Good job on your submissions, everyone. Now... onto the scores.
Mirror
Title: The Desert Rose
Author: vangoghsear
Not a novel idea, yet well-approached. I detect an underlying circularity – somewhat progressive as you interweave wilted creativity with the merciless ministrations of time. Imagery trickles until the last stanza, in which I question the repetition. Poem would have been more powerfully transmitted without it (in a less list-like manner).
20
Title: Devour
Author: Apple
Excellent allusion coupled with a pulsating tone. I appreciate the delineation of rider’s voice from the description. Contains some marvelous verses, such as ‘sand becomes his seed’ or ‘licks the stars’. Wonderful ending, slightly marred by the residual manner in which you constructed it. I can’t help but feel that it could have flowed better. I especially like the ambition in this poem. Enjambment is not overdone, either. This is a gem. Thanks for the read.
23
Title: Planting a seed
Author: Mermaid on the Breakwater
This poem verges on literal. Omission of filler words would enhance the flow. I like the narrative, yet a few self-evident explanations such ‘leaves us with not a lot’ detract from the poem. You’ve already intimated that in the previous verses – no need to spell it out. I see a leap the penultimate stanza to the last one. Perhaps a smoother transition? Also, that last stanza becomes more like the coda of a discourse analysis. I do, however, appreciate the portrayal of familial bonds.
14.5
Tile: Day by Night
Author: Olly Buckle
This poem is a mood piece - Sensual and oscillating, a mood solely afforded by lush imagery, for the rhythm jars in several places. I would remove the capitals, so as to connect lines that inevitable follow one another. Again, most enjoyable: it threatens to lull, but reawakens the reader through movement within verses. I view as a photo negative. Yet, I desired it to be less settling.
18
Title: Dust Devil
Author: MisterJack
Immaculate coordination – almost as if the rhythm heralds the dust devil. Omission of a few filler words wouldn’t go amiss, although in a poem with such momentum a few halts do help in lieu of punctuation. Love the ending – humorous and wry - which not only lends the title phrase another nuance, but also immediately transports the reader into a different scenery – more confined, yet filled with the similar images, sounds, and textures. Yet, I feel the parallelism could have been more accentuated throughout the poem.
22.5
Title: The Block
Author: DavidBetzer
I appreciate the personifications you employ, but the piece merely exceeds description, for me.
Tense shift in the last stanza (lines 3 and 6) presents a problem for me in that I do not know whether to consider the previous stanzas as flashback. Moreover, you proceed from meticulous imagery (gleaning for details in the environment you describe) to a rushed justification, as evinced by the last line.
15
Title: Rainbow Serpent
Author: Autumn
This piece relies heavily on anthropomorphism to compensate for lack of human presence. In something so bare, repetition (namely, of the word ‘desert’) becomes noticeable. I also question the impact, given the brevity. It reads more like enumeration due to predictability of line breaks and abundance of linking verb ‘to be’. I experience a cooling effect, nonetheless, and appreciate the utilization of space in the poem.
12.5
Title: Smoking wicks and lakes of sand
Author: andrew_w
First to all, you need to carefully consider your enjambment. Read the poem out loud and see where you would naturally pause. Content (message) feels one-dimensional to me. I sense an identity (the narrator’s) that evaporated with the loss of fruition, yet this idea becomes muddled in the clichéd expressions, none of which given a new angle or otherwise subverted.
12
Title: My Heart
Author: SerenityJS
This tone in this poem feels torn between self-pity and self-flagellation. I find it somewhat grinded and, almost as if phrases wish to stray away from one-another, only to be viciously connected. A nice return to the point of origin, yet I would have preferred a smoother continuation. The poem jars in various places, due to use of gerunds, inconsistency in verse capitalization, and abrupt fragmentation of thoughts.
14.5
Title: The Desert God
Author: rcallaci
You have imbued this piece with an unfurling quality – each stanza reveals a reason for the uttered wrath, making the latter righteous. A great descent from peak to pith. Centering of poem and lack of punctuation transform the poem into an inscription. The consistent tone works to that effect, as well. Aural poems often render overabundance of imagery unnecessary, yet I would have appreciated more tactility in the characterization of the ‘little bastards’. The concept of self-fashioning due to others’ ego-altruisms prevails.
19.75
Title: Waiting for Wildflower Season
Author: Foxee
