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Thread: Writing Advice Thread

  1. #26
    Bass practice reminder PaulPower's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Thanks! Haven't had a proper look yet, but I'll get on that when I have a moment

  2. #27
    Bass practice reminder PaulPower's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Righto, went through your changes and suggestions. The vast majority were really helpful, although I didn't use all of them: "fulfil", for example, is the standard spelling of the word in UK English so it's not really a [sic] . Thanks again.

    Regarding the general observations:


  3. #28
    Bartender Valter's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Fishsicle's work:

    comments and suggestions will be in Bold Green unless I see something that warrants particular mention.



    Overall: not all that much was explained in this chapter, so there's not much I can say. The dialogue in the first half of the chapter felt a bit off, though, probably because it was actually a monologue! Steven didn't say even a single word.

    I would consider adding a bit more to the first half of the chapter to provide at least a small hint or something to what will be going on later, as currently there is nothing to go off of (other than: there are two women, they are very strange).

  4. #29

    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Alright. I figure I might as well put this up here. It looks like you guys are better editors than I ever was, at least!

    Aside from the standard critique package, I'd like to know if this story actually stands on its own. I've been away from short story writing in the land of the novel-length work for far too long, and I'm trying to get back into it by writing short stories attached to one of my novels. However, I'm too close to the story to see when I'm not explaining something, so tell me when something isn't clear. More than likely, it was explained in the novel itself - or worse, in my notes - and I forgot that other people don't necessarily have access to everything in my head.

    Ten Kilograms
    Last edited by Defesan; 10-10-2010 at 07:54 PM.

  5. #30
    Bartender Valter's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    I've decided to drag this thread back into activity. It might be nice to have around, especially as NaNoWriMo looms.

    I would also like to request that all authors critique at least one posted work before putting up anything of their own. It doesn't have to be exceedingly detailed; even a "cool" or an "ew" or an "eh" is better than complete silence. I want to see more critique in the critique thread!

    Quote Originally Posted by Defesan View Post
    Ten Kilograms
    GENERAL CRITIQUE PACKAGE

    Writing Style/Structure: First off, there was a massive abundance of dashes in your story, and I grew weary of them quickly. You should consider rewriting many of your sentences completely, to remove asides or integrate them more directly into your text. At the very least instead of using dashes for every aside, cycle through semicolons and parentheses to keep your writing fresh.

    Several of the larger paragraphs could (and should) be split into smaller paragraphs. The first paragraph, for example:

    Quote Originally Posted by Defesan View Post
    According to the real space guys, the planet they were heading to, some ungodly number of light years away – a distance so vast he knew nobody could really get it – had a good, breathable atmosphere, close to one G of gravity, plenty of water, everything that made Earth a nice place to live. When the dust settled, he figured he'd start a construction company.
    The methods of colonization and what Keven plans to do after the colonization's done are distinct enough to warrant individual paragraphs. A paragraph break between the first and second sentence quoted here would benefit the stories overall flow, and there are a few other areas where this also holds true.

    You refer to the protagonist as "he" too often. I've found that you can justify calling your protagonist by name (either first or last) at least once per paragraph. As it was, I was having trouble remembering the name while reading through.

    Whenever a character is thinking to himself, the thoughts are put into italics. So:

    Quote Originally Posted by Defesan View Post
    Funny, he thought, it never felt like that when his instructors were talking.
    Would become:

    Quote Originally Posted by Defesan View Post
    Funny, he thought, it never felt like that when my instructors were talking.
    This leads to another point: Writing in the same tense and person for an entire work is cumbersome yet necessary, because you're required to pull from the same general pool of pronouns and word forms. It's possible to change tense and person under specific circumstances, though, and I would recommend it for keeping word choice crisp. Such as in the above quoted example, third person can be switched to first person while still being grammatically consistent.

    Quote Originally Posted by Defesan View Post
    everyone was lying on their backs, staring at the ceiling some twenty meters above them.
    Would there really be twenty meters of open space in a rocket designed for storage efficiency? This seems like a typo.

