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Review Requests: ON
442 Public Reviews Given
1,167 Total Reviews Given
Review Style
Depends. Sometimes, in depth, and sometimes, "just the feel of the item."
I'm good at...
I'll let you be the judge.
Favorite Genres
Sci/fi and fantasy. Anything with a happy ending.
Least Favorite Genres
Anything depressing.
Favorite Item Types
Static.
I will not review...
I do not like reviewing anything that was not spell checked. Do your homework first.
Public Reviews
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126
Review of Lost  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.5)
Hi Hunters Moon,

Thank you for sharing your heartfelt poem! I loved the rhyme, and the emotion was gripping!

Keep writing! *Smile*
127
127
Review of MAD COW DISEASE?  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.5)
Hi DR,

I loved your poem.

What did I like best? The message. It reminded me of a poem I wrote about terrorism. Also, I loved the rhyme and the music.

What did I think could be improved?

The last stroff. I didn't like the content. I might have been happier if the poem had stopped with "a half-wit, yes, but not insane."

Great job!

Tadpole1
128
128
Review of Dominick  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: 13+ | (4.5)
Hi Fyn,

This poem brought tears to my eyes. Absolutely beautiful!

I can't choose a best part. It was imply beautiful!

Tadpole1
129
129
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (5.0)
Hi Revelry,

Thank you for the dream moments! I love the jungle and fantasy. I marked your address as one of my favorites!

Tadpole1 *Smile*
130
130
Review of Fish sig  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (5.0)
Hi Scrollie,

Cool art! It reminds me of the Aztec Indians - or should it be the Mayans? With its crackly background I must have inspiration from the ancients. Perhaps it adorned one of the Mayan pyramids?

If only I were versed in hieroglyphics! *Rolleyes*

Tadpole1
131
131
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (3.0)
Fyn – The Storyteller

Hi everyone. Don’t be surprised if I rank your story / chapter a 3.0 or a 3.5. It just means that it’s a good draft, but with a little work, it could be excellent. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. If you don’t agree with them, just ignore them; after all, you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing! *Smile*


Title: The Wandering Storyteller
Chapter: prologue? 1?
Author: Fyndorian

Note: The black bold explains what I am looking for in each category.

Plot: Comment on pacing, effective/quick hooking, tension and confusions/questions.

The name was a hook for me. The pacing was good. Not too much tension, but it floated above. The use of the language sometimes made it a bit confusing.

Style & Voice: Includes author’s/narrator’s voice, but also hitting truly unique voices for each character

Narrator – educated voice
Fyndorian – storyteller – he / she had an understandable voice.
D’orn – ten year old boy – He was obviously less educated, and this showed through his voice.
Aleseller – Dagan – He was also uneducated, and this showed in his voice.
Twin girls – uneducated speech
Twin’s father – uneducated speech

There were voice slip-ups. For example, Fyndorian speaks well, but then there’s a part where her speech is not as good, and on the contrary, D’orn usually has poor speech, but there’s a part where his English is good.

This was a heavy piece to read because of all the uneducated voices. Also, the points of view changed from the narrator, to different characters. I guess that it was omniscient, but it didn’t quite slide from one point of view to another smoothly and thus caused confusion and weariness.

Scene/Setting: Too much it drags? Too little? Confused? Did they use 3 senses? Not really a lot of setting but enough to understand what was happening. Not all three senses were used.

Characters: Believable? Unique? Mary Sueish? Can’t keep names straight? Make it known! Characters are what it’s all about!

Narrator – He poked his head in and told us what was happening.
Fyndorian – storyteller – A noble lady who ran away from a forced marriage and earns her living as a male bard
D’orn – ten year old boy – A young companion that Fyn saved and nurtures. He keeps her company.
Aleseller – Dagan – He was also uneducated, and this showed in his voice.
Twin girls – uneducated speech
Twin’s father – uneducated speech – Someone in disguise, but we don’t know who yet.

Grammar: We can’t all be jedi grammar masters – so those that are… please help! Besides, type-ohs happen to the best of us and 100k words are a lot to keep track of. Please see line by line review. A couple of possible typos.

What I liked best: I liked the plot and Fyndorian’s character.

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!

Hi Fyn,

I liked the plot and the characters. I can guess at least some of what’s coming. However, the poor speech of many of the characters and some of their thoughts is too heavy to read for a long time.

Suggestions for improvement:

Lighten the speech enough not to weary the reader.

Put an action before speech to define the person who is going to talk before they start.

Either choose one character’s point of view, or work on the transition from one character’s point of view to the next or to the narrator’s. It was confusing, especially with the voices.

I enjoyed the read, I enjoyed the plot, and I enjoyed the characters.

*Smile*

Tadpole1


Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1

"And thus Prince Ramius returned the Goblet of Cyrianon to the King of Alyndoria. He had completed his quest and would now receive the dubious honor of the hand of Princess Kelly Kathryn Anne Miranda Thistleweaver in marriage. Of course, what happened next and whether or not they lived happily ever after is another story for another time."

Point of View below – a narrator

With these words, Fyndorian, a young wandering storyteller stood up and gave a quick bow to the watching crowd as all but one man in the back applauded him. Fyndorian walked over to the aleseller in the square while his young assistant happily collected the coins thrown to the ground by the appreciative audience.

"Tis on me, my good lad,"

Point of View below – Narrator’s

said the aleseller to the delicate young man who had enthralled the marketplace crowd for the past quarter hour. Since he'd first see ?? seen ?? them enter the square, the young man and small boy had kept the aleseller's interest.

Point of View below = Dagon’s

This 'un had been a different sort from them what occasionally wandered through the square, Dagan thought to himself. There was an air about this Fyndorian that bespoke of almost the gentry, a turn of phrase that seemed far above an unschooled man and a gentleness about the eyes that belied one who had to scramble for his coin. There was something about those eyes. . . pale green, not the usual ale-brown of the area. . . bright, inquisitive and the lashes of a maid. Dagan shook his head. Fyndorian released his goblet from his belt and handed it to the aleseller to fill with the good earthy ale of the valley.

Handing the carved goblet back to the young man, Dagan continued, "For 'tis but a small payment for so fine a storytelling as we've just had."

POV sounds like the narrator below.

Fyndorian smiled his thanks and turned to see his assistant run up with a healthy fistful of coins.

"Does we got enuffin' to eats this night? Does we?" D'orn, his apprentice of sorts emptied his hoard into a small leather pouch and handed it to Fyndorian. Fyn glanced at the scant dozen coins before closing the pouch and tucking it in his rucksack.

"I think we can safely say that tonight we shall have a feast and perchance slumber well someplace dry and out of the weather." Fyndorian drained his goblet and rehung it on his belt. Another customer, a hard looking, thin man pushed his way up to the aleseller and demanded ale.

Give Fyndorian an action to show that it is Fyn that is speaking. "Come, lad. We had best be seeking our shelter for this night and soon, by the looks of yon sky."

Narrator speaking.
He and D'orn were perhaps halfway across the square when Fyndorian felt a tug at his sleeve and turned to see two children, twins by the looks of them, standing there.

"Our pa wonders ifn he couldst have a word with ye," said the one. "That's him there by ta well," echoed the other. Having spit out their message, the two girls ran back to their father and hid behind him, peering out as the storyteller came over to the well.

Their father was a big man, roughly dressed but still and all, his clothes had a look of quality about them. He was tall, but bent over as he supported his bulk on a stout staff. Shaggy brown hair, badly in need of his upcoming spring bath, hung over sharp eyes and a thinish, tired face.

"Good morrow Sar. Me thinks that the Master'd be after having you in to tell some more of yourn stories if ye be wantin' a warm meal in your belly and a dry space by ta fire this night. We be headin' o' to the Keep as soon as market be done ifn you' want ta follow us."

Fydorian looked down at D'orn and saw the hopeful smile cross his freckled and none too clean face. "The keep, you say, kind sir. Might that be the castle we saw high on the hill east o town?"

"Aye, that'd be it, Sar. Home of the Master, Lord Jamison Hawke of Knightsbridge hisself, just back from the skirmishes and none to happy these days what with the drought and the new high taxes n all. He's had none too good a time of it, if ye don't mind me sayin' so, talkin' out o turn like. But methinks the Master could use a bit of yourn storytellin' and tha' be a fact I'm athinkin'. What with the missus dyin' three springs back, been a long time since there be laughter in ta place. You go on up to th'Keep, Sar and tells them at the gate the old Tom sent ya. They'll be after openin' the gate to ya."

After telling the man that he would attend his master at the keep that evening, Fyndorian and D"orn made their way slowly out of town. They stopped where the riverbank curled away from the beaten track and followed a worn and dusty path down to the river's edge.

Below, Fyn is speaking, but the speech has uneducated slip-ups unlike his speech earlier.
Put an action her to show that it’s Fyn. "Go down around the bend, lad and have yourself a fine swim. Wash the past hand of days dust from your face in the process. Tonight we be entertaining the gentry and we don't want to come across as a pair o ragamuffins now do we? "

Put an action here to how that D’Orn will be talking. (D’orn’s stomach growled.) "Aye, Fyn. I knows. You wants yur p'ivacy, same as you allus do." Shaking his head, D'orn splashed on down around the bend in the river and was soon happily splashing in the cool water. After his initial exuberance faded, D'orn climbed on to a rock in the middle of the river and let the afternoon sun dry both him and his clothes. A Keep tonight, he grinned to himself. Good food even ifn they was way below tha salt. Would be better than some they's had of late.


Point of View below – D’orn’s

Course, ever since Fyndorian had pulled him out of the sewer back in Almsgate, he'd been eatin' right good. Still, he couldn't quite figure out his new friend. Fyndorian was like no one else he'd ever known before. Though he didn't know for sure, he figured Fyn to be old enough to shave but he didn't seem to need to. That and he were so fussy about anyone seeing him. D'orn now, on the other hand had no such problems whether it be bathin' or peeing. It was natural like, all mens was made the same, more or less, now weren't they?

D’orn’s voice goes from very uneducated to easier to read. Still and all, his lot in life had changed for the better and Fyn was brother, father and teacher all in one. D'orn smiled. And it was fun: getting to listen to Fyn spin his tales to the crowds and fun to watch as Fyn would draws the crowds in and keep 'em hangin' on every word. And then yesterday had given him, D'orn a whole copper penny of his own! No one had ever done that before. Smiling contentedly to himself, D'orn fell fast asleep on the rock in the middle of the river.


