- Oct 2024
-
Local file Local file
-
Every night, before going to sleep, she had to swallowridiculous amounts of sleeping pills because she couldn't stand being in the dark, thinkingabout how she had lost complete control over her life, and how if she died inher sleep she would never have a chance to start over, as she had been secretly dreaming ofdoing for years.
run-on sentence
-
,
remove comma
-
Arte finally got it.
no italics, also maybe say 'understood'
-
e, but the sea... the seawas infinite.
no ellipses and no italics
-
in its entirety,
redundant
-
until her hands were too coldto feel the consistency of the ladder,
remove this
-
,
remove comma
-
threaten
threatened
-
She had no fucking real friends.
do not italicise here
-
shutting
could this be more specific? maybe she slams the door?
-
With a shiver of terror, Arte realized.Blood.
this could just be one sentence
-
A hand hit the glass, exactly at Arte's face level.
'a hand hit the glass right in front of her eyes.'
-
step in that direction
vague wording
-
She fought to get her eyes to adapt to the absence of light,
wouldn't they do this naturally? or if there's pitch black maybe her eyes struggle to adapt
-
she knew shewasn’t anything but a fraud.
'was nothing but a fraud'
-
gotten
'been picked'
-
knowing how he even knows of my existence
'i am more interested in knowing how he got access to my work.'
-
exam
i'll accept the italics here
-
actual
italics
-
As soon as Berlini hadbought her five NFTs and the pictures of them projected on his living room’s walls hadappeared on all the main e-magazines’ social media, Arte had stopped being a nobody no oneexpected anything from.
split this into two sentences
-
refused to go to her dance classes because she had neverdeveloped normal socialisation skills.
this feels clunky - could you show us instead of telling us?
-
The world would have kept on spinning, and she would have been able toremain enclosed in the safe bubble of her studio.
'the world would keep on spinning, and she would remain enclosed in the safe bubble of her studio'
-
Art
'art' and 'science' should not be capitalised even though they are school subjects
-
When she was thirteen and all kids were supposed to pick one main subject in school,all other options had just seemed way too big for her. Of course, it would have been easy topick Science, like her parents did. But she was an overthinker by nature, and even atthirteen the consequences of that choice weighed on her as if the whole world would haveeither thrived or collapsed depending on it.
i like the thought behind this but something seems off - it might be your use of the conditional tense again
-
They could all feel it.
redundant
-
She saw it on their faces, in their lost gazesreflecting on the dark screens of the HoloWatches on their wrists.
she would not be able to see this
-
glasses
glass, singular
-
frizzing
frizzing?
-
immediately
redundant
-
Peopletended to scream all the time, mostly for very un-scream-worthy stuff.
do they though?
-
Someone, somewhere outside the shop, screamed.
somewhere outside the shop, a person screamed.
-
The first time they had sex he had made acomment on how she didn’t need to try that hard.
why is she with him?
-
Laces
lace, singular
-
Quiet, other than for the eery ambiance music.
'the shop was eerily quiet except for its ambient music'
-
seriously started considering leaving
just say 'she considered leaving'
-
upper hemisphere
northern hemisphere
-
The great cruise ships that hadpolluted the city’s harbours for decades left.
syntax is off here - 'the great cruise ships, that had once polluted the city's harbours, docked elsewhere'
-
And alsobecause, even though the canals had been empty for decades, some of the water had remainedstuck in the sewer beneath the streets. It had stood still and stagnant for so long, collecting allthe carcasses of the rats drowning and decaying. And the wet and unsanitary environmentattracted mould, flies and maggots, and despite all of the efforts from the mayor of sprayingthe drains with that rose-scented solution that had gotten the city council into debt, the air stillsmelled putrid.
this is very interesting but too expositional here i think
-
The tram had come
you use this tense a lot and you don't need to. just say 'the tram arrived'
-
wrinkled, soft
'soft, wrinkled body'
-
With her index she slowlystarted tracing her traits.
'with her index finger, she slowly traced the outline of her features'
-
perfectly fine
!!
-
and his lack of amoustache.
find a new way to describe this
-
Or to scream and punch a hole through the wall of her office, like she needed.
this seems inconsistent with her character
-
finally
how long was he looking for?
-
not-like-other-artists
too chatty
-
you would look at a child asking why the Sun goesdown every day.
inconsistent voice here
-
paintings
!!
-
moustache
this is funny but it takes away from the tension in the scene
-
And... yeah, she lost it.
don't use ellipses for emphasis
-
Come on, Arte. Find something smart to say.
i know why you've used italics here but it's inconsistent with her other moments of internality
-
He didn’t seem the type to get offended at anything.
how would she know this?
-
go back.
!!
-
you’ll have any inputs,
clunky phrasing
-
In marble
!
-
physical
you already know what i'm going to say
-
She tried to hide her amazement, evenwhen the border of one of the pages cut through her skin. She flinched and retrieved her hand,hiding it under the desk.
you could make this sentence sharper to mirror the feeling of the paper cut
-
She passed her fingertip
what?
-
came out
'fell out'
-
It was a proper, old-timey, physical folder.
'old-fashioned'
-
She was a professional woman. A successful woman. A confident woman.
this is a great way of showing us her internal monologue without taking us out of the usual style
-
literally
no italics, also no 'literally'
-
She had to say something. Anything. Don’t comment onthe moustache, Artemisia. Don’t. Comment. The moustache.
this is funny but keep in mind who is narrating
-
Odds Raffa would grow a moustache? Close to zero. Hewas obsessed with waxing and shaving and clean, soft, baby-like skin. And anyway, he wouldhave never touched her like that. She had forgotten the feeling of his lips on her skin. But thisman looked like the kind of man who doesn’t care what his partner’s underwear looks like. Helooked like he would rip a bra open without taking his eyes off yours and – Oh my God wasshe fantasising about a student?
where has this come from?