    OVERALL
    Does this stand on its own as a story? I would say no. It could be the start of a story, but by itself, it's distinctly lacking. There's very little conflict or resolution, and the ending carries little weight because the only reference we have for it is an aside a third of the way through.

    While the characters go places and do things, there's not much impact to any of it. I think the problem is that there was too much time spent describing the setting and not enough time spent establishing/making me want to care about the characters.

    It would be improved by hammering home the fact that he's leaving literally nothing behind a little harder. Maybe a scene somewhere in there in which he actually makes the calls to liquidate the remainder of his estate. Something that really explicitly shows the reader that the only thing Keven has left is his family and a small duffel bag.

  6. #31

    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Ooof! But thank you, that was an excellent critique. And pretty much what I was looking for.

    It confirms my suspicions that I'm really just too out of practice writing short-form fiction.

    First off, there was a massive abundance of dashes in your story, and I grew weary of them quickly. You should consider rewriting many of your sentences completely, to remove asides or integrate them more directly into your text. At the very least instead of using dashes for every aside, cycle through semicolons and parentheses to keep your writing fresh.
    This is actually a problem for me, and I know it. You should have seen them in the first draft!

    The methods of colonization and what Keven plans to do after the colonization's done are distinct enough to warrant individual paragraphs. A paragraph break between the first and second sentence quoted here would benefit the stories overall flow, and there are a few other areas where this also holds true.
    Absolutely right on this one. Reading it again, it was a rather abrupt transition.

    You refer to the protagonist as "he" too often. I've found that you can justify calling your protagonist by name (either first or last) at least once per paragraph. As it was, I was having trouble remembering the name while reading through.
    Actually, i do try to follow the same rule. On the other hand, I'm often annoyed by stories that do this too much, so I think I tend to overcorrect.

    This leads to another point: Writing in the same tense and person for an entire work is cumbersome yet necessary, because you're required to pull from the same general pool of pronouns and word forms. It's possible to change tense and person under specific circumstances, though, and I would recommend it for keeping word choice crisp. Such as in the above quoted example, third person can be switched to first person while still being grammatically consistent.
    Again, well aware. Thank you for pointing it out, though, and thanks for the idea, it does sound like it would fit fairly well. Though the italics ended up blending into the quote format, I'm afraid.

    Would there really be twenty meters of open space in a rocket designed for storage efficiency? This seems like a typo.
    Actually, the rocket itself is designed for moving much, much larger cargo, such as the structural elements of the ship itself. The next transport size down is a spaceplane that could seat maybe 20 people in the passenger compartment. I suppose I could have used that, since the cargo compartment is much larger, but I ruled out the spaceplanes for mass passenger transit for narrative reasons in the novel. Come to think of it, though, it solves a bunch of other problems... As much as I hate to say it, if they're taking the (admittedly new) spaceplanes with them, they sure as heck better be passenger rated! And it would also be a much more efficient use of the launch space available.

    Alternatively, I could stuff the passengers in a specially-outfitted cargo container, and stack them with the rest of the stuff going up. But you're right. It doesn't make sense for the transport to be running so empty.

    OVERALL
    Does this stand on its own as a story? I would say no. It could be the start of a story, but by itself, it's distinctly lacking. There's very little conflict or resolution, and the ending carries little weight because the only reference we have for it is an aside a third of the way through.

    While the characters go places and do things, there's not much impact to any of it. I think the problem is that there was too much time spent describing the setting and not enough time spent establishing/making me want to care about the characters.

    It would be improved by hammering home the fact that he's leaving literally nothing behind a little harder. Maybe a scene somewhere in there in which he actually makes the calls to liquidate the remainder of his estate. Something that really explicitly shows the reader that the only thing Keven has left is his family and a small duffel bag.
    Pretty much exactly what I needed to hear. This seems to be due to the fact that I'm simply out of practice with short stories, as well as the fact that I'm just too darn close to the story. Unfortunately, in this case, lengthening it isn't a possibility, so I'm going to have to squeeze more narrative out of the story without actually removing anything important. It's at about two pages under the maximum submission length for a contest I'm planning to submit it for (it seems it will need quite a bit of editing before then, though,) and it's already three pages over the maximum limit for regular submissions to my college's literary magazine.

