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Printed from https://writing.com/main/profile/reviews/shenana
Review Requests: OFF
44 Public Reviews Given
66 Total Reviews Given
Public Reviews
1
1
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
Ouch! Stomach wounds are NOT the prettiest way to go. As an occasional deer-hunter, I know that the body-- human or no-- is essentially just a paper bag full of wet bits waiting to spill out whenever they get the chance. The beginning to your story was visceral, and cringe-inducing, and brilliant. (On a side note, there was an ad at the top of the page that, after reading the story, made me laugh out loud; it read simply "Pain in Stomach? Contact us!")
Two phrases I really liked: "Puddle of my agony" "A mouth I no longer owned but a thought that was still mine"
Things that could use a bit of polishing up: There is one BIG element that makes this story a little tougher to read-- you switch from the present tense to the past tense halfway through. It is important that you (almost) always retain the same verb tense throughout a story, and when you change it, it should be relative to the events shown. So in this case, if anything, the tenses are backwards. The "afterlife" scene should be present, and the "death" scene should be in the past; or they should both be present, or both past.
Number two: You try to fit a lot of idea into not very much text. Which is a very important ability for any short story writer, but in this case, I felt like the amount of space devoted to actually answering the question "what happens when we die?" was a little small; this is the central element of the story, and though philosophy isn't perhaps as exciting to read as gruesome gunshot wounds, maybe you could try interspersing some of those elements from the "explanation" paragraph into the earlier parts of the story.
Grammar/Diction/Style: The first half of your story is essentially flawless-- didn't notice any spelling errors, the sentences flowed well, and the ideas were coherent. The second half, perhaps because there's not as much driving action, has a tendency to get lost in itself. There were a few sentences that weren't as clear as they could be.

As I thought it, I returned to where I originated. It's not entirely clear whether this means "as I had this thought, I returned to my origins" or "Just as I had thought I would, I returned to where I originated" Also, I would use "origin" in place of "where I originated" since it means the same thing with one third the words.

A happiness ten-fold of what I had put out in my life had engulfed me as I flowed freely in eternal peace. This sentence is tricky. As it is now, it just doesn't flow very well, but changing it is also tough. Perhaps: All the happiness I had generated during life was returned to me ten-fold
And the rest is up to you-- but I believe starting the sentence that way opens up a lot of possibilites to you. Also, instead of "had engulfed" I believe "engulfed" would suffice.

All in all, an excellent tale. Keep doing what you're doing, miss; your willingness to confront harsher, uglier realities here, and your ability to temper them with hope, is wonderful. Hope this helped some, and I'd be pleased to look at any revisions.
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2
Rated: E | (3.0)
Duffryn....it is most certainly not rubbish! I found this to be a fantastically worded poem. You'll notice I gave you a 3.0, and being new to the site may find yourself thinking
"Why? I thought it was pretty good!"
And you'd be right-- it's more than pretty good. It's very good. It has all the elements to be a wonderfully evocative poem. I just have a few tips to offer to help you polish her up.
          First, what is the poem about? Often, poems have a very good "emotional" subject, but the actual events are unclear. In this case, I'm having the opposite difficulty. I know that something happened on this street corner, but I can't tell if it traumatized you, or made you think, or if you're simply mesmerized by this address because you've been there your whole life.
          To this end, I have a suggestion: choose your words carefully. For example, you describe the "pleasing curve" of the pelmet, and the "peace of the people sweating slowly in the sun" but you also detail the "red-stained diamonds" and "mess of wires that reach through the window" which definitely both have an ominous tone. But the clincher for me is the white, unmarked van screeching around the corner. Where I'm from in St. Louis, white, unmarked utility vans barreling through the neighborhood definitely has an unsavory connotation-- it makes us think "danger." So give me some emotional words. Make me feel it. Don't tell me, show me. Give your reader a real sense of how you're feeling. Each of these stanzas is beautifully crafted, I just have trouble seeing the correlation. Set a general tone for the poem-- I realize that life isn't like that, that there is both good and bad mixed in, but surely there is an overall feeling of happiness or sadness for you to draw on. Very well done, sir or madam! Again, don't be at all intimidated by the 3-- consider it a sign that I believe you have great potential. Write on!
