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Hatrack River Writers Workshop
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![]() One Part Per Million
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| Author | Topic: One Part Per Million |
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snapper Member |
Reworking an old story. Would appreciate any and all comments
quote:
quote: Version 3
quote: [This message has been edited by snapper (edited November 09, 2009).] IP: Logged |
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Dark Warrior Member |
quote: Techinical point- It is a magazine, not a clip. Clips havent been manufactured in decades...unless the gun is an M-1 carbine, then 'clip' would be correct. I got the impression from it laying under a towel on a coffee table that it was a handgun, but since it hadn't been fired in years then it could be an M-1. IP: Logged |
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snapper Member |
Got it. Magazine it is. Thanks IP: Logged |
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BenM Member |
Ben Hurtle lay curled in the fetal position on the couch in his dank and dusty apartment staring at the gun under a towel on the coffee table. My eyes stopped and tried to make Ben Hurtle lay curled into a rhyme. The sense of verse here continued with a perceived alliteration in dank and dusty. I also wondered at the placement of in his dank and dusty apartment. Removed, and replaced with a comma, this sentence gained a sense of immediacy for me. He smelled the gun oil that lubricated the gears, trigger, and springs within, the gunpowder inside the shells in its clip, and the metal shavings and powder burns inside the barrel the last time it was fired, years ago. It needs to be cleaned. He giggled. He’d let the next owner worry about that. It would take them plenty of time to scrub out the dirt and his brain matter that would be lodged in the barrel. As an opening I felt it needed something more - an unanswered question to keep me reading through what the MC considers an inevitability. IP: Logged |
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snapper Member |
new version above IP: Logged |
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tchernabyelo Member |
Arguably better. I am assuming your MC is in possession of an overdeveloped sense of smell, and that the apartment is dusty because he doesn't want to use the strong odours of cleaning products, and I'm really hoping thta this is going to be the main thrust of the story. You use "startled" twice in rapid succession, which is redundant, and terms like "the startled bio-engineer" always kind of make me cringe. I'm guessing the fact that Howard is a bio-engineer is also significant - presumably something to do with Ben's heightened sense. But I am guessing all of this, which is not necessarily a good thing (something a little more definite might be a good idea). Editorial hat; I might read on, but it's really borderline right now. IP: Logged |
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ScardeyDog Member |
Just a minor point. He's lying on the couch pinching his nose shut. In the next sentence he takes a breath and smells things. I got the impression he breathed in through his mouth, since his nose is blocked, but it doesn't jive with the description of the scents. And the noxious odour you mention: does it have a source? Does he think about it? It just seems out of place. IP: Logged |
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Wolfe_boy Member |
According to my text entry box you're a couple lines short.
quote: 1. The introduction of last names like this seems clumsy to me. At the beginning of a story, perhaps it's alright. Does his last name matter? 2. Someone else mentioned this already. If he's plugging his nose in an attempt to block the world out, why when he (presumably) breathes in through his mouth does he smell something? Does he un-plug his nose? If so, why? You've already made clear that he is attempting to block the world out, and for him that includes plugging his nose. It just doesn't quite make sense. 3. Of the four things mentioned, three have direct sensory etailed described (pine, mint, coconut) and only one with an implied scent. What does dandruff shampoo smell like? Maybe something like medicated would be more indicative of what the shampoo actually smells like. Head & Shoulders smells nothing like Selsen Blue does. 4. Again with the last names, and this one irritates me more than the other. Do these last names matter? Could you introduce them to me in a more elegant way? 5. This whole action scene strikes me as a little cumbersome. I don't know why, and I can't put my finger on what's causing it. I have an asinine instinct to say that you're telling too much, but I doubt it's actually that. 6. Shelve the adverb, IMO. Shelve them all. Uhhhh..... yeah, I'd probably read on, though my irritation meter is pinging more than I'm typically comfortable with. Make my extended attention worth it on page 2. [This message has been edited by Wolfe_boy (edited November 09, 2009).] IP: Logged |
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snapper Member |
Thanks. Giving it another try. Version 3 above. IP: Logged |
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BoredCrow Member |
It took me a while to get the line, "Bruises were all they could accomplish." Something simple like "To no effect" would work. Also, I think you could mention that he notes that the smell is coming from the hallway. Otherwise, it doesn't make immediate sense that he knows to go to the door. And to be truly picky, you start every sentsence with a proper noun, and only two that's not a 'he' or a name. Though that's easily fixed later on. IP: Logged |
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snapper Member |
Thanks BC! ...and everyone else. big help from you all. IP: Logged |
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Architectus Member |
Bruises were all his clamped fingers could accomplish. This sentence reads awkwardly and pulled me out of the story. I like the third hook, though. I'm almost wondering if there should be a clause of introspection stating how he feels about all the smells. IP: Logged |
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adamatom Member |
I disagree with almost everyone on almost every point so far. The first paragraph of the first version, don't touch it. Combine it with the second paragraph of the second version. In between, he reaches for the gun, puts it to his head, maybe comments that he can't stand it any more, is about to pull the trigger, then smells the bio-engineer. This uses the best of the versions and adds some suspense. The description of the gun is vivid and detailed. Combined with the heightened sense of smell and the impending suicide attempt, you're off to a great start. Careful though, with such a good intro, the rest of the story will have to stay at that level or you risk losing me. I wouldn't dwell too long on the suicidal agony. Steer toward exploring the heightened sense of smell and maybe a search for a cure or partial cure. I think most readers would associate the bio-engineer with the heightened sense of smell. Either he's the guy that got Ben in this mess or he's the one who will get him out. IP: Logged |
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LlessurNire Member |
I like version 3. I agree with Architectus: "Bruises were all his clamped fingers could accomplish." throws me off, although I understand its meaning. From reading all 3 versions, I get the sense that he has a heightened sense of smell that causes him distress and he is trying to block out the smells. Maybe a sentence could be reworked/added to version 3 that describes this more directly, saying why he is pinching his nose, or how his nose and the smell make him feel. This would cement the 13 for me and then I would read on. edited to add: I also think the title is hinting at something similar, could one part per million be about some chemical or molecule that changes his smell? [This message has been edited by LlessurNire (edited November 24, 2009).] IP: Logged |
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ScardeyDog Member |
My vote is for version 3. Llessur - a part per million is typicaly the unit used to describe contaminants in air or water. It is literally 1/10^6, just as a percent is 1/10^2. You've probably seen it abreviated ppm. The odour threshold for H2S gas is 0.047 ppm, for example. IP: Logged |
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