Hello, I’m up for a feedback exchange.
I read the first chapter to start, and there’s a lot here that works. The atmosphere is strong, and I like how grounded the world feels — the market, the inn, the barkeep, the soldiers. I also really enjoyed the dynamic between Fire and the girl; there’s a quiet tenderness to the way he tries to reach her, and the small ways she reacts back.
Here are some thoughts from a reader’s perspective:
Chapter 1
I had a little trouble getting a clear sense of who the MC is at first. His appearance and exhaustion made me picture someone on the edge of collapse, almost beggar‑like, but he also has money for an inn, juice, and taking in a stranger. That contrast is interesting, but I wasn’t sure whether it was intentional or if I was meant to read him differently.
I was also curious about what exactly pushed him to approach the girl. The line “Do not let it make you take a single step back” stood out, but on my first read I wasn’t sure if it was a memory, a creed, or something magical compelling him. (On reread I saw it’s a memory, but I wanted to share the initial impression.)
Their bond forms quickly, which isn’t a bad thing, but it did make me wonder what in Fire’s past makes him so willing to take responsibility for her. Is it trauma? Altruism? A personal code? Even a small hint of his internal motivation would help anchor him early on.
The world itself feels surprisingly kind for what seems like a frontier settlement, the barkeep giving free juice to kids, Fire taking in a stranger, even the imperial captain trying to spare Fire before realizing he’s a mage. It gives the setting a gentler tone than I expected, which could be intentional, but it stood out.
The writing is descriptive and vivid; I could picture the streets and the inn clearly.
I'll read at least chapters 2 and 3 after work and give some additional feedback to get to the 10k words you're offering, but i wanted to get my chapter 1 thoughts out fresh.
I'd welcome your feedback on my story as well.
Liriel was raised to be the perfect daughter of a noble house: polished, obedient, and loyal to the traditions that kept her family in power. But when the ancient ritual she was meant to uphold collapses, everything she was taught to believe starts to fall apart, and her family’s...
www.scribblehub.com
Hello there, thank you very much! I shall also get back to you!
I'll try to get my reading done today!
Hello, I’m up for a feedback exchange.
I read the first chapter to start, and there’s a lot here that works. The atmosphere is strong, and I like how grounded the world feels — the market, the inn, the barkeep, the soldiers. I also really enjoyed the dynamic between Fire and the girl; there’s a quiet tenderness to the way he tries to reach her, and the small ways she reacts back.
Here are some thoughts from a reader’s perspective:
Chapter 1
I had a little trouble getting a clear sense of who the MC is at first. His appearance and exhaustion made me picture someone on the edge of collapse, almost beggar‑like, but he also has money for an inn, juice, and taking in a stranger. That contrast is interesting, but I wasn’t sure whether it was intentional or if I was meant to read him differently.
I was also curious about what exactly pushed him to approach the girl. The line “Do not let it make you take a single step back” stood out, but on my first read I wasn’t sure if it was a memory, a creed, or something magical compelling him. (On reread I saw it’s a memory, but I wanted to share the initial impression.)
Their bond forms quickly, which isn’t a bad thing, but it did make me wonder what in Fire’s past makes him so willing to take responsibility for her. Is it trauma? Altruism? A personal code? Even a small hint of his internal motivation would help anchor him early on.
The world itself feels surprisingly kind for what seems like a frontier settlement, the barkeep giving free juice to kids, Fire taking in a stranger, even the imperial captain trying to spare Fire before realizing he’s a mage. It gives the setting a gentler tone than I expected, which could be intentional, but it stood out.
The writing is descriptive and vivid; I could picture the streets and the inn clearly.
I'll read at least chapters 2 and 3 after work and give some additional feedback to get to the 10k words you're offering, but i wanted to get my chapter 1 thoughts out fresh.
I'd welcome your feedback on my story as well.
Liriel was raised to be the perfect daughter of a noble house: polished, obedient, and loyal to the traditions that kept her family in power. But when the ancient ritual she was meant to uphold collapses, everything she was taught to believe starts to fall apart, and her family’s...
www.scribblehub.com
Alrighty, ask, and you shall receive!
This was written on my phone, so my apologies for formatting mishaps.
I've written it mostly as a reader rather than a critic.
IN THE SEALS SHADOW
Chapter 1: tired eyes, blue like mine but different - different how? If this is trying to be mysterious, it reads as just not wanting to go through describing them.
If it is just not wanting to describe them, then it's a bit... abrupt? Anticlimactic? You start describing his eyes and then sudden stop. "They're just different."
I'd give some sort of flavor to it.
Maybe something like
"Blue like mine, but of a different shade, and something different underneath."
As an idea.
Later on, a similar phrase rings.
"Her golden eyes flicker with something unreadable."
But this one works, because it is very clearly written to be mysterious with her current motives and the prose knows it, not to mention the context fits with it.
Rather than being a starting description that ends, it's the prose surrounding a character being vulnerable.
Writing is very concise, yet expressive. It's economics but with writing. Very efficient and succeeds in what it wants to convey.
The amulet idea is cool
As an extension to the writing part, I find it quite easy to visualise what is going on. I usually don't have the easiest time of that. So props.