Point of view – Fyndorian’s

Back up abound the bend, Fyndorian slowly removed his boots, leggings and tunic, dusting and folding them neatly on a nearby log before sliding into the chest deep waters of an eddying pool. Scrubbing his face with a handful of sand, he grinned. Happy to be clean, have money in his pouch and the promise of a warm place to sleep. Life was good.

Funny how things change. Once upon a time to have wealth, good clothes and family. Now to be little more than a beggar, telling tales of far off imaginings in exchange for a handful of coins or a meal. Still and all, far better than what his father had planned. . . marriage to that. . . that-

Fyndorian tore his mind away from the trail his memory was taking. He'd escaped that life. Not that this one was an easy one. And now he had D'orn. But he couldn't leave the little scamp stuck in the grating of the sewer. He couldn't let him be caught and hung for stealing an apple because he was hungry. Who'd only filched the wallet so as he could eat. Who'd likely be . . .well, that wasn't going to happen. Not if he could help it. There was more to that little freckle faced imp than met the eye and he was determined to find it. Hangin' was no good end to anyone, let alone a ten year old boy.

Fyn shook his head and waggled his fingers through his hair. He dressed in a white tunic, jerkin and leggin' which, while not exactly clean, were cleaner that what he had on. Whistling for D'orn, he belted his tunic with his goblet, spoon and fork hanging from it and tucked his short dagger plainly in sight. Not enough of a weapon to be threatening, but enough to defend oneself if necessary. D'orn's head popped up over the edge of the riverbank followed by the rest of him in now dripping wet clothes. Fyn tossed him a cleaner tunic and leggings and wrung out the others before adding them to the pack.

"You ready, Fyn? Looks to be rainin' afore too long." Fyn and D'orn set off down the road that lead up to the keep on the hill. The road was rutted and many a wagon had probably lost a wheel to its rocky path. Fyndorian could tell that D"orn was excited about their destination as he kept up a nonstop prattle of questions and thoughts along their way.

"What story be you tellin' tonight? The one about the princess agin? Or the emerald dragon? Mebe the one about the pirate king or the lady Goddess one? I likes that one. She be after soundin' likes the bestest lady in the whole world that one do! Is there really such a lady, Fyn? Or maybes you tell the one about the Lady Kira who runs away from getting married and travels in disguise? That be one o' my favrites that one bes. Tryin' to imagine anyone being other than their selves. I couldn't do it. Could you, Fyn? I means like for a long time? That'd too way awful hard, I be thinkin'. You eat too many apples earlier, Fyn? You sure do gots a funny looks on yourn face!"

A sudden crack of thunder forstalled forestalled any answer Fyndorian might have made and they both scurried up the last hill to the keep.

Point of View below – narrator’s

In the quickly darkening afternoon, neither was aware of the stranger from the marketplace following a quarter of a mile or so behind, who'd been following them since he'd gulped down his ale after a chat with the aleseller.



Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read your work. Please take any suggestions you like and disregard the rest because only you know what is right for your writing.

** Image ID #1645519 Unavailable **
132
132
Review of Why I'm Fyndorian  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (5.0)
Hi Fyn,

I love this story! It actually brought tears to my eyes! *Cry*

Beautiful.

T
133
133
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (5.0)
Hello Janice,

After reading your other lovely poem, I decided to see what else you had. This one is poignant and brought tears to my eyes. You certainly have talent.

Happy Holidays,

Tadpole1
134
134
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (5.0)
Hi Janice,

Happy Holidays to you too!

When I saw the title of your poem, I just had to read it. I'll let you guess why!

I loved the rhymes, and it brought tears to my eyes. Lucky boys!

Hugs,

Tapdole1
P. S. Oh, and I like poems that rhyme. *Smile*
135
135
Review of Ana and Turquoise  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: 13+ | (5.0)
This was a cute story with a cute twist a the end. It made me smile.

How to make it better? Maybe you could take out the second "turquoise" where it says "The Turquoise design" because I don't think that it is a "turquoise design" but a design using turquoise stones, and the word "turquoise" was repeated.

Thanks for the smile and the happy ending,

Tadpole1
136
136
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: ASR | (5.0)
N. Cain - Where Did the Jellyfish - Go Short Story


Hi everyone. Up front – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. If you don’t agree with them, just ignore them; after all, you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing! *Smile*


Title: Where Did the Jellyfish Go?
Short story: Short story
Author: N. Cain

Plot: This little story is more about playing with words than the plot. *Smile*
Style & Voice: Original and amusing.

Scene/Setting: In his jellyfish world. Well done.
Characters: A cute little jellyfish.

Grammar: Please see line by line review.
What I liked best: The pleasant distraction of an amusing tale. Thank you. *Smile*

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!

This was an amusing little tale. It came full circle and made me smile.

Usually, I point out all the repetitions, but they were what made this piece’s charm.

*Smile*

Very good!

Keep writing,


Tadpole1

Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1

Where did the jellyfish go?
The jellyfish went home. The jellyfish began packing his jellyfish clothes.
"Hello Antarctica!" said the jellyfish. the jellyfish said. The jellyfish grabbed his jellyfish suitcase and hopped in his jellyfish car. The jellyfish drove down the jellyfish road, but then the jellyfish got into a jellyfish car accident.

"Being a jellyfish sucks!" said the jellyfish. the jellyfish said. Instead of discussing insurance policies with the other jellyfish driver, the jellyfish jumped out of his jellyfish car and ran. He was now a jellyfish fugitive. The jellyfish ran towards a jellyfish nuclear testing site. When the jellyfish stopped to catch his jellyfish breath, a jellyfish nuclear missile hit him.

The jellyfish felt strange. The jellyfish felt a strange gravely surface on his jellyfish back. And the jellyfish felt a lot less pressure on his jellyfish body. He opened his jellyfish eyes. He was not in his jellyfish world. When he was a young jellyfish, the jellyfish had heard on an entire heard about new world above the sea sky. The jellyfish had never believed it, but he had not explored the sea sky, for the fear of for fear of monsters who regularly took fish away mysteriously with lines.

There was no fluid sea sky. It appeared like the sea sky, but it looked like a bright blue wall, without movement. With four tentacles, the jellyfish pushed up on the ground that was supporting him. Strangely, the jellyfish realized he was not floating.
The jellyfish looked around. The jellyfish noted there were no other jellyfish.
Where did the jellyfishes go?

Where did the jellyfish go?

The plural of “deer” is “deer.”
The plural of “fish” is “fish,” so the last line could be exactly the same as the first.

In the dictionary, you can find the plural as “fish” or “fishes.” When I grew up, it was only “fish.” For me, “fishes” means different kinds of fish rather than more than one fish. You may find that people will disagree. In any case, you can use exactly the same wording for the last line, which would make it even better.


© Copyright 2010 N. Cain (UN: thenoirgopher at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
N. Cain has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.


Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read your work. Please take any suggestions you like and disregard the rest because only you know what is right for your writing.

** Image ID #1645519 Unavailable **
137
137
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: ASR | (5.0)
N. Cain - Where Did the Jellyfish - Go Short Story


Hi everyone. Up front – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. If you don’t agree with them, just ignore them; after all, you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing! *Smile*


Title: Where Did the Jellyfish Go?
Short story: Short story
Author: N. Cain

Plot: This little story is more about playing with words than the plot. *Smile*
Style & Voice: Original and amusing.

Scene/Setting: In his jellyfish world. Well done.
Characters: A cute little jellyfish.

Grammar: Please see line by line review.
What I liked best: The pleasant distraction of an amusing tale. Thank you. *Smile*

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!

This was an amusing little tale. It came full circle and made me smile.

Usually, I point out all the repetitions, but they were what made this piece’s charm.

*Smile*

Very good!

Keep writing,


Tadpole1

Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1

Where did the jellyfish go?
The jellyfish went home. The jellyfish began packing his jellyfish clothes.
"Hello Antarctica!" said the jellyfish. the jellyfish said. The jellyfish grabbed his jellyfish suitcase and hopped in his jellyfish car. The jellyfish drove down the jellyfish road, but then the jellyfish got into a jellyfish car accident.

"Being a jellyfish sucks!" said the jellyfish. the jellyfish said. Instead of discussing insurance policies with the other jellyfish driver, the jellyfish jumped out of his jellyfish car and ran. He was now a jellyfish fugitive. The jellyfish ran towards a jellyfish nuclear testing site. When the jellyfish stopped to catch his jellyfish breath, a jellyfish nuclear missile hit him.

The jellyfish felt strange. The jellyfish felt a strange gravely surface on his jellyfish back. And the jellyfish felt a lot less pressure on his jellyfish body. He opened his jellyfish eyes. He was not in his jellyfish world. When he was a young jellyfish, the jellyfish had heard on an entire heard about new world above the sea sky. The jellyfish had never believed it, but he had not explored the sea sky, for the fear of for fear of monsters who regularly took fish away mysteriously with lines.

There was no fluid sea sky. It appeared like the sea sky, but it looked like a bright blue wall, without movement. With four tentacles, the jellyfish pushed up on the ground that was supporting him. Strangely, the jellyfish realized he was not floating.
The jellyfish looked around. The jellyfish noted there were no other jellyfish.
Where did the jellyfishes go?

Where did the jellyfish go?

The plural of “deer” is “deer.”
The plural of “fish” is “fish,” so the last line could be exactly the same as the first.

In the dictionary, you can find the plural as “fish” or “fishes.” When I grew up, it was only “fish.” For me, “fishes” means different kinds of fish rather than more than one fish. You may find that people will disagree. In any case, you can use exactly the same wording for the last line, which would make it even better.


© Copyright 2010 N. Cain (UN: thenoirgopher at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
N. Cain has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.


Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read your work. Please take any suggestions you like and disregard the rest because only you know what is right for your writing.

** Image ID #1645519 Unavailable **
138
138
Review of Confustication  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (5.0)
Hey girl,

You got a 5.0 before I even turnded my computer upside down to read the first word!

How on Earth did you do that?

Just what I needed, a silly smile. *Bigsmile*

Tadpole1
139
139
Review of One More Time  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (3.0)
Hi Mizu-chan,

Your story had a great hook, even the name. It made me want to read more. That's my first test.

In your story, I can feel the pain. That's shows that you are a good writer.

What do I suggest to help make it better? First reread it, maybe even aloud, then use spell check. It will find some of the grammar errors. I have pointed out a few.

"and repeats it all" Should be "repeat"

"all over again what would it be?" This needs a comma. "all over again, what would it be?"

