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3,092 Public Reviews Given
3,093 Total Reviews Given
Public Reviews
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151
151
Review of Lost in Cinders  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
A death defined by couplets bold,
encased in mysteries untold.
Love abnormal piques the mind
but clues remain there undefined.
The mystery of the fabrics sought
defies the sun and moon for naught.
On we search, through dancing night
and find the flow to our delight.
But, low! That love encased in tulle
seems harsh and bitter; almost cruel
Alas, we find the mystery deep
filled with many thoughts to keep.
152
152
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
Bu George, Percy, you've thrown out a chunk of raw meat for the "I know everything" crowd to chew on. In my own case, I'll jump right in with you. Who knows what the educated elite wants us to think? We can make our judgments based on the bits and pieces that are filtering to us now. That we have the ability to find what's out there.

Yep, all it takes is a brain and willingness to look past the officially allowed knowledge.

This piece seems to have stopped before the end. Is there more coming?
153
153
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (4.0)
The time has come for Lilith's final rule
Her open eyes bring only added grief.
A thoughtless nod, Bolt thunders, like a fool
Corrupted Flair will promise quick relief.

Now, when clear conscience wakes and all is real
we know that being ‘right’ is not the track.
To get along could be a better deal.
Sometimes there really is no going back.

The truth soon takes its toll, and then we say
'I've put my wrath away and hold my tongue.
I’ll not say that again (least not today)’
Irration sometimes rules us when we’re young

154
154
Review of 29 years  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
"Making love on a bed of roses." What an imagination spurring scene. I visualize it with long stem roses, so we have lots of thorns (and someone else to do the low making, in this case. Now, we can picture scene two: taking turns, with needle-nose pliers plucking thorns from each other.

155
155
Review of Karma  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
We watch helping spirit and we see,
ourselves dragged to a brand new world of thought
While learning at the same time that it's we
who have a chance to learn what you've wrought

What helping others does is likely rare,
But still, it fills our heads with notions neat.
Ideas of new friendships fill the air.
Has helpless Hanna gained from here retreat?

When reading helpful hints and all such stuff.
We must believe, as some of it rings true.
For all of what we know is not enough,
to shake the need for friends from what we do.

Delighted, at the inspiration said,
we know it will still be here when we're dead.
156
156
Review by Norbanus
Rated: 18+ | (5.0)
The metaphors like 'blood' and 'shark' and 'deep',
prompts us to sit, and sip a cup of tea.
Attention drifts to feelings we can keep,
then read the verse again so we can see.

Goodbye…No words to squander on lost nerve.
Although such worlds can prove confusing when
a poet's long-sequestered needs deserve
to shine a light on this well-guided pen.

But now, we see spilt milk—the words withheld
until we know the simile holds true.
We sit and wait. The secret silence swelled,
then shrank beneath the weight of our adieu.

The inspiration soars. Is it alone?
The answer's like a droning dial-tone.
157
157
Review of The Stars Above  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
Delightful, how you’ve shown to everyone
what drives this pentameter with renown.
We see our way, but we'll not jump the gun
We'll wait until the climax or meltdown

This verse could go 'most anywhere from here
and win perspective for the form at hand.
What is that rumbling feeling? Is it cheer?
Just know verse holds together stars and man.

When reading pentameter and such stuff.
It helps us to believe that part that's true.
Our view through readers’ eyes is just enough
to shake the disbelief from what we do.

I'm sure to gain a little from what's said,
if I can shake the fog out of my head.

158
158
Review of Easy and Hard  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | N/A (Review only item.)
Always
A step ahead
Another form of verse
I do not know. I'm left behind
Again.

It lies
Useless mirror
It cannot see my face
There is no flaw in me for it
to see

Thank you
For the practice
with this simple cinquain.
Non-rhyming is my weakest form
of verse
159
159
Review of THE PRISONER  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
Once again, we see the truth in the old adage about the word ASSUME. This is a well-done yarn where you describe the experience of riding on a steam-powered train; something few today will have an opportunity to suffer through. I notice that you also exposed the practice, in times past of hiring out children as farm laborers. A deed that would be thought of as criminal in today's protective society.

