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YouWriteOn.com - Over 100,000 Reviews Exchanged << Back


View the Bookseller News Item on YouWriteOn.com's 100,000th Review

YouWriteOn.com, established with Arts Council funding, has now passed the benchmark of the 100,000th review exchanged by members on site.  YouWriteOn began in 2006 as a means for writers to exchange feedback and ratings to develop their writing, and now each month on site the highest rated writers in the YouWriteOn Top Ten receive free professional feedback from editors for publishers Random House and Orion. YouWriteOn site members have achieved book deals with Random House, Orion, Harper Collins and Penguin after developing their stories through review exchange and receiving professional feedback after being highly rated by fellow members.

 

The 100,000th review on YouWriteOn.com is viewable below.

 

YouWriteOn.com has also received Arts Council funding to develop a further enhanced publishing system for print-on-demand authors, with further increased royalties and benefits for authors. Authors can choose to publish for free through the site.  The new publishing system is due for introduction in the early part of 2010.

 

 

The 100,000th Review exchanged by members on YouWriteOn.com. Throughout YouWriteOn’s history members who develop their writing based on a collective viewpoint of what works well and what needs developing in their writing have been higher rated as a result.


"I'll start first with all the positive aspects about the story. The stories biggest achievement is the authenticity of the first person narratorial voice. I feel you've done an excellent job in providing the reader with a strong sense of the western outlaw, who is moved from place to place by his own ambivalence and chance events. You've written in dialect without going overboard or decending into overuse of the same mannerisms, which is the sign of an assured and confident writer.

In terms of description you have included lots of nice touches, slotting in details that never threaten to clunk with the reader or make the reader aware of the text. The settings are very strong because of these details and although Jeremiah moves from place to place, staying in some areas for only a paragraph or two, the setting never feel lifeless or hackneyed.

Obviously the only thing of any use to you is what I thought could be improved. I made a list as I read the piece:

A few small things to start with. The first one being just one word. I didn't like the word vista in the first paragraph, it seemed a little overwritten and didn't fit Jeremiah's subsequent voice. Also I wouldn't use the mantle/fire phrase to describe his sexual encounter, it's a little cliched and I'd find another way around it. There are a number of places where you use two adjectives in front of a noun which didn't work for me. I know that you're constructing a distinctive voice but it felt a little adjective heavy in places.

I appreciate that the beginning sets up the ending which I thought was clever and well worked, however I felt that the opening third of the story seemed to have too much exposition that wasn't relevant or doesn't seem relevant. It doesn't seem relevant because your recounting backstory as narrative summary which eliminates any tension from the opening. I know that the story takes on the form of a final prayer but it needed more instant scenes rather than backstory. I know that these type of scenes would very hard to weave in, as you're trying to hold everything back for the surprise ending but without them the story is very heavy on narrative summary. One way around is maybe to let the reader know that the protagonist is dying at the outset. I know this removes the surprise, but in sacrificing that I feel you gain something much more important - that being constant tension throughout. If the reader knows the man is dying they are well aware that what he recounts will be directly relevant to his very impending doom. This makes the reader care a lot more from the outset and I feel it would be a worthy trade.

Overall the story is very well written. You're clearly a very capable and accomplished writer and I congratulate you on a very strong story. I would just have a re-think on the structure to ensure that the reader cares about Jeremiah's plight from the outset.

I hope that was of some assistance, though if you need anything clarifying don't hesitate to get in touch."

 


 

 

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