Reviews from

Grandpa's House

Memories of grandpa's house

9 total reviews 
Comment from LJbutterfly
Excellent
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Wow! This is a well written story filled with mystery and suspense. Your detailed descriptions are clearly written allowing the reader to envision each scene. Your dialogue is realistic. Your chosen artwork pairs perfectly with the story. Best wishes in the contest.

 Comment Written 22-Oct-2024

Comment from karenina
Excellent
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"They can stay right where there as far as I'm concerned" (where they are?)

We weren't sleeping, so we decided to sneak down to the kitchen to get a snack. (You don't need to say "we weren't sleeping")

Banshee...capitalized in one description, lower case in another.

(It is a noun and should not be capitalized)

Sorry for those editing suggestions appearing first! The editor function is not allowing me to reformat!

-----

Where I hoped to begin was to tell you I too come from upstate NY...(Rochester), had a French Canadian grandmom (and family ancestry on her side)--

AND I lived in a large house with my family, my aunt and her six children, an uncle and my grandmom!

You won't see me shaking my head...

We had enough apparitions, voices, slamming cabinets, and the like to convince us we mortals were not the only ones in that house!

We moved away to Connecticut when I was eleven...

I've driven by our Rochester home...
I still get chills and wonder what other families have experienced in the nearly six decades since we exited!

Spooky stuff that some will not believe. Lucky them!

Karenina


 Comment Written 22-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 22-Oct-2024
    Hi Karenina,
    I appreciate the revision suggestions. I am starting to realize that I am too wordy sometimes. I've been out of school along time. English was always my favorite subject, and I especially enjoyed creative writing. Life got in the way and now I'm retired and can fill my time with writing. It's a small world isn't it? I left Upstate in 1982 when I joined the Navy and never looked back. It was 39 years before I stepped back in that state.
reply by karenina on 22-Oct-2024
    This is a habit new writers have. I often have to write, read, let it sit for a day or two-- then go back and ask myself what I can cut to make the story leaner, crisper -- and control the pace. It is a lifelong commitment!
    I am VERY verbose (as you can see by my reviews)-- When I attempt prose it is a constant battle to cut out the excess!
Comment from marilyn quillen
Excellent
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I want to know who old Joe Moss was and why Grandpa didn't want to die in that house.? It's really a good story, though; it kept my attention throughout. I would have liked to know a little more about why they were haunted

 Comment Written 22-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 22-Oct-2024
    Hi Marilyn,
    I wish I could tell you who old Joe Moss was. I just don't know, but grandpa was adamant that he did not want to die in the house. I'm not sure if my mother or aunts, and uncle knew. If they did they never talked about. They are all deceased now, so I will never know. Perhaps, had I focused on my writing 15 years ago before my mother lost herself to Alzheimer's I may know. Not sure any of them knew. I have my thoughts on old Joe Moss; I think he may have been someone that helped my grandfather build the house or a friend that did him wrong. Just my thoughts. Thank you for the great review.
Comment from patcelaw
Excellent
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This sounds so it was a difficult place for you to visit with all of the struggles that we're going on in the house for abortions and all of that. You have described the house very well and the seller and all of that. But I am sure that it left a bad taste in your mouth to try to Enjoy yourself at that house. Patricia.

 Comment Written 22-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 22-Oct-2024
    Hi Patricia,
    Thank for the review. The house belongs to someone I don't know. I don't even recognize the house anymore and it makes me sad.
Comment from Wayne Fowler
Excellent
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This isn a very interesting story. Just a few minor glitches you might want to consider:
...the ghostly apparition of a women who - (woman)
We weren't sleeping so we decided... Maybe a comma after 'sleeping'?
...our prospective mothers appeared at the top. - Maybe 'respective' mothers?
After all she was used to the shenanigans of the house. - Maybe a comma after 'After all'?
Good luck in the contest.

 Comment Written 22-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 22-Oct-2024
    Wayne,
    Thank you for the feedback. I have made the changes and appreciate you pointing them out.
Comment from Bill Schott
Excellent
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This story, Grandpa's House, is chocked full of crazy-cool stories that anyone would love to tell and hear. I know what you mean about big scary houses with lots of unexplainable goings on. Fun tale.

 Comment Written 21-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 21-Oct-2024
    Hi Bill,
    Thank you for the kind review. I don't know if grandpa's house is still haunted, but if it is the new owners can have at it.
Comment from Patrick Bernardy
Excellent
Not yet exceptional. When the exceptional rating is reached this is highlighted

Hello Cecilia!

It's great to meet you, and welcome to FanStory! This time of year, there are such a feast of ghost stories around! Your tale of "grandpa's house" was shocking and Grade-A creepy, make no mistake! I do find it fascinating that your Grandpa took all of these incidents the way he did. I think the most surreal scene was the one you described when the rocking chair started moving. Maybe it WAS your grandmother? *shrugs*

I have to admit that the end left so many tantalizing questions about what happened to Joe Ross and what your grandpa had to do with it. True or else fictionalized, that would be a great read!

