Extension English Story: what do you think (1 Viewer)

agua.fuego

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
302
Location
North Coast
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
For Extension English, we had to write a story as an appropriation of Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley. I'm just posting to see what you think, before I hand it in. It's not very much, a 2-night effort, and a kind of stretch in regards to appropriation, but help, please! Thanks heaps. (Also... very long.)

EDIT: I've made some changes. See what you think.
--

Vivir con miedo, es como vivir a medias

It begins in a room, where there’s too much implied in all the corners that it’s said we die from just the thoughts, and their complexity, and their recurrence. It is dark, both the room and the story, and it is one that you never want to enter. Why?

You don’t return, neither in entirety nor in parts. There is only a fragmented shell to hold though if you do. And even that will crumble in your grasp.

And when it does, it echoes off, to the sounds of insanity. “I wish… I wish… I wish…”


--

It’s a hot night. When I come home, I leave the windows, doors and curtains open. I am single-minded. I sit down to the computer I left on this morning, before normalcy summoned me, and in the dwindling sunlight, I make another page to my story.
It has neither fully started nor ended yet. But that is my goal – to start, from the middle, and emerge with a fully told tale, one to rival the greatness of Shakespeare. Keats. Shelley.
The pages take my mind into an abyss, where the rhythmically clacking keys accompany me, duetting with whatever song is playing.

… and I’m drowning slowly, off the coast, and I’m headed nowhere…

I resolve, detachedly, to change those songs. To make them applicable for me, to help me to write, to help my goal, to be remembered and glorified forever only as the greatest. And that is why each night, it is only when the music turns up a notch – a loud guitar solo, or perhaps a fevered note from the singer – that I realise it’s dark, my computer just a dull, yet needed light.
And then as I contemplate the faults of the other greats, and how I’ll remove them, one by one, my screensaver, the one I’ve never changed, will come on, and I’ll be bathed in unsettling darkness.

--

I leave the computer at the end of the chapter and go to my fridge. It’s one of those fridges that live empty.
I never actually intended to write a story. But then, I felt possessed. It took over my time, and my energy. It scared me for a while. Especially that I could delve into this world, a depressing, insatiably cruel place, so often, and that I’d willingly do it, exposing myself to so much…
It’s not that it’s hard to pull the words out of the dry air and make them lusciously ripe enough to enjoy in a story. But the thoughts that come with it make it brutal and a hard thing to endure. My mind burns sometimes; it makes it so hard to write with my computer. But it’s a goal that I’ve started on: once started, I don’t stop til the story does. That’s it, that’s my mantra. And it gets me through the critiquing and the cringing in shame at how right those critiques are.

--

“Where have you been?”
That question is so common nowadays, I hear it in my sleep. “Where are you? Did you forget to call me? I sent you an email… is your phone out of battery? I’ve texted you a million times…”
What else can I say? “Sorry, it’s been really hectic.
My brother looks at me suspiciously. “You’re never around anymore. What’s going on?”
“Work. Uni. Stuff. The usual.” It’s easier and easier to keep the lies tripping off my tongue, and to be quite honest, it’s pretty appalling how I never get caught out. I mean, shouldn’t I have been discovered by now? I must have tripped up by now.
But no. “Well… we should get you out sometime. Get you doing normal stuff. Are you free any time soon?” he asks. He pushes his floppy black hair out of his eyes, looking at me with that sceptical look of an eyebrow up and arched to unbelievable heights. It’s something I’ve always been jealous of.
“Erm… well. It’s a bit difficult to say, really. Everything’s so piled on right now.” I’m avoiding eye contact here, fiddling warily with my t-shirt hem, and at the sprouting little threads at odd angles.
He becomes exasperated with me then, and snaps, “Look. Just call, OK? I’m not busy. I’m free whenever you are. But if you don’t start living soon, you’re not going to be sane for much longer.”
Since when has he known anything?

--

It becomes a life half lived; vivir con miedo, es como vivir a medias. The only thing that I stop to do is watch a movie. I’ve become addicted to Baz Lurhmann. His flashy, bright addictive movies make me relaxed, and that line sticks in my head for no particular reason. I am not living in fear, I tell myself, I am not living a half-life. I know it’s a lie. But why, why admit it?
Your fear is failure.