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Review of Space Holder  Open in new Window.
Rated: ASR | (5.0)
The most incredibly effective spaceholder I've ever seen! Why, with a spaceholder like this, a man could hold all kinds of space! Not only that, the beauty of the prose, the symbolism of the entire piece....simply marvelous. Exquisite. And yet, daring.
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Rated: 13+ | (3.5)
Short, punchy, to the point, and direct. I gave you a 3.5 not because it's bad, but because I look at your work, and I see that there's clearly potential there, and with a little more attention to detail, you could ramp up the intensity of your work significantly.

Well written. Obviously, I won't comment on plot, since this is part of a larger work, but there are a few things that I feel would make the action flow a little more smoothly.
NOTE!!!! This is a looong review! Don't let that scare you! When I first started writing, this kind of review freaked me out, but look at it this way-- if I didn't think your work had potential, I wouldn't devote this much time to it! *Smile* Also, there are more compliments-- but I hid them at the end, so you'll have to read the rest to get to them.
First, your descriptions tend to be rooted in reality, as with the young man desperately trying to avoid his attacker. But I feel like beginning the story with the larger, more skilled man on top of him with a knife out strains credulity a bit; I feel like once the man has his dirk out, he would just stab him in the stomach, in the chest, anywhere, rather than waste effort going for the throat. However! Starting with the body hitting the ground is good. You could have the boy scramble to his feet just before the attacker gets to him, something of that nature. In writing action scenes, helpless situations are tense; situations where the aggressor stops short of the killing blow for dramatic purposes are cliche.
A few punctuation/grammar/spelling notes:
"A plume of road dust exploded up around the body of the young lad, flat on his back and gasping for air."
Problem! Misplaced modifiers-- this sentence basically is saying that the plume of road dust, which is flat on his back and gasping for air, exploded up around the body of the young lad.

Instead, use a pronoun: "Sprang up around the body of the young lad who lay flat on his back, gasping for air."
"The attacker drew his dirk from the leather holder tied to his leg as he straddled atop of the young man, intent on making the final kill, he grabbed the knot at the top of his dark hair and yanked his head to the side." I would refer to the 'leather holder' as a sheathe. In addition, "straddled atop of" is redundant-- if you're straddling something, you're already on top. Just say "straddled the young man."
But the real issue I have with this sentence is just that- it's all one sentence. When a man sees a sentence that long, well, he gets mighty confused. Break it up into pieces-- the instinct to write long, complex sentences is better than the instinct to always write short, choppy sentences, but as Aristotle says, an excess of something is just as bad as a deficiency.
"His other eye glazed over in throws death" I believe the term you're searching for here is "death throes" which is when people or animals who are recently killed begin twitching while their bodies figure out that they're dead. It's a very good word, but if you use it, really use it! Don't just tell me "he had death throes" Show me! Tell me about how the man twitched out the last of his life-- I know, it's a little morbid, but hey, it's true!
Spelling notes: Grudgenly should be Grudgingly

["nay, nay" raven said, Waiving him off.] Spelled this way, waiving means "releasing of liability or responsibility" such as when you sign a waiver. You're looking for "waving," to describe the motion of the hand.

Style: You use words well. Very well. You are quite the wordsmith, sir or madam, and I tip my hat to you. You clearly have a vivid image of this scene, and I would give you one or two suggestions; use more verbs, use specialized verbs. For example- if I am going to take something out of someone else's hand, that doesn't belong to me, would you rather read a sentence:
"Ben took the teddy bear from his brother's hand"
or "Ben snatched/tore/ripped the teddy bear from his brother's hand"
Verbs are wonderfully versatile, and they're like any other tool; there's always a perfect one for the job.
