
My rating: 1.5 of 5 stars
THIS REVIEW INCLUDES SPOILERS
Very pleased to say my flash fiction, "Unravelling," has been published in the latest issue of PULP Lit Magazine. It's only 600 words, so take a second to read it over a sip of coffee:
As I like to do when I'm lucky enough to get one of these crazy works in print, here's a compare and contrast of what the first line of the story looked like in the initial draft versus the published version (I believe I have a written draft somewhere that predates the one below, but it's probably close enough that I'm not going to bother digging through mountains of old notebooks).
Never Lie
by Freida McFadden
★✩✩✩✩
1 star out of 5
The line separating good books from bad, generally speaking, is that in a good book, plot serves characters, and in a bad book, characters serve plot. Not to crap on bad books; I've certainly written my share. There's nothing wrong with scarfing French fries now and again (Ready Player One, anyone?). As long as people are picking up books and visiting their local library, who cares?
Well, me, apparently.
Never Lie by mega-selling literary sensation Freida McFadden is a bad book. The plot follows homebuyers Ethan and Tricia as they tour the house of missing pop-psychologist Dr. Adrienne Hale, only to get snowed in. Creepiness abounds. Not the most original setup, but it works. Chapters are short and the language feels grade-schoolish, but at least it's accessible.