--

Night, day, night, day, night, day, passing, like the cars on a German autobahn, but it doesn’t bother me. Some nights, I add 5 pages, typed in that default font. And sometimes, I even make a reasonable effort to a beginning, one that draws people in, and one that I feel proud of for about 20 seconds. The read-over, punctuated with my Critic’s voice, makes me feel instantly disgusted.
I like living alone. It avoids everyone’s scrutinising eyes, their insanely unappreciative sense for the art and skill of writing. I can get on in peace.
I once heard – I think, maybe, it was before I discovered writing, on my Pride and Prejudice DVD, the new one, that sits collecting dust on my TV – that Jane Austen purposely set herself up in the room of her house that had a creaking door. So she wouldn’t be interrupted; she valued her privacy, so she would know if anyone was coming, and she’d quickly throw down her quill onto the paper. Cover it. Secrecy.
The door shakes with the power of a thudding knock and that knock repeats itself over and over and over. I push down the screen of my laptop with alarming alacrity and go to the door.
My brother pushes himself inside. “Nice to see you too.”
“Bloody hell! Where are the lights? Put them on! It’s 9 o’clock! What are you doing with no lights on?” He looks at me angrily. “Don’t even tell me you’re sleeping, either. You’re clearly dressed.”
“I’m just watching a movie.”
“You don’t watch movies until the weekend. Don’t pull that with me.”
“What’s it matter?” I flick on a light and blink repeatedly at how it blinds me. “It’s oh-KAY. I’m fine. Don’t you trust me, or something?”
He sighs resignedly. “I’m just worried. That’s all.”
“Don’t be. Alright?” I look at him, with my perfected, I am the baby sis and I am completely fine look.
“How can you ask me to do that?” He shakes his head. “You never call, you never reply to my texts, you never even email anymore. You’re just… keeping inside. And it’s not you.”
“I’m just loaded with uni stuff, OK?” I insist. “And work’s a nightmare. I’ve got so many shifts I can’t count.”
“No, you don’t. I checked. I asked them to cut you down. They said if they cut down your shifts any more, you’d be replaced.”
“Why are you doing this?!” [This is where I have to put in the conflict apparently. Express angst. Help?]
“I’ll stop when you become normal again! Don’t. Don’t try to push me out.”
“Go away, alright. Just leave.”
And he does, and he vanishes in the darkness, and I shut the door as quickly as I can to retreat to my world. The computer screen lights up automatically, a welcome, trusting person in my world of distrust, and I continue with my creation.

--

I finish. It’s strange. Three long years of my life, down to 700 A4 pages. I feel lonely. Cold. The computer and I are no longer companions; I cannot bear to look at my pitiful excuse for a story because it just disgusts me so horribly. Each time I read it the critics would be in greater abundance and that made me… insane? I have no clue.
I open all the windows, curtains, doors – they stayed closed for so long because, back when I first began to write, I closed them and forgot to open them again. My house reeks, it is so musty and it feels like there has been no one living there. Not even me.
I haven’t been, really. What I did, could you call it living? I don’t know.
I call my brother’s number. Someone else picks up. “Hello? Is David Jacobsen there?” I say. My voice sounds different. Kind of cracked and raw, from disuse, except in my crazy undertones from when I hurriedly read my manuscript.
“Uh, Jacobsen?” There’s a man on the other end; I can hear a TV in the background. “There hasn’t been a Jacobsen here for ages.”
“Oh. Never mind, then. Sorry.” I hang up quickly and sit, frustrated, on the couch. I open the computer again. Before, it was my utopia. Now the computer is just a revelation of what dystopia truly is. I avoid hovering over the screen, like I am used to doing. Instead I click on the internet button and type in my email.
There are emails, but from a year ago. That’s the soonest one. I click on it. My brother has invited me to a wedding. His. To some girl I have never even heard of. Then, an email from a joined address, telling me I’m an aunty now. I look at the others and they’re very much the same. My brother’s have petered into nothingness.
I hunt down my mobile, and plug it into its charger. I turn it on and wait. It shows me so many texts. From friends. From my brother. I don’t read them; I throw my phone away and grab the copies of the manuscript on my table, in their matching yellow packages, with their different addresses.

--

The trip outside makes me sad, and the way people look at me makes it worse. I am thin, I am looking so empty, and my eyes are rimmed in black from an extensive lack of sleep.
I don’t look normal, vivir con miedo, es como vivir a medias. The fear still exists, but in a way of, Will it get accepted?? Will I get my goal?
--

And then, the letters come, the emails, and none of them are what I expected. I cut my finger opening them.
It hasn’t. Rejected by them all, minor ones too, and it’s so unfair I just want to cry. It repulsed me, to be sure, but why them also? It was perfection; a standard, textbook perfect: WHY? It’s a thought in my reverie. And I… I don’t know. I don’t exist as sane. I don’t. I wish I had changed it. Wishing takes fear over. And repulsion lingers darkly underneath.

