jackofallgeeks: (Literary)
John Noble ([personal profile] jackofallgeeks) wrote2002-11-19 10:11 pm
Entry tags:

Colosseum

There was a deafening sound, a sound like a thousand waves crashing into the same sea-cliff. His breathing came hard as the crowd cheered, and he dropped the hilt of his blade. His body was slick with blood - his own as well as that of the creature - and his skin was grimey and pale from the coating of dust. The sun beat down furiously on him; it had been a good show.
Perhaps next time he would be allowed to win.

Not this time, though. He had been meant to lose this fight. His blade had broken on the first swing, and he should have been little match for the beast unarmed. The Overseers would still make their profit, all the same, but he would be punished.

Punished for surviving.

Love the image...

[identity profile] serenabuny.livejournal.com 2002-11-20 10:01 am (UTC)(link)
Looks good, but remember about repeating words in such a short piece. Find a way to cut out the second "sound".

"Perhaps next time he would be allowed to win.
Not this time, though. He had been meant to lose this fight... Punished for surviving." This is kind of conflicting with this section of writing by itself. Isn't it typically that if you survive and the other... well, thing... doesn't, then you win? I think that's the usual Colleseum-type, fight to the death challenge works. If this isn't the case with yours, make sure in the sectino before it that you explain the rules. This scenario is normally a win-lose situation. You either win or lose. Officially anyway, by the rules of the game... Oh! And "fight" in the second paragraph can be cut out. I think by the blood and colleseum type description we can figure out what it is. Show, don't tell, yes?...

"Punished for surviving." The repetition here places emphasis on punished, yes? If what you want emphasis on is "surviving", just cut out "punished" in this sentence. The natural progression seems to want me to emphasize "survive" though.

"His breathing came hard as the crowd cheered, and he dropped the hilt of his blade. His body was slick with blood - his own as well as that of the creature - and his skin was grimey and pale from the coating of dust. The sun beat down furiously on him; it had been a good show."
You can combine these sentences if you want: "Breathing harsh, skin grimey and pale from the dust, and body slick from their mingled blood, he dropped his sword from white knuckles as the crowd cheered under the furiously beating sun. It had been a good show." Well, something like that anyway. I'm pretending like you described the fight and cut out a lot of the description because it was previously said. Are you going to describe the fight? If so a lot of this can be put in that section so this one isn't so laden with detail. It makes the reader focus more on the details than the second paragraph.