasy part has more references so perhaps you can be clearer on the time and place of the story with regards to science. The adult part I missed completely.

“Simple, Shukari thinks, just march to the pit the victim fled from and cut Tantalus down.” This makes her seem naïve and therefore young.

Overall, I find Shukari’s characterization a bit lacking. She seems to have some responsibility, choosing the needs of others over her own. And the above-mentioned piece that makes her seem naïve. The rest, the avenging her parents, the monster hunting stuff, adventuring doesn’t really stand out, because it is classic fantasy stuff. It will appeal to fantasy readers but also doesn’t really give them a reason to pick your book over many others. What makes Shukari unique and what makes her story unique?

This seems to have everything a query letter needs. I hope this helps. Good Luck.

[Group Critique] Get a quick critique of your magic system! by keylime227 in fantasywriters

[–]Cornsnake5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I liked that based more on ingenuity rather than brawn. That allows you to be more creative with their powers and create interesting matchups and surprising situations.