[personal profile] tachocracy posting in [community profile] concrit_x
I want to receive feedback by : Email (slybootsslick@gmail.com) or comments on this post.

Here are the works I want feedback on (optional: and my safe works are...):
https://archiveofourown.org/works/28496961 (Transformers Prime, 8k)
https://archiveofourown.org/works/29414688 (Transformers Prime, <1k)
https://archiveofourown.org/works/29882895/chapters/73538595 (Transformers IDW/Prime fusion, WIP, ~9k at this time)
https://archiveofourown.org/works/24550762 (Transformers Prime, 3k)

My works' fandoms and content notes are: Transformers Prime, character death, graphic violence

I have these questions for readers: How strong is the description/narrative voice? How distinct are the characters from each other (and if you're familiar with the fandom, how far off are the characters from their canon selves)? How's the pacing? What threw you off? Is the prose samey?

The style of feedback I prefer to receive is: I'm interested in any feedback at all, good and bad. Please be gentle (without sugarcoating). I would rather not get SPAG critique.

Comments to this post will be: Unscreened.

Date: 2021-05-09 03:09 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Hello! I read Molten Copper, your TF Knock Out/Breakdown story, and I liked it a lot - it is a beautiful and moving story of love, loss and grief. (For reference, I've watched several TF films but am unfamiliar with these characters specifically.)

In response to your questions:

How strong is the description/narrative voice?
Very strong - it's vivid and emotive and I'm actually curious if I'd be able to pick something you wrote (of similar tone and content) out of an anonymous lineup.

How distinct are the characters from each other (and if you're familiar with the fandom, how far off are the characters from their canon selves)?
I can't speak to characterization, but I think each character occupies a distinct emotional space in the story - Breakdown is the lover and later a constantly felt absence, Ratchet is Knock Out's boss, Arcee is a friend, Bulkhead seems to be familiar with both Knock Out and Breakdown, and the latter three are also emotional support at various points.

How's the pacing?
I think it's unusual but very effective. This story seems to cover a large span of time during which a lot of things happen, including an entire war going on in the background, but the focus of each (quite short) scene is Knock Out and Breakdown's (or just Knock Out's, post-war) current state of life. There are one or two sharp details that ground the scene (Occasionally they come into ill-gotten Shanix. They spend it.) At every point I have a clear emotional picture, and I never felt like anything was dragging or that I was missing anything.

I found this line - For the next quartex Ratchet keeps him too busy to think. - particularly effective at skipping over x amount (Wiki says a month?) of time. (For comparison, I might be thrown by such a line in a slower piece but I think it really worked in this one.)

What threw you off?
I'm not very familiar with hardware and TF terminology so I had to look several things up to make sure my visuals/associations are right, but that's definitely on me and I expect your usual readership will be totally fine.

Is the prose samey?
A little, but I think it works well - it felt like a strong and consistent narrative voice, not repetitive. I think there's a clear difference in tone between pre-war + during-war (love in a time of hardship) and post-war (grief).



Some other notes I took:

I felt that the emotional focal point of the story is how much Knock Out loves and later misses Breakdown, and in the post-war second half there is a strong sense of Knock Out's grief throughout - sheened over by how he goes through the motions of work and life and redirects people with quips when they chane upon it and start to question, but the undercurrent is always there, and when it is opened, it really pours out. If I were to describe the experience in physical terms it feels like being repeatedly whumped in the chest with a rather big (soft but very capable of winding someone) bat.

Please disregard if this is a usual part of writing in this fandom, but I like the mechanical imagery you chose (the question burns like a scar in his processor and it will stand until Knock Out himself is molten metal and ash among many others).

Some running threads I noticed and liked:
  • Knock Out and Breakdown not talking about their relationship - the first time it's mentioned (An arrangement they’re both content with, Knock Out thinks—though he’s never asked, and he wouldn’t know how to begin) it's sweet - they're embarrassed to admit they're in a relationship and like it! - which makes it all the more painful when it comes back later (It occurs to Knock Out that they never discussed it. Like so much else. and He never asked. He supposes he will never know.)
  • Knock Out and Breakdown's relationship gradually coming to light - their love begins quietly -> during the war they cannot be public about it -> in the aftermath of the war Knock Out's coworkers and friends gradually pick up on how important Breakdown really was to him -> discover the true nature of their relationship -> eventually, Knock Out makes Breakdown's copper a part of himself for everyone to see (a very romantic gesture in itself, and I love how it also is a public relationship admission) and makes a public eulogy for him.
  • Knock Out still talking to Breakdown even though there is no one on the other side (“I love you,” he repeats, in a voice cold and hard as iron, “I love you—where the Pit have you gotten to?” The dead air is colder still than the wind. In the rustle of static Knock Out hears ghosts. and “You would’ve loved this, big guy,” he says into the dead air of Breakdown’s frequency.)


  • Some lines which struck me:

    Breakdown loves Kaon’s sweltering heat and its barely-contained chaos; Knock Out likes Polyhex’s clean streets. Always they return to Iacon. They have no home, not really—but better the slagheap you know than the one you don’t.
    I love the sense that even though they do not always have a physical location to call home, they are always with each other.

    Knock Out thinks, deep in his kernel-level coding, that he and Breakdown will be together until the end of time—and perhaps afterward. It never occurs to him to question this.
    This foreshadowing is very effective - my first time through this story I was not aware of what was coming and the second line already made my heart sink. On subsequent reads, knowing what was coming, I definitely felt a sense of 'oh nooooo', and I imagine it hits even harder for someone familiar with canon.

    He thinks of information theory; he thinks of the silent decay of bits into radiant heat. He imagines Breakdown’s consciousness dissipating softly, sweetly into ambient noise. The background heat of the universe. Till all are one, indeed.
    These are beautiful lines.

    “That thing? Sixteen tons of iron and copper. Breakdown went where good Cons go. Wherever that is.” Something acid leaks into his voice. “Probably nowhere.”
    This line struck me because it captures so many facets of grieving in one - the awareness that the physical remains do not contain anything of the person, the hope (stated as knowledge) that the person is in a better place, the wry addition of 'Probably nowhere'.



    I hope this helps, and best of luck in your future writing! This was a beautiful story, 10/10 would cry over these characters again.

    Profile

    Concrit Exchange

    August 2022

    S M T W T F S
     1 23456
    78910111213
    14151617181920
    21222324252627
    28293031   

    Most Popular Tags

    Page Summary

    Style Credit

    Expand Cut Tags

    No cut tags
    Page generated Jun. 20th, 2025 05:16 pm
    Powered by Dreamwidth Studios