Try to avoid repetion, and do your best not to say things twice! *Wink*
"Thin brown hair, falling loose from his braid, fell from his balding forehead and whipped about in an errant breeze"
This is a beautiful sentence- errant breeze, great term- except! If it's falling loose from his braid, you don't need to say it fell from his balding forehead, do you? You could either make it shorter-- "Thin brown hair fell loose from his braid and his balding forehead to whip about in an errant breeze" OR you could find a way to say it without repeating two different forms of "fall"
Whew. Done with criticism. On to things I like!
The dialogue at the end. Your gruff, tell-it-like-it-is Torvall is a fun character to listen to, and Raven's disdain is almost palpable. I feel like your action scene is very well written, and could even be extended-- many new authors don't want to write very long action scenes, because they don't want to run the risk of letting action replace plot. However, in this case, I feel like action could drive plot-- let your imagination run free. An extra paragraph of desperate combat would be welcome! You definitely make the reader curious-- I don't know how old you are/ what stage of life you're in, but my advice as a not-very-wise college student is this; short fiction rocks! Every fantasy author you've read, I guarantee, started with short fiction. It can be daunting, trying to make a whole story fit into a short space, but will teach you a lot about your craft. I will definitely be checking out your portfolio! Let me know if you have any questions/comments/concerns... and please, WRITE ON!!!! If you do another draft of this or make changes, email me and I will gladly review the updated version for you!
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Review of Planet Perfect  Open in new Window.
Rated: E | (4.0)
I like it! Just the right touch of satire, absurdity, and a healthy dose of humor. However, I wouldn't be really giving you a review if I only mentioned the things I like, so.....
1. The best way, in my experience to blend two genres, such as action/sci-fi and comedy, isn't to have your story take turns being funny, then intense. To be sure, there will be times when one outweighs the other, but for the most part, I've found that the key is to have both elements always present to a greater or lesser extent. For example, with the president, you did a good job of keeping the air of tension in the story even as he made his absurd pronouncements. Don't lose that-- keep the two in balance with each other.
2. This seems like such a little thing, but space your paragraphs! Writing.com is a wonderful place, but posting stories that you formatted beautifully can be aggravating when they show up as a solid block of text. Throw in some extra carriage returns, check the WritngML options for spacing, etc.
3. Don't get in a rush to finish your story (I do this all the time) I know the feeling-- you have a lot of buildup, and you have an idea for how your story is going to end, and you kind of want to get as fast as you can to the exciting ending you have planned, but make a conscious effort to keep the pacing even throughout the middle-- I felt like the last quarter of the story went by very quickly, because you wanted to get to the "punch line"
4. WRITE ON!!!! I appreciate the auto reward, friend, but I can't take your GPs. You've got a lot of talent, and your story actually made me chuckle out loud (which, in turn, frightened my college roommate-- always excellent!)
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Review of Lost Soul  Open in new Window.
Rated: E | (3.5)
First off, I LOVE your handle. Robin Hobb's Assassin books were some of the best experiences of my life. Second, this is a great poem-- dark, but not depressing. I don't get the feeling that you're trying too hard, simply stating a bleak reality. That said, I'm going to do that thing critics do, which is try to make you even better at your craft.
1. "The body is empty, he is dead" read this out loud and it will sound a little immature, compared to the rest of your poem. Maybe seem a little redundant. One of the best writing tips anyone ever gave me was this: Forms of the verb "to be"- is, am, was, are, will be, etc.-- are to be avoided whenever possible. Not that there's something wrong with them, just that you clearly have much more interesting verbs. Don't tell me what someone is-- use a verb that will show me what you mean. For example, you could say "he tries very hard" or you could say "he struggles." Less is more. When you can use a single word to say several, you're getting somewhere.
