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Author Topic: Untitled Science Fiction Story
DerSieger
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Thad decided that it was far too early in the morning to be awake. He ought to just go back to bed. If people were meant to be awake at six in the morning, coffee would never have succeeded – Thad hated the black, vile liquid, but he needed it at times like this. He thought this because, on this particular morning, while Thad had been getting up to read the morning paper, his kitchen table had disappeared.

Well, not exactly. Parts of it were still there, but the middle section, the centre, was gone.

Vanished.

As a result, the remainder of the table had collapsed upon itself, spilling coffee everywhere.
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This was just a short story I wrote today, about 3000 words, about a rip in space that appears in the kitchen of a man's apartment.


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AeroB1033
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I like the idea. I even like what you're trying to do with the opening. But you can do it better.

The main problem with this opening is we're looking at the situation from a distance. At first we're in Thad's head, hearing his thoughts and attitude about coffee, but then we take a huge jump back, around here:

quote:
He thought this because, on this particular morning...

What you need is immediacy. Something like this:

quote:
As he thought this, he set his mug down and got up to grab the morning paper. The second his back was turned, he heard a huge crash and shards of glass flew across the floor. When he turned back around, he saw that his table had disappeared.

Not perfect, perhaps, but it's much better, because suddenly we're there in the scene instead of watching it on a security camera days later. Always keep in mind that we need to experience what Thad experiences--tell us his thoughts. Show us what it's like to be in the scene.

Fix this problem and I think you'll have a great opening here.

[This message has been edited by AeroB1033 (edited October 26, 2006).]


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David
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While I agree that the scheme doesn't quite work the way you have it, in order to retain the point of the former, the latter kind of needs to be the same. The only reason he's thinking the first part is because the second part is true.

The composition, the storytelling itself, is quite good (even if there's no way someone would drink coffee and not come to absolutely love it. :P) The problem is the actual approach. It's a little too ordinary, everyday, without setting the scene to let us know he's actually standing in the kitchen. You can still take the story forward subtlely without nullifying your current setup.

What I'd personally do is to create a real-time reaction to the vista while he's thinking, hint at the fact that he's standing in a kitchen gone horribly wrong, and only explain what it is that's happened at the end, as you do. If he walks in and his jaw drops, then his mind launches into "What the hell is up with mornings, anyway?" like a good little Seinfeld watcher, it sets the scene up for a little more of a stupifying and comical surprise.


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wbriggs
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These are my thoughts:

Cool idea.

Get it to us in the first line. The stuff about the coffee didn't interest me, and I'd have already put the story down or started skipping. You could start with

quote:
on this particular morning, while Thad had been getting up to read the morning paper, his kitchen table had disappeared.

When I read the story -- as opposed to your explanation -- I didn't get that there was a spatial rip in the apartment; I just thought somebody had taken out some of the leaves in the center. You could describe the boundary as semitransparent, or shifting, or something to make it clear this is no ordinary hole.


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LMermaid
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I liked the idea of someone waking up to find part of their kitchen table missing. I was confused by this line, though: "If people were meant to be awake at six in the morning, coffee would never have succeeded." I get the gyst of what you're saying, but I don't understand the "coffee would never have succeeded" part (although that may be due to the fact that I just woke up). I felt like it should have been "coffee would never have been invented."
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Sara Genge
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I think I understand what you're trying to do. It's actually a good idea, but something's not working.
Why do you start explaining stuff like getting up too early and not liking coffee? The main thing is that a table dissappears. Not keys, which could have been misplaced, not smth small, but a table.He thought this because, on this particular morning, while Thad had been getting up to read the morning paper, his kitchen table had disappeared.
Start with something like:
The table had vanished

Then move on to

quote:
Well, not exactly. Parts of it were still there, but the middle section, the centre, was gone.

That's a good phrase.
quote:
As a result, the remainder of the table had collapsed upon itself, spilling coffee everywhere.

Then get his thoughts on coffee which imply he doesn't believe his eyes and thinks it's too early to be awake. Maybe he hopes he could go back to bed and that when he gets up later the table will still be there.


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