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Item Reviewed: "The Pharaoh of Ayubia " ![]() ![]() Reviewer: Max Griffin 🏳️🌈 ![]() ![]() As always, these are just one person's opinions. Always remember Only you know what is best for your story. I've read and commented on your work as I would try to read my own. I hope you find something here useful ![]() ![]() ![]() I enjoyed this tale, written in the style of Poe or Melville. It has a satisfying twist at the ending, and a tone fitting for plot. ![]() Openings are critical in any work of fiction. Some editors and agents will decide whether or not to read your submission based only on your first sentence. Your opening is your best opportunity to draw readers into your fictional world, to induce a dream-like state in which your words guide their imaginations. The readers become the author's active partners in imagining the fictional world, in a state of suspended disbelief. In crafting the opening of any story, it's the author's primary task to launch this fictional dream. Your opening does a fine job of setting the scene. You put us in the head of the narrator fairly quickly with the squawking seagulls and other sensations at the port. It's a bit heavy on background, but doesn't quite slip into the info-dump area. So, overall, good job here--but see below on characters. ![]() Nice plot. I won't give it away. ![]() First person, in Qaza's head. No slips. It has a nice, archaic feel appropriate to the story. ![]() Good job throughout incorporating Qaza's sensations into the scene. ![]() By the end of the story, we understand thoroughly who Qaza Matli is. Indeed, that's a big part of the twist that makes the story enjoyable. But... Qaza is a pretty opaque character, even though the entire story is in his point of view. By the end, we realize he's had a goal all along, but the only hint of a goal earlier is "survival," and that's pretty nebulous. Every character, but especially the protagonist, needs a goal. The goal has to matter--those are the stakes. Finally, there needs to be obstacles to achieving the goal. You've got all three of those, but I think the story would be stronger if we felt those elements from the very start. Qaza's goal, for example, is tied up to his childhood and those who slighted him. It's also tied to his father and (maybe?) those who betrayed him. It would be simple enough to tweak this to bring out revenge as a goal early on, or at least justice. You might even mention a long-lost brother who was among those who rejected him as a child (as in, "even my own brother forsake me.") His very isolation and powerlessness are obstacles. This all turns with the arrival of Pharoah in the story, something that readers realize by the ending but which you foreshadow nicely by showing the Pharoah's mortal nature (he gets seasick). So, I'd suggest considering a tweak that gives Qaza a clearer set of goals, stakes, and obstacles that foreshadow but don't give away the twist, which I liked quite a lot. ![]() ![]() ![]() Reusing words or phrases in close proximity runs the risk of making your prose seem monotone. I've highlighted one or two places where you've got repeated words. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() One way to think of telling a story is that it is a guided dream in which the author leads the readers through the events. In doing this, the author needs to engage the readers as active participants in the story, so that they become the author's partner in imagining the story. Elements of craft that engage the readers and immerse them in the story enhance this fictive dream. On the other hand, authors should avoid things that interrupt the dream and pull readers out of the story. I enjoyed this story quite a lot. The characters, setting, plot, and literary style come together nicely to produce a satisfying tale with a twist ending. Thank you for sharing and do keep on writing!!! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I only review things I like, and I really liked this story. I'm a professor by day, and find awarding grades the least satisfying part of my job. ![]() ![]() Again, these are just one person's opinions. Only you know what is best for your story! The surest path to success is to keep writing and to be true to your muse! Max Griffin Please visit my website and blog at https://new.MaxGriffin.net |