Nicely done.

Norbanus
160
160
Review of The Old Couple  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
Thank you for sharing this powerful tale of the old man and his dying wife. It struck me as the most poignant story I have ever read. That sounds like an exaggeration, but it is not.

You see, last Saturday, my wife of sixty-one years, Bess, died after a three-year battle with cancer. During her last few months, she suffered and wasted away, much as the woman in your story. Each step you took with your characters has a counterpart in our lives. We, of course, are not on a Texas farm and our crops were business transactions, not corn or wheat. But, we worked them together. Her art was her paintings, but it fits nicely into our story, where the quilt fits into yours.

Again, I thank you for this gut-wrenching experience.

It's a shame we don't have a six rating for this powerful story.

All the best

Norbanus
161
161
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
We watch as no name stares into his bowl
but see a hint of long-gone past and now.
Still wondering at the questions and the role,
of Curls, and what the genre will allow.

A name pops to the fore from ancient Greece
but salted with another hint or two.
Meow! A black cat makes his bid for peace
despite the evil that invaders do.

Foreshadows of another zig appear.
The kiss defies those tears of early scenes,
demanding we read more. (we want to hear)
Should we concern ourselves with what Cyn means?

We guess now, of the travels back in time
and think of Stella's place in modern-day.
No help with names, as yet. We have to climb
that mountain of 'what's up' along the way.
162
162
Review of The Final Day  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
By George, you did it. The whole story is there in only one hundred and twelve characters. You could have shortened it even more as the final word 'again' is not necessary.

It reminds me of the shortest story I've read: 'For sale. Wedding dress. Unused.'
163
163
Review of Courage  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
The metaphors like 'stack the wood' demand;
I sit, relax, enjoy a whiskey sour,
and give attention to the verse at hand.
Then read the words again, within the hour.

Goodbye…No time to squander on depression.
Although such thoughts can prove confusing when
a poet's long-sequestered love obsession
Goes public with a bright, well-guided pen.

And now, we see spilt milk—no words withheld
until the others see her courage, too.
We sat to wait, as the awkward silence swelled,
then shrank beneath the weight of no adieu.

She never said good-bye—she sat alone
The mob hears just the droning dial-tone.
164
164
Review by Norbanus
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)
The jagged glare of truth comes shining through
whenever we peek underneath the prose.
your story tells of fire and napalm too
and turns us to the breeze to clear our nose.

Can knowing truly bring us to the light?
The lack of rhyme and meter makes us think,
those descriptions may yet fit, to our delight
instead of stepping on where it would stink.

Now, reaching for the purgewords' purist page
we touch upon the story's final truth.
If left alone to ponder just the stage,
we might deprive ourselves of the uncouth.

Life’s gentle moments show us but the trim
and leaves what’s underneath remote and dim.

165
165
Review of a silent love  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: 13+ | (5.0)
The golden silence finally has its voice
and shows us something we've not seen before.
We feel the tug of which this verse is full
the truth so which you speak shows even more

But, even though the quietood is gone
the loss is dealt with no resisting hand
the pretty words, in silence, will live on.
No need to block the ears or make a stand

First-person POV jumps to the fore
with loneliness in charge of grief and sad.
Echoes from the shouts smear on like gore
with wishes seeking what they've never had

The golden silence fills the world with prose
that's gone before it knows the way it goes.
166
166
Review of Percy  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (4.0)
This little segment tells us quite a lot.
To female birds, his big feet make him hot.
He'll keep their eggs up from the ice and snow
to give the chicks a better chance to grow.

The tale could go 'most anywhere from here
with Percy as the hero in the fog.
What is that jealous feeling? Is it fear?
The other males are sleeping like a log.

I wonder if a longer tale or trick
might help us spin this yarn as if it’s true.
A big-foot penguin could catch on right quick,
and be a superhero through and through.

We need a little more than what is said,
to plant the tale of Percy in our head.
167
167
Review by Norbanus
Rated: ASR | (5.0)
A couple of weeks, eh? A three hour chat up and the best he can do is a couple of weeks. Elizbeth sounded like she was more into it than he was. The BAA should call a council meeting and fire this guy.

