Three writers enter...but only one can move on!
You thought the voting was difficult before? It's time to take it up a notch. Winners from the previous three weeks of preliminary bouts have again been randomly matched, this time in groups of three, to do battle against different opponents using the same writing sample from their first round. We will host five of these cage bouts this week (M-F).
Here's how it works. Writing samples from three different writers, identified only by the craftily selected pen names of the respective submitters, are competing against one another. The writing can be from any genre, any age group, taken either from a larger piece of work or simply a stand alone flash fiction. The focus is on the writing...not the writer...or its categorization. The two writing samples for each bout will be randomly matched and step into the ring for a chance to find out what they're made of.
The winner of each contest is chosen by you...the reader. Simply read each entry and leave your vote in the comment section below. Anyone can vote, as long as you have a Google ID or belong to Google Friend Connect. Anonymous voting is not allowed. If you haven't already done so in a previous round, it is customary to leave a brief critique of all the pieces. You see, the comments are where the true value of this contest makes itself known. Not only do the contestants gain valuable insight about their work from those remarks, but everybody can benefit from how each piece is received and what works...and what doesn't. Please remember to remain respectful with your comments. If you see an opportunity for improvement, make it known in the most positive way possible.
How do you choose a winner? What criteria should be used? The method by which you determine who to vote for is entirely up to you. Which one resonates with you the most? Which one makes you want to read more? Which one demonstrates a total command of the English language and how it can be used to elicit emotion or paint a mental picture you can't stop staring at. There is no hard and fast way rules for determining a winner -- and that's exactly what the publishing world is like. But today you get to decide. At stake is a chance to win free admission to the 2017 DFW Writers Conference and bragging rights.
Your voting takes on an added significance this week as not only will the five winners move onto to the next round, the submission that does not win their bout but tally's the most votes among the losers will move forward as a wildcard selection as well.
Hear that?
It's time to introduce our contestants and get this party started.
Writer #1 is representing the Science Fiction genre with 500 words. Please give a warm welcome to Helveticaw.
Lucy
watched Fritz in the bathroom mirror, while she washed her hands with the unscented
soap he'd provided. He sat on the bed, hands folded, perfectly still in his
grey suit, neatly buttoned and arranged. He'd arrived, as usual, thirty minutes
before the time they'd agreed upon.
When
he was perfectly still, he could pass for human.
Lucy
checked for blemishes. She had no new ones, but her upper lip still bore the
red mark where her most recent cold sore had blossomed, scabbed over, and
healed. Nothing she could do to hide that: there was no makeup any more. She
pinched her cheeks to put some colour in them, and made sure that her eyebrows
didn't need plucking. A few grey witch hairs stuck out against her auburn bob.
There was a time when she would have removed them. No matter. The audience for
her lecture on human romantic love (the text: Pride and Prejudice) would be far more concerned with her scent,
than her appearance.
She
risked another glance at Fritz. He gazed into the middle distance, apparently absorbed
in the task of waiting, or maybe off in the collective mindspace of his people.
She reached for the deodorant she'd kept hidden under a towel--a plain white
plastic tube, the original label gone. There was only a hand-lettered sticker
that said "Ladies." She removed the cap.
A
grey blur passed behind her in the mirror, and Fritz stood beside her.
"You
can't use that," he said, taking it from her and capping it. "The
scent harms us."
As
he spoke, Fritz's face drooped on the right side, as if he were having a
stroke. A ripple ran under the skin, restoring his appearance. As she'd done
many times before, Lucy tried to read the underlying structure beneath Fritz's human
drag. Insect? Reptile? Tentacle monster?
Whatever
was under there, it was sensitive to all kinds of things, especially artificial
scents. She'd traded three oranges for that tube of deodorant. As much as she
longed to wear it, to feel clean for longer than it took her to break a sweat,
she'd never meant to keep it.
"What
does it do to you?" she asked. Fritz's reactions to stimuli were complex
and unpredictable.
"It's
like an electric shock," he said. The corner of his mouth slid down.
"I told you before, if you need something, I will bring it."