2. Repetition! This can be a wonderful thing in poetry-- but only sometimes. Try not to use the same verb more than once, as in your last stanza, where "roams" appears twice.
3. Hyperbaton- this is when you alter the normal sentence order- (i.e. "Roams the dimension of the fourth" rather than "roams the fourth dimension" ) Can be a wonderful tool-- but don't overdo it. It's tempting, because it certainly does give a very 'poetical' sound to things. But poets are allowed to use plain english too *Smile*
I haven't commented on the content of the poem, per se, because I feel like the content can't have anything wrong with it-- I can't change what you say, just give you some tips on how to say it best. You have a good writing style, a good grasp of the language, and I look forward to seeing more from you.
ONE MORE THING!!! When doing your item description, really try to give some idea of the content-- I see so many people post an item that says "a poem I wrote for school." This tells me nothing about what I'm about to read, and, in truth, gives no incentive to read it....you have only a few characters to lure people in. Use them!
WRITE ON!!!
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Review of Conceived Sorrow  Open in new Window.
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
First off, welcome to WDC!!! Whether you intend to be a regular contributor, or just occasionally, you can find what you need here!! Now, for the poem;
Wow. Grim, but honest. Who hasn't been 16 and experienced these fears, and doubts? You do a wonderful job of evoking emotions and making your experiences clear, without giving it a "teen-angst poetry" flavor. I am something of an old-fashioned poet though, so I will leave you with one piece of advice-- when it comes to rhyme schemes, make them consistent. If you want to make every line rhyme with every other line, do it. If you want to make the last line in a stanza rhyme, do it. But keep this in mind-- when people go through a poem, and there doesn't seem to be any rhyming, they have no problem with it. But when they suddenly encounter a rhyme, all they can think about for the rest of the poem is if they're supposed to be seeing a rhyme scheme, but just aren't reading it right. So, when it comes to meter/rhyme schemes, do whatever you want-- just be consistent.
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Review of Turquoise Dreams  Open in new Window.
Rated: 13+ | (4.5)
Wow. This is definitely one of the most fascinating stories I've read in a long, looooong time. The initial scenes of Mr. Barrett's plight are perfect. The only tip I have is this: You have a great gift for descriptive, vivd imagery. Use it to its fullest extent. Avoid chopped up sentences-- you have a small tendency to include strings of simple (one subject) sentences, which makes the story read a bit like a list occasionally. Instead, focus on letting your sentences flow into each other, with the oily, dark texture that the story as a whole possesses.
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Rated: ASR | (3.5)
The cheerful pessimism gives this a kind of ironic, wry edge, which is funny. Clever ideas, but your poem lacks a definite form- it's not quite free-verse, but the meter doesn't remain consistent. My advice for you is this: Tighten up that meter! You're writing in iambic- unstressed/stressed, unstressed/stressed- but the number of feet keeps changing. Good luck! I'd love to see this again once you've worked on it! Write on!
The Masked Potato
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Rated: E | (4.5)
Bravo! As someone who has lived on a farm with only a woodstove for heat during the winter, I can identify with the mingled cheer and hopelessness one feels, even as your wood supplies begin to dwindle. You captured that superbly- "and what a time our last two days will be!" indeed! Your title line carries both humor and despair, and the poem as a whole has excellent atmosphere. The one element I believe needs some work is the rhythm- try adopting a constant syllabic meter, so the rhythm changes won't disrupt the flow.
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Review of Brave Stupidity  Open in new Window.
Rated: E | (4.0)
Hehe. Your intro/item description made me chuckle, and your description of "the trainwreck effect"- when you just can't look away- was quite hilarious. A few suggestions- the second paragraph is pretty long. See if you can break it up, so the reader isn't swamped. Also, in the first paragraph, you wrote-
"to any other day would be an absolute not on your life "NO""- Make sure you change "to" to "on."
The last line- "Stupid-Bulls***" kind of derailed the effect. The vulgarity just doesn't fit with your otherwise elegantly crafted and hilarious story of terror.
