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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

A Sense of Doubt blog post #4090 - Writing Problems to Watch For - Writing Wednesday for 2604.29


A Sense of Doubt blog post #4090 - Writing Problems to Watch For - Writing Wednesday for 2604.29

Greetings Readers.

I am feeling ambitious and hopeful making that plural readers and not reader or bot.

Today's Writing Wednesday is about writing problems - five listed by Briana Sarovski and a post on excessive writing from Mythcreants.

Good stuff here.

I am happy to say that usually when I review a list of writing problems I see things I am not doing, such as my plot does not feel random and the goals of characters are not vague.

However, I am going to have to check for whether characters mostly speak in complete sentences. I don't think they do. But I haven't really put conscious intention into that issue.

I started Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros, and so far I am underwhelmed about some of the writing and yet interested in the characters, the world, the fast-pace action and immediate introduction of multiple conflicts, and the way Yarros dishes out world-building information very slowly and carefully in small chunks (very small!). This author, this series, and this book are IMMENSELY popular, so it behooves us writers in the genre to know why.

Anyway, that's all.

Thanks for tuning in.







FIVE WRITING PROBLEMS VIA BRIANA SAROVSKI


New YT video live now! Your manuscript keeps getting rejected, but it's not because of grammar or adverbs... it's because of deeper craft problems that literary agents immediately recognize as beginner writing.

I broke down five major categories of writing issues that publishing professionals spot instantly: plot and structure problems (lack of causation, unclear scene purpose), dialogue mechanics failures (exposition dumps, unnatural speech), missing emotional depth (underwritten internal life, flat feelings), technical craft errors (POV mistakes, confused narrative logic), and weak stakes and tension (comfortable characters, vague goals).

The great news though is that every single problem is fixable once you know what to look for! Most beginners focus on surface-level issues while these deeper structural problems go unnoticed, but understanding these patterns is one of the keys to turning your manuscript from amateur to professional.

Which category do you struggle with most? For me, it's always making sure my plot events connect through causation instead of just happening randomly because I need them to.

If you're interested, the full breakdown with examples and fixes is in my latest YouTube video (link in bio).

#writingtips #novelwriting #fictionwriting




Lessons From the Excessive Writing of Anathema

No babies were harmed in the making of this critique.

https://mythcreants.com/blog/lessons-from-the-overdone-writing-of-anathema/


Welcome to the Eating Woods series by Keri Lake.* Are the woods eating people? Are people eating the woods? Or does everyone just have picnics there? Unclear, but perhaps the first book, Anathema, will tell us. Lake’s bio tells us she writes gothic romantasy, so let’s see what she has to offer.

Content Notice: This opening depicts violence against an infant.

Don’t Rely on the Front Matter

Help me out, folks. What is happening here?

What looks like an ancestry chart starting with two groups, the Mortasians and the Aethyrians. But lines connect four groups together at the bottom.

It looks like an ancestral chart, right? I would assume one set of people are descended from the Mortasians and another from the Aethyrians. But then why are there lines connecting their descendants to each other? Did all of the Corvikae and Lyverians marry each other? The label of “Ancestral Lines” seems to suggest otherwise.

Also, one version of the book has an Aethyrian (but not Mortasian?) race list, and it says:

Corvikae [cor-vih-kai] – An ancient mortal tribe who went extinct due to genocide; worshipped the goddess of death; it is said that they have Corvugon blood; originated in the northern part of Nyxteros
Traits: Dark hair, light bronze skin, mortal

That’s dark. But there is no mention of the Lyverians they are apparently connected to in some way. Did the Lyverians kill them?

The book also has a large glossary, which is not a great sign. While a glossary may be helpful as a last resort, we should aim to make our stories understandable without one.

Wait, I changed my mind.

This glossary is amazing. It’s like Jabberwocky meets Harry Potter meets every dirty romantasy trope. Allow me to show you some entries.

FYI – the glossary has many small errors. For instance, you might notice that capitalization after the dash isn’t consistent. Either Lake didn’t pay for copy editing or that copy editing wasn’t very good.

Ascendency [ah-send-ent-see] – a phase, similar to puberty, when mancers begin to come into their bloodline magic

I like this one because it explains how to pronounce an existing English word. FYI, comparing awakening magic to puberty is a sign of what’s to come.

Carnifican [car-niff-i-can]– A mancer who has consumed too much vivicantem and becomes violent

Do you get it? When mages become violent, they’re like carnivores! It’s memorable, I’ll give it that. As for “vivicantem,” that appears later in the glossary. It’s a nutrient mages need to maintain their powers.

Celaestrioz [seh-less-tree-ohz] – Aggressive firefly-looking creatures with human faces

So are these firefly-sized bugs with itty-bitty human faces, or are they giant glowing bug people? Inquiring minds want to know.

Dindleweed – A powerful aphrodisiac

Okay, so you want a horny drug in your story. I respect that. But why does it sound like it’s from a nursery rhyme?

Firebleeding – Sprinkling flammapul on the tongue then making small cuts in the flesh and licking the wound to introduce the substance; causes extreme paralysis

Umm… does everyone in this setting poison their enemies by licking their wounds? Is there some reason you can’t just pour the flammapul directly onto the wound???

Lunamiska [luna-mee-skah] – My little moon witch

No, there is no further context for this one, just a sudden use of first person. Maybe it’s supposed to be a common endearment, but if so, it’s oddly specific.

Pendulynx [pen-du-linx] – a long snouted mammal, smaller than an elephant

Saying an animal is smaller than an elephant isn’t really narrowing it down. I feel like there’s a story behind this one, and it goes like this:

Lake: Look at this pendulynx, a bizarre creature with a loooong snout!

Beta readers: Lake, we can tell it’s an elephant. Also, elephants can’t sneak up on people.

Lake: No, it’s not an elephant! It’s smaller than an elephant!

Rapax [ray-pax] – A child predator/pedophile

If you feel compelled to invent your own setting-specific label for “pedophile,” you may want to revisit some of your earlier decisions.

There are two more words in the glossary that start with “rap-.” I think I’ll stop here.

Then, after the glossary, there’s a little “dear reader” note where Lake tells her readers that this is her first foray into gothic fantasy and what they can expect.

My plots tend to be intricate and layered and while romance is one of the many elements I weave into the story, it is not the sole focus in this case. If you’re anxious for the spice, it’ll come eventually, but know that this is a slow burn. You will be tormented with pages of unbearable tension before we arrive at the climax, so to speak.

Just like a glossary, it’s fine to have a notice like this up front, but it makes me wonder why it became necessary. Perhaps Lake has a romance readership who may be disappointed that the romance is less central in this book.

Lake ends this letter with a link to where readers can see a full list of trigger warnings, which is nice of her.

Opening Paragraphs Need to Be Simple

Of course, we have a prologue. Gothic stories can’t just begin; first they need several thousand words on majestic mountains or a treatise on how the heroine’s upbringing made her virtuous. What? It’s not that kind of gothic story? Nonsense.

