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View Poll Results: Which is your favourite? | |||
Sunshine | 2 | 20.00% | |
Nothing Under the Sun | 4 | 40.00% | |
The Hourglass | 2 | 20.00% | |
The Last Captain | 2 | 20.00% | |
Voters: 10. You may not vote on this poll |
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07-10-2017, 06:32 AM | #43 (permalink) | |
Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,994
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Quote:
I loved it up to then, and it's still the best of the bunch for me, but the ending made it suck a little and was a disappointment. This is always a good strategy, though I have not yet managed it.
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Trollheart: Signature-free since April 2018 |
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07-10-2017, 07:21 AM | #44 (permalink) | |
Ask me how!
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: The States
Posts: 5,354
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Quote:
But I sort of get how you feel, because after writing the story and reading it back to myself, I hated the ending. In fact, I hated the whole story. I especially hated how Logan beats Regina to death. I thought about making it vague and ambiguous, or making it seem like Regina had died, only to reveal that Logan had actually killed himself (streaming his song and his death live as it happened). But in the end, I thought about why I wrote the story, the whole point of it, and decided to keep the original ending. The point I wanted to make would have been weakened by ambiguity. I wanted you to know exactly what he did. And in fact, I'm really happy that I got you to hope so strongly that something, anything, else could have happened, before being forced to accept what really happened. The ending isn't an explanation, because by that point, you already knew what had happened and why it had happened. To pull a "What a TWIST!!!" moment would have cheapened the purity of it. I mean, I love ambiguity. Some horror is improved by leaving things unanswered, and forcing the reader to inject their own fears into the story to fill in the blanks. But some horror is exactly the opposite. Sometimes, it's what you know beyond doubt that scares you. It's like finding a tumor on yourself in the shower, examining it, and realizing that it can't possibly be anything else. At that point, ambiguity becomes a comfort, telling yourself all the benign things it could be. But the ambiguity fades, and the horror of certainty overwhelms you. It is a tumor, and you're too poor to see a doctor. You are going to die. That's the kind of hopelessness that I want to tap into. I know I'm not that great of a writer right now, but hopefully I'll get better as I go.
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07-10-2017, 06:16 PM | #46 (permalink) |
SOPHIE FOREVER
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: East of the Southern North American West
Posts: 35,541
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It didn't suck but it was pretty clearly in the rough draft stages tbh. Also like I told you via PM, the gull and naked man characters laid everything out on the table too bluntly. I think the story would be improved a lot by making those two characters more ominous and cryptic.
I wish I had finished mine, but I guess the intro to my story is good enough for some. Basically, he keeps slipping in and out of reality as he decides to stop mutilating himself and keep time by making notches in the captain's log after committing it to memory. Suddenly as he is dozing, he finds himself trapped inside of the hourglass. He's trying to escape and knocks the hourglass off of the desk while still inside it, shattering once it reaches the floor. He comes to lying next go the glass and sand and comes to terms with the fact that he can't keep track of time anymore. Suddenly he sees something peering in through the door window and he goes outside thinking that it's Hendrick. He's chasing the figure that he can't make out because of the flooding rain when he tackles it. Flipping them over he learns that it's an emaciated, faceless man. Horrified, he brutally murders the man before asking any questions. He goes back inside, shaking and looks to the mess on the ground. He sees himself in the reflection of the glass, and that most of his scabs had been washed off in the rain. He gets a closer look and realize that his face structure has changed to something familiar: Hendrick. It mind****s him bad. The story ends with him aimlessly drifting, looking for land. Tl;dr it turns out the main character is the flying Dutchman.
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07-11-2017, 10:46 AM | #49 (permalink) |
Ask me how!
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: The States
Posts: 5,354
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Aw, shucks.
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---------------------- |---Mic's Albums---| ---------------------- ----------------------------- |---Deafbox Industries---| ----------------------------- |
07-11-2017, 10:49 AM | #50 (permalink) |
SOPHIE FOREVER
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: East of the Southern North American West
Posts: 35,541
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Now debate Exo about the quality of your ending.
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Studies show that when a given norm is changed in the face of the unchanging, the remaining contradictions will parallel the truth. |
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