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618 Public Reviews Given
819 Total Reviews Given
Public Reviews
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176
176
Review of Visual Poetry  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (4.5)
Dear Storymistress,

I saw this in the Poetry Newsletter Editorial of 4/26/06. Thank you for creating this wonderful descriptive homage to the site. I especially like "ENERGY." I can't think of a single adjective you left out. If I could add a noun or two, I would add "Newsletters," and "contests."

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
177
177
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 13+ | (4.5)
Dear Bill,

I read this from the 4/26 H/S Newsletter. Quite a take and a twist on Siddarthta! Instead of achieving enlightenment, he became Frankenstein!! Reading this, I never could have imagined where the story would go until the end. The line "You don't have to look upon the face of a fool" is classic.

The very last line of the story, [I am nothing. I am no one.] is anticlimactic and should possess some wry, bitter wisdom that the speaker has achieved. The story should end with a bang. Otherwise, it is perfectly written.

Sincerely,
Lois
178
178
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (4.0)
Dear Ben,

I saw this in the Horror/Scary Newsletter of 4/26/06. Congratulations on being featured! I liked this story!! But why do clowns always get such a bad rap? You are a good writer. I liked how you started the story with the man just walking aimlessly and not caring where he goes. That explains how he ended up in the Carnival of Evil, the arcade game that probably inspired you to write this, am I right?

A few mistakes:

[The man was tall and well built] - Hyphenate well-built.

[old, broken down carnival complex]- Hyphenate broken-down.

[Reaching out for some guide and balance,] - Should be 'guidance.'

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
179
179
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
Dear I Am Fiction,

I saw this in the Horror/Scary Newsletter of 4/26/06. Congrats on being featured. Magpies are lovely birds. Your story has an excellent theme, but I feel it could flow better and as it stands is a bit disjointed. For example, "Anytime, Buddy" sounds colloquial and does not fit with the rest of the intelligent vocabulary and writing. Some sentences are fragmented, such as "Good old friend lifted his jet black bill . . ." Last, I do not believe blue jays "feed" on other songbirds eggs! Cuckoos knock eggs out of the nest and replace them with their own eggs; maybe you could put a cuckoo in your story.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
180
180
Review of Jazz Sugar  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (4.5)
Dear Ridinghood,
I really like the metaphor of Jazz music as sugar. I wish I thought of it. The imagery used brought back memories of outdoor concerts I have attended.

This poem surely satisfies my sweet tooth! Mmmmm!

Sincerely,
Lotusneko

181
181
Review by Pen Name
Rated: ASR | (4.5)
Dear Ridinghood,

Wow, this is another amazing poem! I never before heard of merrows. I love mermaids and had a sig with one designed for me (see port if not displayed on my e-mail). Although, the last two and a half lines (the half being the part about green beer) seem weak and cartoonish compared to the epiphany that is the rest of the poem.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
182
182
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (5.0)
Dear Riding Hood,

Well, I guess I lost the contest (Stormy's Poetry Challenge). This is one of the best poems I have ever read. I love it. You have a real gift. The planets/astrology fascinate me. I am marking this as a favorite. You have got to submit this to have it published.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
183
183
Review of Spring  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (4.0)
Dear T.L. Finch,

I saw this in the Poetry Newsletter of 4/19/06. Congratulations on being featured. This poem is lovely, imagery-rich, and haiku-like. My suggestions for improvement is that you do not need to capitalize oak and maple. They are just tree species. Also, change one of the two lines that follow right after each other and are basically identical: walking down our favorite trails/Strolling on a quiet path.

The two opening lines are especially beautiful.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
184
184
Review of After The Fall  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (3.5)
Dear Pita,

I saw this in the Poetry Newsletter of 4/19/06. Congratulations on being featured. I think this poem could be longer. Just as the idea is developing in the reader's mind, the poem ends. Why did you make it so bried?

I LOVE YOUR METAPHOR OF THE "LIDLESS AFRICAN SUN." Aargh, I am so jealous I did not think of it that I am foaming at the mouth right now. I think you need to say, however, "The lidless eye/Of the African sun."

