superjars
Member
|
I know I said on IRC that I had been reading Legacy of a Hero, but I was actually reading A DragonLord's Loss. I've read through the first couple chapters, and I found some grammar stuff, but I can't be sure that hasn't already been addressed, so I won't worry about it at this time. What I do want to touch on and something that would be good for most writers (me included) is the way you handled descriptions of people. When you introduce a character, I noticed that you switched from a story-telling mode to a fact-and-figures mode: "This is what is going on... They look like this and this and this and this." Description is good and necessary as a part of writing, but it shouldn't detract from the flow of the story nor should it change the voice of the story. When you introduce characters, make it a part of the story. Rather than telling the reader what someone looks like, have a character be looking them up and down and being struck by their appearance. Maybe have the other person be offended by their attention. Good books that I have read and enjoyed never stop the action to give a description. Even if you don't fully know what a character looks like for a couple chapters, that's totally fine. Now, I noticed you did something like this the first time you meet Mritha, and that's a good thing. I think what you did for her is pretty much what I'm talking about. :)
|