The prologue starts with the label “Two hundred eleven years ago …

That’s a long time ago. Sounds like we have some world backstory, or maybe the love interest was alive back then and this is his backstory. I wish novels would skip that stuff and just start, but maybe it’ll be relevant.

Now for the official first sentence.

Lady Rydainn held her infant son close as she approached the glowing vein that, only days ago, had been a snarling fissure of black fire that cleaved the ground.

Oof, too complicated. Just “the glowing vein that, only days ago, had been a snarling fissure of black fire that cleaved the ground” requires a lot of effort from the reader. It requires us to move backward in time from the glowing vein to its predecessor, and then the black fire is both snarling and cleaving. Readers will already assume the fissure cleaves the ground, so I would cut that last part.

I get it though; we have so much to tell readers in the beginning. And since we know it all, it’s hard to identify when it’s confusing. I would say, “Let the writer who has never done this be the first to criticize it,” but that would prevent me from writing this critique.

Let’s see if the rest of the paragraph is better.

With the two moons nearly as one, the chasm of violet lava had hardened to stone, leaving only the flickering remnants of that sinister flame. It was almost time to harvest the igneous rock, but they weren’t there for the bounty it held.

Lake adds two moons converging and also a chasm of violet lava. Is that the same thing as the snarling fissure of black fire? Consistent labeling is extra important in the beginning.

“Igneous rock” feels anachronistic to me. Technically the word “igneous” was used as early as 1664, but not as a geology term for cooled lava. It simply meant “fiery.” But I can understand Lake wanting to use the word; it’s tough when you have a fantasy volcano setting and no characters understand volcano science.

On the plus side, I like phrases such as “two moons nearly as one” and “the bounty it held.” This is solid fantasy prose, but it needs to be in a clearer context.

Let’s do a quick rewrite on this first paragraph.

Simplified Intro

Lady Rydainn held her infant son close as she approached the flickering stone. Only days ago, it had been a chasm of violet lava sheathed in dark flames. Soon the cool rock would be harvested, but she hadn’t come for the bounty it held.

Even when the passage is pared down, going back in time and then forward again is pretty awkward. I would probably try to describe the stone as cooling lava instead and then just be done with it. That is, assuming readers actually need to know about the lava right away.

Okay, we have a lady and her infant son 200 years ago who are not here to harvest igneous rock. Next paragraph.

They were there for the fire itself.

Wait – there’s still fire? I thought by “flickering remnants” Lake meant the lava was pulsing a bit, like coals. But I guess there are still open black flames.

Also, this line about the fire is being treated like a mini twist. It’s getting its own paragraph and everything. But readers haven’t been given any reason to care whether Lady Rydainn is here for the rock, lava, or fire. So the emphasis feels overdone.

Lake should have just focused on the flames more.

Simplified Intro With Flames

Lady Rydainn held her infant son close as she approached the cooling lava. Days ago, it had glowed violet, sheathed in roaring black flames. Now those flames were a mere flicker, but they would be enough.

So what are these magic flames for?

The men who typically guarded the vein from thieves lay in diminishing piles of ash, their bodies and armor charred to useless lumps of soot that scattered in the wind. Burned alive by a flame so hot, she could feel its radiance a half-furlong away. Sablefyre. An ancient element of the gods, forged eons ago in Aethyria’s fiery heart. A single touch could turn a body to ash, and blood to stone.

I have questions.

  • Is “sablefyre” the black flame? And no, I don’t want to look it up in the glossary; I shouldn’t have to!*
  • If it is the black flame, is Lady Rydainn really a whole 330 feet (a half furlong) away from it? Saying she “approached” it in the first paragraph created a very different image.
  • Can she even see the piles of ash that used to be guards from over 300 feet away? Or were the guards standing really far away from what they were guarding?

Turning the body to ash but the blood to stone is interesting. It made me imagine a new sculpture in the shape of veins and arteries, but unfortunately that doesn’t seem to be what happened to these guards.

Altogether, I think Lake is still trying to do too much in this paragraph, but it’s a little more understandable than before.

Okay, we have magical insta-death flames. Now what?

And she had arrived to offer up Zevander, her second-born son, to it.

Holy infanticide, Batman! It feels a little over the top, but at least this time giving a sentence its own paragraph was the right choice. If you’re going to announce an infanticide, it should probably have some emphasis on the page.

Also, I’m guessing this baby won’t actually die, because he has a name and that name is “Zevander.” That is a danger-boy name if I’ve ever seen one; they all seem to start with X or Z. Next, authors will probably start adding lots of apostrophes and harsh consonant sounds to them.

The love interest backstory theory for this prologue is looking pretty good.

Not by choice, of course. Lady Rydainn would’ve sacrificed herself right there and then, if it would spare Zevander from such a horrific fate. Unfortunately, the mage who’d demanded the exchange wasn’t interested in her pittance of an offer. He wanted her youngest son, and nothing more.

Hey, look, a whole paragraph that’s easy to understand! This could be partly because we’re not in the opening paragraphs anymore, but it’s more than that. Notice that Lake is focusing on making sure one thing is adequately explained.

She forced herself to set her eyes upon the dark and corrupt soul, where he stood alongside her eldest son and husband, watching her every step from the edge of the vein. The man she’d come to know as the most dangerous mage in all of Aethyria. One of few who’d mastered the ability to control the otherwise chaotic sablefyre and discovered a means to harness its deadly and divine power. He’d once been the king’s highest Magelord, a member of the exalted Magestroli, disgracefully dismissed on accusations of demutomancy – a dark form of magic decreed illegal by the king.

Wait, there’s been a bunch of people here this entire time? That’s jarring. When you’re setting the scene, you need to establish important features before readers get their bearings. People are always an important feature readers need to know about, just like this cooling lava. If the character is initially focused on something small, you don’t have to mention these features immediately. But as soon as the narrative camera zooms out, you should introduce them. In this case, if Lake simply mentioned that people are waiting for Lady Rydainn, it would be enough.

Also, this lady’s every step is being watched from a whole 330 feet away. Doesn’t that seem like a bit much? Did everyone just say, “Hey, we’re all going to head over to the evil flickering vein early, join us to kill your baby when you’re ready”?

Maybe earlier, when Lake wrote “she could feel its radiance a half-furlong away,” what Lake actually meant was “she had felt its radiance a half-furlong away.” So the lady is currently within that half furlong. But that’s not what the text says.

Perhaps more importantly, Lake is asking for pronoun confusion. That’s because Lake keeps using “he” for this mage instead of naming him. Notice that in the first sentence, the husband and eldest son are both mentioned. Later in the paragraph, a king is mentioned. They all go by the same pronoun.

Riddle me this: Who is watching the lady’s every step from so far away? Is it her husband, her son, the mage, or all three? Grammatically, it’s the husband because he is the last one mentioned, but I think Lake means the mage. That interpretation is important because it’s needed to understand who the next sentence fragment refers to. Otherwise, the husband could be the most dangerous mage in all of Aethyria.

