Critique #114 — Taensray Lewins #2
Kevin Andrew Murphy February 7th, 2007
The old man who “ran” the inn (for lack of a better word) leaned forward and smiled toothily at Meron. His breath, foul and odorous, forced itself, against Meron’s best judgements, up into Meron’s already depressed nasal cavities. As his vision swam, and green toxic stars floated before his intoxicated face, Meron cursed, and choked on the ale he’d been attempting to drink for the better part of an hour.
“Ale not to your liking?”
“You could say that”, replied Meron, sarcastically. The old man seemed not to notice and instead shuffled off to berate (from a safe distance, of course) some young and decidedly spotty lads, who were quite cheerfully beating one of the bar-hands with large sticks. Perhaps it’s jealousy, thought Meron: the bar-hand’s got no spots, at all. Terrible thing is envy, he mused philosophically.Meron winced good-naturedly as one of the Spotted Ones, now bereft of a stick, proceeded to smash the hapless bar-hands face in; the attacker with bits of his meal wrapped around his knuckles; chunks of meat, soaked in what Meron assumed was meant to be “gravy” now decorated the bar-hands face.
“His breath, foul and odorous, forced itself, against Meron’s best judgements, up into Meron’s already depressed nasal cavities.”
AWKWARD SENTENCE. You say “against Meron’s best judgements” as if he has some sort of conscious say in the matter, and the nasal cavities being “depressed” seems to unnecessarily personify them.
“As his vision swam, and green toxic stars floated before his intoxicated face, Meron cursed, and choked on the ale he’d been attempting to drink for the better part of an hour.”
“Toxic” appears twice in the same phrase, which seems (to me) a little repetitive. Also, when you start talking about “Spotted Ones” later in the piece for some reason I think you’re referencing “green toxic stars” again. But that’s probably just be me being stupid.
“…chunks of meat, soaked in what Meron assumed was meant to be ‘gravy’ now decorated the bar-hands face.”
First of all, you skipped an apostrophe somewhere. I’m sure you can find that. Second of all, you don’t need quotes around a word/phrase unless you’re:
a) Quoting a particular person or book. (Jordan’s use of the word “gravy” on page 23…)
b) Quoting a familiar saying. (But hey, like they all say… “gravy!”)
c) Talking about the word for purposes of definition. (Now, what do I mean when I say the word, “gravy”?)
You don’t need the quotes in that instance. He’s not quoting anyone, and he’s not thinking about the word itself. He just thinks it’s gravy. Compare. “I think that’s gravy, don’t you?” and “I think that’s ‘gravy,’ don’t you?” Which one’s just gotten the chef’s surprise, and which one is a foreign language student?
I’m a little sensitive about this right now because my Dad puts quotes around EVERYTHING, and I proofread his papers. Also, now that I look at it, your last sentence is also rather awkward. I don’t know who’s doing what, and those semicolons ought to be some other type of punctuation (a comma and then a colon, perhaps?) but I can’t tell for sure since I don’t know what the sentence says.
I’m intrigued by your idea of “spotted ones” and your characterization of Meron, but I would be afraid of running across even more awkward phrasing, were I to continue reading.
Oh right, okay.
The “against Meron’s best judgements” and the “depressed nasal cavities” was intended. I don’t know how to explain it, really.
Toxic and intoxicated-bad proofreading is all I can say. Sorry!
“Meant to be ‘gravy’ “– as in advertised as gravy-but not. More some gloopy disgusting-appearing other substance. He is thinking about the word itself- but I didn’t make that clear.
Totally agree with your last statement, “a comma and then a colon” with regards to the last paragraph.
Anyway, I’ll try to improve it. Oh, this was meant to be, not hilarious, but hopefully slightly amusing-I doubt that affects your review in any way, though.
Cheers!
I agree with everything Gyp said.
Taensray, please read the following statement out loud for the whole world to hear:
It’s a very jerky sentence, and it’s difficult to keep track of what’s going on. Why not, “His foul and odorous breath forced itself up into Meron’s already depressed nasal cavities against Meron’s best judgments.”? (You misspelled “judgments”, by the way.)
Also, how many judgments is Meron giving on the subject? Or did you mean “better judgment”?
You overuse commas here and miss putting one where it is needed. I believe you mean “As his vision swam and green, toxic stars floated before his intoxicated face, Meron cursed and choked on the ale he’d been attempting to drink for the better part of an hour.” I’d suggest dropping the “as” and making it into two sentences, otherwise you have his vision swimming, stars in front of his face, him cursing, and him choking on ale all happening at once. Also, is Meron choking on the ale because he’s cursing or is he cursing because the ale is bad? Using correct grammar will help clear that up.
Personally, I’m also a little vague on what you’re trying to convey by calling the stars toxic.
You use so many adverbs that it’s noticeable to the reader.
Your writing will come across as stronger if you can convey that information through word choice and description. What dialogue could you give Meron that would convey that the words were said sarcastically…and if the dialogue already does, then you do you really need to tell us the obvious by using the adverb as well?
There are more grammar errors, but I’ll leave those to you or another critiquer.
It’s not clear if the spotty lads have physical spots or if you are referring to the toxic stars. You might want to clarify that.
The last sentence needs to be straightened out for it to read clearly. Right now, I’m not sure what is going where or how. I agree that “gravy” in the last sentence doesn’t need quotes in the way you are currently using it.
Finally–this is really not my specialty as I’ve never gotten drunk in my life–but if the ale is so bad that Meron can’t choke down one cup in over an hour, how come he’s so drunk that his vision is swimming and he’s seeing stars?
I suspect there is something fun in this story, but all the grammar errors turn me off.
The ’spotty lads’ made me smile, but it was rough getting there through all the grammatical errors already mentioned above.
I was very lost by the last sentence however, due to lack of commas and what I think are superfluous semicolons, but I’m not sure what you were going for. It sounds like the attacker is decorating the bar-hand’s face (note apostrophe) rather than the gravy-soaked meat I think you intended.
Judgement, according to the American Heritage Dictionary, is an allowable spelling variation on judgment, though your spell-checker won’t tell you so.
I think you should keep trying, after some review of grammatical rules, because it seems that you may be able to write funny stories, which in my opinion is not all that common a skill.
“‘Meant to be “gravy”‘– as in advertised as gravy-but not. More some gloopy disgusting-appearing other substance. He is thinking about the word itself- but I didn’t make that clear.”
No, he’s not thinking about the word at all. There’s a big difference between “But I thought it was gravy!” You say, “soaked in what Meron assumed was meant to be gravy.” He’s NOT thinking about the word “gravy” at all! He’s thinking about what is “supposed to be gravy [but wasn't],” which is an ENTIRELY different case.
Sorry, something disappeared in my above post. The sentence was, “There’s a big difference between ‘But I thought it was gravy!’ and ‘How do you spell “gravy”?’”
Aaaah-thankyou. I tend to be over-excessive on commas, so I think I went a bit far in the opposite direction there! And again, semi-colons are not my favourite of devices! ;-P Understood, both, thankyou.
Taensray,
I think you’ve gotten some good line editing advice. My problem with this opening is that I don’t perceive any narrative tension. That is, I don’t have an inkling of where you’re going with this - the description seems so far to have little purpose, not even a passing thought about why he is in this situation or some manner of reflection that he wishes he wasn’t here but has no choice.
Also, this is a personal reaction: I am assuming that ’spotty’ is a reference to acne. I have seen enough teenage kids made miserable by acne to not find this by-play remotely amusing.