lost1 said:
Hello
I'm doing Standard English(and struggling by the way
) and I was wondering if anyone here could help me out with my short story. I have got it marked from my english teacher and the feedback was what I was kind of expecting:
I have somewhat gone a 'bit over the top' in places but the main point of improvement was that 'It lacks a narrative compulsion. It drifts along, rather than interest the reader or compelling them to read on...' and that the story does not really lead anywhere and the end is very predictable. She suggested to maybe have a slight twist towards the end and incorporate some kind of motif but i'v got no freakin idea!!!!
Please help me make something out of this short story...I'm basically aiming for at least a 10/15.
thanks
Mix up the language a little. I remember seeing lots of "slowly" and "nothing". Try to get out of the he said, she said formula. More action could be used to cut that out. Concision could also be improved on here.
eg instead of [FONT="]“When was the last time we went for those walks James?”
she asked without hesitation.[/FONT]
You could rewrite it like this:
"When was the last time we went for those walks, James?" she focused her gaze, scrutinising my eyes. I knew it sounded threatening - only because she intended it to be.
[FONT="][/FONT]
Why did I rewrite it like this? Because it adds more to the atmosphere, the audience feels her iciness - it engages the audience. And it shows that James actually does love his gf. It's subtle, but he knows her well.
More showing needed. "Here, now in the darkness of the night, we didn't hold hands, but I felt so close as though I had. Felt closer then I have in a very long time" This is telling.
Paragraphing could also help make the repetition more effective. The repetition - tone it down a little. Truncated sentences are very effective, overusing them makes it lose its impact after the first 4 paragraphs. ie vary your sentence lengths. eg this "As if they were the wind blowing that last lit candle inside of me, I felt unworthy of her, unworthy of happiness." I take issue with. Try to cut down using the same adjective twice in the one sentence. I know it's your style and I don't aim to tell you to fix it. What I'm trying to say is that you could tone it down.
It reads like a vignette - not a story. Yeah, sure, you have a complication, but the problem is: there's no evaluation and no resolution. What does James get out of the break up? What changes besides his marital status? And what exactly did he learn from the break up (if anything)? How did he change? And show us what/how he changed. You can't give me this: "Somehow her words changed me. As if they were the wind blowing that last lit candle inside of me, I felt unworthy of her, unworthy of happiness." And expect me to know. Yeah ok, he doesn't feel good enough for her, but hasn't he always?
You need a character. I know only 2 things about James: he wants his gf back ad he was an alcoholic. He needs more of a presence. What's he like as a person? Arrogant? Quiet? Cheeky?
You've used first person. You could give the audience the opportunity to read about his actual thoughts and opinions, rather than his feelings. Give us something to go on - make James an interesting person.