Her
skin crawled. Standing this close to Fritz always made her want to run or fight,
the need for violent movement rising up like a fierce song from deep within. Instead,
what happened was a kind of paralysis. Her limbs grew stiff, her knees locked,
and she struggled to speak. It wasn't just her: the freeze was a known visceral
response to Fritz's people.
The
deodorant was strategic. She'd hoped that it would knock out his system, giving
her a brief window to unfreeze, long enough to make a request.
"I
do need something."
"Yes?"
His cheek rippled.
"A
dog."
____________________________________________________________________________________
Writer #2 represents the xYA Contemporary genre with 496 words. Please welcome back into the arena Chun-Li.
As Mrs. Pan left,
my mother leaned over and whispered, “Hanwei isn’t good enough for you, Mei. He
went to Northeastern! And, I heard
from Mrs. Tian who heard from Mrs. Ahn—Remember Mrs. Ahn? Her son went to
Princeton—that after Hanwei graduated, he threw his college degree away to
pursue music. I bet you his nose is tiny—a nub. He’s now begging for money in
exchange for guitar lessons.”
“You mean, he’s
teaching music? Like many other normal people?”
“Not normal. Last
resort. Soon, he’ll be just like Ying-Na.”
Poor Ying-Na. The
Asian-American cautionary tale who chose happiness over honoring her parents
and was cut off financially and emotionally. Now, she was the butt of every
rumor, all created to support other parents’ warnings. Ying-Na decided to major in English and now is homeless. Ying-Na had an
American boyfriend and he stole all her things. Ying-Na had one sip of alcohol
in college and now she’s in a mental institution. And for my mother, Ying-Na veered off her parents’ career track
and now takes off her clothes for money.
“I’m so glad you
will be a doc-tor,” my mother continued, her pride overemphasizing each
syllable in doctor. “Doctors always
have a job. Never have to worry. So stable, so secure. And so respectable.
That’s why we so happy to pay your tuition.”
I ducked my head
in fear of her seeing the truth in my eyes—that bacteria-ridden patients made
my skin crawl and biology put me to sleep. But unless I wanted to be Ying-Na
2.0, I didn’t have a choice.
The waiter set my
father’s plum smoothie and my mother’s soy milk on the table along with three
Wet-Naps which my mother immediately swept into her purse. We came so often we
barely had to order. Before he could hand me my Diet Coke, my mother waved it
away with a bony hand.
“She’ll have a
papaya smoothie,” she told him, then poked my breast. “These are much too
small, like mosquito bites.”
Because of a
papaya-eating aboriginal village that churned out big-breasted women, my mother
had been forcing mushy pink fruit down my throat since I hit puberty. Spoiler:
it didn’t work.
Her inspection
traveled to my waist, which she pinched. “You’re getting fat.”
My size six frame
would never be good enough for my shallow mother, who wished I was a classic
Chinese beauty that would “fall over when the wind blows.” I had missed the
Asian skinny gene and instead inherited from my dad, whose college nickname was
Lu Pang, or Fat Lu. I preferred not
to look like a chopstick, but I was in the minority.
“Have you even
been exercising?”
It had to be a
trap. If I admitted how much time I’d spent dancing, she’d scold me for not
studying enough. I pressed my lips into a hard line, choosing silence.
“You need to be careful,
Mei. How will you ever get a man?”
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Our third and final writer represents the YA Historical genre with 500 words. Please also welcome back into the arena Eva.
“Take this corner,” Bahadur balanced a fraying blanket in one hand while gripping hammer and nails in the other. “Quickly, hold tight Mariam jan. The daylight for maghrib prayer is fading fast.”
“I’m trying.” Mariam scrambled to his side. On tiptoes, arms outstretched, she pressed the blanket to the window in their tiny living room. Three taps and the blanket was secured. A flicker of movement caused Mariam to clasp her hands together and squeal.
“Oh, look!”
She lifted a corner of blanket and pointed to a dragonfly.
Bahadur clicked his tongue and tugged her from the window. Being exposed to the outside made him nervous. “How many times do I have to—”
Mariam twisted from his grip. “Remember what Baba jan said, about the dragonflies?” She hopped up and down. “Remember, brother. You have to. Remember what they are?” Mariam darted to the window, mesmerized by the bug.
