Anthology entry
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- CovenantJr
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Anthology entry
Since the verdict on the anthology submissions is now in, I might as well post this. It's the first section I wrote, back in November, of a larger work in progress. The reason it appears to start with a random quote is because that's the song lyric that inspired this.
Announcement: This has been removed in my great purge of 31/8/05. I may send any or all of these to genre publications, and I don't want any issues because they're available here for free. In fact, this particular piece may well feature in my book, since it was the origin of said book.
Announcement: This has been removed in my great purge of 31/8/05. I may send any or all of these to genre publications, and I don't want any issues because they're available here for free. In fact, this particular piece may well feature in my book, since it was the origin of said book.
Last edited by CovenantJr on Wed Aug 31, 2005 6:26 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- CovenantJr
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- [Syl]
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Very good, man. Reminds me a lot of Steakly's book Armor, which in my book is high praise.
"It is not the literal past that rules us, save, possibly, in a biological sense. It is images of the past. Each new historical era mirrors itself in the picture and active mythology of its past or of a past borrowed from other cultures. It tests its sense of identity, of regress or new achievement against that past.”
-George Steiner
-George Steiner
- CovenantJr
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Very enjoyable, but also rather frustrating.
Enjoyable, because it's well-written; the concepts, and particularly the characters - and their relationships - are very intriguing.
Frustrating, because it's not enough. As you're obviously aware yourself, it's a fragment rather than a complete story. I'd love to read the whole thing!
Enjoyable, because it's well-written; the concepts, and particularly the characters - and their relationships - are very intriguing.
Frustrating, because it's not enough. As you're obviously aware yourself, it's a fragment rather than a complete story. I'd love to read the whole thing!

Check out my digital art at www.brian.co.za
- CovenantJr
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- CovenantJr
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Huh. Who asked your opinion?
We'll be the judges of that, thankyewverymuch!
Just write the dam' thing.

We'll be the judges of that, thankyewverymuch!

Just write the dam' thing.

Check out my digital art at www.brian.co.za
- CovenantJr
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*sigh* Ok... By (slightly) popular demand, the second bit follows. Now, you need to comprehend something at this juncture. I'm not writing this in order. The second bit I wrote comes after "Shatter the Sky" but other than this I'm mostly focusing on the backstory to "Shatter..." and the fluid nature of the escalating conflict between the two characters.
Anyway. After the second, there's an addendum which will come in due course. These bits are more...I don't know, I'll just post the damn things.
Enjoy/tolerate:
Announcement: This has been removed in my great purge of 31/8/05. I may send any or all of these to genre publications, and I don't want any issues because they're available here for free.
Anyway. After the second, there's an addendum which will come in due course. These bits are more...I don't know, I'll just post the damn things.
Enjoy/tolerate:
Announcement: This has been removed in my great purge of 31/8/05. I may send any or all of these to genre publications, and I don't want any issues because they're available here for free.
Last edited by CovenantJr on Wed Aug 31, 2005 6:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- CovenantJr
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Announcement: This has been removed in my great purge of 31/8/05. I may send any or all of these to genre publications, and I don't want any issues because they're available here for free.
Last edited by CovenantJr on Wed Aug 31, 2005 6:29 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Khaliban
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I think it was SRD who said, "When a writer asks for criticism, what he really wants is a pat on the back."
This is true of most writers. We are an insecure lot, often needing little boosts to our ego. However, at a certain point, you must learn how to listen to the bad stuff.
It's too much. Too many words, too much conflicting imagery, too much telling, too much effort at intensity. It doesn't create tension. It assaults you with the effort of trying to be tense.
I remember vividly the narcotic joy of discovering purple prose. It is an important skill to learn and an important habit to break.
Cut it by a third. Cut one-third of the words from each sentence. Do not cut one-third of the sentences. That's cheating.
Twain said, "If you see an adjective, kill it." Follow his advice.
I don't say this to be cruel. I say it to help.
This is true of most writers. We are an insecure lot, often needing little boosts to our ego. However, at a certain point, you must learn how to listen to the bad stuff.
It's too much. Too many words, too much conflicting imagery, too much telling, too much effort at intensity. It doesn't create tension. It assaults you with the effort of trying to be tense.
I remember vividly the narcotic joy of discovering purple prose. It is an important skill to learn and an important habit to break.
Cut it by a third. Cut one-third of the words from each sentence. Do not cut one-third of the sentences. That's cheating.
Twain said, "If you see an adjective, kill it." Follow his advice.
I don't say this to be cruel. I say it to help.
"This is the sort of bloody nonsense up with which I will not put."
Smashwords: Discovered Mate: A Tale of Desire and Chess
Some Stories: FanFiction or Archive Of Our Own
Smashwords: Discovered Mate: A Tale of Desire and Chess
Some Stories: FanFiction or Archive Of Our Own
- CovenantJr
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Duly noted. I think I have evolved a less elaborate style as time has worn on. Bear in mind that I had been writing for less than a month when I did these, and was still trying to find my footing. I'm certainly aware of the perils of being needlessly wordy - Gene Wolfe springs to mind.Khaliban wrote:I think it was SRD who said, "When a writer asks for criticism, what he really wants is a pat on the back."
This is true of most writers. We are an insecure lot, often needing little boosts to our ego. However, at a certain point, you must learn how to listen to the bad stuff.
It's too much. Too many words, too much conflicting imagery, too much telling, too much effort at intensity. It doesn't create tension. It assaults you with the effort of trying to be tense.
I remember vividly the narcotic joy of discovering purple prose. It is an important skill to learn and an important habit to break.
Cut it by a third. Cut one-third of the words from each sentence. Do not cut one-third of the sentences. That's cheating.
Twain said, "If you see an adjective, kill it." Follow his advice.
I don't say this to be cruel. I say it to help.
In any case, I think when a sincere writer asks for criticism, what he wants is enough back-patting to believe it's worth continuing and enough constrctive criticism to believe he can always improve.
Regardless, I'm a mere amateur and as such I'm at the mercy of my muse. If the muse speaks in tongues, that's what goes on the paper.
Nathan - thank you. It's always encouraging to believe I'm doing something people enjoy.
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- Khaliban
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Sorry about that. Some writers can be very defensive. Terry Goodkind, for example. I tried to cushion the blow and perhaps cushioned too much.CovenantJr wrote:Oh, and Khaliban - I've just this moment realised why your post got on my nerves though I do my best to be open to constructive criticism. It's because you were quite condescending. I'd appreciate it if you wouldn't do that again.
Actually, the opposite is true. Reading for pure enjoyment is an enviable position. It is the reason people read fiction in the first place. As a writer, I must analyze everything and have lost the capacity to enjoy 90% of what I read. The analysis serves my writing but nearly destroys one of my greatest pleasures. The worth of a story is in its effect, and the worth of the reader is in his capacity to accept that effect.Nathan wrote:...I don't study Literature or language or writing, so enjoying without analysis is, presumably of less worth.
"This is the sort of bloody nonsense up with which I will not put."
Smashwords: Discovered Mate: A Tale of Desire and Chess
Some Stories: FanFiction or Archive Of Our Own
Smashwords: Discovered Mate: A Tale of Desire and Chess
Some Stories: FanFiction or Archive Of Our Own