@n o s t r a d a m u s location_city
Hi All, I'm taking the slow approach and writing my book in excerpts as they come to me and I'd like some feedback. A little background, I'm writing a fantasy novel aimed at 11-14 year olds that explores the failures of adults and the nature of destiny. MC is named Angus (ordinary kid) and SCs are Sinrith ("great" wizard) and Leni (young soldier). The style I'm aiming for is like Terry Pratchet, that sort of fun whimsical prose with a wise-cracking edge. My ultimate goal style wise is to write something that would be fun to read aloud. On to the excerpts:
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“Exchange your life in this world for a life in another. If you remain you will become the greatest threat humanity will ever know, destruction will take form at your very fingertips. Cities will burn, great floods will descend upon the earth, mothers will grieve their children, and fathers will cry themselves to sleep in what is left of their beds.
You will destroy this place. You will gather immense power and it will be misused here. I know of a place where this power is needed. You will be safe and you will be happy, as will everyone you have ever known and ever loved. For they will no longer know you.”
The animatronic smiled, “All you must do is give me the token.”
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Angus poured over the waymarker, a bizarre mix of signpost and bulletin board, looking at all the places they could travel next. To the west, he noticed, was the town of Holdfast Wood. A poster on their section of the board caught his eye. In amongst the grizzled portraits of axe murders and highwaymen, the wanting of labourers, and the petitions of the lowly.
‘THE SPECTRE OF THE WOOD’. Curiosity peaked, he read on.
“Sighted in the burial ground by one young Mister on the third evening of this month. The spectre was described as tall and grey, and lurked for twenty-and-three minutes. If thee has any wisdom or wishes to join the hunt, gather on the steps of the town hall on the eve of the full moon. A reward of thirty gold pieces will be presented to whomever vanquishes this most unagreeable spirit.”
“Hey Sinrith, I have a quest for us,”
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The wizened woman sat back in her chair and raised her hands to him to show her palms. She turned them over to show the backs, a million bejewelled bangles clinked together as she did. “You see this,” She pointed at the back of her left hand, “Wrinkles.”
“I am very old, child. I have seen much in my time. I have seen kings rise and fall. I have seen the most promising students waste their gifts. I have seen the biggest fools become the brightest of stars. I have seen everything and I am tired,” She sighed.
“My knees are bad and my hair is grey and I do not have the spark I used to. The world has changed.
I remember when Ersatz was laughable. Now it is as common as air. And the kids, they do not care much for the old ways. Ersatz is exciting and easy.
They do not see the damage it can do and the damage it has already done. And they won’t, not until they are too old to do something about it,”
Angus thought of the fortune teller in the box.
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He felt hollow. Stupid and hollow. His heart drawled in his chest and the feeling echoed until it hit the internal wall of his ribs. In and out, in and out. His breath came, mechanically. Everything felt so grey all of a sudden, as if someone had come along and sucked all the colour out of the world. He looked down at his hands, turning them from front to back to front again. It struck him how silly they were. Muscles and veins and bones and skin. Easy to break. Easy to cut. Easy to lose a finger or two.
He didn’t care. All of a sudden. He didn’t care what happened to him at all. He could be screamed at or kicked or punched or left for dead or thrown through a window. It didn’t matter, he didn’t care. He couldn’t care. The capacity to care had left him in that moment and all that was left was the hollow feeling in his chest.
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“Adults lie Angus. They lie about miniscule things, they lie about gargantuan things. They lie about what they can and can’t do. They tell you things are easy when they’re impossible and impossible when they’re easy. They lie to get you to shut up. They lie to get you to go away. They lie to make you stay. Adults lie about everything.”
“Why?”
“I don’t know why. They just do.”
“They must hate us then. They must think we’re foolish to believe them. They must look at me and laugh and say ‘I can’t believe he bought that’ every single time…
How many times do you think I’ve been lied to?”
The words swam in the air, wafting like smoke. Lingering.
“Most likely. All your life,” Leni turned back down the path. And Angus was all alone.
…
He had decided that he did miss home after all.
He missed the winter mornings in late july. When the not-quite mountains loomed indigo in the distance and against them the gumtrees lingered deep peridot green. Their jerking pale limbs reaching up towards the blue-grey storm clouds, weighted down by drooping dagger shaped leaves. He would wake, cold in his bed, as the cockatoos screeched and the magpies chortled from the rooftops.
He missed his mother and her terrible pumpkin scones. Which were never sweet enough or orange enough and always came out lumpy, dry, and irregularly shaped. They were a hassle to make, he knew. All the dishes and the kneading, and pumpkin puree everywhere. They made the house smell awful and burnt. But he was glad that she made them, every time.
He missed his friends. He had had a dream the night before. A memory. Of when he and Casper had gone out to the creek with the dogs without telling their parents. They had spent hours messing about in the mud, picking out bits of broken glass and throwing sticks. Trying to see who could hang upside down the longest from the large tree. The creek had swelled with the recent rains and the brownish water rushed where it normally trickled. Right before they decided they were going to leave he had dared Capser to cross it. One last silly little challenge before they both headed home. So Casper waded into the thick creek water, dodging sticks and pebbles with his fluffy white dog in his arms. And just as he reached the bank on the other side, he lost his shoe.
They had spent almost half an hour trying to track it down as the current swept it further along the stream. Casper hobbling one-shoed and wet-socked, his little dog soaked and shivering. His mother would kill him if he didn’t find it, he said.
They did, eventually. After it had dropped dark and they were over a kilometre away from where they’d started. He and Casper had walked back in silence, past the school playground and the milkbar. Until a car pulled up alongside them. Angus’ mothers’ car. She was so worried, she had said. She was about to call the police thinking he’d been kidnapped by some loon in a white van. How dare he go out without telling her and what on Earth had he been doing out this late anyway, what was he thinking. She went on and on and on.
They all drove to Casper’s house. She dropped him at the front door with his soggy white dog. Angus stayed in the passenger seat and watched. Capser’s parents hadn’t even noticed he was gone, they said nothing to him as he slipped behind them into the dark house. His mother got back in the car and said he and Casper couldn’t be friends anymore and if she ever saw them together again he’d be grounded for a week.
In the silent car ride home, Angus wondered why she didn’t react like this when he actually did something bad. Every other time he’d done something troublesome she had said nothing.Normally, she just sighed and looked off into the distance disappointedly. No reprimand, no punishment, not a word.
He had been lucky, he realised. So so lucky. And now he had none of it, traded away for a stupid token and a stupid lie.
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Anyways let me know what you think. What do I need to tweak? What can you gather from the characters and settings? What elements peak your curiosity? Do you think I've hit the style I was aiming for?