S__Aether
New member
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2026
- Messages
- 8
- Points
- 3
Hi everyone,
I’ve recently reached a turning point in my journey as a writer. After publishing 78 chapters of my first novel, "The Prince's Rise from the Shadows," and receiving valuable (and blunt) feedback from several critics and experienced authors, I’ve realized something important.
My story has "structural gaps." While the world-building is there, the foundation—the pacing, the over-descriptive style, and the early hooks—needs a professional level of refinement that simple editing can't fix. Even though I’ve managed to make the hooks much stronger in the middle chapters, the core issue remains with the beginning.
So, I’ve made a tough choice: I’m going to stop this work.
I won't delete it, as it represents my first steps and a huge learning curve for me. Instead, I’m going to dedicate my time to studying the "craft" of storytelling—focusing on pacing, better character dialogue, and more natural narration. I want my next project to be something that truly meets global professional standards.
I’d love to hear your thoughts:
I’ve recently reached a turning point in my journey as a writer. After publishing 78 chapters of my first novel, "The Prince's Rise from the Shadows," and receiving valuable (and blunt) feedback from several critics and experienced authors, I’ve realized something important.
My story has "structural gaps." While the world-building is there, the foundation—the pacing, the over-descriptive style, and the early hooks—needs a professional level of refinement that simple editing can't fix. Even though I’ve managed to make the hooks much stronger in the middle chapters, the core issue remains with the beginning.
So, I’ve made a tough choice: I’m going to stop this work.
I won't delete it, as it represents my first steps and a huge learning curve for me. Instead, I’m going to dedicate my time to studying the "craft" of storytelling—focusing on pacing, better character dialogue, and more natural narration. I want my next project to be something that truly meets global professional standards.
I’d love to hear your thoughts:
- For those who went through this, did you "reboot" the same story later, or did you start something completely fresh?
- Is it better to keep practicing on a "flawed" story—considering that a weak start fails to attract readers, meaning I don't get enough feedback to improve—or is a "hard reset" the right way to grow?