"what God’s plan for" should be "what God plans"

"why did you took him again" The verb is wrong here. It should be: "why did you take him again"

"I didn’t told him" The verb tense is wrong here too. It should be: "I didn't tell him"

You did a good job on your story. *Smile*

Keep writing!
140
140
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (3.5)
Hi everyone.– Up front - I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. You may take my suggestions or ignore them because only you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing!

Title: Because I dared to dream
Type: short story
Author: Mt. Jester

Plot: The title of the story caught my eye and made me want to read your short story. The way the beginning was written hooked me and made me continue to read. I felt tension in the beginning, drawing me in. Good job!

The plot was a little confusing because we jumped from the author to a little girl, and we never found out what the book was about.

Style & Voice: The voice is simple and fairly easy to read.

Scene/Setting: There could be more.

We know there is a fountain in the beginning. The girl went to a school, but what did it look like? Was it hot? Snowing? By the sea? In the mountains? At the end, the boy finds a high place with the sun at his back.

Characters: There is a good description of the young girl’s hair and eyes, but we don’t know about the author of the book until the end of the story. We don’t know what the young man looked like either or, more importantly, what it is that he wants to tell the people.

There were three characters:

The author, an old woman, but we don’t know she’s a woman until the end. (I thought she was a man or a boy.)
A young girl, who finds the book. Courageous.
A young man, who inspires many people and burns quite a few.

Grammar: Pretty good.

What I liked best: The concept of daring to dream.

Just My Personal Opinion:

The story drew me in very well, making me want to read on. Bravo!

I like the idea of daring to think for one’s self, to help to open other people’s minds, to dare to dream.

I don’t understand about the breathing fire and burning people. Maybe the story could be improved if we knew some of the ideas or what the ideas were for. Maybe they were to improve people’s lives or to insure their freedom?

It’s a super story that could be even better with a little work. Bravo! *Smile*



Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*

It took me four years to write it exactly how I wanted it. With low light and dying pens, I scribbled and drew and sketched it out, beautifully, until I was so pleased with it that my tears glowed upon the pages. I bound it, too, with scrap materials I had foraged. It was a crude job, but I could afford nothing more and would have nothing less. Finally, I walked to town and left it by the fountain.

This introductory paragraph was very interesting and made me want to read more. Great job!

The first paragraph is written in the first person.

I wonder why she left the book by the fountain.



It took two days for a small girl to find it. She had dark hair like spilled ink, and her eyes shimmered with the dust of fairies. Good images with the spilled ink and shimmering eyes It was as if destiny had led her to my book.

The years passed like a prerecording Why a “prerecording”? , years and years of things that felt like they had been done before in the same manner by hundreds of people across time. I did not forget about my book; while I slowly bent and broke under sun-cursed work, wringing the substance from my hands, I dreamed about the places my true work, my art, had touched, the people it may have known. And the girl did not forget it, either. How does she know that the girl did not forget it? She grew older and became beautiful, her ink hair tied into a bun and her fairydust eyes shimmering now Why “now”? Did she just become intelligent? with intelligence, and she left for the university with my book tucked beneath her arm. How many times she had read it Here it sounds as if the old woman knows that the girl read her book many times. , and how many times more she would! If I had known how she loved it If she knows that the girl read it many times, wouldn’t she think that she really liked it? , my body would’ve flushed out and burst with the intensity of my purpose and the emotion of my dreams. This sentence makes me wait for an explanation.

She went to school to become a businesswoman, inspired and supported by her parents. Then, almost by chance, she found her music. Her voice was powerful and rich, like the ocean or the sky, and it seemed as if it could move the very earth to tremble. She felt her soul unraveling itself in her navel and surging upwards through her vocal chords. Once she started, she could never bring herself to stop. It was my book, my art, that gave her the courage to drop out and pursue her new gift, much to her parents’ chagrin. How does the woman know that her book gave her this courage?

While in school, she had fallen in love she fell in love with with a youthful aspiring politician, and she found a place in him to write her music. Does this mean that the young man inspired her? How could she “find a place in him”? He was hardworking and somewhat taciturn, but he was burning with inspiration and the need for action. And as he struggled to reconcile his ideas of truth and justice with those of the state, she wrapped my book as a gift and gave it to him. She told him its story, or what she knew of it, and he read it carefully. What was the book’s story? All we know is that an old woman wrote it, but how could she know that?

He read it, and he stopped trying to wrap himself around the philosophies of others. Instead, he found himself a high place, and with the sun at his back, he opened his mouth wide and let his fire rip through the streets. Is he actually breathing fire? Maybe he is really breathing inspiration. Why would he want to burn people? People were burned by him. They stopped what they were doing, stunned and breathless, and looked up to his silhouetted body. He placed a new clog in their minds, and more came to him, until cities and nations were calling for his flame. Why would they want him to burn them? If he is actually breathing inspiration, what is the inspiration about? What are his ideas?

All because of my book. All because of four years of low light and dying pens, because I dreamed of something that seemed small to others but was so big, so deep, to me. Once again, what is in the book? What does it represent?

Dreams—amazing things that can turn a life into a world, visions that can stop the movement of the stars. Those who dream have tools placed into their hands that can rewrite destinies, tools like hope and love and passion. Without my dream, I would have died an old, crooked woman with leather skin, alone and penniless, insignificant as the dirt I worked. But with it, I helped birth a star. I helped form a new philosophy. I was the creator of the creator of a new way of thought. We all dreamed big, impossible dreams, and we touched them with power we found inside of us—the moment we made the decision to let our passion free, we were gone.

How does this woman know that the man got her book so many years after she left it in the park? Can you weave this inspiring paragraph into the story a little more?

I hope that you found this review useful. Please remember that you may choose to accept the suggestions or ignore them because only you know what is best for your story. *Smile*

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Review of A Lapse in Memory  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: 13+ | (4.5)
Hello H,

This is quite a nice fastfiction. Good job!

Tadpole1

P. S. What is "Burdon" ? "Bourbon?"
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Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.5)
Hi Rohini,

Well done.

spelling: "the ways of builing the description into"

building

Tadpole1
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Review of Dream World  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: 13+ | (3.0)

Hi everyone. Up front – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. If you don’t agree with them, just ignore them; after all, you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing! *Smile*


Title: Dream World
Author: Mindshatter

General thoughts: Like you said, this is only part of a chapter, so it is incomplete.
Style & Voice: First person point of view

Characters: We begin to have a relationship with the point of view person.
Grammar: The sentences are not all fully punctuated. This is an area to be worked on.

What I liked best: The first paragraph and part of the second one took me on a voyage to death in a dream-world kind of fashion. What I mean is, I felt it. Good.

Just My Personal Opinion: This is a rough draft with lots of good stuff in it. Good luck on adding it to the rest of the chapter.


*Smile*


Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1

Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read your work. Please take any suggestions you like and disregard the rest because only you know what is right for your writing.
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Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.0)
Hi everyone.– Up front - I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. You may take my suggestions or ignore them because only you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing!

Title: The Super Bowl of Space
Author: starfish
Plot: Several teams get together to play soccer. After the game they all became good friends.

Scene/Setting: The setting is what is all around; for instance, the setting could be outside on the soccer field, under a blue sky with puffy white clouds, with the wind blowing. It would have been nice to have a little more setting.
Characters: The characters were all very nice

Grammar: Sentences should always start with a capital letter and end with a punctuation point: period, question mark or exclamation point.

When you write peoples’ names or the names of teams, you should capitalize the words.

What I liked best: I liked the way the story ended with everyone being friends.
Just My Personal Opinion:

Hi Starfish,

Thank you for sharing this wonderful story with me. *Smile*

When you write a story, the first thing to do is to “give it a go.” What I mean is, write down the story as it comes to you. That’s the easy part. After you have written your story, you should go back and try to find your mistakes and improve the story. That’s the hard part. It’s okay to make mistakes; we all do. Finding them and making them better is part of writing too.

Below, I am going to give you suggestions in the line-by-line review. Maybe these suggestions will help you when you write your next story.

My first suggestion is to reread what you wrote, trying to find any errors you might have made. My second suggestion is to type your story in Microsoft Word and use its spell check feature to highlight spelling mistakes. If you do these two things before you post your story on Writing Dot Com, you will probably get more stars.

Now, I am going to do the line-by-line review and make some suggestions for you. Ready?

One more thing, what you wrote will be in black. My suggestions will be in blue.

I’m looking forward to reading your next story,

Tadpole1

Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*

Tigger takes the leed

“Tigger takes the lead.” Is a sentence, so there should be a period after lead. Please note that you wrote “leed,” but the correct spelling is “lead.”


tigger passes it to woody


“Tigger passes it to Woody.” Is a sentence, so there should be a period after “Woody.” Woody is a proper name, so it should be capitalized.


he kicks he scores the crowd goes wild!!!

There are three sentences here. Each one should start with a capital letter and end with a punctuation mark like a period or an exclamation point.

He kicks. He scores. The crowd goes wild!


The mighty dogs win.

This sentence is almost perfect. It starts with a capital and ends with a punctuation point; however, the team name needs to be capitalized.

The Mighty Dogs win.


They went home with a puppy dog smile on their face.

This sentence is very good too. There is just one thing that needs to be fixed. Since you wrote “they,” and “they” is more than one, then you need to write “faces” with an “s.”

They went home with puppy dog smiles on their faces.


The other team sheba, daisy, oreo, luie, chase are really sad because they lost.

This sentence starts with a capital and ends with a period. Bravo. Since there are several teams, there needs to be an “s” on “team.” Also, the names of the teams need to be capitalized.

The other teams: Sheba, Daisy, Oreo, Luie, and Chase are really sad because they lost.


The were kind of jealous because the other team won.

If you reread your writing outloud, you can catch some of the mistakes. Here, you needed to write “They were” instead of “The were.”

They were jealous because the other team won.


When they went home in their space car they felt sad for the cinnamon dogs.

This sentence is perfect except that it needs a comma.

When they went home in their space car, they felt sad for the cinnamon dogs.


When they got home they invited the cinnamon dogs to practice with the mighty dogs so they can get ready for the playoffs.

Bravo for remembering to capitalize the sentence and put a period at the end. Notice that this sentence starts with the word “When” just like the one before. This one needs a comma too.

When they got home, they invited the Cinnamon Dogs to practice with the Mighty Dogs so they could get ready for the playoffs.


The next day it was tied 6 to 6,

This is really a full sentence, so it should have a period at the end. It also needs a comma.

The next day, it was tied 6 to 6.


