The Saturday Slash

Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.

I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.

If the Saturday Slash has been helpful to you in the past, or if you’d like for me to take a look at your query please consider making a donation, if you are able.

If you’re ready to take the next step, I also offer editing services.

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I saw on your Manuscript Wish List that you are seeking compelling, memorable stories that inspire a wealth of emotions, particularly from marginalized voices. I believe you may be interested in FORTUNES OF 42, a young adult fantasy novel imbued with the allure of fate, communitas, and ever-changing fortunes, complete at 92,000 words. This is a good, personalized intro. Usually I recommend jumping right in with your hook, but you've clearly done your homework and this is a strong start.

While sweating copiously under the blistering blaze of the sun and gazing up in childlike awe at the Demigod who commands the Terra, Ether, and Abyss,the first time I read this I thought Ether and Abyss were names of characters. You've got a lot of worldbuilding vocabulary jammed into this para, and that means the reader has to untangle it. With 200 other queries waiting in the inbox, they might not take the time. eighteen-year-old passive and withdrawn Prince Lucian of the Adarian Empire comes to a realization: He has doomed them all. You're also using two words where one will suffice, and a query needs to succint as possible. Choose between blistering / blaze and passive / withdrawn. Right now your first para is a bit of a muddle of a run-on. Don't be afraid to use periods to break this up a bit.

Lucian disregarded his father’s warning and ventured beyond the confines of his palace to attend a festival that was soon invaded by the enemy. Now, he and forty-one others are held captive in an ancient city with impenetrable mysteries, and guarded around-the-clock by elite Demigods who would ruthlessly enforce order with violence and constrain them to kneel to what? in penitence. Lucian must work with his motley crew of fellow captives to outmaneuver the Demigods and escape the city. If he fails, he will risk the wrath of the divine, lead his empire to calamity, and consign himself and his peers to their demise. But isn't that already happening, in a way? Hasn't he already risked their wrath, imperiled his empire, and pretty much led them to their deaths? Right now this doesn't show a plot - it shows a plot element. A guy made a bad decision and is now in a bad spot and wants to escape, but that's risky. That's not a plot, that's a thread. What's the bigger picture? What's at stake beyond a punishment that they are already enduring? What is the choice that has to be made? What do these two cultures have against each other in the first place?

FORTUNES OF 42 is a standalone with series potential, and is comparable to Sorcery of Thorns by Margaret Rogerson and The Unwilling by Kelly Braffet. It contains an aro-ace protagonist, LGBTQ+/POC characters, and hints of enemies-to-lovers romance.

I am a Vietnamese-American nonbinary first-generation summa cum laude film graduate of California State University, Long Beach. I am also a member of the Gutsy Great Novelist Writers Studio. My film critiques are published on CMRubinWorld, and my portfolio can be viewed at: juliankimcao.wixsite.com/home.

Great bio and good comp titles. Right now you need to get the bigger picture on the paper. What's at stake beyond these 42 people? How does Lucian change and grow through out the story? What must he risk, with so much ALREADY risked - and failed? You describe him as withdrawn and and passive, but never hint to that changing, which doesn't bode well if he's going to be leading a group out of imprisonment.

The Saturday Slash

Slash.png

Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.

I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.

If the Saturday Slash has been helpful to you in the past, or if you’d like for me to take a look at your query please consider making a donation, if you are able.

If you’re ready to take the next step, I also offer editing services.

Seventeen-year-old Catinca Dobromir is determined not to disappoint her father; she knows better. Decent hook here, but maybe some indication about what "knowing better" looks like. For example - the rows of hides on spike outside her window, etc. But life in eighteenth-century rural Transylvania is not easy, and life as the daughter of an ambitious uprising clan leader is brutal. As her father slaughters his way to become the leader of all Shadows, What does that mean? What is a Shadow? Catinca struggles to stay alive, knowing that in his pursuit of power, her father will sacrifice everyone and anyone standing in his way. How is she in his way, though? What threat does she pose? When her father returns from battle with a new ally, a man even her father fears, the gods finally bestow on Catinca a way out. How? What is the way out and how is it related to this man? Or so she hopes, because she is both terrified and drawn to the man like nothing else. If this is a romantic entanglement, you don't want to refer to him as a man. He needs to her age, and not an adult, for sure.

As a young child, Darmiann witnessed his family’s massacre, the slaughter of his entire clan. And every war he fought since, every man he killed, prepared him for this moment—the moment he would pay his family’s butcher in his own coin. But he does not intend to bless the son of a whore with swift death. No, he will start with his loved ones, with the apple of his eye—his daughter. But if she is the apple of her father's eye, why is she worried that she'll fall victim to her father? That is the plan, at least, until he meets her, Catinca, a witty tangle of curls and scratched knees, This description makes her seem flat out child-like, which could again become an issue for readers if there's a big age disparity. with a heart both brave and soft, and no self-preservation instinct whatsoever. How could she survive so long in this world with no instaincts? And before he knows it, she is under his skin, and everything he worked toward, the vengeance he so much desires, threatens to crumble.