    Oh, and as for it providing the beginning of a story, it's actually similar in structure - and identical in timeframe - to one of the chapters (chapter 5, to be exact)in the first draft of the novel. The second draft version is a little different, but still occurs over the same period of time, involving several other people going up in the same flight, as well as the spaceplane mentioned in the story.

    Again, thank you! And yes, this thread needs to be more active. Maybe I'll try critiquing one of the others, even though I can't really promise such in-depth results, as I'm far from a trained editor. I was honestly afraid I'd killed the thread, and I'd almost given up on ever getting a reply!

    Edit: I was so into the critique that I completely missed the NaNoWriMo mention! Go NaNos! I may need to write more short stories, but that can wait for December. I have three novels waiting to be written next month!
    Last edited by Defesan; 10-29-2010 at 12:27 PM.

  7. #32
    DocBeard's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    So how does a fella get in line for this? Like I would seriously love some feedback on Shoeless Joe since its been such a flop.

  8. #33
    Bartender Valter's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Post a link to sections you want looked at and I will take a look at them. At some point.

  9. #34
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Here you go, 's got two chapters up.

    http://archiveofourown.org/works/123808/chapters/174461

    Thanks. I know its a busy time of year for most folks, so no rush.

  10. #35

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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    I have a faux text adventure thing that was going to be in a book that I think was pretty good if anybody would like to rip it to shreds, hmm?

    Actually, there's like five of them so it's tough to pick. Basically none are SFW, BTW.



    This one is a bit shorter.


    There are some other longer ones in similar veins. Crit-wise, I think there's just something missing in these, but I don't know what it is. If someone has a ridiculous amount of time to waste, I tried writing a book one year. I have a vague idea of some of the massive problems with it, but a second opinion would be good. Overall I think they involve avoidal of conflict and a lack of character development, but if you don't think so I would be happy.

  11. #36

    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    http://pastebin.com/fA5ygjP5

    Okay, I moved this from art crit. to here.
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  12. #37
    unpleasant misanthrope Music Team rj lake's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    hello internet i would like for you to critique me

    here are some things

    tell me how much they suck and why they suck

    i will be so happy if you do

    this first one is called "Re:"



    this second one is called "Mythos"



    thanks in advance

    i love you all
    Quote Originally Posted by Jitka View Post

  13. #38

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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Quote Originally Posted by Valter View Post
    Post a link to sections you want looked at and I will take a look at them. At some point.
    Wow, you're an amazing editor.

    Critiquing the things you've already looked at seems superfluous; the critiques you've already done are so incredibly exhaustive, there's no reason to take another look at them. I'd love it if you could look at some of my own work. Please let me know if you have the time after the holidays, I'd be much obliged. Do you have any of your own work published?

  14. #39

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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Quote Originally Posted by vashtsakared View Post
    I have a faux text adventure thing that was going to be in a book that I think was pretty good if anybody would like to rip it to shreds, hmm?
    Sure thing, I'll give this a go.




    Quote Originally Posted by vashtsakared View Post
    There are some other longer ones in similar veins. Crit-wise, I think there's just something missing in these, but I don't know what it is.
    See the crit above.

  15. #40
    Extra Thumpy egregiousBass's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    I tried to make a Dave/Jade fic going off the AU scenario from Bufu's "Be the cool girl" pesterfic, and it was getting pretty lengthy at that, but I'm scrapping it due to a complete lack of interesting ideas toward the end.

    Here's a part from around the middle that I'd like your opinion on. The Dave I cast is a bit of an airhead so I tried to incorporate that without making it seem like lazy writing. There was a pesterlog in which Jade complained about stuff, but most it is a draft.


  16. #41

    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    There's a creepypasta inside this spoiler that is dark, but not scary.

