lame story currently called andelguard
Posted: Fri Jun 10, 2011 3:04 pm
I haven't finished this. In fact, I just started this last night! So, what you're seeing is a very, very, very rough draft. I know, I know, lame excuse. Well, if it sucks, it sucks.
I'd love some reviews of the little I have so far. I want to know if the PoV works so far, if the main character's tone is... oh, I dunno. Analyze what I've got so far, if you don't mind. Be harsh!
Because I have to copypaste it, the stupid thing is going to be in italics. Sorry!(:
I’m not the sort of person to go and have adventures. I don’t go into the desert late at night with my friends and shoot fireworks and drink booze. I sit in my room and browse tumblr. I drink cherry pepsi and vanilla coke while playing things like World of Warcraft. I don’t need adventures or to lose those last five pounds. I’ve got the internet and my books, the perfect escapes. Those glorious places where no one cares that you’re too tall and almost-but-not-quite thin enough. Where no one reminds you day in and day out that gingers have no souls, that Doctor Who isn’t cool, that you’ll never be a successful writer. I can tell you, there are perfect places. They simply aren’t real. Unless, just maybe, they are.
I stumbled into a place that, at first, I would have called perfect. One second I was standing on a sidewalk in Tucson, surrounded by chattering crowds and a classmate on my way home and the next I was stumbling in a wheat field. The stumbling led to me falling, which led to me hitting my head on the ground. I was already close to passing out, I had that feeling you get when you stand up really quickly and your head goes fuzzy. So it was no surprise that when I hit the ground with my head I passed out for the first time in my life.
When I came to, it was because a bug was crawling across my face. I screamed and jerked myself upward quickly, but had to hold my head in my hands for fear of passing out again.
Then I realized something that, later, I could never explain. I knew who I was, I knew where I’d grown up and where I’d gone to school. But one simple fact eluded me: my name. I have no idea how long I sat there, trying in vain to remember something so simple. It was on the tip of my tongue, I just couldn’t quite get it out. It was frustrating.
At some point I just gave up, yanked my backpack of my back, and pulled out my water bottle.I was suddenly glad of what had always seemed, to me, as a ridiculous, unnecessary habit. I wasn’t sure when I had started having water with me at all times, but it seemed that it had been a good choice.
Once I had my fill of the water, which had seldom tasted sweeter than it did in my panicked state, I looked for a sign to tell me what direction I should walk in. There wasn’t one. Just endless wheat, row after row, so different from the streets of Tucson I’d been walking until quite recently. It’d be a long walk until I could find someone to help me home. I looked down at my feet, smiled at the worn in Chucks, and stood back up.
There was no real reason to choose any specific direction, so I decided it didn’t really matter which way I went. And what better way to decide which unimportant direction to travel in than simply spinning around and walking off in the direction you stop spinning in?
I suppose I should explain why none of the strangeness that had just happened fazed me. I had nothing in Tucson. My grades were horrible, it’s not like I was going to be accepted into a college. Even if I was, I’d never be able to get enough scholarships to go. My writing was going nowhere. Every time I started, I’d hit this block that I just couldn’t get rid of. For family, I only had my mom. She wasn’t exactly a presence in my life; she was always on her booze and her antidepressants, not caring that the mixture of the two could kill her.
I had no way to explain how I’d gotten where I had. The only logical explanation was that I’d been hit by a bus while walking home from school and was now in the middle of a very boring coma dream. I only had to wait for the crazy adventures to start happening.
The logical explanation wasn’t the one I was fond of, however. There was another, completely ridiculous explanation. Magic. I mean, how else can a person travel hundreds of miles and go from desert and dry heat to an endless wheat field?
I was surprised at how quickly I’d come to that conclusion. Magic wasn’t something that yesterday I’d even believed could possibly exist, yet here I was, jumping to that idiotic conclusion. But why not? I refused to believe that this was a coma dream. It was entirely too boring for that.
After some time, trees came into view and I could see the end of what I had thought to be an endless wheat field. One tree towered over the others, and I began to get just the tiniest bit anxious. The tree, with shelves that could have been either carved or grown, seemed familiar. It was a giant bookcase, with ornate, spiralling shelves and steps. And every shelf on the tree was filled with books. The name of the tree, and I was sure it had a name, was as familiar as my own name and just as inaccessible. I felt like I could almost spit the name out, but I couldn’t. It wasn’t there anymore, though I wasn’t sure why it had been there in the first place.
This land, whatever and wherever it was, was starting to frustrate me. It was taking memories from me, somehow.
But now I at least had a place to travel to, instead of aimlessly wandering. The tree was full of books, perhaps it could help me find what I was missing.
As I said, not much so far.
If you guys don't mind, could you also review a finished story of mine? This one is finished. Sorry about the formatting, DA made it rather wonky. But here it is!
Thanks for all the reviews, guys! And don't forget, I really do want harsh reviews!
For those who don't know, harsh reviews tend to give you the most ideas of how to improve. They can hurt sometimes, but harsh reviews tend to force you to see what you're doing wrong.(:
And, should anyone want me to review something of theirs, feel free to post a link in this thread or to PM me!(:
Will be updated as more stuff happens.
