Reviews For International Love
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Reviewer: HebrewHammer Signed [Report This]
Date: December 31 2013 4:22 AM Title: Prologue

Love this series! Though I'm dissapointed I didn't get to see more of Emma touring Mexico ;)

Reviewer: Saf Signed starstarstarstarstar [Report This]
Date: August 16 2013 3:34 AM Title: Prologue

Just wanted to let you know that I am still following this as well. :)

Reviewer: kingsun Signed starstarstarstarstar [Report This]
Date: August 01 2013 2:03 PM Title: Prologue

Love your stories, don't feel disappointed, we are still following you! I'd love some more "cat and mouse" games! ;)



Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks a lot for your comment, really. It's a huge relief to know that at least someone is still reading this story. And yes, I promise I'll do more of those games soon. Thanks again for taking the time to read and commenting.

Wholia.

Reviewer: gadgetmawombo Signed starstarstarstarstar [Report This]
Date: June 13 2013 10:24 AM Title: Prologue

This chapter was awesome, maybe do something like that with the main cast?...



Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks for commenting. I'm glad you liked the chapter. The main cast is taking things a little slow, since their personalities aren't as... "fiery" as the ones of these girls. But don't worry, they'll get there. Thanks again for reading.

Wholia.

Reviewer: kingsun Signed starstarstarstarstar [Report This]
Date: June 12 2013 2:49 PM Title: Prologue

That cat and mouse chapter was a surprising little diamond! Please keep up with this kind of story as you seem to be planning, it was VERY well written! :)



Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks a lot for your comment. I'm really glad that you liked it. Thanks for taking the time to read it, too. I'll try to post the new chapter soon. Take care!

Wholia.

Reviewer: Rexpro02 Signed [Report This]
Date: March 29 2013 1:02 AM Title: Prologue

Man i ve been lurking this page for aeons and i made an account just to tell you that i freaking love this story. its by far one of the best i ve read. i dont know what is it but i really enjoy the atmosphere of the story, i can imagine the world so easily, i love it :P .keep up the good work!!  



Author's Response:

Hallo:

Well, thanks a lot. That is really flattering. I'm very glad that you're enjoying it so much. I hope you'll like the rest of it. Thanks again.

Wholia.

Reviewer: Quicksilver Signed [Report This]
Date: March 25 2013 9:40 PM Title: Prologue

Paula said, "Trust me, I know," in regard to relationships between people of such different sizes not working.  I'm surprised we didn't hear the story behind that; perhaps we will in a future chapter.  I love the "T-Rex dancing among mice" description of Lena.


I don't see a blurb from Lena's thesis at the beginning of this chapter, but I guess that's because it's technically a continuation of the previous installment.  I like how the thesis passages and the story complement each other: she draws upon her own experience walking Daniel home from the bar when writing about a clumsy person turning into a "Godzilla monster" in a miniature city, and her discussion of burglars more easily sneaking into giant's homes, but in turn being completely helpless if they're discovered by the inhabitants, mirrors Daniel's first meeting with Sarah.  I think, however, that the blurbs might make more sense in the chapters they relate to rather than at the beginning of the following chapters, especially since the story is essentially a flashback, with Lena occasionally telling the reader such things as how little confidence she had in herself "at the time."  The thesis excerpts can start the chapter, while she relates to us the "research" that applies to those findings afterward.


Speaking of Lena's thesis, it seems odd that someone who is scared to be among people significantly taller than she is, according to one of the reasons she gave Daniel for why she's studying in Mexico, is writing a dissertation on the role that size plays in behavior among humans; that makes about as much sense as someone who's afraid of cats and dogs wanting to study veterinary medicine or someone who can't stand the sight of blood wanting to become a surgeon.  She's lucky to be a height that will allow her to look at other societies from far below as well as from far above, and to not seize the opportunity to enrich her views on the subject seems foolish.  Hopefully, her increasing confidence will provide her the bravery to spend some time among relative giants.  It also wouldn't hurt if Sarah tagged along for the trip, since Sarah seems like the type of girl who wouldn't be afraid to stand up to anyone...not even someone whose palm she could stand upon.  If Daniel is mesmerized by the big bodies of Paula, Lena, and Sarah, I can only imagine how much fun he would have in Europe.  Are there any bigger European students, or American students, at the university in Mexico City?  That might be a way for Lena to ease into confronting her fear before making her face the streets of Amsterdam.