Daisey kicks it to oreo, oreo kicks it to chase, chase kicks it...he scores!

This is really several sentences. Here is something new. When you write a story, you need to stay in the same tense. Everything was in the past tense before, so it needs to be in the past tense here too. Instead of “kicks,” it should be “kicked.”

Daisy kicked it to Oreo. Oreo kicked to Chase. Chase kicked it…he scored!


The cinnamon dogs win!

This sentence needs to be in the past tense as well. Remember the capitalization.


The Cinnamon Dogs won!


They're going to the superbowl against the mighty dogs.

Can you find the changes in the sentence below? How many can you find?


They were going to the Super Bowl against the Mighty Dogs.


The next morning it was tied 4 to 4.

This is a very good sentence. Bravo!

Pepper got the ball as quick as possible

This is a sentence. Now, here is something new. “Quickly” is an adverb. It helps the verb “got,” so it needs an “ly.”

Pepper got the ball as quickly as possible.


she kicks it to Junior,

This sentence needs to be in the past tense.

She kicked it to Junior.


Luie took the ball then Junior got it back.

Luie took the ball, then Junior got it back.

Junior kicks she scores. 5 to 4, then bubbles tried to get the ball as fast as Pepper but that did not happen.

Junior kicked. She scored 5 to 4, then bubbles tried to get the ball as fast as Pepper, but that did not happen.

Chase took the ball but then woody took the ball back,

When you put two sentences together with words like: “and,” “but,” “or,” “so” and “for” then you need to put a comma before that word. In this sentence, the comma comes before “but.”

Chase took the ball, but then Woody took the ball back.

Did you notice that “Woody” needed to have a capital?


he kicks he scores!

He kicked. He scored!

The Mighty dogs win!!

The Mighty Dogs won!

Guess what? The cinnamon dogs were proud of the mighty dogs.

Guess what? The Cinnamon Dogs were proud of the Mighty Dogs.

After the game Pepper thought we should have an after party!

This sentence needs a comma. Also, I think that you meant “they.”

After the game, Pepper thought they should have a party!


The whole team agreed, so they went back to their home on the moon.



They blew up balloons and made a chocolate fudge cake and hershey brownies and decorations plus horns to blow.

This is a very good sentence except that “Hershey” needs to be capitalized.

They blew up balloons and made a chocolate fudge cake and Hershey brownies and decorations plus horns to blow.


After they made the cake and made the brownies plus blew the horns and the balloons the invited the cinnamon dogs so the can eat brownies and cake and blow horns.

“They” was spelled “the.”

After they made the cake and brownies, plus blew the horns and balloons, they invited the Cinnamon Dogs to eat brownies and cake and blow horns with them.


After that they practice playing soccer with the cinnamon dogs and they were all great friends!!

Since the last sentence began with the word “After,” it would be more interesting to find a different way to start this sentence.

When they finished celebrating, they practiced playing soccer with the Cinnamon Dogs, and they were all great friends!


I think that this was a very good way to end your story. Bravo!
*Bigsmile*


I hope that you found this review useful. Please remember that you may choose to accept the suggestions or ignore them because only you know what is best for your story. *Smile*

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Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.0)

Hi everyone. Up front – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. If you don’t agree with them, just ignore them; after all, you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing! *Smile*


Title: The Unfinished Journal
Type: Short story
Author: Fyn

Plot: Comment on pacing, effective/quick hooking, tension and confusions/questions.

When I read the first part of the story the first time, I had to come back to double check what I had just read. The second time, I could see small scenes from a film and thought that they were very good. Maybe if the first two scenes could be just a sentence or two longer…?

Tension rose and fell several places in the story. Excellent. There may have been one or two very small places where I was confused. See the line by line.

Style & Voice: Includes author’s/narrator’s voice, but also hitting truly unique voices for each character

This was done very well. Each character had a distinctive voice. It was one of the strengths of this piece. *Smile*

Referencing: Harleys in the Dark ages? Knights getting jiggy with their hommies? Or is Tommy dressed in flower power head band in chp 1, but in chp 5 he’s goth? Unexpected oddities are possible, but must be supported! We all need trekkies to demand consistency! no comment

Scene/Setting: Too much it drags? Too little? Confused? Did they use 3 senses? Quite well done.

Characters: Believable? Unique? Mary Sueish? Can’t keep names straight? Make it known! Characters are what it’s all about!

The characters were very well done.

Grammar: We can’t all be jedi grammar masters – so those that are… please help! Besides, type-ohs happen to the best of us and 100k words are a lot to keep track of.

As far as commas go, I only made suggestions when the narrator was talking because I considered the other punctuation to be part of the character in question’s voice. Please see line by line review.

What I liked best: Well, I think that I liked the “journey.” By “journey,” I mean how you took us from the beginning of the story to the end.

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!

Well, I certainly enjoyed this piece. I believe that I read more into it than was actually written. *Smile*

As you will see below, I decided to go ahead and give it a full-blown review. *Smile* I like “telling.” This is “telling.” Some reviewers will say to show the story rather than to tell it. This being said, there was a lot of showing too. One way to try to limit “telling,” if that is what you want to do, is to limit the use of the “to be” verbs, turning the sentences around and applying more “active verbs.”

Please note: I am not suggesting that you do this.

One thing that I did notice that I would change is to try to avoid having the same word too close after it was just used. notice: I just used “that” x 2 hee, hee

All in all, this is a great short story! I hope that you won the contest.

Your friend,

Tadpole1





Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1

The old journal waited patiently. The fine layer of dust coating it shimmered for a brief moment, caused, perhaps, by it being caught in a chance sunbeam slanting under the peaked eve. Or perhaps, not.
Just a note here, either someone told me, or I read somewhere to introduce the point of view character in the first line. Otherwise, the first paragraph is rather poetic. *Smile*

*******~~~*******


Two flights down, a long haired calico cat opened one eye and peered at his mistress.

“Aye, you old thing,” she crooned, stroking the length of the cat’s back, “It’s time. She’s coming.” The cat closed its eye and went back to its dreaming.
This as well is interesting. I could see the two mini-chapters at the beginning of a movie.

*******~~~*******


I had driven close to 5000 miles in the past week and a half. I decided that it was time to land somewhere for a couple of days.

It had been a fun adventure driving a friend to Spokane, Washington as we stopped and saw the sights along the way, yet it was this part of the trip I had been looking forward to. No GPS blinking at me on the dashboard announcing the miles and telling me where and when to turn. That stayed behind in Spokane. I could stop and take pictures whenever my muse inspired me. It was absolutely a grand adventure comma and I loved every minute of it. I’d taken “I took” because the protagonist is talking about the present trip and not the first trip. back roads that curled around mountains, often turning to gravel as I drove. I went down roads with no guard rails and nothing but an abyss off the passenger side. It scared me silly, but I did it, even if my knuckles turned white on the steering wheel.

I was proud and caught myself grinning in the rear view mirror. I pulled off the road at a scenic overlook. Relaxing back against the seat, I once again looked in the mirror. Eyes that turned mossy green when I was happy sparkled back. Very green eyes. nice image My short hair was a mass of curls jammed under my hat. I smiled, thinking I didn’t look all that bad for someone who’d passed the half century mark. Must be the ‘road trip!’ glow, I mused. There certainly was something about the freedom, glorious weather and open roads that called to my soul. My camera, laptop and notebook lay on the front seat. I grabbed the camera and notebook and got out of the car.

Spread out in front of me were three sharp, craggy mountains. Snow shone white against a crystal sky. A lenticular I don’t know this word, and my word processor flagged it as misspelled. cloud surrounded the heights of the tallest one. I’d seen pictures of such clouds before, but never imagined I would actually see one. There are no mountains in Michigan. Dipping below the mountains, a sapphire lake complete with a picture-perfect sailboat skimming across it, sparkled in the autumn sun. I reached for my notebook only to open it and remember I’d filled the very last page the last time I’d stopped. Mental note, I need another notebook.

last used twice in the sentence, notebook x 2
The word “are” stuck out to me because it was the only word in the present.


Half an hour and perhaps thirty pictures later, I was back on the road and aiming for Denver. Denver wasn’t too far from Pike’s Peak, and as I was so close to it, all things being considered, how could I not go see it. It was heading towards late afternoon as I turned off the highway leading south of Denver and drove into Manitau Springs. A quick stop at a service station for coffee and gas, also gave me local comments about where to stay and what I shouldn’t miss.

Missing the turn I needed, I took my next left and spiraled down into town. I could feel my eyes widen appreciatively as I realized that Manitou Springs was a quaint village clinging to the side of the mountain. Old two and three story buildings were crammed together, like crooked, hunched over men braving the cold. Odd shaped windows and decorated porches were brightened by strings and swags of twinkling white lights. The road was cobble-stoned and twisted along the mountain’s edge. High, pointed roofs reminded me of witches witches’ (?) hats. Birch-branch benches were scattered every so often. It was so intriguing that I couldn’t wait to get settled and go explore.

I never did see the hotel that had been recommended to me, but stopped at a tiny motel called ‘The Pike’s Peak Inn.’ My room on the second floor was near the end away from the street. A tall willow cloaked this end of the building and a chattering stream ran alongside. I dumped my stuff in my room, and then called home to let my husband know how far I’d made it and what my plans were for the next couple of days. Agreeing to talk later, I was eager to go poke around the village before the stores closed.

As I was staying right in the middle of town, everything was in within walking distance. I meandered by a log restaurant and immediately decided that was where I’d have dinner, but not yet. The cluster of unique shops beckoned. I wandered through a store full of glass blown blown glass ? objects. Glass balls with swirled colors hung from the ceiling. glass x 2 It was as if I were walking through a rainbow. Very pretty. Were there also prisms dancing on the walls?

The next adjacent store was one with handcrafted candles, wizards, castles, and dragons.Leaning against a six foot tall carved wooden gnome comma I found a gnarled willow wood walking stick that I simply had to have. Outside, I realized just why there were so many benches scattered around. Being at over 7000 feet above sea level, it just didn’t seem as if there was quite enough air to breathe, and it felt good to just sit and absorb the quirky atmosphere of the village. just x 2


Spaces are missing between the first and second sentences.

Is there room for me on one of the benches?