-
Because that one. Allof a sudden, she craved that feeling.
this could be worded in a more sophisticated manner
-
always only seen
always and only make each other redundant
-
They looked like they would itchagainst your skin.
just say they looked itchy
-
démodé
don't show off
-
God, Arte had never seen a moustache like that.
not necessary
-
She forced her brain to remove the image of her mother’s new face from her mind –unsuccessfully – and then took a deep breath, painting on her face the expression of someonewho has her life together. Then, she opened the door.
'she tried, unsuccessfully, to cut the image of her mother's new face out of her mind. taking a deep breath and adopting an expression of composure, she opened the door.'
-
acting as if she wasn’t painfully aware of her jumper sticking to herbody because of the sweat, the wool itchy and drenched in her own body odour, and how shereally should have showered that morning.
too long
-
professor
'good morning, Professor,'
-
Instead, she had gotten to work a good half an hour late.
'instead, she arrived at work half an hour late'
-
That to say,
this is not an email
-
Artethought about her mother’s mouth. About the few, rare times the woman had used those lips tokiss her. The ones she had before. Thin, pale, wrinkled. Arte tried to focus on the memory oftheir warmth on her skin. On her cheek, on her birthdays. On her forehead, at graduation. Onher nose, once, when she was five. She tried to hold onto that memory, in an attempt to stopher mind from replacing it with the way her mum’s new lips had felt, when she’d kissed hergoodbye outside of the Caffè Florian. Thick. Hard. Cold.
i see what you're trying to do but this doesn't give us a deeper image as much as just hammering home the same thing over and over
-
few, rare
one or the other, you don't need both
-
Arte should have left the café, gotten on the next tram and gone home, back to bed,taking her stained bra off before Raffa could see it and maybe tried to seduce him, just to proveto herself that she still could.
too long
-
Oh, she was so going to be sick.
'she felt sick' has the same impact
-
Arte definitely took way too long to make the room around her stop spinning
tone is too chatty
-
That face – that unfamiliar, unknown face – barely moved toaccompany the sound.
if she's laughing so hard her eyes water, how is her face barely moving?
-
What. Was. Happening?
tone is too slapstick
-
on those blackchalkboards they had in the old timey movies her dad made her watch as a kid.
tone is off
-
hitched
strange word choice - maybe 'scratched'?
-
back
redundant
-
if Arte had to guess
redundant
-
a woman
italics and irrelevant
-
Even her period had alwaysbeen scarily punctual, ever since Arte had memory.
we don't need this detail
-
Anyway.
not needed
-
that much.
italics - also we know that she can control this, so the sentence is redundant
-
fake
'false'
-
hated
italics
-
,
misplaced comma
-
ten
ten PEOPLE
-
in the frenzy to get out of there
'in the frenzy to escape'
-
reportage
'report'
-
She wasn’t exactly agoraphobic, but almost.
this sentence could be worded in a more sophisticated way
-
time-managing
'time management'
-
,
misplaced comma
-
Or. Remarked? No, no, joked. Artewas, like, seventy percent sure.
redundant
-
incorporating
'the smell of eggs now mixing with the stench of tobacco...'
-
solely
redundant
-
petrified,
is she really petrified as in scared, or just frozen? this could be misread
-
Alarmingly bitter
redundant
-
(which came from the trash, Arte had ruled. Yes. Definetly not her.)
'- which came from the trash, definitely - '
-
on
onto
-
Of course, Arte. Coming right up
what do the italics symbolise here
-
with no coffee in her system...
slightly too fanfiction-esque in tone
-
And, well, shit
redundant
-
only seemingly clean
this feels clunky
-
Nothing could have gone wrong.
nothing could GO wrong
-
have
just 'would' - this should be present conditional tense
-
go through
too vague and chatty
-
would have been
would be
-
casually
italics
-
this time
redundant
-
,
misplaced comma
-
Like. Properly.
don't use italics
-
wall draped with too many pairs of lacy lingerie.
they're on the wall? how?
-
random
i think this word offsets the tone
-
21:13
use written words and not numbers
-
with her head held up high and a fearlesssmirk on her face, looking back at the montage of her life with not a single ounce of regret.
this is too long
-
,
misplaced comma
-
as she would have hoped
as she had hoped?
-
T.S. Elliot
spelling
-
They are left with her art. Everything else is mere speculation.
this might be redundant?
-
, andalways will remain,
unnecessary
-
tinging the sky, the clouds and the ripples on the surface of the Adriatic Seawith thousands of different shades of yellow, and orange, and purple
this is too long and we lose track of the sentence
-
following day
maybe give us a specific date
-
,
unnecessary here
-
Artemisia Parisi
interesting name but runs the risk of sounding too 2016 YA
-
What you care about is a story. Everyone loves a story. They always want to knoweverything about the private lives of people they’ve not even actually met. It doesn’t evenmatter whether what you’re told is accurate or not. A true story is not necessarily a good story.
i'm not sure about this paragraph - i don't think the repetition is effective here, and 'not even actually' is clunky. i also don't like the italics
-
Academics love looking for explanations to rationalize things that were neverintended to be rational.
clunky sentence
-
brilliant, unexplorable minds
feels clunky
-
exact moment
don't use italics for emphasis
-
human portraits that look less human
be careful with word proximity
-