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
185
185
Review of Ol' Fat Charlie  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
Dear Bill,

Awwww! Poor Jack!! I feel so bad for him. I love your idea that Death feels cheated when you save someone's life. Your story has double spacing between some paragraphs, single between others. The only thing I would change is say the old man's teeth were the color of mud. Mud and honey really clashes as a combination. Any analogy using honey should be pleasant.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
186
186
Review of Stomach Ache  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 18+ | (2.0)
Dear Hopkin Green Frog,

I saw this in the Horror/Scary Newsletter of 4/19/2006. Congratulations on being featured. Your story starts off really well. A man has eaten his girlfriend. But then at the end it loses the grip on the reader. How did he swallow an entire head? A ridiculous idea. Why is the head forgiving of him even though he has murdered it? And why the hell does he kiss it and then - they fall asleep? Preposterous.

I would do a rewrite where he has killed and eaten his girlfriend. Have police come interview him, friends and family. Explain why he killed her. Then she is exacting her revenge - you had the right idea - by trying to get out of his stomach and get justice.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
187
187
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
Dear Arch,

I saw this in the Short Stories Newsletter of 4/13/06. Congratulations on being featured! Wow, this broke my heart. The cruelty of the culture and the trials the main character has to go through are well-presented. You did a good job of including cultural references instead of just naming the setting as India. My questions are that if she is from a wealthy family, with servants, why on earth is she sleeping on the "hard earth with a thin sheet?" Also, what time period does this take place in, and what part of India?

My sister is married to an Indian. He has some backwards notions, and she lets him dominate her.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
188
188
Review of The Vegetarian  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
Dear skinbins,

I saw this in the Horror/Scary Newsletter of 3/23. Congratulations on being featured. The title of your story caught my eye. Vegetarians are gentle. How can a non-meat eater feature in a horror tale? This is a clever story, although the end could be a bit more exciting.

I like the takes on the Footprints poem and on Mother Nature.

[allowing the cool air to molest his arms] - Choose a different verb than molest. He is escaping torturous heat, so you don't want a verb with negative connotations here.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
189
189
Review of Try The Uni  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 13+ | (5.0)
Dear BananaMan,

I saw this in the Short Stories Newsletter. Congratulations on being featured! I loved this because I am very interested in Japanese culture. Your story is so fascinating and informative. I appreciate that you took the time to describe the makeup of a sea urchin, rather than just say "it was so gross!" That is why you get five stars.

I love how you described the hostess, her "rainbow burrito" kimono, and the bowing waiter. I like sushi very much, but the only sashimi I like are tuna and salmon.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
190
190
Review of The Great Flood  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: 18+ | (3.0)
Dear ChesterChumly,

I saw this in this week's Short Stories Newsletter. Congrats on being featured! Apart from all the British lexicon, the story is amusing enough. I like the acerbicness of the main character. I just wish you didn't have to include the words "f*** young girls, boys, or both." My personal opinion is that writing, movies, and TV can do without gratuitous obscenities. And I also don't think such a sex tourist would even have the shame to leave his flat after his photos were seen by all.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
191
191
Review of When so amazed  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (2.0)
Dear Essayens,

I saw this in this week's Spiritual Newsletter. Congrats on being featured. I am sorry to say that I coul not understand this poem. The words don't seem to fit together. There is a central theme of listening in reverence, but what ray/tree/stone?
If you want to explain it to me, I will consider changing my rating.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
192
192
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (3.5)
Dear Reverend Bob,

I saw this in this week's Spiritual Newsletter. Congrats on being featured. This sedoka is a worthy effort. You have tackled a very challenging theme. The included background information makes all the difference. This is my favorite part: [Beyond what those of any/Land or race will sacrifice,
/For their own people].

The first stanza did confuse me quite a bit. I had to reread it about five times. Maybe you could revise. Also, this poem could apply to any country besides Japan. I think you should include a couple of cultural references to Japan, otherwise just make it a poem about missionaries in general.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
193
193
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (3.0)
Dear Marilyn,

Awwww, I am sure you will get all the sweet rolls you want when you get to Heaven!

What a great little story. I don't watch Oprah - I don't understand what the big deal is about her - but I have kept a journal since 1992. I have saved all my old ones. It is interesting to go back and read them.

