Monday, October 7, 2013

1st 5 Pages October Workshop - Ledbetter

Name: Christopher Ledbetter
Genre: Young Adult
Title: Hard To Breathe

Dreams are like sunsets, beautiful and fleeting. I often wonder what kind of sunset I’d create if I could control it. The colours I’d choose. The balance. The flow. And if it were mine, maybe I’d make it last all day. But then, what’d be the point in that? A sunset’s beauty walks hand in hand with its brevity.

The air’s thick with autumn’s earthy scent while I sit outside the Hydraulic Road Hilltop Grocery, watching the sun descend toward the foothills behind my school. Monet’s Houses of Parliament has nothing on this. In fact, Monet’s whole outlook on sunsets would’ve been different if he’d lived here in Charlottesville, Virginia, if he could’ve seen what I’m looking at right now.

The sun resembles a giant basketball as it slips through the clouds, igniting the twine. Swish. Helios never misses. I chuckle. Helios, Greek God of the Sun. I guess there are certain things I’ll never escape. Neither my dad’s Greek blood nor his ancient gods. They’re in my soul, no matter how much I try to shrug off the tunic, so to speak.

Basketball will definitely help, though. I need to make the team this year. It’s the last chance for recruiters to notice me. Last chance to get the scholarship I need since I’m not playing soccer anymore. I’m done with that. Dad ruined it.

His shadow looms across oceans. It’s like living under a suffocating blanket. So, no more soccer. And, no more Greek heritage. I’ll be as American as apple pie. Except my last name will still be Anestis. And I’ll probably still have twice as much body hair as the average American.

Condensation from my Gatorade coats my right hand while I bite into the strawberry Scooter Crunch in the other. Not exactly the best post game meal. But hey, it called my name when I entered the store. I open up my journal to record my day’s outing on the court, as always. I feel like I played pretty well today, but in four pick-up basketball games, I only averaged three points, one steal, and two rebounds. That’s not getting it done.

I sigh in a puff. At least my defence is getting better. The guy I guarded only averaged two points per game. And my team stayed on the court the entire time. Small victories, right?

I kill the rest of my Gatorade. It’s an icy river of fruit punch-flavored goodness as it descends. I toss my trash and head down the now darkened, winding road toward my house. Actually, it’s far from a house. It’s the tiniest apartment known to man. Every room is two steps from every other room. All Mum can afford, I guess.

I practice my moves down the sidewalk, loving the feel of the worn leather beneath my fingertips. Who’d ever bother with a rubber ball? Dribble right-handed. Left-handed. Spin around the oncoming night jogger. Behind-the-back. Between the legs. Shake and bake on that crack in the cement.

Only two months removed from summer vacation and basketball camp at the University of North Carolina that Mum suffered through multiple yard sales to pay for, I have moves. Moves I’m about to unleash when tryouts come around. Too bad no one saw them earlier this afternoon at open gym. Where are my moves hiding?

Soon, the smell of Mum’s baked chicken slides an arm around me and leads me by the nose before I even approach the charcoal gray, metal door to my apartment. If it’s Sunday, it’s chicken day. I swear she knows one hundred and one ways to cook chicken.
“Mum, I’m home.” I kick off my low-top Adidas and stride into the kitchen.

“Hey, Mo.” She looks up from her hunched-over-the-dining-room-table position and takes her glasses off. “Your plate’s in the toaster oven, keeping warm.”

“Thanks.” I spoon on some cold green beans and mashed potatoes from the stove. Canned and boxed, but it’s all good to me.

“Aww, I’m sorry honey. I should’ve warmed them up, too.” She swipes several strands of dark hair out of her face. “Hey, your dad called today. You should really give him a call–”

“For what? So he can tell me how many goals he scored in his last game… in Greece?”
“At least he’s still sending us checks.”

“He plays professional football, Mum! He can afford to send more than lunch money.” I fire back.

Mum’s hazelnut hued face falters, probably from the pain of my words and the truth in them. “Well–” She turns back toward the table. “I did get a package from Athens yesterday. I wondered whether or not to open it, send it back or… just give it to you.”

I take a half-step back. “A package?”

Mum walks slowly into the den and fishes a small brown box out of the bottom of her desk drawer. She hands it to me. Her lips are pressed tight. She crosses her arms and twists the wedding band around her finger with her thumb.