“The souls of the dead,” Bahadur muttered. Old Uzbek lore—a childish tale fifteen-year-old Bahadur no longer believed. He opened his mouth to shame his sister for entertaining nonsense, but the words faded the moment her bright grey eyes turned to meet his.
“Who do you think it is this time?”
Her question seeped into the quiet spaces of their home, igniting memories Bahadur promised to bury.
“Mammy?”
Mariam’s breath fogged the glass; she waited for an answer. Bahadur swallowed the bitterness of longing, shrugged away the tightness of loss in his chest.
“We both know where Mammy is, Mariam jan. Now please. Come say your prayers.”
Mariam’s shoulders slumped as she drew away from their makeshift curtain. Regret drowned Bahadur’s heart, but he knew it was best to banish these fantastical thoughts—make her reality easier to bear.
The consequences of performing their daily prayers were tremendous. One utterance of an Allahu akbar, God is great, and Bahadur’s fate was sealed. In 1934, no one in the town of Samarkand was safe from the Communists. Not him, not Mariam—even Baba knelt at the mercy of the Soviets.
He watched Mariam grasp for her worn white hijab—the last present she received from her mother. Bahadur remembered the grin on Mammy’s face, the excitement of laying the headscarf lightly on Mariam’s shoulders, kissing her forehead. The stray bullet that hummed its song through the yard. Mariam’s scream had pierced the air as Bahadur rushed to his mother’s side, blood pooling beneath his fingers.
“Never leave her,” she had begged.
“I-I didn’t see it. Mammy, please. Baba will come.” He had shouted at Mariam to fetch their father before clinging to his mother’s chest, listening for the steady whoosh of life passing through her lips.
“Promise,” she had rasped.
“I promise, I swear.”
Bahadur had waited for the whoosh to come next, but it never did. Later that night, after completing their prayers, Bahadur settled on the ground next to Mariam and watched her sleep. He counted the rise and fall of her small chest, listened for the steady whoosh.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Remember, voting for ALL bouts this week only remain open until Sunday noon. Help us out by spreading the word about WRiTE CLUB far and wide.
Not an easy choice as I voted for all three of these.
ReplyDeleteMy vote goes to Helveticaw.
This is totally personal preference now--"what would I buy?"
ReplyDeleteSo Chun Li gets my vote, because I love the voice and because in YA contemporary I generally prefer realism to fantasy, and lighter stories to darker ones.
This one is tough. I wish all three could move on. But historical has always been my first love, and I love a story that twists my heart.
ReplyDeleteI vote for Eva.
They're all good, which is why they are here, so I'm voting for the one I would buy first, and that is Chun Li's. It gets my vote. Congrats and good luck to you all!
ReplyDeleteI loved all of these and still do, but my vote goes to Helveticaw.
ReplyDeleteThis is so hard because they are all so good, but I have to go with Chun Li. This was such a well crafted story and I would have this on my bookshelf in a heartbeat.
ReplyDeleteTough round, but Helveticaw for me. It just comes down to which story I'd invest time in reading
ReplyDeleteIt boils down to voice here for me.
ReplyDeleteEva: hadn't been voting during your last round. I just didn't get enough information about the unfamiliar words for me to stay in the story.
Vote for Helveticaw.
Helveticaw and Eva were two of my favorites of the whole contest so far (I voted for all 3 though!). That makes it really hard, but seeing them head-to-head I just don't know if anybody will be able to beat Eva!
ReplyDeleteVote: Eva
Chun-li gets my vote. So hard because these are all so good! I wish we could vote for two.
ReplyDeleteI'm voting Helventicaw. The imagery, character building, world-building... and just enough to keep me wanting to read more.
ReplyDeleteChun-Li is awesome, but I didn't get hooked and pulled in as quickly as with Helventicaw, because of the mother's monologue. Too many characters named in the first paragraph. Who is Mrs. Pan, Hanwei, Mrs. Tian, and Mrs. Ahn? And why should we care about them?
