amy s wrote:Version 0 is correct. I don't record how many times I've rewritten. It's depressing.
I want you to read Chapter 1 of Dictates because it is an example of how to integrate magic into your story immediately. Remember, there is no 'first book' in my story. If you want the best then it is Dictates because this is the most recent of my rewrites
Speediness? Rewriting your first chapter in two days? How could I fail to note that little fact?
Ideas for integrating magic into the first half of your chapter. Describe the room more. Since there is a creation magic in play that makes food and clothing poof out of thin air, the room would be decidedly different from an average kid. The contents would be limited by the mother's imagination, and she would be reluctant to throw anything out. There would be no stores, remember, so everything the mother made would be limited by her ability to design. This is a big day, so what are the details she put into the newly created uniform? What colors did she choose for the room? Can she create furniture? Is there something that Izzy's friend has in her room that the mother couldn't create...something that Izzy has always wanted?
Have the mother wearing a new dress for the occasion.
Has Izzy ever seen her mother create? Why did she just ask her mother where food comes from at the age of 12? In retrospect, that question made me wonder. The analogy that I can come up with is kids with the ATM. Need money? Just go to the ATM, mom. It is an endless supply in their experience. Magic for Izzy would be like that. Part of her regular life. Rip up a pair of socks? Mom provides. Hole in the couch? Fixed the next day.
Just a thought to mull over.
What you say about being totally complacent about how magic works is exactly what I want to portray. Nothing at this stage feels as if it is an effort, so why should she go to learn the Skills if her mother can provide what she wants? What teenager wonders (unless forced to) about how her clothes miraculously arrive clean and pressed in her wardrobe? Why she can't have the latest tablet or phone? How are the bills paid? Or any of your own examples. Likewise, she has known for ages (as Amma keeps telling her) that she has to go to Skill School (like going up to Senior School when you are comfortable where you are) but it is only now it is the day before that it is real in her mind.
Descriptions are tricksy. If I want to keep the action momentum going, fast and furious, for this initial footstep into her world, what would she be noticing other than what is in her head? Right now that isn't anything to do with the colours of the room, the furnishings, what her mother is wearing. Not even the colours of her uniform. She might have noticed and remarked later, but she gets into another argument with Amma about going to school, so I don't think she would notice even then.
The only thing likely to be in her mind is a) oh no, she isn't going to freeze me out of bed again, is she (by the way, this is based on a personal memory. My dad used to get me out of bed for school when I wouldn't get up by pulling the blankets back and applying a freezing wet face flannel to my feet, or my belly if it wasn't covered by my pyjamas. So I know how fast you can get out of bed if that is threatened...)
and b) if I DO have to go school (though I won't, nobody will make me) what will it be like?
which brings me to another question.
How far along is it acceptable to introduce the antagonist?
Currently, the main antagonists aren't introduced until about a third of the way through, when she changes locale. I do have a POV character in this new place, and I am thinking of putting some 'this is happening there, whilst you are getting on with your stuff here' chapters just to introduce the antagonist earlier.
Do you all have any thoughts?