Mum braved moving across the world from America to Australia for love, of all things, with visions of a better life. Even though she doesn’t talk much about it, her eyes fail to hide her disappointment that that life is over. That she’s back in the United States with me. Makes me wonder how she’s managed to pick up the pieces so effortlessly once her own dream shattered.

“Why do you still wear that?” I ask with a quiet voice.

She unfolds her arms and stuffs her hands in her pockets. Her gaze shifts to her feet. She sighs. “I don’t know kiddo.”

A pang hits me as I study the box and its evidence of international travel scrawled across the outside. Definite mixed feelings. I almost wouldn’t know how to accept a good gift from him. Though, I also don’t want to get my hopes up. “You remember that crap-tastic sweatshirt he sent me one time with the broken English like some Greek person translated it incorrectly?”

“At least he’s trying, sweetheart.” She flashes a forced smile. “By the way, how’d you play today?”

“I killed it,” I say triumphantly. No way am I telling her that those yard sales didn’t mean anything. “Your son is unstoppable.”

“That’s good, honey.” She puts her glasses back on and returns to papers she’s grading. “After you eat, go be unstoppable on your homework.”

After my shower, I stare at the prints of famous paintings that hang on the wall above my bed. Rembrandt. Monet. Botticelli. Okay, they aren’t prints so much as pictures I printed off the Internet in art class last year. But, they spoke to me. And I hung them over my bed in hopes that one night maybe I’d dream I was inside one of them. Of course, I’d actually have to fall asleep to dream.

Ever since Dad left us, I developed full-blown insomnia. It affects everything. My schoolwork. My basketball. My life. I decide to get to work before my insomniac brain shuts down despite being fully awake, before I have to suffer through yet another night of staring at the ceiling while counting the heartbeats that pulse in my aching eyes.

A new nine-weeks term begins on Monday. I plop down on the bed and open my Geometry book. After the required reading, it’s problems one through twenty-four, only the odd-numbers. I never could figure out why teachers do that. Odd numbers. Like even numbers are so evil.

12 comments:

  1. HARD TO BREATHE
    Critique by: Kathleen S. Allen

    What I loved about this work, and why:
    The main character’s voice was present and engaging. I was captivated by him right away. I wanted to know more about him.
    I loved how you started with the dream line. Dreams are like sunsets, beautiful and fleeting. But you go on to talk about sunsets, not dreams. I want to know more about his dreams. He obviously loves basketball, is that one of his dreams to play professional basketball?
    I love how your main character compares the sunset to Monet’s work but I’m not sure teens would get this. The air’s thick with autumn’s earthy scent while I sit outside the Hydraulic Road Hilltop Grocery, watching the sun descend toward the foothills behind my school. Monet’s Houses of Parliament has nothing on this. Maybe an explanation of the painting would bring it more into the story.

    What caused me problems:

    The genre was not listed. Is this a fantasy, or contemporary? The sub-genre is important because it sets up expectations for the reader. Am I going to expect monsters to appear at some point? Or is this a story about a boy and how he copes after his mom and dad divorce?

    I just read a blog the other day about using rhetorical questions in your query and in your first few pages. http://literaticat.blogspot.com/

    Don’t do it. Change the questions to statements. For example: But then, what’d be the point in that? A sunset’s beauty walks hand in hand with its brevity. What about changing it to: the point of a sunset is that its beauty walks hand in hand with its brevity or something similar.

    I am confused about why he takes the package but ignores it. I think at the end of the passage the package should be prominent even if he doesn’t open it. Maybe have it next to him as he does his homework and have him steal glances at it and wonder about what’s inside. I’m thinking it probably contains either something fantastic—maybe a magical thing of some kind---or something “craptastic” as you mention. In either case, have him open it and then either be shocked, surprised or annoyed.

    The characters:

    I want to know the main character’s name and what he looks like. I like the interaction between the mom and son. The mom seems sad and yet resigned at the same time. What does she look like?

    One problem is the paragraph that reads: Mum braved moving across the world from America to Australia for love, of all things, with visions of a better life. Even though she doesn’t talk much about it, her eyes fail to hide her disappointment that that life is over. That she’s back in the United States with me. Makes me wonder how she’s managed to pick up the pieces so effortlessly once her own dream shattered.

    This is awkward. Did they move from Australia to America or move from America to Australia and then back to America? And what dream do you mean? The dream of a marriage? I do like that you are bringing dreams into it—it ties in nicely with the beginning---but I need more.

