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- #131
That is helpful, thank you!! And yes to clarify I do take critique so it's all good.I really like it! And I know you didn’t ask for critique, but the one thing that threw me off was the great amount of description of the houses. I got lost a couple times. Instead of describing every detail, you can make a couple short, impactful statements about it. The house might be different from the rest of the neighborhood, tell us why. When you get to Sam’s house, simply tell us something like. “It wasn’t bright and flowery like the neighbors' house, but it was not any more ugly from most of the houses on Sam’s street. It was long, squat, and shabby like the rest of them, but that mattered little to Sam. As long as she could do whatever she wanted with her bedroom, she was content.”
You don’t need the reader to have the exact same picture as you in their head, they just need a shabby, ugly house. And they will keep this rather quaint picture in their mind for the rest of the story and look back on it fondly. Only mention a detail if it matters later on. Then it will stand out to a reader, and they will have an ¡Aha! moment.
Edit: As I reread through this I can definitely see it's the weaker of my 2 works so far, probably because I didn't really know how to start the story. But I'm revising it for a second draft right now!
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