If there were just a consistent label for this villain, Lake could ensure the paragraph was much easier to parse. Instead, she withholds the mage’s name so she can dramatically reveal it in another short paragraph.

Cadavros. The mere thought of his name cast a shiver down her spine.

Haha, his name is Cadavros. I like that Lake is making her names memorable, but they’re too on the nose. Lake is trying so hard to create a dark and serious atmosphere, but some of her names sound silly.

Even if that weren’t an issue, readers are just meeting this villain for the first time, so his name won’t give them shivers. Treating the name like a reveal isn’t going to do anything until that name has some significance. The lady may dread the name, but emotions don’t transfer straight from the viewpoint character to readers.

Keep Motivation Consistent

I’m going to skip over the next short paragraph, which is redundant except for naming a couple factions we don’t need to know about.

In their moment of desperation, the reclusive mage had approached the Rydainns with an offer they couldn’t refuse. A powerful protection spell against those who sought their heads, in exchange for their firstborn’s blood magic—a sampling Cadavros had claimed would be used in his studies.

So if he wants their firstborn’s magic, why are they killing their second son?

This whole situation is clearly too complicated. We’re getting so much exposition for a backstory from 200 years ago, and it’s still confusing. Maybe if Lake gave us just the right information, that would clean things up. But it sounds like the story might need to be streamlined.

If only Lady Rydainn possessed the power to reverse time. She would’ve chided her stupidity. Warned herself not to trust his lies. For, what he’d taken from her eldest boy was far more than a sampling of his magic.

Black, beady eyes, those deep soulless sockets, stared back at her, as if daring her to run from his ghastly form. There was a time he was said to have been handsome, but the dark and forbidden magic had taken a toll on him. Sank its claws into his flesh and twisted him into a wicked beast. From the top of his head breached long branching antlers, with horns that curled back. Deep grooves etched into his hardened skin reminded Lady Rydainn of tree bark, the black pulsing veins beneath said to house small serpents trapped inside his flesh.

So did Lady Rydainn have a choice in making this deal, or didn’t she? First Lake says this is a deal Lady Rydainn couldn’t refuse, then the lady regrets trusting the mage. That suggests she actually trusted him instead of being forced into a deal with him. Also, if she regrets making the deal over her elder son, why is she willing to kill her youngest son?

And what does Lake have against names? The second paragraph above could be describing the villain or the elder son. Once I read far enough, I concluded it was the villain, but that’s not a good experience for readers.

This is so much text about the villain. Maybe he appears in the present timeline as well. However, he does look pretty cool. I like the antlers and the bark skin.

His appearance was the result of having performed the Emberforge ritual on himself, the same ritual he intended for her son. A rite that only young children were believed to tolerate without any permanent disfigurement, seeing as they hadn’t yet gone through their Ascendency.

Lake, that does not sound like offering this baby to the insta-kill flames. Some stories covering sensitive issues will need to bring infanticide up, but pretending like the characters are committing infanticide when that’s not true feels like it’s in poor taste.

So Zevander is going to get dark magic, but don’t worry; he’ll be very pretty.

Lake, can he at least have a pair of antlers? Please?

Beside the mage stood her husband and their eldest son, Branimir,
whose similarly protruding black veins and coarse skin marked the horrific deformities of her first sacrifice only weeks before. A sacrifice that’d proven insufficient for the greedy mage, (…)

Her demands to break the devil’s bargain with Cadavros had proven hopeless, when he’d vowed to slaughter both boys should she fail to comply. Not an idle threat, given the many inquisitions she’d witnessed where he’d exerted his power with merciless cruelty.

Wait a second, so the parents made a deal with Cadaver in which he would get a sample of Bran Muffin’s magic and the family would get protection from their enemies. Then Cadaver takes more than a sample, making the lady regret the deal. But Cadaver is still not satisfied, so he demands that he should also get to do something terrible to their second son even though that’s not part of the deal. Then the parents have to comply because Cadaver is threatening to kill both sons.

So why didn’t Cadaver just walk up to this family and say, “Give me your sons’ magic or I’ll kill all of you”? At this point, it’s not a contract agreement anymore; the family is doing this under the threat of death. And that makes the lady’s regrets extra silly because Cadaver could have killed them all if she said no to the first deal. Or he could have simply kidnapped the sons.

It feels like Lake is just making up everyone’s motivations as she goes along. But multiple motivations get confusing fast; you need to choose one and stick to it.

Next, Lady Rydainn… keeps approaching. She thinks about her beautiful baby boy and how she prayed to the gods in vain.

Had she the choice, she’d have sooner taken young Zevander and fled to Mortasia, beyond the Umbravale that separated the mortal lands from Aethyria. A place believed to be nothing but a barren wasteland, brimming with famine and death.

There was nowhere to hide. Nowhere to flee.

So the lady is willing to flee to a barren wasteland, but there’s nowhere to flee? If the implication is that Cadaver can easily chase her down, that needs to be stated. But since the lady has a 330-foot head start, maybe she should give it a go.

Alright, Lake, how about if we get on with the ritual now? We’ve had so much text while a woman walks. You’ve had abundant opportunities to give us all the exposition. Please make something happen.

Spoilers: Lake does not.

Make Less Mean More

Normally I have to summarize paragraphs I skip over, but not so much in this one. For this book, you folks will never know the difference. But just to ensure minor mentions in later excerpts aren’t confusing, here you should know that the lady is very angry with her husband. He made those enemies they need protection from.

The notion of watching her jubilant baby, an echo of the sweet, loving boy Branimir had once been, suffer the same fate was an agony she couldn’t bear.

Lady Rydainn’s power trembled like a plucked thread, as rays of moonlight hit the sigil on the nape of her neck, penetrating the thick fabric of her cloak and eliciting a charge that hummed in her veins. It innervated every cell in her body, rousing a cold rush to her fingertips, where it begged to be turned loose. The moon affected all Lunasier that way, and Zevander shifted in her arms, as if sensing the vibration beneath his mother’s skin.

It would’ve been years before his power would come to fruition, and she’d longed for those heartwarming moments of discovery that would soon be tainted by the poison of the flame.

Don’t mind Lady Rydainn; she’s just having a moon orgasm while taking her baby to his doom. Totally normal.

More seriously, this magic description would be fine if her moon powers were critical to the scene. But of course Lady Rydainn is not going to use her magic in any meaningful way because Zevander is predestined to be a dark and broody love interest. So spending a whole paragraph describing how she charges her moon batteries feels overdone.

The paragraphs of Lady Rydainn feeling upset are similar. Obviously, she should feel something in this situation. But just because her feelings are strong doesn’t mean they need to take up a whole page. Perhaps Lake believes dragging this out will make readers care about the situation, but it won’t, not in itself.

For that, readers have to get attached to Zevander and get a better understanding of how terrible his fate is. Lake has suggested his moon powers will be taken away and replaced by dark magic. But right now, making people look scary is the only negative effect of the dark magic we know about, and Lake has specified that young children like Zevander don’t change that way.

