Second language? In that case you are completely excused--I know how tough foreign grammar can be. I suggest you find a friend or two who are very good at grammar and have them proofread everything before you submit this to the contest.I do proofread, but all these little grammar and spelling mistakes usually take me several passes to be totally noticed, if noticed at all. (english is my second language and I still wrestle with some vices result of an initially flawed teaching of it).
However, it makes me a bit sad to hear it lacks in originality. I believed that a time traveler coming from the past as opposed from the future was an interesting reversal of the trope.
Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
Esoteric (post: 1330094) wrote:Second language? In that case you are completely excused--I know how tough foreign grammar can be. I suggest you find a friend or two who are very good at grammar and have them proofread everything before you submit this to the contest.
I had one more thought. Maggie expected Jeff to question and disbelieve her. Would there have been any way that she could have provided him with proof? Is there any piece of equipment, or Newton relic, or something she could have shown him in an attempt to convince him? If not, okay, but if there was, I figured she would have tried to be prepared to answer his skepticism with evidence. His continued laughter in the face of such evidence would make her disappointment/sense of failure even stronger.
EricTheFred (post: 1330100) wrote:First and foremost, I have a great deal of difficulty believing in Maggie thanks to her manner of speech. She's 'too 21st Century.'
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You can perhaps even make this an element that leads Jeff to not immediately reject her. Something like 'she always seemed a bit out-of-date' or such.
Second, I suggest you go back and eliminate at least half of your adverbs. As an example, go to the third paragraph and remove the words 'tenderly', 'courageously' and 'possibly', then read it back. To me, it sounds much stronger this way, less tentative, and it loses no meaning at all.
Third, quotes within dialog should use single quotation marks. (That's not opinion, it's straight out of the Chicago Manual of Style.)
Finally, paragraphs...
You're fine until you hit dialog. By nature, each line of dialog is technically a paragraph on its own. If it is firmly attached to neighboring narrative for some reason, we can glue them together. But, you should never end up with lines from one character and lines or actions of another character in the same paragraph. Your first paragraph is a case in point.
Paul (post: 1330135) wrote:Now, not quite done yet, just a few more things. Narrative hook. Have you ever heard of that? let me share it just in case. The narrative hook is the first paragraph of the story line and whenever possible the first sentence or two. It's often the gunshot in the night or a dead homicde victim found, or in your case the light bulb going off in your readers head that perhaps the beautiful, gorgeous, red-brown, light reflecting hair of Maggie, the girl everyone has connected and identified with, may be in serious trouble.
If this was my story, you could make a sure bet my readers met Maggie and her problem before they met Jeff, even if Jeff was the main character. Because until you reach that epilog at the end of the story, those readers are going to fret with every page they turn, about poor Maggie and her plight. As a writer, that is exactly what you want. The other thing on their mind will be is the mystery of if the love of Jeff and Maggie are friends, or if he is going to get a lover's kiss out of Maggie before she is found by her nemesises (those she is running from).
Take this and put it in the beginning of your story. Work it in and make a narrative hook out of it, in a paragraph or two, that will land them on the river bank where Maggie reveals to her trusted and beloved the truth. No matter if he believes her or not.
Maokun, after all that, I hope I'm still your friend. You are a great writer with ton's and ton's of potential. This story of yours about Jeff and Maggie is going places if you do it right. Listen my friend, you are heavily blessed by God with a desire for writing. You just lack some of the basic writing skills, that's all. Time, Patience, studying your craft, and take heavy critique from those of us who love to write in love, and putting our advice to work for you. We all want you to be the best, we all are passionate about the written word, and we all know it's dog eat dog out there, which means we are going to be honest about writing well.
P.M. me later, let's talk. Post some more of this story of yours, let me look it over for you, because I like it and you got a great imagination.
Paul.
EDIT! Oh joy! The deadline is actually 31st August, not July! Yosh! However, I know I shall not slack.
Esoteric (post: 1333565) wrote:Okay well, I tried to catch as many typos and grammar issues as I could. I hope this helps.
Blue text notes the majority of changes. Everything from missing or misspelled words, to sentences reworked to sound less awkward.
Orange text is comments.
Pink text is suggested omissions and/or punctuation.
Fish and Chips (post: 1333769) wrote:Hmmm, you have a solid base for a story (time travel with limits is never not a good plot device), but things appear to be moving a little quickly. No sooner do we meet our protagonists that they're already zipping through things. It may be valuable to scale back a bit, or spread it out just a touch, though some other comments indicate people thought it dragged so maybe I'm alone in this.
I also think it would prove useful to dedicate a single paragraph each to their appearances, were proper, instead of just running into it after dialogue, or better yet to slowly sculpt them as the piece goes on, though again, this may be "Just me." Don't mention hair color until a character combs theirs back with their fingers for example, or that Jeff has glasses until he needs to push them back up the bridge of his nose to see. Things like that, overall just pacing.
I'm sorry I came in so late, or I might have been of more help.
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