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Review of I, Katrina  Open in new Window.
Rated: 13+ | (4.5)
Wow. Paints such a powerful image- the "Empress Bold," with flashing eyes and hair flowing in the wind, descending upon the Gulf Coast. Novel. After the third stanza, there's a line that sticks out on its own for no reason I can discern. In addition- "A dog's last woof"? Your use of the word "woof" made me scratch my head: judging from the rest of the poem, Katrina, Empress of sea-wind and waves, wouldn't be caught dead using the word "woof." It seemed a little incongruous to me.
Those two things aside- great job on crafting a vivid and unusual piece.
The Masked Potato
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Rated: E | (3.5)
Your use of powerful descriptors and vivid rendering of emotions makes this poem stand out. My suggestion would be to focus, however, on the poetry rather than the words. Remember, line breaks don't mean a pause- if you want to control the flow of the poem, you need to use punctuation. Also, try to avoid the temptation to confuse "disjointed" with "stream of consciousness." The 'broken up words' style doesn't convey emotions as well as a naturally flowing, rhythmic poem. Those are my suggestions- you have a real gift for capturing emotions with your words, now see if you can make it flow a little better!
Good luck!
The Masked Potato
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Review of A Mind  Open in new Window.
Rated: 13+ | (3.5)
Intriguing. and I'm not just, as some writer or another said "damning you with faint praise." I really did find this a fascinating and gripping, vaguely 'careful what you wish for' read. Your use of the 2nd person allows you to convey the irony of this piece very well. Your use of a number of metaphors, from the door, to the guillotine, is very skilled. There are a few mechanical/wording errors: your first line: as the first of your steps echoed throughout This doesn't work, because due to the nature of the clause, you are effectively ending a sentence with a preposition, making the reader ask "throughout what?" Your second sentence isn't a sentence at all- there's no verb. The rest of your first paragraph is excellent. The end of that first sentence "among this place," doesn't make sense either. You can't be among a place. Here is where you use 'throughout.' Take root throughout this place makes more sense.
Second full paragraph: As any place does, demons, imperfections take root The line "as any place does" doesn't really make sense- the place isn't taking root. Perhaps something more along the lines of: "As will happen in any place" or "Just the same as any other place"? Make sure you keep your verb tenses consistent- your description of 'the evil' shifts tenses several times. In the second-to-last paragraph, 'wondering' should be 'wandering,' unless you intend to indicate what the person is 'wondering' about.
General advice: Avoid the list effect. Make sure to vary your sentence structure, and use all the sentence types. Try to avoid having more than one simple (one subject, one verb) sentence in a row.
I see a lot of potential in this one. I would be happy to look at it again once its been polished up a little. Good luck, and keep it up!
The Masked Potato.
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Rated: E | (4.0)
I like it- more to the point, I sympathize! One minor point- "While I look to the misty moon" Now, maybe things are different in England...but in America, we don't go to school when the moon is out. It's nice imagery, but it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Nice job on capturing the sense of misery that plagues and will continue to plague every school child unto the end of time.
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Review of The Chanters  Open in new Window.
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
Good stuff, good stuff. Since you asked about punctuation, let's look at that first: When doing dialogue, if the 'speaking' verb is followed by more words, you don't need a period. Thus: I beg. "go away!" can instead be: I beg, "go away!" Likewise with "they hiss." The third stanza- put a period at the end of the first line. in the last line, a comma after ask. Also, the third line of the poem: The Chanters take hold of my soul doesn't fit, rhythmically. Perhaps "With icy hands they grip my soul" or something of that nature. Great job!
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Rated: 13+ | (4.5)
Good play on words. I like the satire element, making fun of this iconic conversation. The "talking heads" factor actually means that the reader isn't distracted at all by extraneous words. The one thing I would look at- in the son's last line, he says "I'm obsessed with T..A...L..K" and then "I'm obsessed with intercourse" shortly after- using obsessed twice in a row is a little repetitive, don't you think?
