Hi, my name is Jim. As I always tell people, I hope that you're looking for an honest review. If so, you're in luck, because that's the only kind that I do. If all we ever hear is 'That's great', "Keep up the good work', we don't learn and grow. I find feedback to be one of the best and most important things about this website. Lastly, keep in mind that these are my opinions; whether you agree or not is up to you.
Having said that, I really like your story. Perhaps it's because I was always very close to my grandparents. When they passed, I was crushed, and thought that I would never recover. I'm a sucker for a good, family story.
There were a lot of things that I noticed when reading it. I'm not going to go into all of them because it can become 'nitpicky'.
The biggest thing, for me, was in some of the mechanics. The only line of dialogue is the first sentence. There's nothing wrong with it, if that's your writing style, but if you're not going to use any more than that, I would take it out You use what I refer to as stream-of-consciousness in your writing; you write the story as if you're thinking out loud; again, not necessarily a bad thing. That type of writing can easily lend itself to run-on sentences and sentence fragments, for example, you write:
Always so deep in concentration in whatever he was reading at the time when he was in that chair, until i would shyly come in waiting for him to extend his arms to me so i could climb onto his lap. Such a serious looking man all the time who was always properly groomed and well dressed, even in all of the pictures i’ve seen.
Those are clauses, not sentences. I found a bunch of others, but hopefully, you get the idea. You may want to go back through the story and check them out. If you need any help, drop me a line.
I also found a lot of instances of mixed tenses. I'll give you an example: Why was she acting so horrible to the people who love her most? 'was acting' is past tence; 'love', when used as a verb, is present tense. For this sentence, just change it to 'loved'. Also in that sentence, you should use 'horribly' because it is an adverb modifying the verb 'acting'. The new sentence would read: Why was she acting so horribly toward the people who loved her? And, by the way, using 'loved' in the past tense, doesn't mean that you don't love her now. You're just following syntax rules. Saying 'my heart used to beat wildly at the sight of her', doesn't mean that my heart isn't beating now.
Thank you for letting me read and review your work. It was fun. I invite you to read a short family piece that I wrote called, 'I Remember Papa'. PS (My father died on his 69th birthday.)
Jim |