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Joseph Griffiths's avatar

Was away on vacation when this email arrived. Took me some time to fully digest it all. I can't begin to express my gratitude and thanks to you Chuck for taking the time to provide so much detailed and valuable feedback. I am in awe of your efforts to provide so much value to your readers and subscribers. I signed up to substack because I saw you had joined. Somewhere near the beginning and have never once regretted my decision to join your community. It is a fantastic resource for writers (and readers). Every week I learn something new or am insipired to try a new technique.

I have never been in any writing classes or workshops so I have never had one of my stories critiqued before. I love to learn and want to grow as a writer so I am grateful to you for taking so much time to provide insight on techniques I can use and ways I can make the story stronger. I had never heard of Cornhole so this is the first story I've tackled that required some research. Your comments on how I can use burnt language to explore the sport is extremely helpful. Having re-read the story again with your comments in mind, I can see where I can amp up the tension and restructure it to spend less time in the narrator's head. There is just so much to take in and so much I have gained from being here.

But mainly I am still in awe that you took the time to read it and help me understand how to make it stronger. I know, I know, that's the second time I used the word "awe" but honestly, I am having a tough time expressing how much respect I have for you and the time you take to share your knowledge with the rest of us. I signed up because I love your writing but I stayed because you have done so much to help your subscribers get better at telling stories. And I thank you for doing so.

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Maegan Heil's avatar

Hey Joseph!

Thank you for sharing The Cornhole Bungle with us!

I really enjoyed the relationship between Bobby and Jimmy. These guys almost seemed like people I knew or had met before. Or characters from a movie even, just you give a good feel for these guys off their banter, I can totally picture guys like these in the movies.

You had some excellent word-choices such as:

-“trolleyed”

- “waddles”

-“sloshing around”

Here is a visual I thought was disgustingly delightful: “laughing so hard there are strings of snot dangling from his nose like half-chewed maggots.”

These lines made me chuckle:

-“He rubs the back of his head like maybe I injured the hamster inside.”

-“I swear to god if you say that to me one more time, I’m gonna beat you over the head until it fits through the hole on the cornhole board.”

I know Chuck already highlighted it, but this is great: “pops up against my blocker and back doors into the hole.”

It's good corn hole lingo and it is physical stuff I can picture.

There’s a lot of talk about cheating throughout the story, but I’m very curious about how exactly these two plan to cheat, and what the heck is with this light thing in the pen!

And oh yes, speaking of That Pen!!! You could put a lot of tension in that pen if you wanted. You could have it be explosive as Chuck suggested, or — just the simplicity of Jimmy keeps chewing on it or bringing it out before he’s supposed to and maybe almost breaks it or something. The pen is just a good, concrete object that could be used much much sooner in the story and would help draw us along as we follow these guys.

I do want to know what the stakes are. Why does it matter if they win this corn hole game? Why do they need to cheat? What happens if they lose? Ask yourself what could go wrong? (And then make all the things go wrong!)

The moral is fun!

If you kept going. If you wrote that they played the game instead of getting stopped by the police, what would go wrong in that game? I say write that scene out—that’s where your tension is. But only if you first tell us what will happen if they don’t play/don’t win. Why must they play, the reader needs to know that or they won't feel any sense of urgency to continue.

My favorite advice from Chuck:

“Imply. Create that gap the reader must complete, and it allows for a participation that will draw the reader closer to the action.”

And Keep going!

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