The poem creates a remarkable sense of isolation which breaks into a flashback only to present the lingering wait through personification of hopes later on. Seemingly disparate elements interweaved to create a plaintive, yet expectant mood. More cohesion between stanzas may have been desirable. I also wonder about the enjambment, specifically your choice to end a verse with an article (‘a’).
19.25
Title: Sweet As Desert Breeze
Author: Ilasir Maroa
Yet, another mood piece. Delicious images (slowly poured) with an undercurrent of sublimity. I particularly like the last two verses, which lend the spectral scenery a fleshy farewell. I also appreciate your revival of archaic language – it befits the vacillation of hues in this poem. The staggering flow works for me. Nice use of slants, if scattered in various places.
22.75
Baron
The Desert Rose by Vangoghsear.
Thematic resonance – 4/5
Technical Excellence -4/5
Composition – 4/5
Message – 4/5
Originality – 5/5
21
Good imagery. The poem held me until the end.
Devour by Apple
Thematic resonance – 3/5
Technical Excellence -4/5
Composition – 4/5
Message – 3/5
Originality – 5/5
19
A lively read but the theme seems incidental to the poem.
Planting A Seed by Mermaid of the Breakwater
Thematic resonance – 4/5
Technical Excellence -3/5
Composition – 3/5
Message – 4/5
Originality – 5/5
19
A great original interpretation of the theme but I feel that this poem is let down by the structure.
Day by Night by Olly Buckle
Thematic resonance – 5/5
Technical Excellence -3/5
Composition – 3/5
Message – 3/5
Originality – 5/5
19
Some nice images in this but it lacks the concrete to bind them together. Structure and rhythm very jerky.
Dust Devil by Mister Jack
Thematic resonance – 4/5
Technical Excellence -3/5
Composition – 4/5
Message – 4/5
Originality – 5/5
20
Some nice imagery, with the poem structured to fit the tornado image. I think that the poem really needs some trimming down to make it effective.
The Block by David Betzner
Thematic resonance – 5/5
Technical Excellence -2/5
Composition – 2/5
Message – 4/5
Originality – 5/5
18
Great images and mood. I honestly would have thought this a winner but it is let down by typos/errors.
Rainbow Serpent by Autumn
Thematic resonance – 5/5
Technical Excellence -2/5
Composition – 2/5
Message – 3/5
Originality – 5/5
17
This was a nice short work which transmits a good mood and feel. Again, a poem let down by typos/errors. Also, although the image contained is good it leaves me feeling that it needs something more.
Smoking Wicks and Lakes of Sand by Andrew W
Thematic resonance – 4/5
Technical Excellence -2/5
Composition – 2/5
Message – 2/5
Originality – 4/5
14
I really don’t want to come down heavily on someone expressing writer’s block but this lacks originality. Although I like the idea of the desert/block metaphor, it isn’t a new one. Again, this is also let down by typos/errors. I think that there is something here and that, with a fresh look, it can be worked and something drawn out of it.
My Heart by SerenityJS
Thematic resonance – 3/5
Technical Excellence -3/5
Composition – 2/5
Message – 2/5
Originality – 4/5
14
This poem barely touches the desert theme confusing it with metaphors that clash completely. Again it is not helped by typos/errors. The central formatting is off-putting. There are some good lines in here but I think that they could be applied to different poems rather than be used as a cocktail of images in this one.
The Desert God by RCallaci
Thematic resonance – 5/5
Technical Excellence -3/5
Composition – 3/5
Message – 4/5
Originality – 4/5
19
I’m quite surprised to see Bob post a poem in a challenge that has typos in it. For shame, and for me it killed what could be a winning entry. The poem is strong and witty and the central format actually works for this one. The idea isn’t totally original but it is well presented in a witty way.
Waiting for Wildflower Season by Foxee
Thematic resonance – 5/5
Technical Excellence -4/5
Composition – 4/5
Message – 5/5
Originality – 5/5
23
For me, the only thing that lets this poem down is the wishy-washy use of punctuation. Punctuation should be used, or not used, consistently. The poem paints a good scene with nice imagery. S2 L2 is weak in that it uses “a” as a last word, a weak line ending where a stronger word would give more to the poem. A good read none-the-less and, to me, one that best fitted all the criteria of the challenge.
Sweet as Desert Breeze by Ilasir Maroa
Thematic resonance – 5/5
Technical Excellence -5/5
Composition – 4/5
Message – 5/5
Originality – 5/5
24
This poem meets all the criteria of the contest, in my opinion, and is well structured and thoughtfully worked out. If Ilasir is to work this further then I would suggest adding another image to centre the others in the scene.



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). Ilasir, a very beautiful work, lovely flow and feel.

Congratulations on a well deserved win. Foxee and Jack, your poems are awesome.

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