ext_6735 ([identity profile] pearl-o.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] ds_workshop2005-10-30 03:29 pm
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This week's story: "Your Hands, Clasped" by pearl-o

After a lot of thought, I decided the story I was most interested in putting up here would definitely be both one that I was proud of, and one where I had taken some risks and experimented as I wrote. The one that probably fits both of those category best for me is Your Hands, Clasped.

Basically, a lot of this story was me experimenting and trying to try new things, and find out what happened. The POV here is a mixture of first and second person, which I hadn't used before; the timeline is slightly irregular; the voice is in some ways richer, and in some ways more minimalist than I would usually use; it's quite short and very focused. The story's very stylized, and I guess what I'm mainly interested in what ways that works, and which way it doesn't -- because ideally, in this sort of story, the style enhances the substance, instead of the substance just disappearing, but that's not always the case.

Besides that, I'm really interesting in any comments people have in general.

The story is here: Your Hands, Clasped.

This week's moderator is [livejournal.com profile] sprat, email at sprat75 @ gmail.com

[identity profile] zebra363.livejournal.com 2005-11-04 11:54 am (UTC)(link)
I didn't have much of an emotional response to this story, and maybe needed more explanation of their feelings than the style you chose allowed.

I thought the first section was really interesting: Fraser filled with unalloyed tenderness and Ray pulling away. Fraser realising: ...I had misjudged, misinterpreted the limits of what we have between us is really painful.

The second section didn't have any particular impact for me. I assume it was there to reinforce the fact that Fraser wanted Ray (though why he wanted him wasn't very clear to me from the descriptions of Ray in the story).

The third was painful again: Fraser trying to tell Ray a story, and Ray reacting with "Why are you telling me this, Fraser?" I wasn't quite sure why Ray said that — whether he felt it was irrelevant, because he wouldn't treat Fraser that way, or whether it was irrelevant because he wasn't in love with Fraser, or whether it was too personal for their level of intimacy, or what. What Ray was feeling wasn't obvious to me at all (not that it should be, if it wasn't obvious to Fraser either). If the story had been written in a way that permitted it, I'd've loved more detail about what was going on in both their minds.

Next, bad day --> sex: but I wasn't sure what either of them felt about that.

I liked the line It was only after your hand reached out, patting softly against my arm before calming, that I fell asleep. in the next section. I'm still not sure what they're feeling: Fraser's a bit uneasy but really wanting Ray, and Ray reacts almost resignedly to what he sees on Fraser's face.

Ray's declaration in the last section — "I want all of it, okay? Everything. You happy now, Fraser?" — puts a happy ending on the story, but doesn't seem to follow very clearly from what's gone before. I know that from this POV we can't see what Ray was thinking, but it's all a bit confusing (which I guess is what you intended, since presumably it's also confusing to Fraser). When and how did Ray sort out what he was feeling? I wanted to know that, and since I was left with no clear idea, found it kind of unsatisfying. The story seemed to be told, perhaps, at too great a distance from their emotions for me to fill in the blanks very successfully. If that makes any sense!

There's an 'r' missing from misinterpreted, which I didn't notice until the preview spellcheck pointed it out.

[identity profile] zebra363.livejournal.com 2005-11-05 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
I thought of Ray's questioning there as less a rejection and more sincere

It wouldn't have occurred to me that Fraser would need any reason to tell a story like that other than the desire for Ray to know him better. I definitely got the impression that Ray didn't particularly appreciate hearing it or think it was appropriate, though now rereading that section I see that you didn't really use negative terms to describe Ray: odd expression and face creased, as if (he was) trying to figure something out.

It's really interesting from my point of view to hear how it was meant to come across!