Review on behalf of the Anime and Manga Group
As a first piece this is a very good start. I like the plot and the setting of an industrial town where people are forced to work in the factories. There is a rather neo-victorian/ industrial revolution theme to it, which is quite fascinating. However, there are a few issues, some quite major that do hamper the flow and structure and sometimes disrupt the readers suspension of disbelief. I’ll go through each of the issues in order:
Layout:
At the moment all you have is one large block of text:
Milo labored to open his eyes. Almost imperceptibly at first then slightly faster as the sight of the smoky haze was filtered through his eyes and became accepted by his swirling mind.
"Where am I?" he thought as his eyes snapped fiercely open.
He pushed back violently into the arms of the two bystanders that were holding him.
This is very hard to read and needs to be either tabbed or line spaced to give it structure. This could well be just because you copied and pasted it directly into WDC from a word processor. If you do this then there is a box that needs checking on the item creation page which preserves the spacing in the text but this doesn’t always work. I would suggest line spacing as follows:
Milo labored to open his eyes. Almost imperceptibly at first then slightly faster as the sight of the smoky haze was filtered through his eyes and became accepted by his swirling mind.
"Where am I?" he thought as his eyes snapped fiercely open.
He pushed back violently into the arms of the two bystanders that were holding him.
Redundancy:
In writing, less is generally more. If you can convey an action or notion with two words rather than three then it’s best to be concise, otherwise you risk redundancy which clutters up the sentence and slow the pacing. For example:
"Where am I?" he thought as his eyes snapped fiercely open.
In this example “fiercely” is a redundant word as “snapped” also conveys the image of a sharp, sudden action. It would be better to remove the word “fiercely” in this instance.
"Where am I?" he thought as his eyes snapped open.
Punctuation:
You have a lot of long sentences and in long sentences it is important to structure it properly.For example:
The frozen roadway he sat on as the well-meaning strangers propped him up was asphalt, not the filthy brown dirt of the road outside of Basra?
There are a few things wrong with this sentence. First you don’t need the question mark as it is neither dialogue nor internal dialogue or asking a question. It is a statement and therefore does not need a question mark. The first half:
The frozen roadway he sat on as the well-meaning strangers propped him up was asphalt
Is a bit clumsy and a little confusing for the reader. It could do with being rearranged to make the meaning clearer. I would suggest:
The frozen roadway he sat on, with the well-meaning strangers who propped him up, was asphalt
I’ve done two things. I restructured the statement to make it clearer and I moved the “with the well-meaning strangers who propped him up” into commas as it can be considered a non-essential element, in that the sentence would still make sense with it removed. With the length of the overall sentence this gives it more structure and makes it easier to read.
The frozen roadway he sat on, with the well-meaning strangers who propped him up, was asphalt, and not the filthy brown dirt of the road outside of Basra.
I’ve also added “and” after asphalt as “not the filthy brown dirt of the road outside of Basra” would work as a standalone sentence and therefore needs to be joined properly, not just with a comma.
Structure:
The story, to me, starts out a lot weaker than it continues and ends. The dialogue doesn’t feel natural between Milo and Sergeant Martinez. This is a shame because your description is quite strong in the piece. In a piece of writing the opening paragraph is the most important. It has to grip the reader and pull them in. I don’t feel your start does this.
I think starting with Milo confused is not the best option with regards to drawing the reader in. With the main character confused, the information given through him is also confused and therefore the reader is also confused and cannot properly visualise the world and scene they are being presented with.
This is likely to turn a lot of people off, as people can’t become absorbed into a world which isn’t being presented in a clear and defined manner. I think it would be better that Milo know exactly where he is and what he is doing and that he only acts confused to hide his actions and intentions. That would add to the clarity and also the tension of the piece, if the reader immediately knows that Milo has something to hide.
Overall:
I think this is a promising piece. You description is vivid and well described and the character of Milo with what appears to be a mountain of mental health issues is an interesting character with plenty of depth and personality.
Like I said before the dialogue needs looking at as, at the moment, it is letting the piece down. When writing dialogue you have to imagine not just what the character would say but how they would say it, as people speak differently to how they write. In dialogue it’s quite fine to break a few grammar rules, as people rarely speak with perfect grammar.
As I also mentioned before, I feel the opening of the piece needs a bit of rejigging to make it clearer to reader and to set the scene more cohesively as at the moment the opening feels clumsy and this will affect the pacing of the first half of the story and may put people off reading.
However, for a first piece this is a very good start. You clearly have skill in description and world building as both those elements are strong in the piece. It is just now about working on the weaker elements of dialogue and structure to get strengthen the piece further.
Very well done so far and if you need any more help the feel free to drop me an email.
Happy writing!
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