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Rated: 13+ | (3.0)
Things to correct: These are all examples of things I noticed a lot in your story
there was- subject verb agreement- it should be 'there were'
none-the-less: This should be one word
Sir Hadley looked at the farmer with an angry look in his eye: This is a double one right here. First, looked with an angry look is redundant, and sounds kind of silly. Second, from reading your story, I know you have better verbs than "looked." How about "glared?" that will eliminate the need for describing he was angry. In general throughout your story, avoid the verbs "walked, said, hit." The big verb to avoid is any form of "to be": is, was, are, etc. Instead, use your impressive and diverse array of action verbs.

The young man, or Eloc as he was named: Extraneous statements- Doesn't this seem like you're using too many words for such a simple sentence? How about introducing him when he volunteers.

Subject First:
His followers were his men-at-arms. Strong loyal men who fought for him as they trusted him with their life. They wore an assortment of armor, some made out of bronze, some leather, some had scale armor on, while some had full bronze cuirasses like Sir Hadley had. They were fifty-five in number and they were his best men.
Every sentence in this paragraph starts with the subject. This gives the sense that one is reading a grocery list, and makes your vivid descriptions of the men-at-arms less interesting. Spice it up: Behind the knight rode his men at arms. Strong and loyal men, they fought for him, trusting him with their lives. Though they wore a motley assortment of armor, which included everything from leather to full bronze cuirasses, these fifty-five men were the finest Sir Hadley had to offer.
Now, I'm not saying you need to do my stuff word for word, but do you see the difference?
One last suggestion, then I bust out the praise :) You should decide if you want to focus on Eloc, or the combat in general. You seem indecisive as to whether this is a story centering around a young farm boy, or the whole horde of serf warriors. Maybe you could either A) Give a little more background, or B)give less preamble- you seem to want to jump right into the action, and I can feel your introductory paragraphs straining to let you show some combat. Maybe you could open right before the battle: "The day dawned gray and cold. Eloc stood shoulder to shoulder with his fellow serfs, a pitiful group of soldiers at best." and then commence the battle.
What I liked: good action sequences. Your combat has a nice visceral feel.
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Review of Hot  Open in new Window.
Rated: E | (3.5)
funny! However, your poem lacks flow. Or maybe it flows too much- you should insert some punctuation so your reader doesn't expire from lack of oxygen. Perhaps this is better suited to being a short story- in fact, I would put it into a short story format and see if that might not be a better way of doing it. Well, those are my thoughts. Good luck, and write on!
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Review of A Modern Vampire  Open in new Window.
Rated: E | (3.5)
Hehe. Clever concept. I like it. What I think might help though is varying your sentence types- you have a lot of simple sentences, and a tendency to start with your subject first- this makes your "interview" come out sounding like a grocery list. Try switching things up- use a complex sentence or a compound-complex. I think this would help your piece flow much better, and once that flow is established, everything else pretty much falls into place.
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Rated: ASR | (3.5)
Very funny! As a poet, however, one of the most important aspects to me is the flow- poetry originated as a spoken art, and so without the proper rhythmic aspect, even words as hilarious as these just don't jibe right. My suggestion for you would be to read this out loud, and restructure it to have a consistent rhythm/ rhyme scheme. I look forward to the improved version, if/when it happens- lots of potential here!
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Review of The Best  Open in new Window.
Rated: E | (3.5)
Dude...the irony of this "careful what you wish for" story is really what makes it good. If I had to focus on one area for you, it would be your dialogue; I myself have trouble writing good conversations, but my advice would be to say everything your characters say out loud- if it sounds strange from your mouth, change it. Also, vary your speaking verbs: use "exclaimed, shouted, whispered, teased, cajoled, etc." instead of just "he said, she said" Other than that, a well done story with a clever little hook at the end.
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