Everyone passing by nodded or said hello. Shopkeepers introduced themselves by name as I entered their shops. I spoke for a few minutes to an older lady named Saffron who said she ran a pottery shop. She pointed across the road to show me where her store was. Smiling goodbye, she headed across the road. “across the road” x 2 I watched her as she disappeared into her store, her long floral skirt brushing the cobblestones as she walked, the tinkling sounds of her jewelry surrounding her in music. as x 2

Crossing the road with every intention of visiting the pottery shop before it closed, I was instead sidetracked by the first store I passed. It was called ‘The Olde Curiosity Shop’ and was, indeed, a most curious building. There was no decision to go in; it was if I were pulled inside. I climbed up the two crooked steps into a vine-covered entryway, I’m not sure this comma is needed. Maybe it is optional for a drop in the voice. and up two more to a door with crescent moon cutouts of stained glass. It reminded me, subtly, of a store I’d once seen on a side alleyway in Boston. It had that delicious feel about it; as if something magical was about to happen.

Tension builds in this paragraph. Excellent!

Inside, beyond a counter hung from the ceiling by chains which had all sorts of things hanging from them was a lady dressed as if she belonged in a castle more than in a store outside of Denver. Long, long tawny hair was looped and twisted and tied with colorful beads. She was wearing a medieval gown festooned with lace and had the strangest blue eyes. Curled up on the counter was the largest long-haired calico cat that I had ever seen. The woman smiled and it seemed as if the temperature in the shop jumped by several degrees. She introduced herself as Lady Alice and told me that the cat’s name was Archimedes.

This was lovely.

hung…hanging (Maybe “hanging” could be changed to something like “dangling”?

I have a question here. Were “all sorts of things” hanging from them (the chains) or it (the ceiling fan)?

Long x 3


I couldn’t resist petting the cat comma and he looked at me with glowing golden eyes and began purring. and x 2

“He likes you,” said Lady Alice. “He tolerates almost everyone unless they are prone to pulling his tail, but he seems to really like you.”
Archimedes was now arching as I scritched You told me that this spelling was intentional; otherwise, I would have thought that it was a mistake. I wonder what other readers think? my fingers gently down his back. He reminded me of a cat from, from somewhere, but I couldn’t quite remember. Oh, yes, she’s got that feeling again. *Smile*

When I was reading about style somewhere, I read that today, it is better to say “he said” than “said he.” I’m not suggesting that you change it, I’m just sharing something that I read.

“Feel free to meander my little shop, there are many delights awaiting your discovery.”

I nodded and wandered on down a step and around a curve. It seemed as if there were no straight aisles within. Items were piled haphazardly, in a colorful jumble of sights and odd scents. Jeweled colored scarves hung or were laid out over rough wooden boards. A snow globe designed to look exactly like the shop had its snow floating around even though no one had touched it.

I smell magic!

I saw tapestry chairs piled with handmade quilts. Ancient trunks, lids open, spilled forth sheet music and jewelry, a stuffed tree frog and stained glass sun catchers. I brushed by a wind chime comma and its melody followed me as I wandered further into the shop.

Enchanting.

A spiral staircase beckoned upward and how about “upward, so I” I climbed the wrought iron stairs two flights up into a room brimming with books. Old books with detailed illustrations vied with ones of buttery leather. A small shelf near a star-shaped lead paned window was curtained in cobbed webs. Leaning against a first edition of ‘The Neverending Story’ was a book with a quilted cover. There was no title, but upon picking it up, I realized it was an old partially finished journal. It had plenty quite a few pages of pages left that I could use. Plopping down on a conveniently placed Victorian chaise lounge, I thought to read a couple of pages. Handmade paper, fragile with time, sewn together with strips of leather, the title page said simply, ‘My Journal.’ pages x 3


The first page, written in a spidery crawl with now faded ink, read
“ October 23rd, 1847
I am a free spirit. I am a creative soul. I am a writer and the need to write is, for me, akin to breathing. My name is Sarah comma and this will be the place, my secret place, where I can put pen to paper and let all that is within me spill freely upon the page.”

“Sara” is one of my favorite names. Hmm, Sarah?

“Strange,” I murmured softly, “My name is Sara, and today is October 23rd. I could have written those words. “
Note: Maybe this was intentional, but “Sara” is spelled two different ways.
“We have this week left the city of Denver, in Colorado Territory. The mountains seem so terrible in their height. They seem as if ferocious beasts and I am frightened of them. Is the English her incorrect on purpose? They are so high and our wagon seems so small to cross over them. My husband says that there are passes and that I must be brave. Yet I have seen what happens when wagons slide off the trail and tumble down into ravines. I pray for their souls.

There is a different voice in the above paragraph. I wonder if it is intentional; especially, since I feel that “Sara” is going to be adding to this journal.

It was kind of Jacob to allow me the coins to buy this journal.”


Jacob? Too, too weird.
“We have little enough to spare and we need carry no extra weight. But he smiled at me whence I asked and said it might be company for me. It is lonely on the road and he is so tired at dark that he eats and is asleep. It is a hard job to get us to our new homestead, and I look forward to being there at last.

I see the different voice in the above paragraph as well. Good job.

Today we stopped at a small lake to water the oxen and the horses. Above us three mountain tops already are white with snow and I know this worries my husband, although he wouldn’t speak of it to me. I know that look and the crease in his brow whence he is worried.

On the trail today the road was fearfully narrow and I held on to the edge of the wagon such that my knuckles turned white. All I could think of were those poor souls we saw a few weeks back.

Very good.

We passed a large waterfall that caught the sun creating a lovely rainbow. It seemed a good sign for our journey.”


I tried to read more, puzzled as I was by the uncanny coincidences, but in the dim light, it was too hard to make out the faint script. Returning downstairs, I would delete this comma with the journal in my hands, I went to the counter to ask Lady Alice its price.

“It is $14.23 with tax.” I began to dig my credit card out of my pocketbook, but before I could even reach for my wallet, Lady Alice said, “I don’t take credit cards, my dearie.”

Archimedes stood up and stretched, his purring, a low thunder.

“Um, I’m not sure how much cash I have on me,” I said as I put my hand in my pocket. I pulled out a handful of bills and a smattering of change. Counting it out, I stopped, just staring at the bills on the counter and the change in my palm. It was exactly $14.23. I looked at Lady Alice, who smiled benignly and scooped up the cash.

Amazing!

I was still staring at Lady Alice as she put the journal carefully in a small, handled paper bag with ‘The Olde Curiosity Shop’ hand lettered on the front above a line drawing of Archimedes sitting in a window.

“Have a good evening, my dear. It is closing time now. Enjoy the journal.” Lady Alice all but hustled me out of her shop, no comma and locked the door behind me with a rusty clank and a loud click.

Still somewhat bewildered, I headed across the street and went over to the restaurant I’d passed earlier. Fairy lights twinkled in the old oak tree that spread its branches over the log building. Inside, it was dimly lit comma and candles flickered on every table. I was seated in the bar section where I had a good view of the fire crackling noisily in the fireplace. I ordered my meal and took out the journal to read as I waited.
“Jacob is good with the team though and we passed safely.“


I had just started reading when my waitress returned.

“Excuse me, ma’am. We seem to be out of baked potatoes. Would rice be okay?”
I assured her that would be fine and picked up the journal again.
“Our foodstuffs are growing low and I am worried that we will run out of food. We had planned to restock in Denver, but the shelves at the general store were nigh on to bare. We were able to purchase some rice but no potatoes. We have little sugar left although we still have some flour. My husband says that we will camp here tonight and that he will hunt tomorrow. Fresh meat will be a godsend.”


My meal arrived and I stared at the rice on my plate. I closed the journal for the rest of my meal.

That’s exactly what I would have done. After all, she couldn’t share her rice with the journal “Sarah.”

Returning to my room, I’d no more than flopped on the bed, when my cell phone rang. I told my husband all about the strange coincidences with the journal. While he understood why I had bought it, I think he thought I was, perhaps, reading too much into it. We said goodnight, agreeing to talk the next afternoon. I changed into my nightclothes and settled in bed to read some more. But I no more turned to the next page, when the long twelve hours on the road and the events of the evening took their toll and within seconds, I was fast asleep.

In the morning, sitting out near the willow tree and drinking the coffee so thoughtfully supplied by the motel, I once again opened the journal. This time I read of Sarah’s journey across the prairie up into the Dakota territories as she filled in her trip prior to buying the journal. It was fun reading about this long ago trek across the same lands I had recently driven on my drive west. driven…drive I read about their seeing a huge tower of rock rising out of the landscape in Wyoming Territory, and how folks there abouts called it ‘The Devil’s Tower.’

I stopped reading and thought about how several days earlier my friend and I had raced down twilight roads to see Devil’s Tower before the sunset. This was just too strange. Realizing I needed to head out if I was going to make my reserved time on the cog train up to the top of Pike’s Peak, I put the journal back in my room, grabbed my camera and headed to the car.

Being assigned a seat in the front of the train as it headed up the mountain, no comma was perfect for taking pictures. I had an unimpeded view as the cog train slowly clacked its way up and up and up. At the top, standing by the sign telling all the history of Pike’s Peak, I took pictures of world spread out before me.

“The views sure are breathless, aren’t they?” said the woman standing next to me.

“Breathless is right!” I agreed. “It feels like there is no air at all up here.” I paused, still trying to catch my breath. breathless…breath “I had no idea what it was like to be at 14,000 feet! I don’t think I like it very much.”

The woman nodded. “I guess you just have to get used to it,” she said as she walked away.

The trip down the mountain seemed to take forever. I was tired comma and the lack of oxygen had bothered me much more than I had thought it might. I had been able to take some excellent pictures, and while normally I would have been excited to get back and download them to my laptop, all I wanted right then was to lie down.

Driving back to the motel, I stopped to let some people cross the street. One woman was using a walker comma and I shifted into park while I waited. She was having difficulty maneuvering it across the stones. Looking around, I realized I was sitting right in front of ‘The Olde Curiosity Shop.’ Or I should have been. But where the shop was yesterday, was now something called “The Twisted Tassel.”

Interesting.

I must be really tired, or I’m not where I think I am. I thought, think…thought looking around. No, there was the restaurant across the way, and the glass blowers shop and. . .

A horn honked behind me, alerting me to the fact that the lady was across the street safely and that traffic was building up behind me. I shifted into drive and returned to the motel. Stopping in at the motel office, I asked the wispy bearded kid behind the counter about the ‘Olde Curiosity Shop.’

“Nah, we don’t have no such place here. Maybe you was thinkin’ about someplace over to Colorado Springs?”

I thanked him and returned to my room. I picked up my cell phone and tried to call my husband. I had no bars and the call didn’t go through.

