Great Gods of writing, I ask you please for a review of my three chapters, please.

LastMinami

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Hello gods of writing, I come to request, beg, plead for a sliver of your attention, please. If possible, I would be grateful if you could please review or write a few words about my new novel. I've noticed it's garnered some attention (though for me it's overwhelming), so I wanted to know what you all think. Humbly yours, your esteemed human and sacrifice, Minami

 

TheKillingAlice

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So, since nobody else answered, you get no reply from the Gods of Writing, but the Asshole of the SH Forum:
I literally only read the synopsis, because it's not my genre and, going by how little engagement the story garnered, maybe we should start with the obvious parts that should normally draw in new readers - not the chapters inside, that you would need to have any interest in reading, before you open them up. [EDIT: No, SH was fucking with me, it does have engagement. That's fair enough. Showed me on my second tab refresh.]

Three months after running away from home with his best friend Michael, Dani Zeyer is scraping by in a cheap motel—broke, hopeless, with no future in sight. On a rainy night when everything feels lost, he has no idea it will be the last time he ever sees Michael with his own eyes.

Kidnapped by a cosmic entity calling itself The Damned Curiosity, Dani gets hurled into a world that isn't his own. A reality where women hold all the power, gender roles have been flipped… and Michael never existed at all.

As if that weren't enough, his body no longer belongs to him. He's now a girl with delicate features and platinum blonde hair, burdened with an absurd command: conceive a child.

But Curiosity overlooked one thing: Dani is stubborn, rebellious, and absolutely livid. If he's going to have a child in this world, he'll do it on his own terms. He won't be the woman in the relationship. He'll be the one doing the conquering.

Caught between encounters orchestrated by an invisible force, the ghost of a love that never took root here, and the struggle to hold onto his identity inside a foreign body, Dani must decide whether to play the game… or smash the board entirely.

The first two sentences irk me somehow. Like, the first sentence sounds good, it has a good rhythm and tells me something about the protagonist. The second sentence makes me pause, because it just doesn't flow very well. It's hard to explain, but "On a rainy night when everything feels lost" just seems disconnected from the last sentence.
Next part we get an insight into how he is transported to a new world in which he is turned into a girl.
I personally dislike Gender Bender, because it's mostly in order to bring in cheap, lazy fanservice or smut scenes. In reality, just because your body is now female, it doesn't mean you are suddenly into men. Oftentimes, that is not considered by the autor and it seems like it won't be considered here either. Though I, as a gay romance writer and reader, read some gayness into his relationship with Michael, because really, it seems he's far too emphazised to just be a one-off character that possibly never even shows up, if we start the story on that "rainy night".
After that comes the line that broke my brain entirely: "He won't be the woman in the relationship. He'll be the one doing the conquering."
But, he's the woman, right? Didn't we already state that in this world, roles are reversed? What exactly is he supposed to "conquer" anyway? And it seems like that would already be his place, as he is a woman?
And we finish the whole thing with the old "vague interesting things" mambo jumbo - not that I don't use it myself, it's fine, it's just that the story gives me little to carry that interest.

But, again, that's just me. I don't even like the genre, so I wouldn't read it either way. Take it with a grain of salt.
 

LastMinami

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So, since nobody else answered, you get no reply from the Gods of Writing, but the Asshole of the SH Forum:
I literally only read the synopsis, because it's not my genre and, going by how little engagement the story garnered, maybe we should start with the obvious parts that should normally draw in new readers - not the chapters inside, that you would need to have any interest in reading, before you open them up. [EDIT: No, SH was fucking with me, it does have engagement. That's fair enough. Showed me on my second tab refresh.]



The first two sentences irk me somehow. Like, the first sentence sounds good, it has a good rhythm and tells me something about the protagonist. The second sentence makes me pause, because it just doesn't flow very well. It's hard to explain, but "On a rainy night when everything feels lost" just seems disconnected from the last sentence.
Next part we get an insight into how he is transported to a new world in which he is turned into a girl.
I personally dislike Gender Bender, because it's mostly in order to bring in cheap, lazy fanservice or smut scenes. In reality, just because your body is now female, it doesn't mean you are suddenly into men. Oftentimes, that is not considered by the autor and it seems like it won't be considered here either. Though I, as a gay romance writer and reader, read some gayness into his relationship with Michael, because really, it seems he's far too emphazised to just be a one-off character that possibly never even shows up, if we start the story on that "rainy night".
After that comes the line that broke my brain entirely: "He won't be the woman in the relationship. He'll be the one doing the conquering."
But, he's the woman, right? Didn't we already state that in this world, roles are reversed? What exactly is he supposed to "conquer" anyway? And it seems like that would already be his place, as he is a woman?
And we finish the whole thing with the old "vague interesting things" mambo jumbo - not that I don't use it myself, it's fine, it's just that the story gives me little to carry that interest.

But, again, that's just me. I don't even like the genre, so I wouldn't read it either way. Take it with a grain of salt.
Honestly, while I was writing it, I was making it up, lol, but anyway, yes. Women dominate; they have that role, but it's not like he knows it. And when he says she won't be the woman in the relationship, he's referring to the perspective of our world, not that one. And it's not that he's gay; maybe he is, that story wouldn't have fallen apart if he had. But it's not like you go to that world and automatically know what you have to do; at least I wouldn't. Thank you so much for replying; I honestly didn't even remember this thread, haha.
 

TheKillingAlice

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Honestly, while I was writing it, I was making it up, lol, but anyway, yes. Women dominate; they have that role, but it's not like he knows it. And when he says she won't be the woman in the relationship, he's referring to the perspective of our world, not that one. And it's not that he's gay; maybe he is, that story wouldn't have fallen apart if he had. But it's not like you go to that world and automatically know what you have to do; at least I wouldn't. Thank you so much for replying; I honestly didn't even remember this thread, haha.
I mean, just replying pulled it back up, so it really didn't matter that much what I had to say. But yeah, I mean, if we get that first intro into the world and see how it is, it should be the other way around. Like, have him make that statement first, then turn it around - how he noticed that, well, woman are the ones in power, so he's breaking through doors that were already open.
Aside from the fact that woman can do whatever they wish to do in our world; on the contrary, people dog on you when you're open with the wish of wanting to become a housewife an mother (me, the asexual, doesn't have that freedom, but I do know people who do and they have that problem). But that's beside the point. Michael just irked me, because he doesn't even need a name in a synopsis of a story in which he plays no part. That's why I made that joke about how he might have been gay, lol. Well, it was a half joke - because it sounds like it for real. :blob_cookie:
 
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