--

The story ended in the room, a dark and dank and dreary place to exist as a whole and then… then. The wishing started and it made it impossible to even pause at the door to the room, a toe lingering on the threshold of entering, because those thoughts and pulses radiated violently and hurt even those trying to come close. And it hurt.

Each day wishing reverted to remembering, and that remembrance brought fear, and that hurt. Hurt hurt hurt.

The room was locked. Shut down. Like winter.


--

That's it all "fixed up", I suppose. What I really need help with is the conflict part. What can I do for it?
Thankyou for all your help by the way. It's been really useful.
 
Last edited:

sbeydoun91

In za box, which is
Joined
Aug 10, 2006
Messages
36
Gender
Female
HSC
N/A
I really enjoyed reading this! Sorry, I have no advice for changes, because I think it should be left the way it is! I really love the way you have appropriated Frankenstein whilst mantaining originality, particularly the parallels drawn between Victor and the Monster, and the writer and her work. Keep up the writing! :)
 

agua.fuego

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
302
Location
North Coast
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
Thanks heaps! I'm completely nervous about reading it out in class, though. Thanks for the feedback - I was worried it was a complete stretch, too.
 

bored of sc

Active Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2007
Messages
2,314
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
Tash, this is very clever, I enjoyed reading this. I don't know what else to say. Um, this is not a reflection of your life is it?! The dark references are in keeping with gothic culture and I like the personal nature of it. Hmmmm.... Yeah, its fine.
 
Joined
Jun 27, 2006
Messages
80
Gender
Female
HSC
2007
this was rly good, i wish i could of written as well as tht when i was doing ext eng... dont change it, and be proud of it
good work :)
 

AnandDNA

Member
Joined
Jun 22, 2007
Messages
408
Location
2148 :)
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
Omg that was really really really good and i mean it :). Now i know how high the standard of writing is outside my school. OMG i got srs work to do,here i was thinking my creative pieces were at a suitable level for Yr 11 and 12 :(
 

agua.fuego

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
302
Location
North Coast
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
Thanks... surely this isn't THAT high a standard? I mean, my teacher's not even read it yet. I really appreciate all your comments though! It's awesome to have it that liked. Now to do the speech with it (aargh!).
 

agua.fuego

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
302
Location
North Coast
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
scaredytiger said:
its incredible!

now i feel like my writing is terrible...
Don't start with me, Em... *throws chocolate in disgust* You're awesome. You can write better than me.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2007
Messages
1,409
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
That was really, really great. Very well written, nice work! I can't think of any way it could be improved for what it is.
 

lyounamu

Reborn
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
9,989
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
agua.fuego said:
Thankyou!

(1 week away til I read it... eep):worried:
I think it is great. However, my criticism goes to numerous grammar mistakes such as "neither...or". It should be "neither...nor". There are few grammar mistakes that can be fixed. Other than that, it was great to read such a well-structured piece of work.
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2007
Messages
1,409
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
lyounamu said:
I think it is great. However, my criticism goes to numerous grammar mistakes such as "neither...or". It should be "neither...nor". There are few grammar mistakes that can be fixed. Other than that, it was great to read such a well-structured piece of work.
"It neither has fully started or ended yet." -> "It has neither started nor ended yet."

I didn't really notice stuff like that (not least because of the stream of conciousness style it's written in). Authors have proofreaders and editors for that. :p
 

agua.fuego

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
302
Location
North Coast
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
lyounamu said:
I think it is great. However, my criticism goes to numerous grammar mistakes such as "neither...or". It should be "neither...nor". There are few grammar mistakes that can be fixed. Other than that, it was great to read such a well-structured piece of work.
THAT'S what my teacher meant! I just looked at him strangely, like, "Well, no, it's not backwards because I speak another language. Try to remember: I don't."
 

agua.fuego

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
302
Location
North Coast
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
veloc1ty said:
"It neither has fully started or ended yet." -> "It has neither started nor ended yet."

I didn't really notice stuff like that (not least because of the stream of conciousness style it's written in). Authors have proofreaders and editors for that. :p
I need one. I have asked my friends, but they don't focus on stuff like that.
 

agua.fuego

Member
Joined
Mar 8, 2008
Messages
302
Location
North Coast
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
I'll post up the fixed one. When my teacher deigns to help me. It took him 3 weeks to get around to reading it.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top