I don't know whether you have any specific ideas in mind for the "world tour" story you mentioned, but I was watching the television show The Amazing Race last week, and the contestants were in Vietnam, which I recalled as being home to some of the smallest people in your world, and I couldn't help but picture relatively half-mile-tall racers thundering across the countryside.  (Americans aren't quite that tall compared to Vietnamese in your world, but I didn't have the exact measurements at the time.)  I don't know if you've ever watched The Amazing Race, but if you're looking to give the characters from this story a break, something along those lines could be fun, with multiple teams jetting off to different countries across the globe.


Pkong's question about what stops people from conquering those so much smaller than them also got me thinking.  There are lots of reasons countries go to war, but I'd say that competition for land and/or resources is at the top of the list of the most common.  However, I reasoned that this may not be as much of a problem as it may seem at first thought, since I expect that the map of Earth in your Sizes and Countries universe (S&C) would look much different from the map of the real world (RW).  To show what I mean, probably the highest ratio of S&C height to RW country size is Luxembourg--the Luxembourgers would be cramped into a relative 3 square miles or so of land--while the lowest ratio may be India, which, to people who average 6 centimeters in height, would seem to them to have more land than 21 entire Earths.  If you scaled each country relative to its inhabitants, though, S&C India would only be about the size of RW Luxembourg, while S&C Luxembourg would swell to the size of Pakistan.  Even though some big RW countries like India would shrink to an inconsequential size in S&C, the relatively small RW Netherlands would alone be about three times the area of Russia in S&C.  So, I have a feeling that, if we kept the Earth with the same surface area, there would be less water, maybe even none.  But, since we're already ignoring gravity's impact on such enormous human and animal bodies, let's forget that a bigger Earth would create even more gravity and just say that the planet is indeed bigger.


I don't know if you've ever seen world maps where the national borders are redrawn to illustrate various measures (like this one at http://rs.resalliance.org/2006/02/16/another-world-population-map/ does with population), but when I imagine how your world would look, scaling the countries to the humans' heights, I picture Europe and Russia utterly dominating the Eurasian landmass, with South and Eastern Asia occupying only a small portion of land in the lower right corner.  Certainly, if borders were the same in S&C as in RW, I bet the Europeans would change that pretty quickly, but when Cambodia is 30 square miles in area and a Dutch person probably covers 100 feet per step, a Dutch explorer stumbling upon Cambodia would have been like finding a needle in a haystack.  And even if they found Cambodia, tracking down and killing millions of people who only seem a millimeter tall would have been like trying to get rid of every ant in your neighborhood.


Obviously, I like to mention the Dutch and Cambodians because they represent the most extreme size difference, but I think that even when there's less of a disparity, the giants would not have tried to wipe out the smaller people.  Depending on the size difference, the giants may have used their smaller counterparts to serve such varied purposes as food, fashion accessories, pets, lab animals, or slaves: more as resources to be occasionally harvested and exploited for the giants' pleasure and utility than something to be eradicated. To modern sensibilities, those fates may seem just as reprehensible, but doing these things out of ignorance is a little better than committing genocide out of sheer cruelty.  I wouldn't expect that all the people of your world lived in harmony, and there would have been a lot of death and humiliation inflicted upon captured individuals from the smaller countries, but I think the nations as a whole would have survived.


In the modern day, smaller people would be easier for giants to find, building shiny office towers and emitting electronic signals, but I think science's increasing understanding of the similarities between humans and technology's ability to connect everyone across the size spectrum would inspire international outrage if one country attacked a significantly weaker country.  RW Costa Rica doesn't have a standing army, but for anyone to invade them would be pointless at best and probably turn the world against them at worst.  I find it hard to even picture a non-state actor like a terrorist gaining entry to a country with tiny inhabitants only to get to a city and start stomping on everyone in sight.  Small people could still do some damage if they want to, though: a tiny terrorist's bomb exploding in a crowded area could still kill a few giants, and anyone of any size could create an electronic virus to cripple the computer systems of anyone else.


I know the logic of how such a world as yours could have developed isn't our first concern in this story, but I thought I'd share some logical possibilities for how the "lesser" members of the species still exist.  Keep up the good work.



Author's Response:

Hallo:

OK, first of all...wow! I'm extremely flattered to see that you give all this thought to the little scenario I made here. It means a lot to see that someone is so interested in it to make such a long comment. I'm also glad that you like the little comments spread around the story.

Now, for the thesis thing, I didn't want to give spoilers at the beginning of the chapter, so I decided to put them in the next chapter. I know that spoilers wouldn't be so bad in these cases, but the readers would still already know what to expect from the chapter.