When something bad happens, I use a red pen to record it. Red ink expresses negative emotions. However, my husband saw me very depressed one day. He asked me what was wrong, and I told him that I was re-reading an old journal and it brought back some bad memories and experiences. Brian said that I shouldn't record bad things. At first I disagreed, but it is true that my journal has a positive slant.

You are so lucky to have had your grandmother living with you. With all the obstacles to faith in the modern world, all the doubts cast in a Christian's path, I also turn to children's Sunday School lessons to renew my faith.

Sincerely,
Lois
194
194
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (4.0)
Dear Kenzie,

Thank you for sharing this with me. This is a sweet story. It really speaks as to the innocence of those days when you could go and spend time with an adult neighbor without your parents worrying about your safety.

Mrs. Lescoe was a gem. She reminds me of our crossing guard, Mrs. Carter, who would sit in her car and read her Bible. I did crack up out loud over Mrs. Lescoe's advice for wives and mothers to pray while scrubbing the toilets. But of course that is good advice.

I love how you closed out your story, tying the past to the present, and showing how she impacted you.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
195
195
Review of Prayer 101  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (4.5)
Dear Kenzie,

I saw this in the Spiritual Newsletter, way at the bottom in "Submitted Items." There were far too many for me to read them all, but your brief description caught my attention. I got excited because it addressed an issue I have been struggling with lately, namely, how can I speak to Jesus as a friend when He is not physically present with me and cannot answer me in a human voice?

While your article did not exactly address my questions, it was very good. I learned a great deal. I never heard of an International House of Prayer, or the Harp and Bowl method.

1. Have you actually been told this yourself by emergency personnel, or did you hear this secondhand? How do the responders KNOW the victims are dying? Maybe they recovered later. It is a compelling story, that is why I ask.

2. [Many folks think that prayers must contain "thee" and "thou" in order to have God listen] - Again, do you know any of these folks? I don't know anyone who feels this way, except the Amish. I would change "many" to "some" or "a few."

3. What is a "mainline Christian?"

4. Who is Jim?

P.S. Happy First Anniversary

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
196
196
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (3.5)
Dear Brenpoet,

I saw this in the Spiritual Newsletter. Congrats on being featured.

The theme of your poem is a good one. I am reminded of all the people who live in God's creation and see his wonders every day, yet scoff at "Intelligent design."

Your poem's rhythm and power could be greatly improved if you removed the word "and" from the beginning of the last lines in the stanzas, and just wrote the action verb: Listen, listen. You can also put a colon at the end of the next-to-last lines.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
197
197
Review of A Dark December  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (2.0)
Dear KayJuran,

I saw this in the Poetry Newsletter of 2/16/2006. Congrats on being featured.

The description of the haiku intrigued me to no end. A haiku about paranoia and things unseen! But I was disappointed because the piece did not fit the description. If not for the description, I admit I would not have understood the theme.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
198
198
Review of Klahhane Ridge  
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (4.0)
Dear DreamLand,

I saw this in the Poetry Newsletter. Congrats on being featured. Your haiku has a Zen feeling, because of the blank wall of fog opening your mind. Very nice, a pleasure to read. This brought back memories of when I lived in Tucson. It was always infernally sunny, but once in a while, rainclouds would roll in and the mountains would be shrouded in a Shangri-La mist that was food for the soul.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
199
199
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | (2.0)
Dear Baby Girl,

I am reviewing your piece for the "We Luv In-Depth Reviews! Contest."

Overall Impression

You have chosen a topical subject matter. Alzheimer's is an incredibly devastating disease that takes a huge toll on not only the victim but his family as well. I sense that you have tried to convey that. Most readers would like to read a story with this theme. What made you choose to write about a family afflicted by Alzheimer's? Are you in nursing? Did you have a relative die of the disease?

Since medical dramas are still so popular, a story of this type would have a good chance of being published by a women's magazine like Good Housekeeping, or a family publication like Reader's Digest. Look how long ER has been on TV; now they have Gray's Anatomy too.

