When I was first starting out writing someone told me that my stories were terrible. It really discouraged me from writing.
I am glad that I did not listen to them and kept writing anyway. I am hopeful I have contributed to the body of writing on SOL and entertained people.
I do not want to ever make new authors feel the same way I did.
Recently, I have seen two new(ish) authors post what appear to be incomprehensible word salad. It was a jumble of ideas and dialogue with no connection to the preceding paragraph. There were very complex compound sentences;
We did (this thing) but we wanted to do (that thing) and (this other thing) but we never realized why we did (that thing) although it was nice when we did it.
I am not saying I have perfect grammar. I have several bad habits as an author that I am trying to improve. I did however find it so painful to read one of the stories that I felt compelled to stop.
In one example, the author created a very complex and unique world for their story. I know at one point he described a robot with a small penis.
I was once told that when writing fantasy the reader will suspend disbelief if you create a world that is consistent. As an example, if you have elves who do magic the reader won't balk at talking trees who protect the forests. If you were writing James Bond or the script of a Seinfeld episode they most likely would.
The author has an obligation to inform the reader of the sights, sounds, smells and reasons for things to be the way they are in such fantastic settings.
This story had none of this. Two people are simply discussing a rogue robot with a small penis. (At least, that is what I think was happening). The story was largely incomprehensible.
The author mentioned that they needed an "editor".
An editor can not fix what is wrong with this story without simply rewriting it for the author. There are fundamental story telling and grammatical issues with it. It would be easier to get an army of monkeys to type at typewriters for 1,000 years to get a comprehensible story.
I mention all of this because what I think this author needs is a basic story writing course and essential grammar. Even MS Word and Grammarly cannot fix a jumble. A beginner's "Boot Camp" of sorts.
I did a little Google searching and I could not find anything that really stood out. It isn't that there aren't any resources. Quite the contrary, there are so many it is hard to find a concise resource to get someone started writing on SOL.
I am looking for online (preferably free) alternatives to send to a new writer seeking help. Would you suggest a book, website, article, that may have helped you?