I looked at the bag from the shop. Plain as day on the bag were the same words and drawing from the day before. But now, there was no address or phone number below the name of the store.
Tension is building.

Settling on the bed, I opened the journal about half way through, where there was no writing. I needed to write; to sort out my jumbled thoughts about the journal and the similar happenings. As curious as I was about her words, I was almost afraid to read more of them. The two journeys seemed connected in some fashion comma and as illogical as it seemed, I was beginning to wonder whose journey was affecting whose.

Writing in a far different fashion than I normally did, I reported all the facts of my strange adventure. Still, with no answers, I turned again to her words.
“We climbed high into the mountains today. The air is thin here and snow has blocked the trail up ahead. Jacob built a fire and we are camped near a rocky outcrop and have some small shelter from the wind here. It is a feeble fire and offers scant warmth. Jacob left a goodly pile of wood nearby and went off to hunt for we have little food. It is very cold and he has been gone some hours now. I am losing the light and know I must conserve the candles. If he is gone much longer, I shall have to gather more wood.”


I stared out the window for some time. I looked at my cell phone and saw I still had no service. Pondering her words, I shut off the light and slid into an uneasy sleep.

I overslept and had to rush to be out of my room before check out time. Getting on the road heading home, I drove out of Colorado and into Nebraska. The sky was blue comma and it was a good day for driving. I hoped to make at least 500 miles today and be able to be home the following day. I missed my husband and longed to be home.

As I drove across the flat prairie, my thoughts were with Sarah up in the mountains. After several hours of driving, I noticed that the sky was no longer blue, indeed, it was now gray with clouds low to the horizon. Fearful of any connections, I headed off the highway as it began to snow heavily. I took the first exit, but it proved to be one without any facilities. Turning around, I headed back to the highway.

“Fearful of any connections” I did not understand the previous phrase.

Blue lights were flashing comma and a barrier was across the on ramp.

“I’m sorry Ma’am,” said a state trooper. “The highway’s closed due to blowing snow. This storm came up out of nowhere. You’ll have to drive down the 302 for ten miles and you’ll come to Aurora. You should find a place to stay there. So, if you’ll just turn around, the faster you head out, the sooner you’ll be able to get out of this storm.”

I sighed, turned the car around and headed back down the road. There was no traffic comma and the snow was now blowing sideways. Driving about twenty miles an hour down the middle of the road, I eventually made my way into Aurora. Finding a small motel with its ‘vacancy’ sign blinking pink and blue, I pulled in and got a room for the night.I asked the woman behind the counter if she knew how long the storm would last. Spaces are missing between the last two sentences.

“Don’t rightly know. This blew up out of nowhere. I expect it will blow itself out come morning. We’ll just have to wait and see. That’ll be fifty dollars for the room. You can get a bite to eat across the way.”

In my tiny room, with the wind howling in around the windows, I tried again to call home. Verizon wasn’t hearing me any better now than it had earlier. Although I was tempted, in a weird sort of way to read further in the journal, I left it closed in my bag and watched reruns on the only channel I could get.

I’d leave it closed too because it’s getting creepy – and cold, brrr.

The next morning, the snow had stopped, but the sky was still looking like it could start snowing snow…snowing at any second. The lady up front said the road was plowed east to where I could get back on the highway if it was open. Phone lines were down, so she couldn’t check, but she figured they’d be open again by the time I got there. She was sorry, but they were closing the motel for the next few days due to a family emergency, so I couldn’t stay an extra night.

I’d been on the road for about half an hour comma and I still hadn’t come to the highway. Beginning to wish I had my friend’s gps with me still, I kept going, figuring that at least I was headed in the right direction. The wind was blowing the snow across the road and I was not making good time at all. I was driving past empty fields and hadn’t seen another vehicle.

Suddenly, something black flashed in front of me comma and I slammed on the breaks. Skidding slidways sideways , I felt a sickening lurch and the back end of my car slid down into a ditch. Shaken, but unhurt, I knew maybe: “realized” the car was going nowhere.

Getting out of the car and climbing up from the ditch, I looked both ways down the road. Nothing. Wait. Squinting my eyes against the blowing snow, I could see a faint light out across a field. Perhaps it was a floodlight left on from the previous night A a mile off, maybe, I thought. I couldn’t stay in the car as the whole back end was buried in the snow comma and though I tried restarting it, it kept dying.

I wrote where I was headed in the journal and left it on the dashboard. Taking the walking stick out of the back seat, and bundling up in all the warm clothes I had with me, I headed out across the field, walking towards the faint light.
*******~~~*******


Jake sat slumped in the living room chair. In his hands, he held Sara’s cell phone. He could see she’d repeatedly tried to call him. The journal she had bought had led the state police in the right direction, but it had been too late. They had found her about three miles from her car. They had no idea about the light she wrote that she’d been heading for as there were neither houses nor lights in the direction she’d been headed. awkward sentence

He opened the journal and read the long ago Sarah’s last entry.
“Jacob has yet to return, and I am fair worried. It is late and I must get more wood else the fire go out. Mayhap he will have returned by the time I get back. The wind grows bitter cold. I must not let the fire die.”

Lots of tension. I have tingles everywhere. Good job.
*******~~~*******


Lady Alice showed Archimedes the fine old walking stick. He purred and rubbed his head along one of the gnarled burls that made it so unique.
“We really need to find a special place for it.” She smiled as she walked walking…walked to the back of the ancient building located on a side alley in Salem, Massachusetts.







4292 words including WritingML tags

Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read your work. Please take any suggestions you like and disregard the rest because only you know what is right for your writing.


** Image ID #1645519 Unavailable **
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Review of Dragons of Fire  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: 13+ | (3.5)
Hi everyone.– Up front - I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. You may take my suggestions or ignore them because only you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing!

Title: Dragons of fire
Chapter: Short story
Author: P Gordon Kennedy

Plot: Comment on pacing, effective/quick hooking, tension and confusions/questions.

There was a nice hook. After reading the first two sentences, I wanted to read on. I marked the place in the story where I thought the tension was highest. There were a couple of places where I did feel a bit confused, but I didn’t mark them.

Zen wakes up and realizes that it wasn’t a dream. He has been transported to the gatehouse of the underworld. He walks back to the Cave of the Abyss and finds the wizard unconscious. Zen remembers the magic box containing good and evil. He is trying to wake the wizard when an elf, Eryd, appears. Eryd explains that the blue dragon – the ice dragon – has been released, and the red dragon – the fire dragon must be released as a counter-balance, or the world will freeze. Together, they manage to wake the wizard. Afterwards, when they summon the red dragon, Eryd falls into a trance. The dragons melt together bringing world balance. Eryd’s sister, Calvyna, wakes him from the trance with a potion. All ends well.


Scene/Setting: Too much it drags? Too little? Confused? Did they use 3 senses?

I don’t think that there was too much description; although, there was some.

Characters: Believable? Unique? Mary Sueish? Can’t keep names straight? Make it known! Characters are what it’s all about!

The characters were heroic.

Grammar: We can’t all be jedi grammar masters – so those that are… please help! Besides, type-ohs happen to the best of us and 100k words are a lot to keep track of.

Generally speaking, the grammar was good. I did give a couple of suggestions though.

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!



Hi Gordon,

Thank you for sharing your story with me. I love stories about dragons. This was a happy story that made me smile. *Smile*


What can I say that might help you to improve it? Well, I think that the story could have ended when the two dragons melted together, bringing balance to the world. I don’t really think that the second elf was needed.

I think that you write well, so here are a couple of advanced ideas, if you want to use them.

I read in a book about style which suggested to write “he said” instead of “said he.” It seems to be the way modern writers are writing.

Here’s another trick. If you don’t always want to say “he said or she said,” you can make something happen indicating the speaker before he speaks. For example,


Xen darted his eyes around the cave, trying not to stare at the stranger. “Who….Who are you?”

The tall stranger with the pointed ears touched his chest with his index and pinky fingers. “The name’s Eryd…an elf from afar I am.”

Xen had never seen and elf before, and he was surprised that the elf wasn’t any taller than he was. “You’re an elf?”

Eryd nodded. “I am.”

Xen glanced at the unconscious wizard. “And what might bring you here?”



Did you notice that I didn’t say “he said” one time, and yet we knew who was talking? What do you think?