With so much emphasis on how upset Lady Rydainn is, this is beginning to feel melodramatic even though strong feelings are perfectly justified. Lake is making this worse by doing too much telling of emotions: for instance, “an agony she couldn’t bear.”

Fighting Cadavros was futile, though. With the power of sablefyre at his command, she’d be reduced to ash, like the guards who’d tried to fight him off when they’d first arrived at the vein.

A tear streaked down her cheek. “Pilazyo. Orosj tye clemuhd,” she
whispered. Please. I’m begging your mercy.

Cadavros wordlessly slipped his fingers beneath the baby, and her tears turned hysterical when he gave a tug.

She yanked her child back to her, jerking the young boy to her chest. “Nith! Nith hazjo’li! Je fili meuz!” I will not do this! He is my son!

Lake has a conlang! I guess I shouldn’t be surprised, given all the new words in the glossary.* But it’s been a while since I’ve seen a conlang in a critique. They are a fun worldbuilding exercise, one I have engaged in myself. Theoretically, if they are used well, they’ll make the world more immersive and keep fans busy talking in secret codes.

There’s just one problem. See, the purpose of writing is to put down symbols that represent ideas so that other people can observe the symbols to receive your ideas. If you insert symbols that no one can translate into ideas, well… it rather defeats the point of writing in the first place.

Does writing dialogue in a conlang and then also in English add to the reader’s experience? Unlikely. My eyes just skip right to the translated text. The conlang is instantly forgotten, and the only difference is that Lake has called attention to the inherent awkwardness of conlangs.

I have an article on incorporating a conlang into your story. But my recommendation is to use them in a very limited manner, and that’s a bummer for people who love conlangs. I get it, I do.

Zevander’s outcry, as Cadavros pried the boy from his mother’s arms, stirred her instincts. On a whim of madness, Lady Rydainn lurched for the beastly man who carried her son toward the smoldering vein, but a force struck her throat, knocking the breath out of her. Black smoke crawled from her mouth, choking out the words she’d longed to say. Stop! I surrender myself! Her unseen attacker held her there in its invisible grasp, while Cadavros didn’t even spare her a glance.

Lord Rydainn strode toward his suffering wife, but as he neared, his leg snapped beneath him with the gut-twisting sound of splintering bone. His outcry echoed through the surrounding forest, and he fell to the ground, his limb bent wrong at the knee.

If written differently, what’s happening here might be exciting. Lady Rydainn tries to stop Cadaver, but then something Force chokes her. When her husband tries to help her, the unseen force breaks his leg.

Unfortunately, this isn’t a real conflict, just calamity. For a conflict to work, the protagonist must have the ability to affect the outcome. It’s clear that Lady and Lord Rydainn are helpless and their actions don’t matter. In turn, we have no reason to follow events closely. Instead of an exciting struggle, this is just more emotional expression or maybe a little misery porn.

Also, since Lady Rydainn is so desperate, why isn’t she trying to use all of that moon magic Lake went on about earlier? She’s angry and experiencing a “whim of madness,” but the most she can muster is a lurch?

Are there invisible spirits hanging around Cadaver? That could provide some novelty, but the possibility gets very few words. Maybe Cadaver is doing this magic himself and Lake is trying to show us that it takes him little effort.

Altogether, it’s a big lost opportunity.

Lady Rydainn whimpered and quailed, her knees weak with defeat, and before she could shutter her eyes from the horror, Cadavros shoved his palm against her baby’s mouth, smothering him with the black flame.

[…]

The trauma that both of her precious sons were made to suffer tore at her heart with jagged teeth. Tears spilled down her cheeks as she watched the black flames emerge through her son’s skin, licking the night air like the dark tongues of serpents.

Zevander’s struggle ceased, his body limp. The flames died, settling across the baby’s flesh in wicked black swirls.

The darkness had accepted and branded him.

An eternal curse.

Finally, we’ve arrived at the actual transformation. Unfortunately, it’s hard to feel the impact because Lady Rydainn’s emotional reactions are constantly intruding. She’s shuttering her eyes from the horror and having her heart figuratively torn out with jagged teeth. In comparison, the flames emerging from Zevander and the black swirls on his skin are relatively understated. But it’s the ritual that matters to this story, not Lady Rydainn’s melodramatic feelings.

Maybe my issue is that I’m not interested in graphic depictions of infanticide. Cadaver is not actually killing the baby, but Lake wants it to look like he is.

Then Lake gives a bunch of bold declarations about darkness and an eternal curse, but those are abstract concepts. They feel like marketing buzz, not substance. What does this transformation actually do? I’m interested in the magic; tell me more about it.

Cadavros lifted the baby and drew his noseless face over her son’s naked chest. His mouth opened impossibly wide, and he shoved Zevander’s head inside.

“No! Oh, gods! No!” A scream rattled in futile misery inside her chest, as Lady Rydainn watched in horror while the ghoulish mage attempted to consume her child.

Lololol! OMG, baby eating, it’s just too much!

This is why the make less mean more mantra is important, folks. Because before we learn how to create emotional impact, our tendency is to make everything extreme to get a reaction. But if you do that, you just end up with something that feels comically exaggerated. This is clearly not what Lake wants.

To make a story darker, start by making existing hardships more emotionally impactful. Make readers care about the people who are suffering, and show the harm done to them in detail. Give problems negative ripple effects, and use some realism to make it hit home. If the realism is too low, you may end up with something that is less dark in tone and more Halloween-y in aesthetic – like violet lava and black fire. Halloween aesthetics are great; it’s just not the same thing.

Adding some miscommunication to the comedy in this excerpt, that first pronoun there is referencing the wrong individual. The baby has he/him pronouns, so “his noseless face” technically refers to the baby’s face. The initial impression I had was Wait, the ritual removed the baby’s nose? That’s not what I expected for a love interest.

Finally, where did Lady Rydainn’s conlang go? She’s just speaking in English now. If we’re being generous, we might say she is bilingual. But since she was speaking in desperation before, that makes it unlikely she’s reflexively changed to her native tongue here.

Be Concrete, Not Vague

So is Zevander actually going to get eaten? If he is, points to Lake for surprising me at least.

The mage let out a boisterous roar and yanked the child from his mouth. He tipped his head, inspecting the black markings left on her baby’s skin. A deep, guttural sound rolled in his chest, and he snarled, snapping his attention back to the flame. “Quez sa’il!” What is this?

Again, he looked back to the boy, running his finger over one of the markings on his chest. Growling, he struck the infant’s face and tossed him into the flaming fissure.

Lake, after the villain tried to bite the baby’s head off, nothing you do to this baby will shock readers anymore. And if the villain was not allowed to eat him, there’s no way that fissure is going to finish him off.

So the baby gets cool-looking black swirls and is invulnerable now. What exactly is the downside here?

“No!” The scream that echoed through the forest could’ve roused the old gods from their slumber, as Lady Rydainn shook and cursed their names, demanding they set her free.

Lord Rydainn howled in agony, crawling toward the vein with his horribly mangled leg dragging behind him. “You bastard! You fucking bastard!”