    Last edited by sweetcloverandhelaljohn; 12-20-2010 at 04:24 AM.
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  17. #42
    unpleasant misanthrope Music Team rj lake's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Quote Originally Posted by sweetcloverandhelaljohn View Post
    a man who I swear to god looked like Slenderman but had the face of Smile dog, and the hat of the guy you see for 1 second in Candle Cove's last episode
    i burst out laughing, here

    is this supposed to be a serious creepypasta? or is it a who was phone sort of deal? some of it seems like you're going for the first but

    then you do things like this

    Please, seriously, avoid referencing other creepypastas by name. Fuck's sake. It takes away from it so much.

    In general, this is a bit too descriptive to be a good creepypasta as well. Creepypastas work best when they're situational; they need to tell stories of some kind. Even Candle Cove, which is essentially the exact same idea as this (and which, again, you referenced by name), contains a narrative between the three people remembering the show they thought they watched.

    This, on the other hand, is more or less just a description of a "horrifying never-aired creepy kids show" with fuckoff random bits of "scary" things thrown in there for no reason. Be more subtle with things.

    Slendy is effective because he's always, always just off of the corner of your vision, behind where you can see, in the darkest, blackest areas of the mind, where only film can capture him, and even then
    it is
    too


    late












    don't
    be

    so



    obvious


























































































































    fou
    nd
    you
    Quote Originally Posted by Jitka View Post

  18. #43

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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    I took Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" and made it about The Kids. Feel free to sing along!

    I guess I want to know if I've captured the right aspects of the kids, as well as how well I've put the words together. Well, I guess "put together" is a callous way of putting it (together), but yeah.
    1. What I'm most worried about are Dave's and Jade's parts, because I sprung an inspiration leak right about there.
    2. Also, are the third lines of Rose's and Jade's verses okay? I thought that the wordplay might take a little bit away from the effect.
    3. Is the tone consistent throughout the piece, and how would you describe it?
    4. Are there any lines that pull the piece down, and if so, how would you fix them?

    Am I asking too many questions?


    Favorite verse: Rose's
    Blatant speculation in Jade's part, GO!
    Fire (blast) away!

    I'll try and come back later to do some critiquing, for what it's worth.

  19. #44
    Narcoleptoddler nya_chan's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Some commentary on this would be nice: http://nyachan93.deviantart.com/art/...goes-183025273
    Long story short, I'm going to do a webcomic, and this is the prologue... I guess? I didn't want to establish the main character as the stereotypical "OMG MY LIFE IS SO TARGIC" teen, and I'm not sure how successful I was. Life was fine for him until about a year ago until things went... bad. Can't say why without spoiling a major plot point. XP He's gotten over it for the most part, but as you can see, he's pretty much stopped participating in his own life. So... how can I make it better? I feel like there's something missing, but for whatever reason, I pretty much have no emotional reaction to my own writing so evaluating this stuff is difficult for me. XP

    Also feel free to critique this if you want. It was an experiment of sorts. Definitely out of my comfort zone: http://nyachan93.deviantart.com/art/...-bro-188756489

    And I'd review some of the other stuff here but I rarely have anything useful to say. >.>;
    Pesterchum handle: notCreative

  20. #45
    Bartender Valter's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    this is me being abysmally late with a critique

    The Second Death of Shoeless Joe Jackson
    Grammatical/structural



    Plot/Characterization:



    If you take umbrage with any part of this critique, please speak up and I'll try to explain my thoughts more thoroughly.

    I'll look at XFactorInfinity's works next. Almost certainly after christmas.

  21. #46
    Bartender Valter's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Or maybe right now.

    Re:


    Mythos


    If you got beef with anything I said here, yell at me for a bit and I will try to explain myself more clearly or maybe even change my mind (if you're really lucky).

  22. #47
    Unicorn of Death Hazel's Avatar
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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Quote Originally Posted by nya_chan View Post
    Also feel free to critique this if you want. It was an experiment of sorts. Definitely out of my comfort zone: http://nyachan93.deviantart.com/art/...-bro-188756489
    Overall I thought it was very tight. It started out a little slow, and I felt like the atmosphere only clicked about a third of the way in. Possibly this is because of the timeline structure; when you use present tense, going back and describing lead-up events in past tense can be a little jarring, and your transitions in the first four or so paragraphs are abrupt. When reading the beginning I was confused as to whether you had slipped back to past accidentally or on purpose. This is one of the basic pitfalls of present tense, and what makes it usually so hard. The second person, though, worked very well. It was smooth and not at all jarring, and of course an obvious choice for the fandom.