Last note: The information is very easy to digest. I never felt lost in what the story was doing. Very clear structure.
'Flashback' memory, carriage ride, amulet, talking about the baron, then the ceremony.
Chapter 2:
I like captain Carver. Not exactly sure why, but his character comes through nicely with even his very first dialogue.
Liriel describes him as cold without letting any warmth through, and disciplined, but his dialogue right after makes it seem like he's not cold,
just someone who doesn't let his feelings influence his duty. So reserved rather than cold.
This then juxtaposes his later dialogue where he reprimands her for messing up the speech, which is cool.
Though I might be reading too much into that.
Liriel has a lot of interiority and I feel like I know her character quite a decent bit just from the two chapters.
The art moment with the soldier is cute.
Chapter 3
The movement from starting the ritual to the chaos is a little too abrupt.
I'd say she moves a little too quickly from being nervous about the ritual to just suddenly doing it
Not to mention that the explosion immediately undercuts it all
I recommend adding two moments before
Before she starts actually speaking, have her falter, second guess herself or anything else. Just a beat before she settles into the rhythm and finds herself being able to do it fine.
The other moment to add would be before the chaos starts.
Make the moment where she's doing it last a bit longer, add another beat before things hit the fan.
Right now it reads very quickly.
She's nervous-no she's not it's fine-explosion
Each of those needs a bit of time to breathe
But otherwise very neat chapter! Good worldbuilding. The same prose praise as before appliest here.
Side note: Well screw Carver I guess XD
The callback to the art enjoying soldier is good for establishing that the forces at play here are unnatural and corrupting.
Minor note: storm tossed should be storm-tossed.
Chapter 4:
I am pleasantly surprised at the subversion of expectations.
First, I thought the mother turned out to be behind it, but then it was just a smart play by her, and then it turns out the big bad has Alzheimer's.
Bravo.
It's actually interesting how the story doesn't start with a big bad immediately doing big bad things after being unsealed. He's just a guy who's a bit confused. Interesting indeed.
Only comment is that perhaps the debacle ended too quickly. Perhaps that's intended, but I feel that the movement from her talking to Vaeroth to her going to sleep in her bed is a bit too fast paced.
Chapter 5:
Liriel is far too chill about him. This is funny to say since she's seething at his existence, but she's simultaneously too chill with the most powerful big bad she knows just being in front of her, and at the same time a little too expressive, seeing as she could be jeopardizing their lives by having a tantrum.
Yes, let me just take this extremely strong bad guy who lost his memory, who my mother is professionally gaslighting so he doesn't kill us, and then blame him and insult him in his face while getting angry.
That is, in my opinion a little stupid even from an emotional character.
She should be forced still in her seat from fear and from the ptsd of having people die around her and smelling burning flesh, on top of the supposedly strongest villain just sitting in front of her.
She was nervous about a ceremony but she's just fine roasting the big bad? Something's off here
When you and you family's lives are at stake, you don't just start insulting the guy who can erase you with a flick of his finger.
That is my first real criticism so far. Not by any means bad enough to stop reading or something, but just an inconsistency I had to pause on.
Not being super shook because of the fighting that happened I can understand, we already know she has the memory fragment dreams of the battlefield, so she's presumably used to it, but how is she able to act like that in front of the big bad?
I like their conversation after quite a bit, but I feel like it needs to be earned a little better.
Note: He reminds me of Macht from Frieren. That's cool stuff.
Chapter 6:
She's already glancing at Vaeroth asking for his support in mischief?
That's a bit fast from the last chapter lol
The escalation of their relationship is paced a bit fast.
Finishing the chapter, I like their dynamic, but I think it moved from "there is a calamity in front of me and I have to force myself to play along"
To
"On today's episode of my annoying roommate..." A bit too fast
It doesn't take away from the story much, but it would be good to smooth that transition over.
I reads very much as "oh, were doing this now?" Rather than a natural progression of a relationship - especially one as complicated as theirs.
Both sides are good, the beginning and the end result are very much enjoyable, there's just no proper in-between.
Chapter 7:
Just a good read. Forgetting about the relationship hitch, this is just pleasant to read!
I actually don't have any specific notes.
So I'll just move to the conclusion:
CONCLUSION:
You have a well written story here. Liriel is a pretty engaging protagonist, and her dynamic with Vaeroth is very unique and interesting. I assume he'll be the secondary protagonist, and I also hope so.
The prose is very clean, no grammar mistakes or inaccuracies I could spot, save for one I mentioned earlier.
It's very easy to imagine what is put down on the page, and the worldbuilding is delivered on point. Not a single time did I find myself thinking "what/who was that again?"
I never got caught up on anything due to clunky writing either.
The story, while quite simple so far, is engaging and interesting. It is clear that the narrative/plot itself doesn't matter to the story as much as the relationship between the two main characters.
Or rather, right now the plot is the important bit (hey we awoke this big bad guy and this will have consequences)
But it seems to be leading towards a place where the relationship and dynamic between Liriel and Vaeroth will take the center stage.
And I'm all for that dynamic.
It's going in my plan to read.
4.5/5 stars.
Missing half a star only for the relationship hitch.