Eldoria
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2025
- Messages
- 1,573
- Points
- 113
Imagine you're writing fiction. You finish 2k words in a day. Then you continue writing again and again... until you're done.
A few years later... you've written 1 million words. You smile, witnessing the fruits of your labor. You might cry while smelling the paper... no, that's an exaggeration. I think... we can still be proud of our work without the smell of ink.
You happily show your work to your friends, colleagues, or even family. Look, I've managed to finish my fiction just the way I wanted it.
"Please read my work."
Your friend smiles, "That's great. Let me read it first."
You reply, "Of course."
Your friend receives your fiction. She focuses on the paper (or phone screen).
Her dark eyes widen. Her lips pout. She flips through the pages. Then she closes the book.
You ask, "What do you think?"
Your friend is silent. Cold sweat drips from her forehead.
She pats you on the shoulder and says, "your fiction may be good in your opinion. But-"
She shakes her head. "I can't read it. My eyes are tired from just reading one page."
"You're amazing... you wrote 9,000 pages. But I can't read it. Sorry."
Your eyes widen. "How is that possible? Is it unreadable?"
"I even remember Errie releasing a black aura to defeat the black dragon in chapter 900?!"
Your friend snorts, "You're an author... I'm just a casual reader. How should I know what you're thinking?"
Your friend pats you on the shoulder and says, "Your fiction might not be suitable for me. Try... give it to someone else."
You don't give up. You hand your fiction to your friends one by one.
But their response is the same. They can't finish a single page.
You might frown, witnessing this cruel reality.
Well, this is just a fictional scenario. But this could happen to any author. The problem?
The authors lack feedback. The narrative might be good for them. But it's not reader-friendly.
A few years later... you've written 1 million words. You smile, witnessing the fruits of your labor. You might cry while smelling the paper... no, that's an exaggeration. I think... we can still be proud of our work without the smell of ink.
You happily show your work to your friends, colleagues, or even family. Look, I've managed to finish my fiction just the way I wanted it.
"Please read my work."
Your friend smiles, "That's great. Let me read it first."
You reply, "Of course."
Your friend receives your fiction. She focuses on the paper (or phone screen).
Her dark eyes widen. Her lips pout. She flips through the pages. Then she closes the book.
You ask, "What do you think?"
Your friend is silent. Cold sweat drips from her forehead.
She pats you on the shoulder and says, "your fiction may be good in your opinion. But-"
She shakes her head. "I can't read it. My eyes are tired from just reading one page."
"You're amazing... you wrote 9,000 pages. But I can't read it. Sorry."
Your eyes widen. "How is that possible? Is it unreadable?"
"I even remember Errie releasing a black aura to defeat the black dragon in chapter 900?!"
Your friend snorts, "You're an author... I'm just a casual reader. How should I know what you're thinking?"
Your friend pats you on the shoulder and says, "Your fiction might not be suitable for me. Try... give it to someone else."
You don't give up. You hand your fiction to your friends one by one.
But their response is the same. They can't finish a single page.
You might frown, witnessing this cruel reality.
Well, this is just a fictional scenario. But this could happen to any author. The problem?
The authors lack feedback. The narrative might be good for them. But it's not reader-friendly.
My question is, what kind of feedback would you like to improve your narrative?