Some Thoughts As I Read:
---"I don't remember my grandmother, other than the fact that she had a deep gruff voice and looked scary." --This is excellent characterization for your grandmother for the reader. It gives us her persona from your point-of-view when you were younger.
---"The house always had a spooky feel to it and my mother and aunt always talked about the ghostly apparition of a women who would appear under the large maple tree in the front yard." --Yeah ... no way. So, I believe all of this, and I'll tell you why. I have a similar family story from when I was four or five years-old. My older sister when she was twelve had a slumber party with six other girls upstairs in this house we lived in at the time. They were having a seance and something TERRIFIED them so badly that all of them called their parents to come and get them in the middle of the night. There were other encounters with this ghost named Mrs. Myers. My mom, my dad, and the next door neighbors all saw her. I never did, though. But I believe something was going on.
---"There were pictures on the wall that had eyes that seemed to follow you when you moved.' --Yeah, this is VERY creepy. I imagine all these sepia-toned pictures of old relatives from the turn of the century. Something about those old photographs just scream spooky.
---"one of the knives raised up and went flying towards our head." --Wow, what an experience this must have been for you!

What follows are some things I think you can do grammatically to make your gripping story better for the contest. Please feel free to disregard any of them if you disagree:
---The first issue has to do with placing a comma before the conjunction connecting two independent clauses. I pulled out three of these for you, but there are a few more. If you wish for me to locate all of them for you, just let me know in your reply, and I will find them again and send them all to you.
---"ground to about six feet up[,] and the rest was made of wood shingles painted brown, with an olive-green trim."
---"Walking towards the left was the living room[,] and off the living room was grandpa's bedroom and a set of stairs to the top floor."
---"The house always had a spooky feel to it[,] and my mother and aunt always talked about the ghostly apparition"

---"Standing in the front of the house [there] was a front door" --I would eliminate "there" as unecessary.
---"To the right there was an[d] enclosed porch that led to the kitchen." --I think this is a typo where "and" should be "an."
---"Then of[f] course my mother, older brother and younger sister." --Another typo where "off" should be "of."
---"Some of you may or may not believe in ghost, but I'm here to tell you otherwise." --I think that "ghost" in this sentence should be plural "ghosts."
---"This may have been my nine-year-old self having an over[ ]active imagination." --It should be "overactive."
---"Imagine how eight- and nine-year old[']s felt?" --Remove apostrophe as this is not possessive.
---"We weren't sleeping so[,] we decided to sneak down to the" --Remove comma.
---"We were whispering softly[,] as we were getting our slices of bread when out of know where one of the knives raised up and went flying towards our head." --Two issues with this sentence. First one is just to remove the comma after "softly." The second issue has to do with word agreement. The word "head" is singular and therefore cannot follow "our." I recommend rewording this sentence for better clarity. At the very least, the easy route would be to just make it "heads."
---"Another harrowing experience was the rocking chair. Grandpa and I were in the living room watching [tv]" --The proper style for literary or journalistic writing is to capitalize this to "TV."
---"Ella was my grandmother[']s name." --A possessive apostrophe needed here.
---"Grandpa was bed[-]ridden by now and so when my mother." --"Bedridden" is one word.
---"He dilly[-]dallied up[ ]stairs for reasons known only to himself." --"Dilly-dallied" needs a hyphen. "Upstairs" is one word.
---"On a side note there wasn't a [sole] in the family that wanted that house." --Word choice here. I think you meant "soul."

I think you do a great job with your story, Cecilia. Like any of our works, we sometimes need an editor to come in and catch some these things I mentioned above. I hope very much they were helpful to you! I only ever want to help writers on their journey to improve in their craft. Let me know if you have any questions, or if you would like me to pull out the rest of the conjunctive commas. Good luck in the contest! I hope you do well!

Patrick

 Comment Written 21-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 21-Oct-2024
    Patrick,
    Thank you very much for the review. I really appreciate the help with my errors and would much appreciate you finding the rest of them for me. You are very kind for helping me. Are you a English Major or Teacher? you are very good at this. I will correct the errors. Thank you again.
Comment from royowen
Excellent
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An excellent story! It could be told around a campfire, and I believe it would be a riot if shared there. You wrote this very well indeed, your ancestry would be very similar to people of my country which was settled by people from many lands, beautifully written Cecilia, blessings Roy
Typo : Believe in ghost(s) 2: there wasn't a (sole) in the family. Soul? 3: Of the cellar (were) where?

 Comment Written 21-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 21-Oct-2024
    Roy thank you again for the kind review. Yes, it would be fun times with my cousins telling their tales around a campfire. We'd probably scare each other to death.
reply by royowen on 21-Oct-2024
    Welcome Cecilia
reply by royowen on 21-Oct-2024
    Bless you
Comment from Begin Again
Excellent
Not yet exceptional. When the exceptional rating is reached this is highlighted

I've had some strange things happen to me, but your story beats all of them. There is no way I would want to own that house, either. I'm glad that finally someone was able to make it their home, though.
Smiles, Carol

 Comment Written 21-Oct-2024


reply by the author on 21-Oct-2024
    Carol,
    Thank you. My sister took me to grandpa's house last year and I didn't recognize it. It made me sad.