(Mar. 05, 2011 1:55 AM)KingCepheusIII Wrote: They will come soon, but here is chapter 2:Alright, I've become a better writer than when I first joined, and I think I can give you some pointers:
Chapter 2: Excitement
I ran in and told my parents the story. I knew all about the bey somehow. It wasn't just based on the constellation Lupus. It was based on that and the moon. Fenrir searched night after night, looking for a master who can tame it, (Which I have not done yet) and searches during the cold nights in Siberia. We were a poor family Siberian family, but we could hold together. My father suddenly pulled out a stone stadium and laid it on the floor. Then he pulled out his bey, Stone Orso TD145WB and ripped it. I went to instinct and launched Fenrir. Suddenly, a huge bear spirit with stone armor came out. Fenrir's spirit, the huge white wolf with horns came out too. It attacked Orso with difficulty. Orso was a strong defense type. Fenrir was a swift attack type. They clawed at each other and a huge wave of snow and stone burst from the stadium.It phased right through us. Fenrir cracked the stadium (luckily, my father had multiple) and trapped Orso. It attacked rapidly until Orso stopped I had won. "Let me show you the master!" exclaimed my older brother Dmitri.
*Plot-Every stories gotta have it! Make sure you always follow the course of the plot and try not to deviate too much.
*Fluency-Try to make your story flow, and cut down on the choppiness. Which sentence is better? 1. We went to the shop. We bought food. We went home. OR 2. We went to the shop. There, we bought food, like cereal, apples, and lots of bananas! Then, after a long day, we went home. Get the picture? And BTW both of those were horrible. DO NOT write like that.
*Detail-Make sure you're describing things. What did Fenrir look like? What he act like? Did he smell like goat cheese? And so on and so fourth. smell is the #1 trigger for memories, so if you want the reader to be able to connect with the picture you are describing, use smell often (Keep it fluent, though!)
Hope this helped. Good story, anyways. Just work on these things-it'll improve your writing tenfold!!!