Once again, thank you for sharing your story,

Tadpole1

Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*


Xen looked at his surroundings bewildered. It seemed to him that he had just awoken from a very odd dream. Something about a wizard, a cave, a key, and a dragon wrought of fire. Though it all seemed quite dream-like, Xen found his surroundings strangely familiar.
“Could it be? Yes, it is….I’m in the gatehouse to the underworld!” thought Xen.
He picked himself up, grabbed a torch from one of the walls, and exited the gatehouse to begin his hike back to the entrance to the Cave of the Abyss. He remembered what the old wizard Mernomus had told him about maintaining a straight path through the cave, though all those memories now seemed like a rapidly fading dream.
After the long journey back to the cave entrance, Xen looked about. It was night, but he knew not how much time had passed since he had been transported back to the gatehouse to the underworld by some magic, he assumed The sentence would be stronger if it ended “by some magic.” . Stars lit the sky, but there was no sign of the dragon of blue fire or of the old wizard Mernomus.
“Mernomus!” yelled Xen, hoping to find the wizard again.
There was no answer, which was exactly what Xen expected. The last he remembered of the old wizard, he lay apparently unconscious after releasing the fire dragon from a magical box. The wizard had previously sent Xen into the Cave of the Abyss to retrieve the key to the box from the gatehouse to the underworld.
At that moment, Xen’s memories of past events began to clear, as if a dream-like fog had lifted from his mind. He remembered that the first time he was in the gatehouse there were shadow demons in the gatehouse, but they were not there the second time, after the box was opened. Not a moment later, he recalled what Mernomus had said about the magical box’s power to defeat evil.
In spite of new insights from his memories, the situation was still not entirely clear to Xen. “What happened to that wizard?” he wondered to himself.
Then at once came another insight, a very important insight. Xen remembered the place where he and Mernomus were when the magical box was opened. At once, he made for that place with all the speed he could muster in spite of being exhausted from his journey out of the Cave of the Abyss.
The magical box lay open and lifeless upon the ground and next to it laid lay the old wizard. Xen cautiously approached, not certain if the magic contained within the box had been totally exhausted or not. The wizard’s eyes were open staring up at the sky unresponsively, as if in the deepest of trances.
“Mernomus!” yelled Xen loudly, in hope of breaking the trance.
The wizard did not respond. One of his hands was still upon the key to the box and the other held his wand, which still emitted a faint glow.
“Mernomus!” yelled Xen again, this time with growing desperation.
“He can’t hear you…” came a voice from behind.
Startled, Xen whirled around, his heart racing. Not but a few paces away stood a tall young man with blond hair. He held a small bow in his hands.
“Who….Who are you?” asked Xen nervously.
“The name’s Eryd…an elf from afar I am,” replied the stranger.
“You’re an elf?” inquired Xen.
“I am,” replied Eryd in a matter of fact tone of voice.
“And what might bring you here?” asked Xen.
“Well, it seems a fire dragon has been released upon the world and now it seems pretty clear who did it…,” said Eryd pointing at Mernomus as the old wizard remained locked in trance.
“Can you break the trance?” asked Xen.
“Not yet, first I need answers and then I need the antidote…,” replied Eryd calmly.
“What antidote?” inquired Xen.
“First tell me what happened here,” answered Eryd.
“Well, Mernomus here sent me into the Cave of the Abyss to the gatehouse to the underworld to retrieve the key to that box. It was quite strange, There should be a semicolon or a period here instead of a comma. he gave me a potion to make me fly and another to make me invisible to the demons there. When I returned to him with the key, I discovered that three days had passed, though it did not at all feel like it. I gave him the key and he opened the box, releasing a dragon made of blue fire. At that moment, it seems, the wizard was knocked into trance and I for reasons unknown to me, found myself transported by magic back to the gatehouse to the underworld,” said Xen, summarizing his adventures.
“I see. Did the wizard tell you anything about the purpose of the box or the fire dragon?” inquired Eryd.
“He said whatever was in the box had the power to defeat evil, but that is all he told me. Never mentioned anything about fire dragons; I didn’t learn of them until the box was opened,” answered Xen.
“Seems then he didn’t tell you about the other fire dragon…” said Eryd.
“There’s another one?” asked Xen curiously.
“Yes. You see, the one you saw was the blue fire dragon, but there’s also a red fire dragon. Both can defeat evil in the world, but they each have their side effects so to speak…,” said Eryd.
“Side effects?” inquired Xen.
“You see, the blue dragon has the power to defeat evil, but also the power to turn the world to ice. With the red dragon, he has the same power to defeat evil, but also the power to turn the world to fire. Both must be released at the same time each to counteract the effects of the other….” answered Eryd.
“Turn the world to ice!” exclaimed Xen.
“And quite soon unless the red dragon is released,” continued Eryd.
“Where might the red fire dragon be found?” inquired Xen in alarm.
“I hoped you would know the answer to that,” said Eryd.
“Maybe Mernomus does. If you can get the antidote and revive him,” said Xen concernedly.
“It is a very rare potion…,” replied Eryd.
“Check the pockets of his robe, you might find something there,” said Xen.
With that, the elf Eryd began to carefully check the wizard’s pockets, extracting several vials and bottles of potions among other things. As the elf examined the vials and bottles one by one, Xen could not help but notice the sharply pointed ears poking out from under Eryd’s blond hair.
“Ah, this might be it…,” said Eryd.
“Well is it or not! We might not have much time…” interjected Xen.
“On that you’re right we need to release the red fire dragon soon. We have to try,” answered Eryd already administering the contents of the vial to the old wizard.
Moments later, the old wizard groaned and pulled himself up scratching his head. He tucked his wand back into one of his robe pockets and hastily gathered up the vials and bottles of potion sitting on the ground next to him.
“Did it work?” were the first world words out of the old wizard’s mouth, coming in a spaced-out sort of tone.
“The blue fire dragon has been released from the box, but where’s the red dragon, without him the world shall freeze,” replied Xen.
“The red dragon wasn’t released?” said Mernomus still sounding spaced-out.
“No, and we need to know how to release him now!” yelled Xen.
“Who are you?” asked Mernomus gesturing at Eryd.
“An elf, my name’s Eryd,” replied Eryd in a matter of fact tone.
“And what brought you here?” asked Mernomus.
“The blue fire dragon has been released, what else?” said Eryd.
“Any idea how to release the red dragon?” asked Xen.
“Try….Try turning the key the other way,” replied Mernomus.
Eryd without hesitation walked up to the box and began turning the key. It made a loud click and a glow began emanating from the box. At first, it was yellow, but it steadily grew redder.
“The antidote! What if you’re put in trance like Mernomus!” exclaimed Xen.
“Don’t worry…” replied Eryd calmly.
The glow from the box steadily grew in intensity as sparks flew into the sky. Suddenly, there came a rushing of blue fire in the sky as the blue fire dragon soared overhead. Ice crystals began to grow on everything in sight. Xen found himself shivering as the temperature suddenly and dramatically plummeted.
“What’s happening!” exclaimed Xen.
“The world’s freezing, what do you think!” yelled Eryd.
“If that red dragon doesn’t come out soon…” said Xen now more worried than ever. There is tension here. This is good. *Smile*
“I know I know…,” replied Eryd.
The old wizard Mernomus had gotten up and had begun to pace about, still recovering from his trance. Eryd turned the key again as hard as he could. The glow from the box intensified, and then it exploded in light. There was a rush of red sparks comma and a dragon wrought of red flames flew into the sky, leaving an incredibly powerful burst of heat in its wake.
The glow from the box dimmed, Eryd the elf lay silently on the ground having been knocked into trance, his blond hair scattered upon the rapidly melting ice. A look of peacefulness was upon his fair face.
In the sky above the red and blue fire dragons dueled in cascading showers of sparks, eventually merging into one, showing in shades of red, orange, blue, and purple. This is poetical. I like the fact that they melt into one. *Smile* Then came a flash that illuminated the sky as if in daytime. A moment later, darkness returned, the fire dragons were gone comma and no light but the stars shown in the sky.
A purplish glow illuminated the eastern sky, the very first sign of dawn. Xen stood over the elf who was locked deeply in trance.
“The Antidote….The Antidote!” yelled Xen.
“What?” asked Mernomus, now having nearly recovered from his own trance.
“We need the antidote to awaken Eryd!” exclaimed Xen.
The old wizard’s hand fumbled about his pockets extracting various crystal vials and bottles. He examined each of them comma and one by one, returned them to his pockets. When the wizard came upon his last vial, barely a quarter full with liquid, he paused.
“Ah, this is the stuff to break such a trance, semicolon though I may not have enough…” said Mernomus.
“Try…We have to try!” interjected Xen.
“That we will,” said Mernomus as he prepared to administer the last of the liquid in the vial.
Mernomus gave the last of the liquid in the vial to the elf and reached for his wand, casting aside the empty vial. Eryd stirred a bit, but seemed unable to fully come out of the trance. Mernomus shot a bolt of energy from his wand as Xen looked on worriedly.
“That’s odd, he’s not responding,” said Mernomus.
“Not responding!” gasped Xen with dread.
“We need more comma but I don’t have it,” replied Mernomus.
By now, the light in the eastern sky had grown brighter. The sun was about to emerge over the horizon heralding the start of a new day. A day without shadow demons in the gatehouse to the underworld, but unfortunately, it seemed, also without one of nature’s fairest creatures, the elf Eryd.
As the sun entered the sky comma there came a voice from behind, a calm and reassuring voice coming from a beautiful young lady saying, “Do not worry my friends everything will be alright Please check your dictionary because – I think – that “all right” is supposed to be two words. .”
From the young lady’s fair complexion, pointed ears and finely braded Check the spelling here. I think that it should be “braided,” but I’m a terrible speller. blond hair, it was apparent at once to Xen that she was an elf.
“I’m called Xen, who are…What’s your name comma fair lady,” said Xen in awe of her beauty.
“Calvyna’s my name; Eryd’s my brother…” said the elf lady.
“Your brother…I’m sorry…,” replied Xen.
“Do not worry my friend, Eryd did what he must to save this world,” said Calvyna peacefully.
“But we didn’t have enough antidote to get him out of trance…” said Xen.
“He’ll be alright all right? , don’t you worry,” came Calvyna’s reply.
After a final failed effort, the old wizard Mernomus turned and said “I’ve done all I can. He can’t be revived,”
“May I help?” asked Calvyna, having not yet been noticed by the preoccupied wizard.
“If a trance like his can’t be broken in time, he will surly slip into oblivion,” replied Mernomus solemnly upon noticing that Calvyna was an elf.
Without a further word, Calvyna kneeled before her brother’s head, gently stroking his hair. She pulled out a small crystal flask ornately inlaid with swirling lines of silver. She gave the liquid contained therein to Eryd, who at last sat up, blankly staring at his surroundings as if dazed.
“You broke the trance!” exclaimed Xen.
Turning to Xen, Calvyna said softly “Magic can be a dangerous endeavor, but don’t you worry, all is well…All is well, brave Xen.
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Review of Homecoming  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.0)
Hunter’s Moon – Homecoming - Flash Fiction


Hi everyone. Up front – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. If you don’t agree with them, just ignore them; after all, you know what is best for your story. Keep Writing! *Smile*


Title: Homecoming
Type: flash fiction
Author: Hunter’s Moon

Plot: Comment on pacing, effective/quick hooking, tension and confusions/questions.

Major Westcott and his honor guard receive the corpse of the defunct soldier Sergeant Tom Caulfield. Despite his lesson from the colonel, Major Westcott can’t help but care.

For me, personally, I wanted to use this story as an exercise to double check my point of view detecting skills. During the second read, I had difficulty deciding from whose point of view the story was told. First, I thought that it was from Westcott’s, then it seemed like an outside narrator told the story, then I returned to believing that it was Westcott’s point of view. As I said, I am still trying to master pov.

Style & Voice: Includes author’s/narrator’s voice, but also hitting truly unique voices for each character

The story flowed well and was well written. The dialogue bits seems real.

Referencing: Harleys in the Dark ages? Knights getting jiggy with their hommies? Or is Tommy dressed in flower power head band in chp 1, but in chp 5 he’s goth? Unexpected oddities are possible, but must be supported! We all need trekkies to demand consistency!

No comment.

Scene/Setting: Too much it drags? Too little? Confused? Did they use 3 senses?

Well done. Two of the three senses were used: sight and hearing, but in such a short piece, it is not surprising that smell didn’t find it’s way in. (It didn’t in mine either.)

Characters: Believable? Unique? Mary Sueish? Can’t keep names straight? Make it known! Characters are what it’s all about!

Unfortunately, the three characters were all too real.

