I'll check it out!
I'm in the middle of a rewrite. So if you wanna check it out, don't bother going past
chapter 10, if you even decide to go that far. I'm down to do a review swap. More interested in seeing your general impressions.
Alright, I'm back!
I've gone through the first five chapters to get a feel for the writing.
I'll give you
4 Breadcrumbs out of 2.5 Limited Edition Graham Crackers.
What that means? let me explain.
Let’s start with Chapter 1. It’s mostly sharp — but
almost too sharp at points.
This feels like a lot of world-shattering events packed into just a few lines. We've got an epic duel, a city descending into chaos, an empire falling
and the birth of legends , Holy knights, all in a quick burst. Then, we immediately cut away.
Honestly, that scene left me feeling a little "meh." It has all the ingredients to be awesome and hook the reader, but it feels rushed. Like an after thought.
If you want to keep it short, maybe weave this into the classroom scene later. Frame it as a lecture or retelling. That way, the “glossing over” doesn’t feel so jarring. But opening on an epic battle and then immediately pulling the rug out? It made me wanna cry a little.
I'd suggest either
fleshing the scene out into its full epic glory or
working it into the classroom as a kind of historical recap. Either way, let us bask in the drama a little!
That being said:
That line goes hard. Instantly makes me curious how the world ends — and how the narrator already knows it. I like it. But I don't see enough of it in the rest of the story.
I will move on to some bigger and more consistent issue I see.
Telling and not showing. This is an issue I see it 90% of stories and even in my own. So I'm gonna be a little brutal.
[Charlotte seemed just about ready to burst out into a tirade, but with my characteristic lack of grace, I knew exactly how to get out of the situation.]
I picked this because it a good example is a lot of t
elling and not enough showing. You're telling us Charlotte’s about to go off, you're telling us that the MC is clumsy, you're telling us that they know how to escape all at once.
Instead,
show it! Maybe Charlotte taps her foot impatiently. Maybe the MC stumbles as they’re being yanked out of the room. Maybe they awkwardly wiggle free without saying a word. Drop the "I knew" part and just
show the MC doing it.
You do this pretty often especially in the later chapters and it begins to drag a bit.
On to my next point.
Some of your phrasing can be a bit jarring
I'll ignore the filter words and focus on a larger issue. This sentence feels awkward to read and feels a little out of order.
We go from:
Girl with hands on hips ->Dragged out of classroom -> Girl Standing in hallway.
When the logical flow would be:
Dragged out of classroom -> Standing in hallway -> Girl standing with hands on hips.
Small thing, but in the opening chapters,
every word counts. Little things like this can trip the reader's mental flow. (It did for me.)
Let's go to the close:
I actually kind of like this as a set-up. It's a tad overwritten. but, it gives a bittersweet vibe.
Buuut... who’s the narrator here?
Is it the MC looking back? Is it an omniscient narrator? A random person? It feels out of place, and the answer to this question affects how readers frame everything going forward.
Chapter 2:
Here is where I feel things kinda fall apart. Not gonna lie, I was super confused. It feels totally disconnected from Chapter 1. We go from school to... IDK where. I wasn’t sure where we were, what the "blue cracks" were, why we’re messing with graves, or even why I should care about the MC’s history yet.
A larger issue is that the overwriting really takes hold in this chapter.
an example:
Holy hand grenade, Batman! That’s a lot of words to say, “she’s hot.”
It's
very repetitive, and honestly, it feels a bit like ChatGPT slop. (No offence. I've written some absolute monstrous and generic descriptions. But it had to be said )
You could cut this in half if not a quarter and still sell the "divine beauty" without hammering it home five different ways.
Also: after chapter 1, there is a lot of bloat and a general lack of direction. Like this vampire chick is just... hanging out with a random as she plots to take over the world...?
there are no stakes. Is the MC okay with this plan? Does he even care?
There’s is also a boat load of exposition that’s hard to care about yet, and it feels like we’re jumping between POVs and settings without clear anchors. I kept feeling lost at the start of many chapters. And I have no clue where we're going.
Dialogue:
This needs a bit of work. Characters — especially ones as different as an ancient vampire and a modern nerd — should have really distinct voices.
Right now, if you took away the dialogue tags, I wouldn’t be able to tell who’s speaking.
Characterization:
I will be honest. All the characters feel paper thin and generic. The MC feels like a Everyman audience stand in who's only job is to exist so the reader can imagine what it'd be like to hang out with a vampiric hottie.
What does he want? Where is he going in life? why is so so chill about all the life changing information? Bro got bit by a naked vampire and didn't even blink.
everyone else, including Cacophony, is also generally uninteresting and seemingly paper this. Maybe they have huge character arcs that come later. But You've given me no reason to care. or be interested as of
chapter 5.
Overall:
It feels very. generic. The prose are at times awkward and at others very bloated. it feels Like a random Harem anime from ten years ago. Which isn't necessary a bad thing. People love that stuff. Just not me.
I wish you the best with your story. and hope you keep having fun writing it.