The solution presents itself when a rival clan moves for power. All Darmiann must do is step aside, and he would rid himself of the weakness she has plagued him with. What does this mean? Let someone else kill her? And yet, that one step might prove harder to take than the sum of all steps that brought him thus far. Because in his case, Darmiann discovers, when the gods decide to piss on him, they give him precisely what he needs, not what he is desires. I don't understand how giving him what he needs (or desires) equals pissing on him.

BRIGHTER THE LIGHT is a 90.000 words historical paranormal So if it's not YA you can probably get a little wiggle room with the age difference, but I'm not getting any whiff of paranormal from this. You'll need to clarify where that comes in. romance set in eighteenth-century Transylvania, written in both Catinca’s and Darmiann’s point of view.

I am a desperate housewife, Well, true or not, don't know that claiming to be desperate ever endeared someone to anyone else. mom to one fantastic kid, twelve dogs, fourteen chickens, and I’ve lost count of the fish. When I’m not cleaning the coop, feeding the dogs, the kid, and occasionally the husband, I love to read and especially write fantasy novels.

Not having any publishing credits is fine, but don't go for an overly cutesy bio, either. DEFINITELY mention that you live in Romania, as this is important information that speaks to your ability to write this story.

The Saturday Slash

Slash.png

Don't be afraid to ask for help with the most critical first step of your writing journey - the query.

I’ve been blogging since 2011 and have critiqued over 200 queries here on the blog using my Hatchet of Death. This is how I edit myself, it is how I edit others. If you think you want to play with me and my hatchet, shoot me an email.

If the Saturday Slash has been helpful to you in the past, or if you’d like for me to take a look at your query please consider making a donation, if you are able.

If you’re ready to take the next step, I also offer editing services.

Meili Bai hates humanity with a passion. Good hook!

Humanity disowned Mogwai You sure you want to use Mogwai? I immediately think of Gizmo and from the description that follows, I'd say that's not accurate like her for their red eyes, black nails, and the way their feet hovered inches above the ground. Humanity embraced the Mogwai-hating empire that stormed the City and the corrupt government officials who let it happen. I would just refer to them as humans after the first hook.

Worst of all, humanity tore Meili’s little brother Rin from her side. Meili will do anything to find him, even if that means clashing with a dangerous police state.

Then, Meili discovers her first ray of hope: a brash fugitive who can track Rin’s nervous signals. Chul Kim does not hate humanity, but he does hate dying. If he’s going to help Meili find Rin, it’s going to be on his terms, whether Meili likes it or not. You're leaning a little heavily on the hate theme. It's getting repititive. Hate is not necessarily a sustainable emoiton, so I'd rethink using it often in the query. While it might be an accurate reflection of the character, it's also the only trait we're getting about her - HATE. What else? Are the red eyes and black nails just for show? Can she fly, or just hover? Tell us more than hate. The same is true of Chul - of course he hates dying. That's an assumed. What else?

Political turmoil brews in the City. The commander of the invading empire So the City is a bad place anyway, and they hate Mogwai. But there's somebody worse at the gates? wants total control—a fate that will prove disastrous to Meili and her fellow Mogwai. Isn't it already disastrous? Would this really change things? But little does Meili know that Rin is the key to the City’s downfall. How? Why? Bullets spray. Blood spills. With each passing day, the City creeps closer and closer to complete submission. Meili must overcome the blind hatred in her veins as Rin edges further and further from her grasp. Why does she have to overcome her hate? Is she going to help the City? Why is Rin moving further from her grasp if he was already lost?

Someone is bound to yield, and something is bound to break. Great last line!

Cyberpunk Mulan meets RED QUEEN by Victoria Aveyard in GHOSTHEART, a 93,000-word YA science fiction novel featuring #ownvoices Asian representation and key components of Taiwanese culture. It will appeal to fans drawn to the futuristic landscape of Marie Lu's WILDCARD and the political intrigue of Victoria Lee's THE FEVER KING. Great comp titles. However, from the description this feels way more like fantasy than Sci-Fi.

I am a high school senior in Central California. When I’m not writing, I’m bingeing anime at late hours and listening to BTS. I wouldn't reveal your age in the query. Of course, don't lie about it, but let the story stand for itself and if the query garners you a phone call, be honest and share a more detailed bio.