Cadaver, please put these parents out of their misery.

Okay, okay. Let’s say this is a serious sequence and it’s only realistic for the parents to have a big reaction. What should Lake do?

First, showing more and telling less would reduce the melodrama. Lake could get rid of words such as “in agony” and “horribly.” Using more creative phrases like “could’ve roused the old gods from their slumber” is also another way of telling.

Second, even though this is an extreme situation, their reactions are still either too overblown or nonsensical. Think what actors would do. Would the actor playing Lord Rydainn both howl and also say, “You bastard!” Probably just the latter. And would Lady Rydainn be focused on the old gods right now instead of the villain and possibly dead baby in front of her? Instead, she might reach for Zevander even though touching the flames could kill her.

Finally, even if these emotional reactions felt realistic, readers would get bored of them after a while. In fact, I think one of the reasons they feel over the top is that Lake is switching things up to avoid repetition. But that’s a self-imposed problem. Instead, Lake can summarize and gloss over the parents more, even if they’re having a fit.

I would go for something briefer.

Lady Rydainn wailed and reached for Zevander. Just before she touched the deadly flames, Lord Rydainn grabbed her wrist to pull her back, twisting his broken leg. His tears fell on her palm before she swatted him away.

Notice that twisting his broken leg sounds bad enough without declaring it’s “horribly mangled.”

Next, Cadaver grabs the limp baby from the fissure.

Lingering wisps of smoke drifted over the mage’s face, and she caught the glisten of raw flesh across his bark-like skin.

It was then that Lady Rydainn realized: in his attempt to harm her son, he’d somehow suffered pain himself.

While Zevander already has enough powers, I imagine Lake might need a reason why Cadaver (the big bad?) doesn’t keep trying to kill him. If Cadaver’s attempts only end up harming himself, that’s a pretty solid reason. While it might risk making Cadaver look less threatening, currently he’s all but unstoppable, so it’s probably fine.

I just wish this got more development in comparison to all the words spent on Lady Rydainn. How did Cadaver inadvertently create this effect?

The pressure at her throat subsided, and sapped of all will, she crumpled to the ground. When those cloven feet stood before her again, she lifted her gaze to see Cadavros handing back her listless child, carelessly holding him by his arm as if he were nothing but a sack of meat and bones. Feeble arms outstretched, she reached back for him and cradled him against her. A searing heat burned her skin, but she refused to let him go.

(…)

Thank the gods! He still breathed. On a tearful exhale, she held him tighter and kissed the top of his head. Her sweet child had survived being cast into sablefyre–a fate that would’ve left any other a pile of ashes like the poor soldiers.

Oh look, Zevander is alive. I am shocked, I tell you, shocked.

Also, Lady Rydainn has been thinking in English. The lesson here is that if you must have a character speak in a conlang, don’t make it your viewpoint character. Then you at least won’t have thoughts to deal with. Plus, if your viewpoint character doesn’t know the conlang, they have the option of not understanding some words.

The babe awoke, and the once innocent blue of his eyes showed as a gradient of wine red with swirls of orange and gold that converged at the center in a black eclipse. The silvery wisps of hair that’d begun to grow in had burned away. Gone was the soul of a harmless, loving child. In his place lay the vestiges of an aberration that the gods would surely forsake.

Squirming in her arms, the child cooed and babbled, a peculiar sight, given what he’d suffered moments before. The gash at his face had blackened into a deep groove that mirrored the vein from which he’d been pulled. At the edges of the wound, smaller black veins branched out like rivulets on a map.

So we’ve confirmed this baby looks super cool and badass now. But what nonsuperficial differences are there? Maybe Lady Rydainn knows little about it (you’d think she would have asked), but this dark magic is supposed to be notorious and forbidden. Surely there are some rumors?

Will Zevander start hungering for people’s souls? Will he blight crops he comes near? Will he drain someone’s life force every time he casts a spell? Maybe Lake can ask Alex Aster, the author of Lightlark, for some curse ideas.

As is, this focus on appearance plus vaguery about darkness makes me think it’s nothing special. Maybe Zevander can control the insta-kill flames. That would make him formidable, like most love interests, but it would be a terribly uninteresting effect. Even creating a fun fight scene would be challenging if his opponents immediately die.

Cadaver hasn’t been mentioned since he gave the baby back. I guess he must be standing around in the background somewhere. After Lake spent so many words on this big bad and how scary he is, that’s a pretty lackluster way for him to exit the scene.

Alright, we’re ready to close the prologue. In the ending passage, Bran Muffin has a good stare at his baby brother.

He reached for Zevander, running his finger over the marking on his chest, a curious black swirl that’d seemed to anger Cadavros. On closer examination, there seemed to be words written in ancient Primyrian embedded in the swirl in a way that reminded Lady Rydainn of a wax seal across his heart. Branimir’s lips twisted to a snarl as he whispered the words that stabbed her conscience. “Il captris nith reviris.”

What is taken will never return.

In an alternate universe, this could be a resonant ending. But as far as we know, the only thing that’s has been taken is Zevander’s inherited magic and his blue eyes, which have been replaced by dark magic and swirly eyes. So this is not hitting home the way it could.

Maybe something else has been taken, but if so, Lake needs to tell us about it. Vagueness doesn’t have emotional power. Curiosity can be compelling, but it requires a strange set of circumstances to make readers wonder. Here, it’s not even clear if there is something to wonder about.

The Opening Overall

Let’s start with the big picture. Is this prologue a good idea? It could be worse. While I recommend opening with the main character, a love interest in a romance is the next best thing.

But for a sequence focused on the love interest, I don’t think this is doing what it could have. Because Zevander’s only a baby, it still doesn’t feel like we know him. It’s also hard to say how much he’s suffering. I think Lake could have gotten more sympathy for Zevander if the prologue featured him as a boy being taken away from his mother. That way, it could focus on his suffering instead of hers.

As currently written, the best use for this prologue would be if we need to know all of these characters. If the beginning is already crowded with information, it could be hard to remember them otherwise. Adding a prologue just to convey information is a tactic of last resort, but sometimes that’s what we have to do. And considering the glossary, that’s the kind of trouble Lake might be in.

Regardless, the prologue is almost certainly longer than it needs to be. So many paragraphs are wasted trying to get readers to feel emotion via tactics that don’t work very well.

Then, Lake is missing the mark on the tone and atmosphere she’s aiming for. She did say this was her first gothic fantasy. Less critical readers may still enjoy the black flames, antler horns, and edgy provocation, but only if Halloween and grimdark sauce is what they want from their stories. I’m not the only one who will laugh at baby eating in this context.

However, if Lake could just conquer a few bad habits, I actually think her wordcraft could be a selling point. Unlike many romantasies, it feels graceful rather than modern. She chooses strong verbs, and her prose often has a nice rhythm to it.

But foremost, she has to stop telling so much. She’s hyping her content rather than letting it stand for itself, creating melodrama. After that, she should work on clarity. She has too much ambiguity with pronouns and modifiers. Her frequent use of sentence fragments is making this worse.