EDIT: That sucked. Rewritten below.
I'd love some reviews of the little I have so far. I want to know if the PoV works so far, if the main character's tone is... oh, I dunno. Analyze what I've got so far, if you don't mind. Be harsh!
Because I have to copypaste it, the stupid thing is going to be in italics. Sorry!(:
I’m not the sort of person to go and have adventures. I don’t go into the desert late at night with my friends and shoot fireworks and drink booze. I sit in my room and browse tumblr. I drink cherry pepsi and vanilla coke while playing things like World of Warcraft. I don’t need adventures or to lose those last five pounds. I’ve got the internet and my books, the perfect escapes. Those glorious places where no one cares that you’re too tall and almost-but-not-quite thin enough. Where no one reminds you day in and day out that gingers have no souls, that Doctor Who isn’t cool, that you’ll never be a successful writer. I can tell you, there are perfect places. They simply aren’t real. Unless, just maybe, they are.
I stumbled into a place that, at first, I would have called perfect. One second I was standing on a sidewalk in Tucson, surrounded by chattering crowds and a classmate on my way home and the next I was stumbling in a wheat field. The stumbling led to me falling, which led to me hitting my head on the ground. I was already close to passing out, I had that feeling you get when you stand up really quickly and your head goes fuzzy. So it was no surprise that when I hit the ground with my head I passed out for the first time in my life.
When I came to, it was because a bug was crawling across my face. I screamed and jerked myself upward quickly, but had to hold my head in my hands for fear of passing out again.
Then I realized something that, later, I could never explain. I knew who I was, I knew where I’d grown up and where I’d gone to school. But one simple fact eluded me: my name. I have no idea how long I sat there, trying in vain to remember something so simple. It was on the tip of my tongue, I just couldn’t quite get it out. It was frustrating.
At some point I just gave up, yanked my backpack of my back, and pulled out my water bottle.I was suddenly glad of what had always seemed, to me, as a ridiculous, unnecessary habit. I wasn’t sure when I had started having water with me at all times, but it seemed that it had been a good choice.
Once I had my fill of the water, which had seldom tasted sweeter than it did in my panicked state, I looked for a sign to tell me what direction I should walk in. There wasn’t one. Just endless wheat, row after row, so different from the streets of Tucson I’d been walking until quite recently. It’d be a long walk until I could find someone to help me home. I looked down at my feet, smiled at the worn in Chucks, and stood back up.
There was no real reason to choose any specific direction, so I decided it didn’t really matter which way I went. And what better way to decide which unimportant direction to travel in than simply spinning around and walking off in the direction you stop spinning in?
I suppose I should explain why none of the strangeness that had just happened fazed me. I had nothing in Tucson. My grades were horrible, it’s not like I was going to be accepted into a college. Even if I was, I’d never be able to get enough scholarships to go. My writing was going nowhere. Every time I started, I’d hit this block that I just couldn’t get rid of. For family, I only had my mom. She wasn’t exactly a presence in my life; she was always on her booze and her antidepressants, not caring that the mixture of the two could kill her.
I had no way to explain how I’d gotten where I had. The only logical explanation was that I’d been hit by a bus while walking home from school and was now in the middle of a very boring coma dream. I only had to wait for the crazy adventures to start happening.
The logical explanation wasn’t the one I was fond of, however. There was another, completely ridiculous explanation. Magic. I mean, how else can a person travel hundreds of miles and go from desert and dry heat to an endless wheat field?
I was surprised at how quickly I’d come to that conclusion. Magic wasn’t something that yesterday I’d even believed could possibly exist, yet here I was, jumping to that idiotic conclusion. But why not? I refused to believe that this was a coma dream. It was entirely too boring for that.
After some time, trees came into view and I could see the end of what I had thought to be an endless wheat field. One tree towered over the others, and I began to get just the tiniest bit anxious. The tree, with shelves that could have been either carved or grown, seemed familiar. It was a giant bookcase, with ornate, spiralling shelves and steps. And every shelf on the tree was filled with books. The name of the tree, and I was sure it had a name, was as familiar as my own name and just as inaccessible. I felt like I could almost spit the name out, but I couldn’t. It wasn’t there anymore, though I wasn’t sure why it had been there in the first place.
This land, whatever and wherever it was, was starting to frustrate me. It was taking memories from me, somehow.
But now I at least had a place to travel to, instead of aimlessly wandering. The tree was full of books, perhaps it could help me find what I was missing.
As I said, not much so far.
If you guys don't mind, could you also review a finished story of mine? This one is finished. Sorry about the formatting, DA made it rather wonky. But here it is!
Thanks for all the reviews, guys! And don't forget, I really do want harsh reviews!
For those who don't know, harsh reviews tend to give you the most ideas of how to improve. They can hurt sometimes, but harsh reviews tend to force you to see what you're doing wrong.(:
And, should anyone want me to review something of theirs, feel free to post a link in this thread or to PM me!(:
Will be updated as more stuff happens.
EDIT: That sucked. Rewritten below.