This is a story I am working on
"Jack, where are you going?"
I turned around. My father stood in the kitchen doorway.
"Just outside for a walk," I replied.
"Well don't wander too far," he cautioned me.
I walked down to the gate, pushing it open, its hinges creaking. I reminded myself to oil it when I got back. Or in the morning, as it was starting to grow dark. The air was damp, and I knew it was going to rain soon, although I didn't really care. A walk up the hill on the other side of town would be pleasant.
I strolled down the street. The pavement was badly in need of repair, as many stones were cracked or missing. The houses on either side had small gardens and brick walls. Some were well kept, others appeared derelict, although I knew for a fact that every house on my street was occupied.
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Generic.
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Please keep writing more
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Laternenpfahl wrote:
Please keep writing more
This. It sounds awesome
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RedRocker227 wrote:
Laternenpfahl wrote:
Please keep writing more
This. It sounds awesome
Can you post more by this evening?
Pweeeze?
PLEEEEEEEAAAAASSSSSEEEEE?????
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Kay. Prepare for nitpickiness:
"Jack, where are you going?"
I turned around. My father stood in the kitchen doorway.
"Just outside for a walk," I replied.
"Well, don't wander too far," he cautioned me.
The transition from this to the next paragraph seemed a bit abrupt, maybe you could add in, ' "I will" ' or 'I nodded' or something.
I walked down to the gate, pushing it open, its hinges creaking. I reminded myself to oil it when I got back. Or in the morning, as it was starting to grow dark. That second sentence may be considered a fragment, consider joining with the other one. The air was damp, and I knew it was going to rain soon, although I didn't really care. A walk up the hill on the other side of town would be pleasant. I'm not sure how those two thoughts go together. Consider adding at the end of the second one, 'even in the rain'.
I strolled down the street. The pavement was badly in need of repair; many stones were cracked or missing May give the sentence a better finished-ness if you finish with "missing altogether" rather than just "missing". The houses on either side had small gardens and brick walls. Some were well kept, others doesn't need the word "appeared" derelict, though I knew for a fact that every house on my street was occupied.
Despite my nitpickiness though, it's actually a great start
Post more soon
Last edited by Wickimen (2012-02-18 17:29:07)
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soupoftomato wrote:
Generic.
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soupoftomato wrote:
Generic.
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Wickimen wrote:
Kay. Prepare for nitpickiness:
"Jack, where are you going?"
I turned around. My father stood in the kitchen doorway.
"Just outside for a walk," I replied.
"Well, don't wander too far," he cautioned me.
The transition from this to the next paragraph seemed a bit abrupt, maybe you could add in, ' "I will" ' or 'I nodded' or something.
I walked down to the gate, pushing it open, its hinges creaking. I reminded myself to oil it when I got back. Or in the morning, as it was starting to grow dark. That second sentence may be considered a fragment, consider joining with the other one. The air was damp, and I knew it was going to rain soon, although I didn't really care. A walk up the hill on the other side of town would be pleasant. I'm not sure how those two thoughts go together. Consider adding at the end of the second one, 'even in the rain'.
I strolled down the street. The pavement was badly in need of repair; many stones were cracked or missing May give the sentence a better finished-ness if you finish with "missing altogether" rather than just "missing". The houses on either side had small gardens and brick walls. Some were well kept, others doesn't need the word "appeared" derelict, though I knew for a fact that every house on my street was occupied.
Despite my nitpickiness though, it's actually a great start
Post more soon
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I though this was about the MPFC sketch. I can't link though cause it has some naughty themes.
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