[This message has been edited by Swimming Bird (edited August 04, 2005).]
"Where is it?" (grabs me, I wasn't to know where "what" is. The fact that the reader is even LOOKING at your story means you HAVE them, but beyond the first paragraph, it is YOU who has to KEEP them. After all, watching TV is a hell of a lot easier than reading.
"Excuse me?" said the girl. I can't remember what she looked like, but she had a playful smile.
"My Peach Tree!" I fumed. I was, after all, only 3.
"You have a Peach Tree?" asked the girl, smiling playfully. "Did you check your back pocket?"
"Who would have a peach tree in their pocket!" I was still fussy. "No, I planted a pit in my sand box and watered it and watered it and it hasn't grown."
"Well," said the girl kindly. Red hair, I remember she had red hair. (saying you can't remember what the girl looked like is a ditch, if you ask me and doen't give the reader something about that character to fucus on. I know, the character's only 3, but she could remember a hair color if whe remembers playful smiles.) "Trees son't grow very well in sand, maybe you should try in dirt?"
Anyway, you get the picture, and I hope this helped.
Remember that the opening pargraph is a freebie. Use it to establish setting, conflict, etc, as well tone and voice. There's plenty of time to esatblish your universe before you begin that first crucial scene.
I have to disagree with ChrisG's suggestion. Starting a story with dialogue is usually confusing for the reader.
[This message has been edited by DavidGill (edited August 01, 2005).]
quote:
My earliest clear memory (I think) is sitting in a chair on my front porch somewhere in Russia, asking a girl what happened to the peach tree I had planted the night before.
When I first read this sentence I immediately envisioned an old man sitting on a chair in his front porch.
I think a three-year-old would probably sit on the steps or the floor of a porch, and like most toddlers he would probably stand up to speak with the teenage girl. Children usually feel the need to stand up when they want to talk of things that are important to them.
quote:
probably the hardest work a three-year-old can legally do
What do you mean by legally?
Like DavidGill said I think your narrative voice is pleasing, the paragraphs are a little jerky but the story is one I would like to continue reading.
Keep it up!
The parenthetical asides are a little bit awkward, but somehow seem to fit. I don't know what to tell you about those; it seems to me like they should be smoothed out while still retaining the information, but I don't have any ideas.
I love how the memory is nonspecific, just a collection of details.
I was under the impression that Russia didn't have child labor laws, though.
So, what genre? What length? I'd be curious to know where this is going.
FYI - Right now, knowing what happened to the peachtree is a lot less important to me then knowing why the father gave it to him with such specific instructions. That's the idea that really hooks me.
[This message has been edited by NewsBys (edited August 02, 2005).]
Guess the real thing is...what is this stroy about? We don't know
The story is a coming of age tale, as many have guess, and yes, it is told by the boy as an old man many years later.
It is a finished work of 120,000 words.
One thing I would suggest. Change the first line a bit so that it isn't entirely contradicted by everything that follows. You call this his earliest clear memory, then describe in some detail a great many things that happen prior to it, in a manner that suggests that these are also memories rather than later inferences.
I think that when you say "earliest clear memory", you mean something else. But I have no idea what you mean.
Still, the story is an interesting one, and the language is clear most of the time. The narrative voice engages well.
At any rate, I think what made it interesting for me is the teenage girl's response to the child's question. Most teenagers would take the opportunity to play a trick on the child, but her response is a kind one...
"Miners, not minors!"
"You lost me."
The biggest problem I had with my first read is that I expected this (becuase most everything around here is) to be some sort of SF, and yet nothing SF happens. Is this just regular fiction, or do lots of SF things happen later?
My advice: delete the first six or ten words and come up with a stronger hook for the very first.
Also, why does he say "somewhere in Russia?" Does he now know where he lived as a child?