Anyways, here it is. More straight forward suspense, sub 1K. Looking for Crits on the first 13, and readers for the whole kit'n kaboodle.
quote:
It was late in the evening. There was a knock at the door.“Come on in.”
She was tall, long dark hair pulled back. A large leather purse over her shoulder. Her face was half obscured in the faint light.
“Ms. Kelly? Have a seat.”
They shook hands. He felt the coolness of her skin, the sharp prick of her fingernails. “Thanks for seeing me, Constable Fawkes.” She dropped into a low chair, clasped her bag in front of her.
“I’m still a little confused. You’re a blogger?”
“I write about small town happenings, send them out to the world." He saw a smile play on the edges of her lips. "A double
Jayson Merryfield
[This message has been edited by Wolfe_boy (edited September 07, 2007).]
[This message has been edited by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (edited September 08, 2007).]
Here are some thoughts (as always, just thoughts).
quote:
It was late in the evening. There was a knock at the door.This works, but it did feel a little rough for a first sentence. My voice is often similar. I wonder if it might be combined into a single sentence, though?“Come on in.”
She was tall, long dark hair pulled back. A large leather purse over her shoulder. Her face was half obscured in the faint light. I wondered if this two might have been smoothed out into a single sentence. Maybe just change the first period to a comma and then make the last sentence not passive.
“Ms. Kelly? Have a seat.”
They shook hands. He felt the coolness of her skin, the sharp prick of her fingernails. “Thanks for seeing me, Constable Fawkes.” She dropped into a low chair, clasped her bag in front of her.
“I’m still a little confused. You’re a blogger?”
“I write about small town happenings, send them out to the world." He saw a smile play on the edges of her lips. "A double murder certainly is something to write about, no?”
“If you say so, ma’am.” He flipped open the folder on his desk.
That's it. I'd keep reading. A blogger is modern. A double-murder in a small town feels somehow classic. It feels like a modern twist on an old idea.
Looking for readers?
First, I like this, for the same reasons as others did: hard-boiled detective genre meets blogging, double murder in a small town, even the voice.
That said, let me be critical. The beginning feels very distant, mostly because of the passive voice. Look at your sentences:
You could restructure your sentences to be more active, which will have the added benefit (for a flash, especially) of compactness. You could also dip into the head of the MC earlier. I'll make suggestions if you like.
I'll read the whole thing if you're still interested.
Edited to add: Since the initial dialogue doesn't move the story forward, maybe focus on getting to "I'm still a little confused. You're a blogger?" faster.
Regards,
Oliver
[This message has been edited by oliverhouse (edited September 09, 2007).]
>>>>>>
It was late in the evening. There was a knock at the door.
“Come on in.”
She was tall [WITH] long dark hair pulled back. A large leather purse [HUNG] over her shoulder. Her face was half obscured in the faint light.
“Ms. Kelly? Have a seat.”
They shook hands. He felt the coolness of her skin, the sharp prick of her fingernails. “Thanks for seeing me, Constable Fawkes.” She dropped into a low chair [WITH HER BAG] clasped in front of her.
“I’m still a little confused. You’re a blogger?”
“I write about small town happenings, send them out to the world." He saw a smile play on the edges of her lips. "A double
>>>>>>>>>>
I'd be willing to read the whole thing; feel free to send it along.
"The peace of the late evening was shattered by a knock at the door."
I'll read the whole thing: feel free to e-mail.
I'm trying to be descriptive here, not prescriptive. Use what works for you and your readers for this story.
There was a knock on the door. [or delete this]
“Come on in,” I said, even though it was late in the evening.
Deb, to find out how anyone does anything, click the "edit" button on his post. You won't be able to actually change the post without knowing his password, but you'll be able to see the UBB Code that he uses.
In this case "he" is me, and you'd see
code:[list ][* ]Item 1[* ]Item 2
[/list]
Well, almost that, anyway. There's an extra space in my example that I used to prevent the UBB code from actually showing you the bulleted list. You shouldn't have any space between the word "list" and the symbol "]".
Regards,
Oliver
P.S. I just read the "Captive" thread and see that IB already gave you your new toys. Oops...
[This message has been edited by oliverhouse (edited September 14, 2007).]
I'm not entirely sure what to make of this - I suppose there was a little blood, but no more than an episode of Law & Order or CSI. It really was more of a police procedural suspense than a horror. Maybe I'll toss it into the Mystery mags - anyone know a good mystery market for short-short stories?
Jayson Merryfield