Re: Sisterhood (Hanako Epilogue) (Completed)
Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2012 5:25 pm
Thanks.
Better to go down fighting than end up a sad iron golem sold in flee markets to scare children. I ain't mad, Gunther.Brogurt wrote:>You will never have a skullgun installed
>You will never kill someone without so much as raising a finger
>You will never have orange; you will be stuck forever with lemon-lime
I haven't really decided yet. I'd need to have a clear and accurate idea of where I'd want to take the story... (and obviously I'd need to feel like spending another two and a half months or so worth of writing on it...I probably wouldn't post it chapter for chapter)If you do decide to write more to this (regardless of you tagging it as completed), I will look forward to it.
You know me way to well. I've been trying to find a reason to read this 18 chapter monster, but so far I haven't been able to convince myself. So I've been checking the comments, and two things have come up.BlackWaltzTheThird wrote:
Also Brogurt, if you see this, I'll get to yours soon. Maybe on the weekend. I'm kind swamped with Uni at the moment.
Don't cling to that phrase. You'll likely get the wrong idea (though it sort-of makes sense after you read it).Brogurt wrote:"A Hanako bad end and a Lilly good end"
If this means that Hanako doesn't get her happily ever after and Lilly does instead, I'd have a right to be upset. And it's hard to imagine criticism being so positive if this only refers to a meltdown over whiteknighting and an airport chase.
The parenthesis aren't used like that. They're used a bit like most people today use italics: to indicate direct thought. And, no, they didn't work for me either. But there aren't too many of them, so that's little more than an occasional distraction.On parenthesis, I'm inclined to agree that () these kind of parenthesis are bad. But take a look at this.
He (at least it looks like a he) offers me his hand.
He -at least it looks like a he- offers me his hand.
He, at least it looks like a he, offers me his hand.
"at least it looks like a he" is a parenthetical statement in all of these, and all of them work, some being less obtrusive than others in different scenarios.
I can't tell what difference the brackets are supposed to make. They might indicate that Lilly (= narrator and point-of-view character) actually had that very thought back then, formulated in her mind, rather than that story-telling Lilly is imposing the question. But the difference seems academic, to me. If you delete the brackets, you get the same effect, IMO, especially since it's present tense narration anyway (which has that in-the-moment feel anyway). The brackets (or - more conventionally - italics) might make more sense in past tense narration (though I doubt it).Guest Poster wrote:I hear a whoosh from my sister’s direction, followed by several short splashes in the distance.
(Is she skipping rocks?)
I get no different feeling from that and it's easier to read.I hear a whoosh from my sister's direction, followed by several short splashes in the distance. Is she skipping rocks?
Thanks. Glad to hear you enjoyed it.Okay, I meant to go to bed a while ago, but I decided to finish this instead of stopping at the end of the first page. What can I say that hasn't been said already? To channel Richie Benaud; marrrvelous. I very much liked the parallels your fic drew to other routes, Lilly's in particular. There was one person who summed it up quite nicely as being "a Hanako bad end and a Lilly good end inside a Hanako good end." And best of all, it felt like it fit perfectly within the mould of Katawa Shoujo; a natural extension to the story as if it had been written by cpl_crud himself. Okay, maybe that's going a bit too far. I'll leave that to the man himself to decide.
Well noted. Truth is, I'm not a native english speaker and this was probably one thing that spelling and grammar checkers don't filter out. Still, good point and point taken.In spite of all the wonderful things your fic has brought me this night, there a a few issues I have with it. There are a great number of times wherein you randomly switch between present and past tense,
Any specifics? There were a few things that were written out (like Hisao and Hanako playing specific games and commenting shortly on each and, more prominently, the whole thursday that took place in the hospital) and I decided to scrap them because the chapter they were part of was already running long enough as it was. Some things were "told, not shown" with brevity in mind. And I realize I'm in a weird position to say this, given the fact the story's rather large. Other things (a large part of the Hokkaido trip) I considered writing but I left them out because they pretty much mirrored the events in Lilly's route and I figured too large a part of it would feel like "seen that already" to the reader. I skipped over the first date because I couldn't really find a way to make what Hisao himself admitted was a rather run-of-the-mill experience sound like an exciting read. There was already another date planned as part of the story after all.and personally I think the "recount everything that happened offscreen" trope is a bit too heavily ustilised here.
By the formatting, do you strictly mean the parentheses? (It was brought to my attention some of the chapters exceeded the length the forum software could display them without problems for all users, but I'm not one of the users affected by this supposed glitch, so I failed to notice it) If so, point taken.In addition, at times it was hard to follow conversations or trains of thought, due to the formatting. While I understand your rationale for the use of the parentheses, I object to their purpose. You're writing from the point of view of a character; the narration is their thoughts and vice versa. If they think something and it sounds spoken, perhaps it ought to be rephrased such that it fits as prose instead.
That's not what they were referring to, I think. The parentheses are used to enclose entire sentences that are direct thoughts. (as in, spoken lines that simply aren't spoken) They're a stylistic choice that some of the readers ended up disagreeing with."at least it looks like a he" is a parenthetical statement in all of these, and all of them work, some being less obtrusive than others in different scenarios. Now, I don't know which ones were in the prose, but I think I remember Guest Poster saying he hadn't written in a while, so maybe this is helpful.
I assume you're not going to point out which posts are legit and which ones aren't?Also there's the aimless praise I've been seeing. I won't deny that some of it seems legit, but
Maybe, maybe not. I'm not gonna say whether you're warm or cold.If this means that Hanako doesn't get her happily ever after and Lilly does instead, I'd have a right to be upset.
I'm not sure whether you're actually talking to me, or whether you've drawn together Brogurt's and my post, but:Guest Poster wrote:The skipping rocks part you bring up is actually an exception. Most of them are more direct thoughts. Eh, it's kinda to point out.