Eva lost my vote because of the foreign words. I love stories that help me learn about cultures unlike mine, but unfortunately there wasn't enough description to put the foreign words into context.
That said, it was hard to choose! All of them were fabulous.
GAH! All three of these selections are past favorites! I love the voice in all of them. Helventicaw drew me into her nightmarish world of the future, Chun-Li's entry reminds me of something out of Joy Luck Club and Eva's entry brought me to tears.
ReplyDeleteIn the end my vote goes to Eva. While I adore Chun-Li's entry and definitely want to read more, I feel the voice is too old for the category. The young woman talks about studying to be a doctor in college and her mother is pushing her to find a man. These subjects seem like they belong more in New Adult rather than Young Adult. Otherwise she'd have my vote hands down.
Congrats to all on some fantastic writing and good luck :)
PS this reminds me of an exchange student from China my husband and I nearly hosted for a summer a few years ago. Her parents wanted her to study business but she was a really gifted dancer and wanted to continue that as a career. We spoke back and forth with her, the organization and her family and in the end apparently her mother decided to allow the daughter to go to dance school instead :)
DeleteWow! It gets a lot harder from here, doesn't it? I vote Chun-Li this time, but it wasn't an easy choice.
ReplyDeleteAll three were good reads but since I have to choose, my vote is for Chun-Li. Her story is the one that would make me turn the page.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Helveticaw and Eva!
Helveticaw. Tight prose that made me curious. The other two feel predictable.
ReplyDeleteWow, what a match up!
ReplyDeleteI really wish I could vote for more than one. That being said, I will just say that Chun-Li wins my vote by a nose (a very tiny nose, at that!).
Helveticaw gets my vote in this tough round. This story has the "keeping the reader slightly off-balance" feel of good Science Fiction, but without an overt dystopian feel to it.
ReplyDeleteChun-Li, I love stories such as yours, but what kept me from getting into it is too much of the mom and too little of the MC. Yes, we see the MC's reaction/response to her mom's tirade through her internal monologues and body language, but because she chooses not to answer out loud most of the time, I feel the piece misses out on some great character and relationship building moments.
Eva, I adore diverse stories like these, but this snippet discusses too many characters that are absent from the scene which makes it lose immediacy. Also, I felt a few places had potential POV issues--I couldn't decide whether the piece was going for tight third person or omniscient.
I like the feel of Helveticaw. Vote
ReplyDeleteChun-Li gets my vote. But this is tough, because all three are compelling works. But I can't stop thinking about that awful lunch with Mom!:) Good job to everybody!
ReplyDeleteOuch, this is hard! Chun-Li has my vote though.
ReplyDeleteHelveticaw for me -
ReplyDeleteEva has an interesting, well-written story, but in this line-up, for my tastes, it just couldn't compare.
ReplyDeleteI would snap up Helveticaw and Chun-Li's books in an instant, but if it was down to my last penny, I'd have to go with Helveticaw.
Helveticaw gets my vote, and Helveticaw and Chun-Li both get my fervent hopes that regardless of how this contest turns out, they decide to finish and publish their stories so I can stop wondering how things are going to end!
It came down between Helveticaw and Chin-Li. Story or voice. I went with story, so Helveticaw gets my vote.
ReplyDeleteI can hear the characters so well in Chin-Li's story, but I just didn't see anything unique there. Helveticaw's story intrigues me. I'd keep reading.
They're all good. I'll vote Eva because I'm curious where the writer will go next.
ReplyDeleteI asked myself, which one of this stories makes me see the characters more? I closed my eyes and the first thing I saw was a young Asian girl with curvy hips and a flat chest squirming in her seat. I saw a tiny skinny well groomed Asian mother overbearing her and a giant Asian man sipping quietly on his drink deciding to stay out of the conversation for fear of his wife biting his head off(figuratively of course).
ReplyDeleteThis is why my vote goes to Chun-Li.
I really liked all three pieces!
ReplyDeleteSo I have to vote for what I'd buy, which would be Helveticaw's piece.