Grammar: We can’t all be jedi grammar masters – so those that are… please help! Besides, type-ohs happen to the best of us and 100k words are a lot to keep track of. Please see line by line review. I didn’t catch anything.

What I liked best: You managed to tell a meaningful story is so few words.

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!


Hi Ken,

Just a personal note first. I wrote a boring little flash fiction story, thinking that I should write a second with deeper meanings for each of the mandatory words: key, flag and diamond. There was just so much potential. Therefore, I decided to see what the winner wrote. Congratulations! You have a fine flash fiction. Good job. *Smile*

More than a fine flash fiction, you have managed to make a statement.

All right, if I am obliged to look to find an area that could be improved, which is difficult in this piece, I would say that I would have liked it to pull a little harder on my heart strings.

Thank you for sharing your story with me.

Tadpole1




Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1
** Image ID #1105709 Unavailable **
HOMECOMING

The seven statues stood Beautiful image. At first, I actually thought that they were statues. , barely visible in the charcoal light nice image , as the C-130 taxied up and came to a stop. The jet wash picked up bits of debris which flashed, diamond like, in the landing lights.

I have much to learn, but let me share a comment that I received recently. The name of the Point of View character should appear in the first sentence along with an action.


Homecoming fireflies, flashed through Major Westcott's mind Here we learn who the POV character is. although his countenance remained fixed. Only an occasional blink indicated he was aware of his surroundings.

For my Point of View character, I place my little camera inside his head. All that can be seen comes from his perspective. If that is the case, then who is watching and seeing the occasional blink? Have we just left our POV character’s point of view? Obviously, Westcott is aware of his surroundings.

The cooling metal of the C-130 engines pierced the sudden silence as the engines quit and the crew completed its shut-down checklist.

It was early morning and yet a pale brightness found its way through the overcast sky illuminating the quiet scene.

With a sound of protest, the large cargo bay ramp began to lower, revealing a line of flag-draped coffins.

"Guard – attention!" he said sotto voce, followed by "Forward, march!"

The honor guard moved forward “forward” was used in the previous sentence. in a practiced cadence toward where the first coffin was waiting. A young airman handed him paperwork. Sergeant Tom Caulfield, he noted. Taking their places on either side, six white-gloved hands grasped the handles.

At his command, lifting in unison, they moved their comrade to the waiting vehicle for his final journey ... home. With practiced hands, they slid the box into the cavernous opening.

As the doors closed, a final command - "Present arms!"

There was a line of coffins. What happened to the others? Is it understood that they repeated the same actions over and over until all of the coffins were placed in cavernous openings? If that is the case, unless Tom was someone special to him, how did he remember the first soldier’s name? Reading the last few lines, I don’t think that Tom was someone special to him, but rather that he represent all the fallen.

Looking over the line of men – his men – Major Westcott felt the telltale tickle of a tear sliding down his cheek as the hearse pulled away. God speed, Tom.

"The key to this assignment is to remain detached." The Colonel's words came back to him from his first day's orientation.

"How do you do that, Colonel?" he asked into the fading darkness. Only the returning silence answered.

I don’t know why, but somehow the last line didn’t seem best. Maybe, he could receive a paper for the next coffin or look towards the next coffin? I don’t know. Don’t worry about it because this is a good flash fiction. *Smile*
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Review of Dare To Be  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.0)

Hi everyone. Warning – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. Keep Writing!

Title: Dare To Be
Type: Poetry
Author: Ken

Style & Voice: Includes author’s/narrator’s voice, but also hitting truly unique voices for each character
I am not a poetry expert, but, except for two lines, the poem had beautiful music and flowed quite well. They rhymes were perfect.
Grammar: We can’t all be jedi grammar masters – so those that are… please help! Besides, type-ohs happen to the best of us and 100k words are a lot to keep track of. Please see line by line review.
What I liked best: The first stanza – or – perhaps, the hopeful words.

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!

This is an altogether pleasant piece. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*

Tadpole1
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Dare To Be

Behind your eyes a great unknown
until we see the woman grown.
Like a flower in first bloom -
until it blossoms, no perfume.

Lovely.

The person that we see today
will, by tomorrow, go away
and in her place a woman new
and that new person will be "you."

Perfect

The trials and lessons that you learn 8 syllables
will make you stronger in return. 8 syllables
With confidence and self assurance 9 syllables
you will have built up your endurance 9 syllables

The music on these two lines slows a bit.

How about: “you will build up your endurance”? or
Confidence and self-assurance 8 syllables
Will help to build your endurance 8 syllables


to face the challenge that is life
and overcome the daily strife.

And in the end, a woman grown
from the seeds that you have sown.
So choose your seeds with greatest care
and meet the challenge, if you dare,
to become a woman, proud and whole,
who reflects the beauty in her soul. How about: “beauty of her soul”?

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149
Review of Why I Write  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: E | (4.5)



Hi everyone. Warning – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. Keep Writing!

Title: Why I Write
Author: Anastasia praying for Haiti

Plot: Comment on pacing, effective/quick hooking, tension and confusions/questions.

The hook was sufficient. The tension rose a couple of times. There was no confusion.

Style & Voice: Includes author’s/narrator’s voice, but also hitting truly unique voices for each character

beautiful and moving

Referencing: Harleys in the Dark ages? Knights getting jiggy with their hommies? Or is Tommy dressed in flower power head band in chp 1, but in chp 5 he’s goth? Unexpected oddities are possible, but must be supported! We all need trekkies to demand consistency!

no comment

Scene/Setting: Too much it drags? Too little? Confused? Did they use 3 senses?

Parents’ bed, library

Characters: Believable? Unique? Mary Sueish? Can’t keep names straight? Make it known! Characters are what it’s all about!

This is a personal essay which cracks the window of the writer’s heart.

Grammar: We can’t all be jedi grammar masters – so those that are… please help! Besides, type-ohs happen to the best of us and 100k words are a lot to keep track of.

Please see line by line review.

What I liked best: In the last years of his life, my father lost most of his sight and the year that I was able to spend with him I would read the newspaper to him.

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!

This was absolutely beautiful. It brought tears to my eyes more than once. You have talent, my dear.





Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1
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I am of the belief, as are many, that a writer must be a reader first. Most people I have encountered who love to write, whether it be stories, poems or essays, their desire grew from a love for reading. So, my journey as a writer began a long time ago when I was a little girl.

As a young child who couldn't read yet, I would jump into my parents' bed every day begging my father to read to me. This continued long after I could read for myself. Once I learned that my father would skip pages at times because he wanted to take his nap, I decided to go it alone. I would make weekly visits to the library, taking in that wonderful book smell and relishing that within their pages lay adventures wanting to reveal themselves to me.

The stories I read absolutely fascinated me comma and soon I found myself creating stories in my head and needing to put them on paper. One of my older sisters was always kind enough to type my stories as I recounted them to her, and so my love for writing continued to grow. All through high school I had notebooks filled with short stories, poems, and random thoughts. Once in college and graduate school, most of any reading and writing I did consisted of textbooks and reports and research papers textbooks, reports and research . While this was not a huge pain for me, I missed the creativity and the outlet writing provided me.

Now I have rediscovered my love. I realize I can start writing a story and the best part of the process is the ending. Not because I actually finished something, but because I am always surprised of where the extra space journey of writing has taken me. This is quite nice. That last paragraph or sentence of any story is as much a surprise for me as it is for the reader. I understand what you are saying here.

While this might be a little self-indulgent comma I am compelled to mention it. My father unexpectedly passed away a few weeks ago. In the last years of his life, my father lost most of his sight and the year that I was able to spend with him I would read the newspaper to him. There is tension here. I recognize now how life had come full circle for us full circle, because , because he read to me when I couldn't. As I started to post my stories on WDC comma I would read them to him as well. About two weeks before he passed comma he begged me to promise him that I would never stop writing. Not quite understanding the urgency in his voice comma I assured him that nothing would distract me from writing.

So, why do I write? I write because I have a story to tell. I write because I love the art that words skillfully put together can create. I write because of the encouragement I received from one of the most important people in my life. I write for you Dadda.
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Review of Pieces of Me  
Review by Tadpole1
Rated: 13+ | (4.0)

Pieces of Me

Hi everyone. Warning – I rate hard – usually a 3.0 or a 3.5. I don't give very many 4.5s or 5.0 unless I think the work is almost perfect. Any of my comments or suggestions are just that: comments or suggestions. They are always given with respect and the hopes that they will be helpful. Keep Writing!

Title: Pieces of Me

Author: Hunter’s Moon

Plot: Comment on pacing, effective/quick hooking, tension and confusions/questions.

The beautiful music of the first stanza, along with its content, was a great hook into the poem.


What I liked best: I liked the first stanza best because of its music. It was beautiful.

Just My Personal Opinion: tell them what you liked/didn't like. How did it make you feel and all other misc.!

I am not a poet and do not know the rules, so I can only tell you what I feel in this review. I hope that you find it helpful. *Smile*

I liked the first stanza best because of its music. It was beautiful. I like the last least because it has a sad ending, and I prefer to see the glass half-full. That is simply personal preference.

The first stanza seemed more powerful, perhaps because the verses were shorter?

Unfortunately, I believe that your poem tells the tale of many a brokenhearted lover, too weak to rise above.

The rhymes, the actual words, were perfect. I felt that there were a few hiccups in the music of the second and third stanzas.

All in all, well done.

Thank you for sharing this piece,

Tadpole1


Please add a few smiley faces here and there. *Smile*
Tadpole1



Energy is constant.
It’s a universal law.
What happens to the force of love
when it chooses to withdraw?
The crushing weight of loneliness,
the bitter taste of bile,
plays upon my mind.
Is continuing worthwhile?

Like a shattered mirror,
I see pieces, not a whole. This line - 7 syllables
The fractures run so deep
that I can feel them
in my soul. This line - 8 syllables - maybe: “that they cut my very soul”
Vague wisps of memory
dance taunting in the light. 12 syllables
I cannot take the visions,
I only wish for night. 13 syllables

She made it clear that there’s
no hope in spite of my persistence. 15
In misery I contemplate the end
of my existence. 15
Perhaps I’ll find a better place,
one that’s free of pain. 13
I make a choice and watch
the scarlet circles in the drain. 14

Notes:

An entry for "A Broken Heart Poetry Contest " [18+]
Prompt: "Pieces of me."

Thank you for taking time to read my words. I would appreciate it if you took a moment and left a comment. Your reaction, impressions, criticisms, - yes, even praise - are all equally welcome.

Ken
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