The other issues with her narration are mostly a matter of what she’s choosing to communicate with each sentence, not how she’s doing it. It takes extensive knowledge to become more intentional about what we’re writing and why. Hopefully, with time, she’ll get there.

Altogether, I’d say this book might get fans because of the type of story Lake is telling. Romantasy is so big; surely some readers are looking for a darker version. But judging only by the prologue, I don’t think Lake will win over anyone who is critical or skeptical. It’s just too excessive.




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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2604.29 - 10:10

- Days ago: MOM = 3954 days ago & DAD = 608 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I post Hey Mom blog entries on special occasions. I post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day, and now I have a second count for Days since my Dad died on August 28, 2024. I am now in the same time zone as Google! So, when I post at 10:10 a.m. PDT to coincide with the time of Mom's death, I am now actually posting late, so it's really 1:10 p.m. EDT. But I will continue to use the time stamp of 10:10 a.m. to remember the time of her death and sometimes 13:40 EDT for the time of Dad's death. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

A Sense of Doubt blog post #4089 - DETROIT PISTONS! GO TIME! Another Fiery Speech?



A Sense of Doubt blog post #4089 - DETROIT PISTONS! GO TIME! Another Fiery Speech?

Tomorrow night is the next playoff game for the Detroit Pistons who are down 1-3 to the Orlando Magic in the first round series.

If they lose, they're done.

If they manage to solve how the Magic are beating them and win, then they still have to win two more to take the series with Game Six in Orlando on Friday.


One big reason for Monday's loss was 20 turnovers. Of those, Cade had eight.

I would like to see the ratio of forced to unforced turnovers, as I suspect that most if not all of those were forced.

They also had eighteen blocks of which Isaiah Stewart had eight!

The Magic are dominating the inside game and pulling down more offensive rebounds than Detroit (at least in game four).

And though the Pistons had some good looks from deep, several shots were rushed and ill-advised. They were 6-30 (20%) from beyond the arc in game four and just shot 38% (31-82) total.

The score would be more lop-sided if the Magic had shot much better, but they also sucked (30-92 33% overall and 9-35 from deep 26%).

Though the Magic only had six blocks compared to the Pistons' eighteen, they had eight steals compared to the Pistons' five.

If they Pistons can turn up the horsepower on their defense and manage the offensive game a little better, then they should win tomorrow night at home.

The defense runs the offense. Get stops. Force turnovers. Be more physical and get out in transition for easy baskets.

They can do this.

DEEEEEEEETROIT BASKETBALL!!

Here's two recent articles that are inspiring for why the Pistons won 60 games this season.

It would be an epic collapse if they exit in the first round.

GO PISTONS!!

Bickerstaff's fiery speech provides 'spark' in Pistons' Game 2 win over Magic


https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/48566992/bickerstaff-fiery-speech-provides-spark-game-2-win-magic

Ohm Youngmisuk
Apr 23, 2026, 12:13 AM ET

DETROIT -- With Wednesday's game tied at the half and the Orlando Magic hanging around, Detroit coach J.B. Bickerstaff lit into his team to try to ignite the Pistons.

"He really got on us in the locker room," Pistons forward Tobias Harris said. "[His message was] there is no more of 'my bads.' It's like they're out there hustling, getting offensive boards on us. And there's too many of them for us [to allow] as a group. We know that's not our standard.

"So he was on us. We were able to find that little spark."

After hearing it from their coach, the Pistons delivered an emphatic reminder that they are the East's best team. Detroit hit Orlando with a 30-3 third-quarter avalanche to win 98-83 in Game 2 and even the first-round series at 1-1.

The Pistons' sellout crowd -- which included some of the franchise's biggest legends, such as Isiah Thomas -- savored the team's first home playoff win since May, 26, 2008, when the Pistons beat the Boston Celtics in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals. The Pistons' 11-game home playoff losing streak was the longest in NBA history.

Detroit set an early tone that this game would be different than Game 1, when Orlando led from start to finish. The Pistons swatted seven shots in the first quarter and finished with 11 blocks Wednesday. There were several blocks at the rim as both teams went at each other.

"It's Pistons basketball, and that's what it looks like," Bickerstaff said. "We have one off night to come at a bad time. But I know what our guys are, and we trusted that they were going to come back tonight, be the best version of themselves at some point."

That version emerged in the third quarter. Detroit was everywhere, turning up the defense and smothering Orlando into missing nine of 10 shots and turning the ball over six times during that 30-3 run.

On offense, the Pistons made 11 of their first 15 shots of the quarter, including dunking three times to get the crowd amped up. By the time it was over, Orlando trailed 76-49 with 4:34 to go.

The Magic were 6-of-34 (18%) on contested shots in Game 2, compared with 21-of-45 (47%) in Game 1. That 18% is the lowest field goal percentage on contested shots in the playoffs since ESPN began tracking (2013-14).

"They met us at the rim a few times," said Orlando forward Paolo Banchero, who finished with 18 points, eight assists and six rebounds. "And they brought the intensity on defense. But we got good looks, and nobody really had a great night shooting the ball."

Orlando's 83 points are the fewest Detroit has allowed in a playoff game since surrendering 79 to the Cavaliers in Game 3 of the first round on April 24, 2009.

"That's us," said Detroit center Isaiah Stewart, who had 10 points and two blocks. "That's what we were talking about. If we just be who we are, who we've been all season long, we'd be just fine."

The Pistons' Cade Cunningham has shined in this series. He had 27 points, 11 assists and six rebounds in the win, following a 39-point performance in Game 1.

Still, even after the third-quarter dominance by Detroit, the Magic starters kept playing hard in the fourth. They had a total of six blocks and held Detroit to 6-of-26 shooting from 3 in Game 2.

The series shifts to Orlando for Game 3 on Saturday.

"We're not backing down," Orlando coach Jamahl Mosley said. "It's not who we are. Especially in a series like this, in a game like this, with an opponent like this, we're not backing down. They threw everything that they had in that moment -- the aggression, the physicality, all the plays in the game -- that's part of it.

"We knew that was coming. We embrace it. When we go to Orlando, we got to just make sure we exceed it."





https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/48552714/how-jalen-duren-helped-reignite-detro-defense-first-legacy

Michael A. Fletcher
Apr 23, 2026, 08:19 AM ET

JALEN DUREN SAT in front of a Detroit Pistons logo as a few thousand season-ticket holders gathered inside Little Caesars Arena in a late February player meet and greet.

The team was split into four groups stationed in the corners of the court, fans moving in a steady line, offering handshakes, fist bumps and quick words of encouragement. Music pulsed over the speakers while highlights from the franchise's most successful season in two decades looped across the video board above.

For the most part, Duren, dressed in gray team sweats, a black Detroit Tigers cap and a black jacket, kept it moving. He greeted each person, occasionally spun a basketball in his hands, posed for photos and said little.

Then a man in a red Pistons cap and matching sweats stepped forward and called out a phrase that reached back to the franchise's past.

