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Old 03-14-2014, 10:47 AM   #161
Graham
Wizard
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Planting the Flag - 1.1

Quote:
Originally Posted by gmw View Post
The opening definitely reads better. Even the middle section went past more smoothly for me this time.

Spoiler:
The removal of DEP/CAP helps a lot, I think. I didn't miss KEN-E at all. I also think that, with the opening not sounding so technical, it sets the reader up better for what follows. (But beware. It's something I've said before: you can only get a person's initial reaction once, everything after has to be tempered with the knowledge that things are always different, and often smoother, as you gain familiarity.)


I'm inclined to agree with you about the Mate. It was almost a surprise to see "We're" and "There's". I wonder if simply expanding these abbreviations may be an adequate middle ground, while still leaving out most of the formal terminology you had before. Or maybe going as far as replacing a few words with more formal sounding synonyms (eg: "expected" with "anticipated" and similar).


Coolant spattered to float, weightless, in the air...

The ", weightless," pulls me up every time. I think the first sentence is the wrong place for this sort of construct. I guess it does give us an immediate heads-up about where we are, but we soon see the word "starship". Alternatively, does it really need the commas?


... body, brushed away small bits of foam. Maybe: ... body, and brushed away small bits of foam.


I didn't have a problem with the captain waving his hand weakly near the end, you did say his head was still connected to the body by some wires.

Braced against the rock, ... I think someone's already said it, but I think it should probably be "a rock" (since the rock hasn't been introduced yet).
Thanks for those.

Spoiler:
I wonder if simply expanding these abbreviations may be an adequate middle ground, while still leaving out most of the formal terminology you had before. Or maybe going as far as replacing a few words with more formal sounding synonyms (eg: "expected" with "anticipated" and similar).

Yes, my thoughts too. I'm going to go for another version, pulling slightly back out of the Mate's head, and putting some of the formality back into her speech. For the story to work, the Captain has to be more 'human' than she is. I can rationalise that as being due to him being the one who did all the rounds of interviews and meeting the public (but I don't think I need to make that explicit).

Coolant spattered to float, weightless, in the air...

I see what you mean about the commas in that. The word 'coolant' also comes across as harder SF than the story. Let's see if I can come up with a better opening few lines to set the scene.

The other comments were also much appreciated.


Graham
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