Ronald and his brother fished the waters around the Kirin Islands for their entire lives and had never worried much about the pirates. Pirates and fishermen hunted different prey, and both groups pretty much left each other alone. None of this made Ronald feel any better about the pirate vessel, the Merry Dancer, bearing down on his little fishing boat.
The pirate ship dropped sail as it coasted into position alongside his boat. “Ahoy,” a pirate shouted as he threw a line down to Ronald.
Ronald grabbed the line and tied it to a cleat before turning a worried eye to his brother, Donald, at the tiller.
Donald shrugged and shook his head.
I would read on. I love a good pirate story.
I'll read. Will send email.
I am more disturbed by the similarity in names, i.e., Ronald/Donald, which may confuse readers until their individual characters are well defined.
I'll read your email. Yarr, it's a pirates life for me.
Are the pirates attacking Ronald and Donald? Are they friends?
In one sentence the Merry Dancer is bearing down on Ron and Don, and the pirate calls out "ahoy" and tosses them a line.
The First sentence says Ron and Don don't worry about the pirates, and the Second-to-Last shows Ron worrying abot the pirates.
The fact that sailors don't worry about pirates until they actually get boarded doesn't bother me.
I've got two nits:
1) The name thing. I'm confused. Even if their parents had named them in rhyme, by the time they were grown they would each have personalized their names. (Ron/Donald?) As a reader, I stumbled over that and had to regroup for a moment. Unless there's a powerful reason, I'd make their names different.
2.) You used the word "pirate" two more times than you needed to. In the first sentence, we establish that pirates are bearing down on them. Further down you write, "pirate ship" in one sentence and "a pirate shouted." These would have been wonderful opportunities to describe the ship and the shouting man (which I, as a reader, would have let represent all the other nasty scum aboard).
These are my humble opinions. I know nothing. I just wrote my first 13 lines of fiction this morning and posted them in short story fragments. Please take my comments accordingly.
I would really like to read the rest of it.
Toni
[This message has been edited by tdeveson (edited March 15, 2007).]
[This message has been edited by tdeveson (edited March 15, 2007).]
Lynda