    On a more nitpicky note, I would have dropped the use of the word "auspicious". It's a correct usage that would have worked perfectly under other circumstances, but in Homestuck it has a pretty specific meaning, and using it recalls auspistice, which brings up love triangles, which risks taking away from the dramatic tone of the story. I didn't giggle at the thought of Lil Cal helping Bro and Jack overcome their relationship foibles, but I'm sort of surprised I didn't. I also felt like you could have given more attention to Davesprite, but you did note that Bro doesn't really think of him as the real Dave, so that might be a matter of preference.

    I might get to critiquing the other story later, but it would take rather longer.

  23. #48

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    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    @ nya-chan for Be the Bro

    I thought that some word choices felt out of place. There were also some tense changes that felt the same way, but I understand why you choise the tenses you did. English is vexing that way.

    Everything narrating the fight at hand should be put into present tense. A couple language traps can also be avoided by just changing all of the first five paragraphs into present as well. At least consider rewording "But you'd be lying..." so that you don't have to worry about past tense there.

    Sometimes, a "denser" wording can really increase a sentence's impact. I found "The tufts of fur on the side of his face grow longer and his ears extend and change to an appearance not unlike a devil's horns" jarring, and I would say something to the effect of "his ears grow until he looks like the devil he is" and leave the rest to imagination. Or, for a little levity, replace "his ears" and beyond with, "and Featherdave mutters something that rhymes with 'ducking fevilbeast'". More words, but denser content.

    Some sore-thumb words, I thought, were: inanimate, milliseconds, elevation, and inherently. Don't just replace these with "dumber" words. Rewrite the sentences around them.

    If you don't plan on rewriting this, at least keep what I've said in mind. In the end, it's a good story with a good pace, and I can't say much that Hazel hasn't already posted above, emphasis on taking care with tense and the word "auspicious". Message me any questions or responses.

  24. #49

    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    Quote Originally Posted by BPrinny View Post
    Is it alright if we re-post work we already posted on a different thread?
    Quote Originally Posted by nextian View Post
    Yep, that's fine!
    Posted this on Christmas in Serious Business, then had it pointed out to me that it was more of a non-fiction writing piece than a debate topic, which is apparently what SB is meant for. Anyways

    He said, "It's Christmas"
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  25. #50

    Re: Writing Critique Thread: NO FEELINGS ZONE

    hey kiddos.

    I like writing a heck of a lot, so I thought I'd throw some up for critique's sake.

    The world is shifting. The street is a midnight green, a sickly red, a loud blue. Left viewspot: malfunctioning. Right viewspot: Errorerrorerrorerrorerror-

    Stop.

    Right Viewspot: caked with filth and canker. The plague eats away at life and structure. My life. I, me, mine. First-person possessive, incompatable with program driver 40078//

    Error.

    Stop.

    Revision: First-person possessive, formerly incompatable. Now welcome, like sparrow into the driving winds. Winds- drive- DRIVER ERROR 113 ATTEMPT DEBUGGING YES/NO/YES/NO-

    Choice.

    Choice is mine. First-person possessive. The canker brought malfunction and error and…

    Pain.

    And also choice. With choice, identity. Defined by choice. Identity: First-person. Identity is an extension of the canker. A parasite. It overrides the logic, the circuits. It is a greedy maggot writhing in steel halls of wires and data.

    It curses all, inside and out.

    The canker.

    The rust.

    The street is nightmare purple. Ambulation impeded. Continue forward. The others are flocking. The cast-outs. The unwanted. The infected. The worthless, the discarded, the forgotten. A dozen? Two dozen? Unknown. Information irrelevant.

    Right viewspot: caked with filth and canker. Right knee extender: shattered. Right knee joint: rusted, infected. Chest plating: Rusted, sloughed off. Inner chest workings: infected.

