It might be that, shrift. That story was just the one I was reading at the time, as opposed to one that stuck out as an egregious example. But really often I feel it's awkward when noses nuzzle or whatever--when it feels like a verb the person should have attributed to them, not a body part.
Fan Fiction II: Great story! Where's the sequel?
This thread is for fanfic recs, links, and discussion, but not for actual posting of fanfic.
I dunno, things like "standing or sitting?" or "front to front or front to back?" seem like pretty simple and basic logistics to me. The finer nuances of how an arm got where or which joint was bent which way I can work out if those basics are met or at least imagine something adequate to flesh out the general parameters. But if I suddenly sit back halfway through a scene, finally realizing that they'd been on their knees the whole while, front to back, when I thought I'd been a standing scene front to front, it jerks me out and then I'm just confused about what I'm reading. Same goes for fight scenes, actually, which I think must be even more difficult to write, given the speed and constant physical changing of position. Then again, the speed, and the need to convey that, gives more leeway for skipping over a lot of maneuvering.
Can I just suggest the porn writers do a quick search for "stok" before they post their story just in case John is stoking any part of Sherlock, or Bella is being stoked by Edward, or whatever.
For reasons I can't put my finger on, it jars me more than many spelling errors.
just in case John is stoking any part of Sherlock
That sounds like a really appalling metaphor. "Stoke me, Sherlock! Stoke me like the furnace that burns the biohazardous materials at Barts!"
One of my favorite Mentalist fic writers has tired of all of us bemoaning the dearth of comments and reviews on our stories, and has started "Operation: Reviews". The idea is, to take a pledge to leave a comment on every fic one reads, even if it is a very short, simple "good work!"
I intend to apply my pledge only to stories I read all the way through. If something is so bad I Giveup on it, I won't bother. It's not like "your grammar, punctuation, and ability to write in character all suck" would actually help.
ETA: I guess that also undoes my resentful, envy-laden refusal to leave comments on stories that get tons more reviews than my own. Piffle. Now I have to act all grown up.
Now I have to act all grown up.
Doesn't that suck, having to do that? I hate it.
The idea is, to take a pledge to leave a comment on every fic one reads, even if it is a very short, simple "good work!"
I once read a post from a fic writer going ballistic on people who leave short comments. She said either write a helpful in-depth review or don't bother. I wonder how many other writers feel that way. Me, I love any feedback.
I know comments are wonderful, especially good ones, but I think it's a lot to expect everyone to leave one. Everyone who buys a book doesn't write the author a letter. Views is maybe a better way to judge how many people have read your work, and then supportive comments are gravy. For me, anyway.
As a part of the SPN anon meme I did make a pledge for a month? Two weeks? Anyway, an amount of time that felt way longer than one week, to comment on any piece of art I actually clicked through on and *looked* at, and any fic I finished. I didn't finish as many as I usually do--but for me that's really not a bad thing. I will literally try and read every fic in my pairing that hits AO3 or the main LJ community that doesn't contain a squick pairing or warning/component. It's not the pairing, but it is the other pairing. Traffic is decent. That was my habit at the time, anyway. I have since started putting LJ notes on authors and only retrying them every 3-6 months to see if they've upped their game.
For me "good job" feels like a pat on the head from a teacher--not quite as rewarding as might be imagined. Something with a bit of personality is preferred "That was nice" or "They made me laugh!" or something. A "good job" is better than nothing, but not really much better.