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Greg_Barnett
Posted: March 25, 20132013-03-25T02:50:03+10:00 2013-03-25T02:50:03+10:00In: Public

The memories of his last leave and a chance encounter with his lost love inspire a British Officer to survive the last months of War so he can return to England and live the life with her he always dreamed of.

A White Feather

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    5 Reviews

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    1. Richiev Singularity
      2013-03-25T09:34:45+10:00Added an answer on March 25, 2013 at 9:34 am

      I have to say this isn’t the easiest story to put a logline to. How about:

      “After a chance encounter with his lost love, A British officer must survive his units final, war-ending offensive if he’s to return home to her.”

      Hope that helped, good luck with this!

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    2. Richiev Singularity
      2013-03-25T09:42:38+10:00Added an answer on March 25, 2013 at 9:42 am

      “After a former love informs him he has a son, A lonely British officer must survive his units final, war-ending offensive if he’s to return to them.”

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    3. 2013-03-25T11:06:50+10:00Added an answer on March 25, 2013 at 11:06 am

      Thanks for your help. It is a tricky one as the encounter with his love is played out in flashback. So it’s kind of two stories running parallel, although they clearly inform how each other play out. She informs him that their daughter died a couple of years ago which is obviously a massive obstacle for their reconciliation but would be a spoiler in the logline and the time at war is very much about the comradeship between him and hs closest friends. It is a lot to get into a short logline.

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    4. [Deleted User]
      2013-03-26T02:32:09+10:00Added an answer on March 26, 2013 at 2:32 am

      Richiev is on the money.

      My thoughts:

      This is overall TMI, IMO (acronym much, Pitchpatch?). Like a pleasant but unexciting first date, you put it all out there, leaving no sense of mystery, no sense of intrigue. And we have no reason to call you tomorrow.

      Loglines aren’t meant to showcase beginning, middle, and end. Save that for the synopsis, outline, and treatment. Typically, LLs describe the hook/teaser and the Act 1 turning point, maybe hint at the midpoint developments, and the rest should hang enticingly in the air, infuriatingly vague but ripe with potential.

      So, let’s put the clothes back on your LL and only put out enough to whip the reader into a frenzy.

      “Haunted by a lost love, a British Officer dreams of winning her again — if he survives one final mission during the last months of the War.”

      Your LL suggests the the story focuses on what happens in those last few months as the War (WWI or WWII?) winds down. I’ve noted elsewhere: ‘to survive’ is a wimpy, vacuous motivation. Generality sucks the life from LLs.

      We can tweak it a little by hinting at WHAT will try to kill him: one final mission. Hackneyed it may be, as story consumers we instinctively know final missions always goes awry and Very Bad Things happen to the protag. We know the hero will go through hell to get to heaven — his reward being the opportunity to start fresh with his lost love.

      Like Richiev, I need a clear and present purpose to get me invested. If you briefly tease us with a unique and thrilling “mission” instead of leaving it generic, all the better: I’ll illustrate with an easy one:

      “Haunted by a lost love, a British Officer dreams of winning her again… if he survives one final mission during the last months of the War: assassinate Churchill.”

      BOOM! Are you kidding me? That raises so many delicious questions! Is she the one who wants Churchill dead? Is it the oppose: she’d revile him if she found out? Who gave him this traitorous mission? Why must Churchill fall?

      See how a two-word reveal can kick your LL into the realm of high concept? Okay, so maybe your story doesn’t need such a gimmick. What you do need is a logline that bleeds excitement.

      NOTES

      * “return to England” — we know he’s British so we can leave it implied.

      * “memories of his last leave and a chance encounter with his lost love” — both broadly brushstroked by “haunted by his lost love” or similar.

      * What’s missing in the original LL: a sense of urgency and stakes; a suggestion of the specific problem he faces; a hint at how he will be tested by this story, what he must overcome internally to be the man he must be.

      Best of luck, Greg.

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    5. 2013-03-26T10:21:04+10:00Added an answer on March 26, 2013 at 10:21 am

      Thanks guys. This is all fantastically helpful.

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