That is a good job of tossing out his many BS lines. Maybe the guy is just not a closer.


168
168
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
While choosing that less traveled as the on
this wordsmith shows a path of some renown.
We walk and learn that we have jumped the gun
when thorny weeds and vines bring a meltdown

This tale could go 'most anywhere from here
and shares the heave load as if we care.
What is that rumbling feeling? Is it fear?
That road ties together Earth and air

We see the rock of ages and such stuff
but can't believe a bit of it is true
until we see that we are not enough
to shake the power of choice from what we do.

Each of us gains a little from what's said,
if we get over caution from our head.
169
169
Review of Sometimes  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
I stare into my bleakest thought.
The darkest fears reply.
"What is the emptiness I've brought?"
I shake my head and cry.

The frozen words ripped through my mind
like what I hoped to buy.
Lo, what is it I thought I'd find?
Where does the future lie?

Now, watch the void's ability
to strip away the need
and bare the word's utility
when talking at full speed

No need for making sense this time
the meaning's not your fault.
Sometimes it feels like it's a crime
with thoughts in summersault

Will understanding ever strike?
That's worth another shrug.
For comprehension and the like
let's sweep it 'neath the rug.
170
170
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
Delightful, how you’ve taken on the task
of showing us all the wet-dreams of the tale.
We see our way, but there's no need to ask
for places where the tickets go on sale.

Your upbeat mood could turn from there to here
for entertainment, or to just plain bored.
I thank you for the warning, but I fear
that madness grabbed me first. My, how it roared.

When reaching for wet-dreams and all that stuff
We find ourselves more certain what to do.
Each of us gained a little (just enough).
to know the hopelessness is all quite true.

I thank you for the verse in which you show
us all some things that we deserve to know.
171
171
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
A lesson learned. A notion on its head.
The static crackles sharply in my mind.
It's drowned by those examples that we dread
but know that they are all we'll ever find.

Past deeds may tell us where to go from here
to see us rescued when the porridge poured.
I thank you for the warning, but I fear
the universe has not yet cleared the board.

When reading social justice and such stuff
I find myself uncertain what to do.
Each of us gains a little (just enough).
to know the leftist path is not what's due.

Congratulations on the guts to show
us something we all deserve to know.

172
172
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
Thanks for the update, cos. It's good to know that Space Kid does not suffer from multiple personalities. *Smile*

I see no reason for confusion around the issue. "Space" seems to be an appropriate nickname for Space Kid's friends to use.

Taytum Willows is a well imagined character. You are doing fine in exposing the personality as the story unfolds. Narrated descriptions seldom work as well as letting them seep out onto the page at their own time.

I enjoy reading your work. Keep at it.

All the best

Norbanus

173
173
Review of Let this go.  
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
Sometimes a bleeding soul may give a start
But grieving often doesn’t stir the pot
so much as joy and things which swell the heart
and show us life without the molding rot

Our hearts all bleed a bit from time to time.
That might assuredly engage our muse
to prompt an awesome story or a rhyme.
Perhaps to still the ink, but we can choose.

Delightful how you’ve found both paths across
this field of broken thoughts and frozen schemes,
and not fall victim to the scourge of loss,
or end in wailing for your shattered dreams.
174
174
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
We watch the story build and what we see,
drags us into a brand new world of thought
While learning at the same time that it's we
who have a chance to learn what you've wrought

What Space Kid does, we know is likely rare,
But sill it fills our head with notion's neat.
Ideas of new friendships fill the air.
Has Munch recovered from her last retreat?

When reading of Space Kid all such stuff.
We must believe, as some of it rings true.
For all of what we know is not enough,
to shake the need for friends in what we do.

Delighted, at the inspiration said,
we know it will still be here when we're dead.
175
175
Review by Norbanus
Rated: E | (5.0)
You have quite a tale here, Nick. Thanks for giving us an excuse to think back at that time in our lives. A similar time in my life came about in the 1930s in woods in Missouri in the US.

You did a heck of a good job of keeping us engaged and sharing a laugh. I did notice a typo, but I don't remember where, so it must not have messed up the story for me.

Cheers

Norbanus
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