Santos
I never understood why the people of Terra Roma rose up against the Qurin. My friend, Jose, said it was because humans are violent and greedy by nature. Whatever the reason for it, the rebellion changed my life, and even though I fought against his people, I owed my own survival to Jose and Saint Xi-Crupp.
I met Jose on my first trip to my father's office. Jose wasn't his real name, and Qurin were asexual, so he wasn't really a he either. Jose didn't care about our differences, though. The Qurin believe in predestination--Jose later told me that he knew we would be friends from the first moment he saw me. It took me a little longer.
Thanks
Part of me wants to switch the two paragraphs, even though I can see that the order you have them in is appropriate for the purposes of telling the story. Maybe you should just try cutting the second sentance and putting it somewhere else, so that Jose doesn't appear until you officially introduce him. I know that introduces a minor unreferenced pronoun problem in the last line of the first paragraph, but it makes it flow better overall. And you could replace "his people" with something else.
Anyway, I'd like to take a look at the rest.
I'll take a look if you want to send it over.
Which is good.
The language is simple but conveys a lot of character so I really liked that. I did have a couple of crits though. As soon as I read "the rebellion changed my life" I inwardly groaned a little. It seemed like an oversell to me, and a little cliched. But that could just be me.
The only other thing was that the tautology in "so he wasn't really a he either" threw me a little too. Maybe something as simple as italicising the second he might fix that though.
Just thoughts. I'd be interested in reading the whole thing though.
quote:
It took me a little longer.
This sentence seems to just be hanging there. It took you a little longer to...what? Add something to the end so that it doesn't look so incomplete.
"It took me a little longer to be convinced," for example.
I hate to be the one to break the mold, but I didn't like it as much as everyone else seems to. Maybe part of the reason is because first person has never sat well with me -- third person just seems more natural. Also, I'm simply not hooked. By the time the second sentence rolled around I was yawning. (I agree with thexmedic, "the rebellion changed my life" does sound a little cliched. Like your trying to make the reader interested in the story without giving any reason why he should be.)