 

About her being afraid of large people, I think that'd be kind of normal. I didn't really mean to put it as if she had some kind of giant-phobia or something. I just thought it'd be kind of easier for someone to study the role of size in societies when you're the big one and can more or less calmly observe the city around you, than if you were tiny and maybe too busy trying to avoid being stepped on, or taking a long while to cover distances. Being the big one might just give you a panoramic view of things. But I agree with you, she should also try to visit a large city. That might give her an even more panoramic view of things. I was definitely considering that from the beginning. That's why, like you said, I picked someone more or less in the middle of sizes.

 

Unfortunately, no, i have never seen The Amazing Race. It sounds interesting and fun, though, so I'll try to give it a look. As for the big ones attacking the little ones, I admit I didn't give it much thought before. But I absolutely love your idea. Invasions would be kind of pointless if the invaded territory or resources were so tiny. Plus, like you said, technology nowadays would let even the tiny ones do some sort of damage. And finally, I guess other countries wouldn't exactly like it if a tiny country was attacked like that. Of course, I know the world would be bound to have conflicts, but as you said, I tried to avoid that point, at least in this story.

 

The world map in general would be much different, I agree, but I didn't think I'd really need to describe how it was. It sure is interesting, but this story might not be the place to do it. I probably will eventually, just...not here.

 

But all in all, you have no idea how much I appreciate you taking the time to share your point of view about this setting in general. Even if I don't immediately do something about them, it doesn't mean I don't take them into account. I definitely will do something about them at some point. Again, thanks a lot and hopefully I'll hear from you soon.

 

Wholia.

Reviewer: pkong Signed [Report This]
Date: March 18 2013 7:42 PM Title: Prologue

So I love the premise of the story, even if it doesn't make much sense logically (What keeps the big countries from conquering the small ones?). My critique is, don't forget your sstories strengths. While your doing a good job on the love story, giantess love stories are a dime a dozen on this site. What makes yours interesting is the setting. I want to know more about the world and how people of widely different sizes get along. For example, in the begginning of the story, the girl was sitting on a bench. But why was there a giant sized bench in a small city? Was it in the middle of the city or in some kind of giants section? And if it was a giants section of the city, why was that boy walking by? Also, how did she pay for that car she stepped on? Would small cars cost less?

These are the kind of details I want to know. Sometimes I find the little blubs you beging the chapter with, like the explination about crime, to be more interesting than the actual story. The more details you can provide about the setting the better! 



Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks a lot for the message. As I said before, I really appreciate when someone takes the time to write a whole paragraph to comment. I know that a few things don't make sense, and as I said a few comments before, it'd be almost impossible to get rid of every logical issue in the setting. I'm kind of counting on the reader to accept a few breaks from reality to just enjoy the story as it is. The idea is entertaining, after all. As for the love story being too common in here, I agree. However, I hope that this story has enough original elements to avoid being boring or seeming repetitive. After all, no two stories are the same.

About the general setting details, like the bench or the money, I know that I skipped a lot, but I didn't think they'd make the story confusing or boring. For example, you're the first one to comment about the bench or the money details, so I'm guessing most people didn't mind them so much. But I agree with you, just explaining all those details and how things work in general could be pretty interesting on itself. I'm sorry to hear that you care more about the couple of paragraphs at the beginning than the story itself, but I can't expect everyone to like it. I'm guessing that it might take a long while to explain all the details that you mean, and as interesting as it could be, it might deviate the plot from the original story, which wouldn't be so good right now, I think.

However, I think you got a very good point there. The setting could definitely use a more thorough explanation. You actually gave me an idea. I'll definitely do that, but in a separate story. Maybe one exclusively aimed at that purpose. Some sort of "tour" around the world with this particular setting. Should be fun to write, actually.

Again, thanks a lot for your comment. You gave me a good idea, and you also helped me understand a bit more of the reader's point of view. I'll definitely take that into account. I still hope you enjoy the story as it is so far. Take care!

Wholia

Reviewer: The Lone Ranger Signed starstarstarstarstar [Report This]
Date: March 17 2013 5:12 PM Title: Prologue

Great Story!!! :) Keep up the great work. :D Love the layout.

Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks a lot. I'm glad you're liking it so far. Hope you enjoy the rest.

Wholia.

Reviewer: Wauster Signed [Report This]
Date: March 14 2013 9:37 PM Title: Prologue

Only an idea Wholia.
Riches are giants and poor people smaller.
Understand?
:D

Author's Response:

Hallo:

Yes, I understand. But I don't think I can do that in this story anymore. Maybe in another one, but right now I don't think I'll be doing that. But thanks for the suggestion.