Story Structure

Your piece flows well - but - this is not so much a story as a sequence of events. Look at how many paragraphs you have begun with words indicating time: "The next day"/"The next morning"/"The three days"/"When"/"The whole next week"/"Days turned into weeks"/"At about midnight"/"At about five." And those are just some examples.

I knew what would happen at the end. The events all unfolded neatly and in their proper time. Therefore, the story did not hold my interest. A short story should not run like clockwork, not a miniscule event left out. There should be conflict, and a plot twist or two. I really started to get bored when the kids were talking about their dad's stocks and bonds. Another reason I lost interest is because the dialouge seems stilted and artificial. The words are right, but somehow they just lack a genuine quality.

Physically, the story badly needs spacing. The lengthy paragraphs with conversation should not be a giant block, but you should put spaces each time a new character begins speaking. Here is an example:

WRONG WAY
"Say, Schmedrick, have you seen my dachsund, Helmut." "No, I can't say I have. What's going on?" He chased the balloon man down the street at noon, and he hasn't come back for his afternoon Wienerschnitzel."

RIGHT WAY
"Say, Schmedrick, have you seen my dachsund, Helmut?"

"No, I can't say I have. What's going on?"

"He chased the balloon man down the street at noon, and he hasn't come back for his afternoon Wienerschnitzel."

Characters/Character Development

The characters are rather bland. There is little internal or external conflict. I see no discernable character changes or development. Yes, Jake, Mary, and the children accept the disease, but it seems pre-fabricated.

Unless this family is The Waltons, it is implausible that all five grown children as well as their spouses are willing and able to pitch in at a moment's notice. In this modern time, at least one kid would have strayed far from her ranching roots and maybe even been hard to locate. They ALL come back for Thanksgiving?

This family is going through a terrible time, yet it is hard for the reader to relate to them because they seem more like cardboard cutouts than fleshed-out real people. Jake and Mary are not too bad, but the reader can't tell one kid from the other.

There is not a hint of physical description of any of the characters. What do these people look like?

Suggestions

You need to breathe more life into the characters. You do a pretty good job with Jake and Mary, but the kids all seem like clones with the exact same mindset. Have a little conflict. Maybe one child will be too late coming to the funeral. Maybe kids will bicker over who will stay with dear old Dad. Realistically, it is most often one kids who gets saddled with the responsibility of taking care of an aging and ailing parent. My grandmother passed away in December. For the last ten years, when she had been going down hill, my aunt broke her neck working full-time and taking care of her. The other two daughters did not help. One never came around at all, the other visited maybe twice and pushed my grandmother around in her wheelchair and then bragged about it, feeling she had done her part.

Also, I think it is realistic that Mary would secretly be angry at Jake, for forgetting precious memories, for falling apart on her. That happens. Maybe you could have Mary say to herself, "Why are you leaving me? I need the strong man I married. I am getting old, too. We were suppose to be together in our twilight years. Now who will take care of me?"

Lastly, the story completely lacks descriptive writing. You need to make the reader feel what these characters are feeling. Use all your senses: sight, sound, smell, touch, and taste. Describe the house they live in. Describe the food at Thanksgiving.

Jake would not have perished if a full search party was mounted so soon after he wandered off. I think having ALL the kids in the house with an intercom is unbelievable.

Positives

The title is perfect. It fits perfectly with the very end of the story. I think the ending is beautiful in that he died how he would have liked to have died, instead of in a hospital bed.

With re-structuring and re-writing, this story could be a real tearjerker and touch readers' hearts. I would be willing to help you as your editor. And I am not saying I am the greatest short story author in the world - feel free to have at my port!

Sincerely,
Lotusneko

200
200
Review by Pen Name
Rated: E | N/A (Review only item.)
Dear Chocolate is Key,

I saw this in the Poetry Newsletter. Congrats on being featured. I agree wholeheartedly with your handle! As to your delightful children's poem, I say, I WANT A PONY! I WANT A PONY! I WANT A PONY! WAAAAAAAHHHH!!!!!! Sorry, regressed a little.

I can see this illustrated as a super kid's book. One suggestion I have is to change the line "with no cares at all" to "without a care at all." The rhythm is much better that way.

Sincerely,
Lotusneko
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