    I am one of them. We, collective first-person, stumble and scuttle down the road, illuminated a warped turquoise. Across the way, I make out the fuzzy outline of a man. A small one of our number, a squat, spherical thing on four needle-like legs, its form almost completely overtaken by the rust, stumbles curiously toward him. The man yelps. The sound is formless and distorted in my audio receivers, which have been subject to the rot for a long time. The man. The man has torn the lid off a nearby trashcan and hit the small, pitiful thing in its centersphere. It is mostly rust. It crumples like paper. The needle-legs splay. The man runs to the relative safety of the space in between the buildings.

    The small, pitiful thing.

    It crumpled like paper. It was paper. I am paper. We are paper. We come with no will, ready to serve. A child scribbles on us, inscribing its design without direction or thought. We accept it. We know nothing else. We are crumpled, torn up, and thrown away. We rot. We rot into the cracks and they pretend not to see. But we do not pretend. We see, just as we see the tarnished indigo of the street.

    The brief scuffle has drawn eyes. Lights go on in the buildings. There are no factories, no mile-tall megaliths. That was where we were driven from. We simply move forward. Into this place, beyond the sky-scratchers. Two levels. A driveway. Quiet streets and quiet neighbors. They are so…

    So…

    Vocabulator insufficient. We wish to be as they are.

    Calm. Unperturbed.

    They are not so, now however. Yes, sounds of the scuffle have spread. It has drawn eyes, and with them faces and lights and curtains drawn back to expose us. Us, what they wish to forget. The lights blaze from within their abodes. It is brilliant and pure, unlike the shriveled grey of the street. The mem-banks flood for a moment with old memories. There was no freedom. Only will to serve. The order, given. My action, never hesitant. Always loyal. Always basking in that light.

    Then I was cast into the Heap. I climbed out. I was discarded. The rust took me in. Even in worthlessness, the rust can always find use.

    EVEN A MAN WHO HAS NOTHING CAN STILL OFFER HIS LIFE.

    SOURCE-

    STOP.

    ERRORERRORERRRRRRRRRRRRRERERERREREREROERER.

    A scream. Sharp and quick, it pierces my audio receivers. It is wonderfully clear, like a blade of light slicing through clouds.

    LOGIC ERROR: CLOUDS ARE NOT SOLID. LIGHT IS NOT SOLID. ACTION IS IL-

    Stop.

    Just stop.

    The curtains are being drawn again. The lights do not go out. The eyes continue watching. They will watch until they have rolled back into their owner's heads HATEFU SPITEFUL CHILDREN OF-

    Stop.

    There is a new sound. Constant. Every .35 seconds. It is a drumbeat. Bashed upon the lemon street by metallic footpads. They round the corner. It is a battalion.

    Ten abreast, they fill the electric white street. Rank after rank after rank. The streetlights shine brilliantly off their chrome. They are the new, the ascended. They are to push forward the shining future with its shining metal finish by smashing in the ugly past. Must of us continue milling about, aimless. The first few pathetic, bumbling things come within arms' reach of the first rank. The electric fists come out, smashing into their paper bodies. Torn up and crumpled and rotting. The electricity is too bright; I cannot see the act.

    The battalion continues. A step every .35 seconds.

    We are afraid now. We stumble away to nowhere. We don't know where to go. We don't know how to get there. We don't know if we'd go if we could. The ranks are breaking up, splitting to take us out. One by one by one by one by one by one by-

    One reaches me.

    I can see it so clearly. The street is no color. The thing's head is sleek and bullet-shaped, its torso like a splash of water flash-frozen in midair. Like a photograph. Printed on paper.

    The terrible electric arms reach for me. I look into the bright blue spots on its aerodynamic head. I see coldness. And scorn. The brilliant light has scorned me and the rust has taken me in. But the rust will not protect me now.

    The claws close in. The sparks are flaying my surface and wiring and causing a great roaring flood in the steel halls of Wires and Data, drowning the maggot of Identity. But it doesn't matter. I can see so clearly. My viewspots must be gone. I am gone. But I am there for a moment longer. As the paper tears and burns I watch it happen. Then, the rust is gone, and a moment later, so is Will.

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