"Bad Boys Rule!"

Duren looked up, and for a moment the line stalled. Then he and his teammates broke into laughter.

Over the past two seasons, as the Pistons have made an improbable climb from the league's basement to the top of the standings, the team's success has conjured memories of the club's glory days. Meanwhile, Duren's imprint has grown alongside them. He is the team's center, and also, something like its center of gravity.

Point guard Cade Cunningham remains the team's engine, leading scorer and primary playmaker. He was in the thick of the MVP conversation before a collapsed lung on March 17 sidelined him for 11 games.

But the 6-foot-10, 250-pound Duren has become equally important, the second option who punishes opponents in the paint, anchors the defense and, as much as anyone, embodies the franchise's longstanding hardscrabble identity. He was named an All-Star for the first time this year, the reward for a breakthrough campaign in which he averaged a career-high 19.5 points -- more than seven points higher than last season -- on 65% shooting.

Duren's role expanded when Cunningham was sidelined, and the Pistons kept winning, going 8-3 with the Boston Celtics in position to take advantage had they stumbled. The offense held steady in Cunningham's absence, averaging 116.8 points, while the defense tightened, holding opponents to 107.7 points, more than two points better than before the injury.


"I'm just proud of how we just keep at it and keep fighting through adversity," Duren says, adding that his own play is "not anything that just happened. This is months and months and years of work that I've been putting in and now the world is starting to see."

Coming into the postseason, the Pistons are the Eastern Conference's top seed, and their fate might hinge on whether he can sustain this level of play and, perhaps more importantly, how he leads.

The leadership part, of course, is often the differentiating factor for how a team goes from also-ran to contender. A Sterling K. Brown-type of come up only happens if a team figures out who it is and enacts that identify upon its opponents. Defense and physicality are what the Pistons are best at, and in last year's postseason, they hinted at their potential, forcing the favored New York Knicks to six games.

After a 60-win regular season, when they outmuscled teams, this iteration of the Pistons came into the playoffs with a year's worth of momentum. Whispers of a Finals run were even discussed.

Then reality swiftly put the coronation on pause as the postseason began.

Duren opened the playoffs with one of his worst games of the season, taking just four shots and finishing with eight points and seven rebounds in a dispiriting 112-101 loss to the Orlando Magic on Sunday. Duren was consistently outplayed in Game 1, struggling on both ends of the court. Most jarring was that he couldn't rally his teammates in the ways he has all year.

"They're going to put a bunch of bodies in the paint to try to make it difficult on him," coach J.B. Bickerstaff says. "Our pick-and-roll game, making sure we're executing properly there can create space for him. So, it was a good opportunity for us to see, and then we'll go prepare for the next one."

In Game 2, he played better, finishing with 11 points, nine rebounds and four assists as Detroit used a dominant third quarter to blow out Orlando 98-83. Duren was more active in this game, but his play still didn't reach the level he showed throughout the year.

The test for Duren will be whether he can steady himself and meet the moment as the competition levels up. If not, their playoff run will likely end sooner than anticipated.


THROUGH DIFFERENT ERAS, the best Pistons teams have measured themselves not by flash, but by toughness. It is the same sensibility that shaped past championship squads led by Isiah Thomas, Joe Dumars and Bill Laimbeer in the late 1980s and later those mid-2000s teams guided by Chauncey Billups, Richard Hamilton and Ben Wallace. The current Pistons team carries that lineage forward. Or at least it is trying to establish the necessary mentality to do so.

In a February win over Charlotte, he took a foul from Hornets' center Moussa Diabaté that left him stumbling. The two quickly went forehead to forehead before Duren mushed his right palm into Diabate's face, setting off a brief melee that resulted in four players getting ejected and multiple suspensions, including a two-game ban for Duren.

Two months later, in one of the final games of the regular season, the teams met again in another tense contest. There was more talking, a few shoves, but no fight. After the final buzzer, the victorious Pistons walked off without exchanging handshakes, a moment that Duren helped set in motion

"He's super young, but he's super assertive," reserve forward Paul Reed says. "He knows what he wants. He is not scared of the moment. He's not scared to step up and say something. He does not hesitate to bring energy to the group."

It is this kind of spontaneous leadership that can galvanize winning teams, which the Pistons lacked during their many losing seasons. With Duren, it extends beyond the court into the locker room, where he helps keep everyone loose, and most often, the one in control of the music.

"He's always on the aux," says second-year forward Ronald Holland II, whose locker sits beside his. On some nights it is old school R&B. On others, rapid fire rap, or maybe some reggae. "He's one of the most versatile people on the team when it comes to music."

It is a small detail, but on a young team that only recently learned how to win, it helps establish a rhythm.

Duren has been able to help carry his teams since the Sharon Hill, Pennsylvania, native was a fifth grader throwing down his first dunks. To some extent his elite athleticism obscures the finer points of his game, which he has been methodically developing for years.

By the time Duren finished middle school, he had become something of a phenomenon. He was not yet consumed by the game, even as he was gaining recognition at all-star camps and on the grassroots circuit.

"I did not take it seriously and really do basketball workouts," Duren says. "I played AAU in middle school, but I was just playing. I was just big."

Duren was recruited to play high school ball at Roman Catholic, a respected Philadelphia school with a powerhouse team, which included some of his AAU teammates. He made an immediate impression on the coaching staff.


"He had the basics down to be a big," says D.J. Irving, then an assistant coach at Roman Catholic, who is now an assistant at Florida Gulf Coast University. "He had really good hands at the time, which was not normal for a 14-year-old big man. He could catch lobs, and he could run. But he didn't really have a ton of skill."

Irving, who was a three-time all-conference guard at Boston University and went on to play professionally in Spain, would often stay after practice to play one-on-one with Duren. Afterward, he usually would drive Duren to a relative's home in Chester, just outside Philadelphia, where his mother would pick him up after work.

"We just got close from those car rides," Irving says. "He always had this maturity about him. His voice was as deep as it is now. Sometimes, I was like, 'Is this kid actually 14?"'

That season, Duren helped lead a stacked Roman Catholic squad to the 2020 Catholic League championship, and he held his own against highly touted opponents. After the season, Irving asked Duren what his workout plans were for the summer, drawing a blank look. "He said he didn't know. He had never worked out before," Irving says.

Irving took it on himself to craft a summer workout plan. They did footwork drills, form shots, short hook shots, touch around the basket and ballhandling. At the end, they would play a few minutes of full court one-on-one.

Irving says he does not remember Duren beating him that summer, or if he did, it happened once or twice. What stood out, he says, was Duren's rapid improvement. And the more Duren improved, the more he wanted to work.

"I was so raw," Duren says. "I honestly was just playing basketball because I was tall. He showed me the way and showed me what working is."

From there, Duren began to take off, adding a short jumper to his offensive game and tightening his handle as his scoring and rebounding improved. By the next summer, the dynamic had shifted when Irving and Duren went head-to-head.