Helveticaw: I am completely hooked by the dystopian aspect of this piece. There are so many questions and I am dying for the answers. I'm still slightly concerned by the logic of artificial scent being the Achilles heel when it's virtually impossible to avoid artificial scent in the world today, but I'm trusting that is addressed elsewhere in the full story.
ReplyDeleteChun-Li: "He’s now begging for money in exchange for guitar lessons.” “You mean, he’s teaching music? Like many other normal people?”" still cracks me up every time I read it. I like the humor of this piece and the mother-daughter struggle is a timeless conflict. I'm not sure there's anything truly new in this story though, and when up against such strong competition that is a problem.
Eva: I still feel this piece stands out as being a unique choice of setting and perspective for a YA historical fiction story. It's heartbreaking in the way only strong writing can be. The figurative language in this piece evoked strong imagery and emotion for me.
My vote goes to Eva. I would absolutely buy all three of these stories... but I suspect Eva's is the one that would most change me in the reading of it.
Congratulations to all three of you for making it to the Cage Match!
I liked all of them. Chun-Li's story was beautiful and painful to read, and drew me in completely. So, my vote goes to Chun-Li!
ReplyDeleteI actually thought that it was the WRITER that moved to the next round and not the PIECE. I was expecting, and hoping, for new pieces to judge/critique. To see if the writer took what people told them and did something with it. OR for them to at least be given the chance to improve their pieces. I dunno. ^^;
ReplyDeleteAnyways,
Vote: Helveticaw
Eva
ReplyDeleteI would want to read the whole book by Chun-Li. So that's my vote.
ReplyDeleteWithout a doubt, I vote Helvaticaw for having narration that is grammatically proper and devoid of any awkwardness; for characters and environment I can imagine thanks to the perfectly sparse clues provided; for the many intriguing questions and delightfully chilling mood it raises. This piece transports me right into the scene thanks to its marvelous subtlety. It's so creepily imaginative!
ReplyDeleteI'm disappointed though. I thought that the winning writers were moving on with new pieces and was very much looking forward to that. My interest in Write Club has definitely sagged now that there is nothing new to read!
There will be new entries for the winners after this round though, so keep checking in!
DeleteHelvaticaw is the one I would continue to read so it gets my vote.
ReplyDeleteChun-Li for me. I love the setup of the piece and would definitely keep reading!
ReplyDeleteChun-Li has good pacing, tone, voice, style and was able to keep me reading all the way through without pausing for a second.
ReplyDeleteHelvaticaw has a great story concept and the writing was good, but there were moments where I paused and wanted to edit a few sentences. I am being nitpicky here, so just for clarity, these are not poorly written sentences but just personal preference. For example, "Standing this close to Fritz always made her want to run or fight, the need for violent movement rising up like a fierce song from deep within." While "fierce song from deep within" sounds beautiful to the ears, I'm not sure the description makes sense or is fitting for the actual description.
Eva has a lot of potential, but there were too many foreign words for me to be able to read it through without pausing half a dozen times. Adding more context around the foreign words will help or scaling it back to just a select few for such a short excerpt. I'm sure it would be fine if it was part of a larger novel where the reader's vocabulary will grow with the narrator, but there's just not enough time to do that in 500 words.
With that said, I vote for Chun-Li.
Wow, good work all around, but Chun-Li has the best work I have seen in the entire competition. The voice is perfect, absolutely authentic. In just 500 words, I know this girl, her family, and her life. Absolutely awesome work.
ReplyDeleteHelveticaw's vignette was creepy and matter of fact - well written and effective. Against anyone else, I would vote his/her way.
Eva's work was competent, but I felt the emotion was a bit forced. Against two passages which so effortlessly made me feel with the protagonist, I felt oddly distant when reading the third submission.
Still the distillation of talent is obvious; this is harder. Again, vote to Chun-Li. (She deserves the win for the competition as a whole.)
My vote is for Chun-Li--great voice, great talent.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I also share the same flagging interest in this competitions as some of the others above because there's nothing new to vote on here. At this point it's oh- I recognize that one from before and really liked it. I don't see the point of this round.