Wholia.

Reviewer: Quicksilver Signed [Report This]
Date: March 13 2013 9:30 PM Title: Prologue

Certainly, one could nitpick all day about the logic of one nation's size relative to another, like South Koreans averaging 22 times the height of North Koreans.  But, as you said in response to another review, we could also ask how the Dutch can even stand up under their own weight while we're at it.  As with time travel, stories in this genre can be very easy to pick apart if I want to.  But, I don't; in fact, I love the basic premise of this series.

 

What's more important than the believability of the situation, I think, is the believability of the characters, and I'd say you're doing a great job with that.  The two young women we've met so far are neither carbon copies of each other merely in different shades of skin nor are they caricatures of their homelands.  It's good to see people of various ethnicities differing in size yet engaging each other largely as equals, outside of the dynamic of a modern person stumbling upon some primitive, isolated civilization.  Daniel obviously has some things to learn about the great big world and its great big girls, but I don't think he's the only one who will learn from his experiences.



Author's Response:

Hallo:

I'm extremely thankful about your comment. Not only because you say some nice things about my story, but also because you took the time to actually write two paragraphs. I agree with you, though. There are some things hard to explain or make logical sense in the whole setting. I was actually trying to ask the reader to bear with me here. I know that many people reading this would wonder how some aspects of life in general would work. Like the one you said of the Koreans. It's obviously kind of funny seeing them at so different scales. But this story is just for entertaining purposes. I don't think some details like these keep it from fulfilling that objective. So if the reader could just ignore those hard to explain situations, the story itself might be enjoyable.

Second, I appreciate that you enjoy the character developement as well. Many people here only care about what the characters actually do, and not what they think, feel, etc. Some even find it boring. So it's actually very nice to see that it's not all in vain. I hope you continue enjoying the story, and again, thank you so much for your comment.

Wholia.

Reviewer: Wauster Signed [Report This]
Date: March 13 2013 4:10 PM Title: Prologue

I make a story where the wealth determinates the size of people. Riches are bigger, and poor smaller.

But this story are in portuguese.

Can you make one with your vision and thematic?

Sorry for my english :D

Author's Response:

Hallo:

I'm not really sure what you're asking me here, I'm sorry.

Wholia.

Reviewer: Carycomic Signed starstarstarstarstar [Report This]
Date: March 07 2013 1:31 PM Title: Prologue

As an American I LOVEDthe confusion over American vs. Canadian English! It's my fondest wish, in fact, that someday, someone will make a movie about WWII, where the British army officer has a Canadian adjutant as an interpreter of American English.*


*LOL!

Author's Response:

Hallo:

Well, to be honest, to many people who don't speak English as a first language, it's really hard to detect the accent as American or Canadian.

Wholia.

Reviewer: Wauster Signed [Report This]
Date: March 06 2013 2:23 PM Title: Prologue

I love your stories.
Please make any situation with sports like olympian giantess, and give more giantess to the stories.

The best of the giantess and tinies are interactions :D

Thx

Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks a lot for reading and for commenting. Of course, I'll try to put more interaction as the story continues. This is just the beginning.

Wholia.

Reviewer: Stubbornstain Signed [Report This]
Date: March 05 2013 5:38 PM Title: Prologue

I like the prologue, despite it being very short. Although I have to ask why there is a list of countries, many of which on the face of it, seem to be irrelevant to the story.



Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks for your comment. That's a very valid question. There are two reasons, actually. First of all, I use the same table of sizes in other stories, so even if most of them aren't mentioned here, that doesn't mean they don't appear already (or will appear) in other stories. Second, I will be introducing more characters in this story. This is just the first chapter. Plus, I like to have more options open in case the situation presents itself to put more characters in the story. I really don't have all the chapters figured out yet, so they might come handy later.

Also, thanks a lot for reading and taking the time to comment.

Wholia.

Reviewer: aaron Signed starstarstarstarstar [Report This]
Date: March 05 2013 9:21 AM Title: Prologue

Great job. I really hope to see more of this story. Love the character as well as the size difference. It's was a very cute scene when she got drunk, most authors make them just angry but you wrote the gentle albeit clumsy perfectly.

aaron
Ps can't wait to see the other sizes too.

Author's Response:

Hallo:

Thanks a lot, really. I'm glad you're enjoying it so far. And don't worry, there will be many other sizes. This is just beginning. Thanks again.

Wholia.

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