    This is a good beginning. I feel like the dialogue is realistic. I like how the main character calls his mother, “mum” and “mo.”

    Add more inner dialogue for the boy so I can see what he’s thinking about his new life in America without his dad.

    Your visual descriptions are good. Make sure to include more than the five senses. Read this blog to find out more (I found it in the Reeling in Readers tab on this workshop): http://jasouders.blogspot.com/2010/10/writers-wednesday-11-senses-excercise.html

    Comma before the word kiddo in the line, “I wish I knew, kiddo.”

    Clarify whether this is YA contemporary or an urban fantasy or what.

    Hope this was helpful, I’ll be looking forward to reading your revision.

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  2. HARD TO BREATHE
    Critique by: Chris Awe

    This is a promising start. I like the premise and the setting of the story and feel it has great potential.The pace is comfortable, your descriptions good, the dialogue realistic. Though this is only a very short piece, it left me wanting to find out more about your main character. And this is what matters most, I guess.

    Still there are one or two things you might want to take a second look at:

    1. I agree with Kathleen. If you start with a dream, why wait another five pages to reveal your character's condition.

    2. I like the way he imagines things (It kind of reminded me of Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close), but I didn't like that this part ended so quickly. If you have a teenager interested in fine arts, spend a little more time to develop that trait (But then again five pages are very little space to do that).

    3. These parts confused me:

    "Only two months removed from summer vacation and basketball camp at the University of North Carolina that Mum suffered through multiple yard sales to pay for, I have moves."

    "After the required reading, it’s problems one through twenty-four, only the odd-numbers."

    4. If I were a teenager and reading your book, I would want to know how he looks like.

    Looking forward to reading your revision.

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  3. I really, really liked this! :D The descriptions are wonderful, and I love the bit about the sunset at the beginning. My only problems are as follows:

    1. The genre. I assume it's contemporary just from the little I've read, but I'm not sure since it wasn't listed at the top.

    2. The main character. I don't know his name, what he looks like, I didn't even know he was a boy until he said, "Your son is unstoppable." I have a hard time focusing on the story when I can't picture the person narrating it.

    Other than those tiny things, great job! :D

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  4. First off, I think you did a nice job with your opening. I think the prose is very descriptive, lyrical and strong. The voice is engaging and the dialog feels realistic. I could easily picture the main character and his mom having the conversation in their apartment.

    I had trouble with a few different things. Most importantly, I wasn't exactly sure where the first few paragraphs were going. I, at first, had the impression that his father was an actual Greek god--and that he had some kind of power that he was looking to leave behind to lead a "regular" life. But then, as I read more about the basketball/soccer, I realized it might be a contemporary story.

    The first sentence confused me a little--maybe switch the wording to read, "Sunsets are like dreams." Although I think the first paragraph could be cut altogether, since it is passive and doesn't necessarily relate to the rest of the narrative.

    I think you could also cut down on the backstory in the first five pages, and include more action. The story starts off with the character observing the weather, walking home, and then speaking to his mom. I think you could potentially start with the conversation with his mother, or some other kind of action. It just felt like a bit too much information without giving us a reason to care yet about the character.

    Thanks for sharing! I hope my comments help. I can't wait to see the revision.

    -Maureen

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  5. I love the descriptions but there were quite a bit of them. The first paragraph about sunsets was good but then the next 2 paragraphs talk about the same thing. I like Gatorade too but the " icy river of fruit punch-flavored goodness as it descends" was a little too descriptive. Good job so far, I'm looking forward to the next round. I would love to see some action earlier.

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  6. Hi! Well, your writing is beautiful so it was tricky to look past that, but I tried. ;D As lovely as it is, I would skip that first paragraph. You can put the sunset part later, but don't use the dream as a first line because the paragraph is really about the sunset and I then expected it to be about dreams.
    Careful with your backstory. You don't have to get it all in right then. Pick what's important. Saying that dad's a professional football player especially stuck out to me because why would anyone say that if they both already know it? Convenience for you! LOL He'd say, "Dad can afford it." Or something.
    What is this first part supposed to be? Is it to set up the issue that he needs a scholarship but can't cut it? I feel like the problem needs more focus and more urgency even if it's a small one you want to focus on, like whether to accept dad's gift. I'm guessing there's something important in the box. Foreshadowing? Get to it faster? IDK. Just thoughts. Great stuff overall! Can't wait to read next week's.

    ReplyDelete