tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post6491268665838676366..comments2023-09-16T15:03:34.579+07:00Comments on Adam Heine: First Impact: Haphazardly Implausible by Miss Jack Lewis BaillotAdam Heinehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02225813532455467868noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-44873514260023258282012-07-30T20:29:26.072+07:002012-07-30T20:29:26.072+07:00Thank you everyone so much! This is very very help...Thank you everyone so much! This is very very helpful! I'm going to try as many of these suggestions out as I can and find which one works for the back cover. <br /><br /> And thank you, Adam for giving me a chance to do this and for doing it. I've been enjoying reading the others you've been doing. (I missed mine because I was away without internet so it was fun to find, but that is why I didn't reply before. 8-) )Jackhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04395502314886308773noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-78471244807666874912012-07-17T03:51:49.667+07:002012-07-17T03:51:49.667+07:00I agree on specifics -- I want to know if this is ...I agree on specifics -- I want to know if this is WWII or WWI, or something else entirely. Word trimming will help too -- look for those filler words and seek stronger verbs than was/were etc, like you do in your manuscript. I also like books with different storylines that connect at the end. Nice work :)Stephscohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06328839483008086049noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-5647530925142855492012-07-15T00:22:34.153+07:002012-07-15T00:22:34.153+07:00I think that you should clarify why Peter was left...I think that you should clarify why Peter was left at the base. As it reads now I imagine that he was abandoned there and so don’t know if his parent’s death has any importance as they are already out of the picture. I like the second paragraph as it is. Saying that Singur is the smartest man in the world and a genius is redundant. Also I would either say what he invented or leave out the part about him bringing the world into the future, as I feel it either sounds pretentious (as the world is always becoming the future) or he made time travel, which would be a big part of a story. Also the last sentence of the third paragraph feels unnecessary given the last paragraph that covers the way they 3 people will change/end the world. Lastly I like the format of a brief bio on each major character and then a little on how they interact.JR Vanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01666770848567563451noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-38005497268671823262012-07-12T17:13:13.485+07:002012-07-12T17:13:13.485+07:00Just as I was caught up in the first story, it goe...Just as I was caught up in the first story, it goes to the second, and third. I see why it's done that way, but it did throw me a little, and I agree with Adam about needing some connections.<br /><br />The beginning sentences are fine, but "abandoned" might be better than "left" (unless he was to attend school there). And I always try to cut passive verbs, so you might try it something like this:<br /><br />At the age of seven, Peter Jones's parents abandoned him at the Scottish Royal Air Force Base...<br /><br />Also, how were the parents killed? If it wasn't an accident, you should say so, like "they were assasinated" or "their car was rigged with explosives," to show the stakes their son is facing.<br /><br />Finally, love the zeppelin, but "Black Beard" seems an odd name for an airship, as opposed to "Black Storm" or "Black Wind," unless you mean "Blackbeard."Steve MChttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15026970188928733645noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-20215728832794354162012-07-12T11:38:47.347+07:002012-07-12T11:38:47.347+07:00I agree with many of the other commenters above. I...I agree with many of the other commenters above. I'm not a writer (aspiring or otherwise), so I can only give you my viewpoint as a consumer of many books. YMMV. :)<br /><br />I found the jumps from one person to the next jarring. On the one hand, I do appreciate not being spoiled by the back cover. On the other, I want to know what I'm getting into - and whether I'm reading three separate stories or one that starts out that way but ultimately, blends together. <br /><br />FWIW, I found the first paragraph the most compelling. I guess that plot resonates with me most. <br /><br />Thanks for allowing us to critique your work! It's much easier to improve on what is there than to stare at a blank page. Good luck!crazymixedupgirlhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08444605986944237515noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-33512506088673340032012-07-12T04:46:34.989+07:002012-07-12T04:46:34.989+07:00I'm a lot more experienced with MS critiquing,...I'm a lot more experienced with MS critiquing, so perhaps this will sound like that. Hopefully it helps. <br />Right off it starts with a lot of telling instead of showing. For example, instead of telling us Peter was left, show it. (At the age of seven, Peter Jones' parents left him at a Scottish Royal Air Force Base. A week later they were dead.) Basically you want to punch readers in the gut. For example with the general part, consider something like: He trusts the general that raises him, until Peter founds out the general wants him dead. <br />Consider that more often than not when an author uses a form of the word "to be" is signals telling instead of showing. (Not always, but a lot). Cut telling out of every paragraph you can. It will stand out that much more.<br />One last point: This seems a bit long for back cover. It may intimidate a reader.<br />Also, I love the name Isadore. :) Good luck!Ranee`https://www.blogger.com/profile/08982272894927029549noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-77957415302452471092012-07-11T22:30:50.640+07:002012-07-11T22:30:50.640+07:00Yeah i agree with Adam. I think you have a really ...Yeah i agree with Adam. I think you have a really great start here, i think you could just bump it up to make it even better. If you could connect them all together each other's paragraphs, i think that would help. Becuase i felt like right when i got a feel for Peter, you switched to Isidore, then when i got a feel for Isidore you switched to Singur, and each time this happened, it pulled me out of the narrative.<br /><br />Good luck!Sarah Ahiershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02795455714801965956noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-79224066989339809842012-07-11T21:17:59.164+07:002012-07-11T21:17:59.164+07:00I saw this done recently (disparate characters, se...I saw this done recently (disparate characters, separate paragraphs), and it worked because you could imagine the connections between the two characters, even though they weren't explicitly drawn out - which I think is even one step beyond putting in the details. So, I would rewrite once to add in the connecting details (and get rid of the vagueness, as Adam says), then rewrite again to trim down to the bare essentials, but leave just enough detail in to create connections in the readers' minds.<br /><br />Those couple rewrites will trim things up too.<br /><br />p.s. I didn't get that they were all "young" until the last paragraph. If this is YA, you might want to state that somewhere. If "young" means mid-twenties, I would leave it out.Susan Kaye Quinnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07348197999397141067noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-1416273282778732722012-07-11T20:20:03.357+07:002012-07-11T20:20:03.357+07:00I love copy which shows how seemingly unconnected ...I love copy which shows how seemingly unconnected people will be brought together. So the brief introductions to the three characters are awesome, but I agree that perhaps some connection could be made--even if it's no more than a literary allusion... That is to say, you don't have to tell us how they're connected yet, but you can blend/harmonize the paragraphs with one another by word choice--start each one with similar (interesting) sentence structure, repeat key words, etc.<br />Air Pirate Zeppelin! So cool.Faith E. Houghhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03823750019164801104noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4665052536053897386.post-90736595190887901872012-07-11T19:29:27.302+07:002012-07-11T19:29:27.302+07:00I don't feel I have the experience with Jacket...I don't feel I have the experience with Jacket Copy to properly critique this, but I will agree with Adam that for me, as a reader, it would work much better if there were at least some hint of connection between these characters.<br /><br />That being said, you had me at: "Air Pirate Zeppelin called the Black Beard."Matthew MacNishhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03264738483763244969noreply@blogger.com