While visiting America, a young British academic (who has an inflated sense of his own entitlement) must strive to prevent his liaison with a besotted, underage runaway from being uncovered in order to preserve his much-loved career and evade prison.

Dysfunction

6 reviews

Lee Brooks Penpusher · 1 pts

Hi Craig. Thanks. I like your take and, yes, a single adjective to state his flaw would be better. Not comfortable with 'pompous' as my protagonist is quite charming and natural in manner. To me, that word conjures up someone who others might find off-putting. I might use 'egotistical'.

Neer Shelter Singularity · 55,464 pts

After a young british academic is seduced by an underage runaway whilst visiting America, he must hide their relationship to preserve his career and evade prison.

Hope this helps.

CraigDGriffiths Singularity · 20,463 pts

Don't mind the logline. To get rid of the bracketed explanation trying using pompous. It is used a lot to example that type of looking down the nose that British can do.

To avoid prison and save his career a pompous young British academic visiting the USA must hide his liaison with a besotted underage runaway.