"He was so long and quick off his feet, I was having hard time getting my shot off," Irving says. "You could see the development before your eyes. The good part was that he was excited to get better."

In search of better competition, Duren transferred to national power Montverde Academy in central Florida for his junior year of high school, where his team included four future NBA players, including Ryan Nembhard and Jalen Hood-Schifino. The team won the GEICO High School Basketball National Championship and Duren emerged as the nation's top recruit in his class. Having accumulated enough credits to graduate, Duren skipped his senior year of high school and went to the University of Memphis.

The Pistons were stuck in a historically brutal stretch when they acquired Duren, who was the 13th pick, via a draft night trade with the Knicks. He was 18, fresh off a one-year stop in college and stepping into what looked like a perpetual rebuild. Detroit had won just 23 games the season before and had not finished above .500 in seven seasons. The franchise cycled through two coaches and totaled only 31 wins across Duren's first two years, a stretch that included a 28-game losing streak during the 2023-24 campaign.


Offensively, Duren was mainly a rim runner, who averaged 11.6 points and 10.3 rebounds while shooting 65.3% over his first three seasons. On the other side of the ball, he was a quick and powerful athlete, but not yet adept at the finer details of impactful defensive playmaking.

Each season he took a step forward, and this year in particular, with being named a finalist for the Most Improved Player award, the hard work is paying off.

"He's grown in so many different ways," Bickerstaff says after a midseason game against Oklahoma City. "His understanding of how important it is for him to dominate the paint ... there are guys grabbing his chest, grabbing his jersey, pulling him down. But he understands how important it is for us to finish possessions. Offensively, his ability to attack in different ways has come a long way."

When Duren is clicking offensively, "he's unstoppable, and teams have to make very difficult decisions," Bickerstaff says. "Coverages have to change, the amount of bodies they put on him has to change, and it opens it up for everybody else."

He has become better at throwing passes from the elbow, facing up defenders and making quick dribble moves to the basket. "He's just grown as a whole," Cunningham says about Duren. "He's gotten better at everything that he was doing. We have full faith in just getting him the ball in there, him going and figuring it out and getting us points."

Duren spends hours going over film, which has allowed him to figure out ways to cut off opponents with sharper rotations and otherwise tighten his once questionable defense. His defensive rating has improved from a below average 116.2 as a rookie, to this season's 108.2.

Duren says losing tested his mettle, even as they deepened his desire to improve. "It was tough mentally and physically," Duren says. "Coming into the league, you want to be great. You want to come in and just get rolling. But it didn't work like that for me. It didn't work like that for our team."

He believed the Pistons would eventually build a team that could win. The talent, he says, was coming together. What the group lacked was experience, confidence and the intangible knowledge of what it takes to win at the professional level.

"I never tried to soak in the fact that, 'Oh, we're losing,'" Duren says. "I was more like, 'Yo, how can I get out of this cycle? I don't want to be losing my whole career.' So, I focused on what I could do to better myself and my teammates."

Even as he enjoyed the money and privileges that come with the league, there were moments when it felt distant, like something happening around him rather than to him. The team got little national attention, and when it did it was for the wrong reasons. "We didn't really feel the impact of being in the league," Duren says. "We were like the joke of the NBA."


On the court, he kept working. Away from it, he looked for stillness, something he continues as the Pistons have found their footing. Music is often where he settles. Much of it traces back to what his mother played around the house and during car rides, Michael Jackson, Charlie Wilson and his favorite, Erykah Badu. Other times, he drifts toward rock, such as UK artist Yungblud.

Duren describes music as a way to settle himself. It is almost always playing at home or through his headphones. He rarely makes it to concerts, though he did see Badu once. "It was the best concert I've ever been to," he says, drawn to the calm and the spiritual vibe in her songs.

He also turns to meditation, another way to quiet the noise around him.

"I take that very seriously," he says. "I like to be at peace, to settle my brain and just relax."

These sustained efforts, working and trying different things to get better, have set Duren up for success and likely set an example for his teammates.

When the Pistons' breakthrough finally came, it seemed to happen all at once. Detroit won 44 games last season after winning just 14 the year before, the first team in NBA history to more than triple its win total in a single year. Duren calls the transformation a combination of talent and belief. "I think confidence is the word because no matter who is out there now, we believe we can win," he says.

The winning has returned in a way that is familiar in Detroit. The team ranked third in the league in points allowed, relying on relentless ball pressure to slow opponents. Ausar Thompson, a 6-foot-7 swingman, is one of the league's best on-ball defenders, whose quick feet allow him to stay in front of crafty offensive players and make pick-and-rolls difficult to execute.

The team leads the league in blocked shots, even though it does not have a dominant shot blocker such as Victor Wembanyama or Chet Holmgren. The Pistons also led the league in total steals with 856.

Offensively, they are almost a throwback. They finished near the bottom of the league in 3-pointers made, relying instead on pick-and-rolls, points off turnovers and points in the paint.

Whether this style of play can succeed on the biggest stage is unknown. Defensive-led teams are in the minority in today's NBA. Even factoring in the Thunder's title run last year, OKC plays a different kind of defense than what the Pistons employ, and when all else fails can rely on the razor-sharp offensive execution of Shai-Gilgeous Alexander. Detroit's heavy-handed approach allows them far less margin for error.

That said, a 60-win season offers its own answer, even if it does not silence every doubt. And for a franchise that traditionally has experienced success on its own terms, the optimism is warranted.

"I think the similarity to those other teams is sort of a coincidence," Duren says. "We have guys who are just passionate about the game, guys who are natural aggressors, guys who are natural alphas. So it just kind of fits into the history."


Duren credits Isaiah Stewart, the 6-foot-8, 250-pound forward known as one of the league's most fearsome players, with indoctrinating him into the Pistons style. From their earliest workouts together four years ago, Stewart banged Duren whenever he could, bringing an edge to every possession. Over time, their competition formed a tag team built on force.

"We battle, man," Stewart says. "We still battle every day. We push each other and when you have a stablemate like that and you are working eight months a year, you grow a bond. You grow a brotherhood."

With the playoffs here, Duren has more immediate aspirations. He believes the Pistons can win a championship this season. He also wants to be recognized as one of the top big men in the league. Those two goals are intertwined, one only possible if the other fully manifests.

His game has come a long way, but he knows he can be even better. For his part, Duren is eager to grow.

"I'm a big believer in everything that is earned," Duren says. "I don't want anything handed to me. The guys who are regarded as top in my position have earned that. And I am going to do my part to earn it too."


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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2604.28 - 10:10

- Days ago: MOM = 3953 days ago & DAD = 607 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I post Hey Mom blog entries on special occasions. I post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day, and now I have a second count for Days since my Dad died on August 28, 2024. I am now in the same time zone as Google! So, when I post at 10:10 a.m. PDT to coincide with the time of Mom's death, I am now actually posting late, so it's really 1:10 p.m. EDT. But I will continue to use the time stamp of 10:10 a.m. to remember the time of her death and sometimes 13:40 EDT for the time of Dad's death. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.