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* "March Twenty-First" by Crimson Dragon (hot dreamlike sex) Peters: 10, 10, 6
http://www.dejanews.com/getdoc.xp?AN=333785276


* "March Twenty-First" by Crimson Dragon (dcrimson@yahoo.com). Guest review
by Stephen Peters (sxjames@aol.com).
http://www.dejanews.com/getdoc.xp?AN=333785276

This story opens with the protagonist (Lori) having left her lover (Heather)
to return home to a cold and lonely apartment. Lori misses Heather something
fierce -- she needs her lover's body badly, if for no other reason than to
keep her warm on a cold and snowy winter's evening. Well, as luck would have
it, as Lori drifts off to sleep she finds her heat (both kinds) by entering a
phantasmagorical, druid-like dream world of chanting women, warm fire and cold
stone. After a short, sexy encounter with a woman who is/isn't Heather, Lori
can no longer contain her desire so she rushes back to Heather's
apartment...and to a rather surprising ending to her night's adventure.

This story idea has all the makings of an very entertaining read. The soft,
semi-conscious realm between wakefulness and sleep is a great setting for a
fantasy of this type, and the author did an admirable job as the tour guide.
The various settings were well described, I was able to connect with Lori's
distress, and the dreamlike atmosphere was sustained throughout. In
particular, the transition between the cold apartment in winter and Lori's
dream/fantasy world was startlingly good -- probably the best image in the
piece.

Unfortunately, the storytelling itself was marred by a writing style that kept
me (the reader) from establishing a strong narrative voice. The repeated use
of sentence fragments and single words to indicate Lori's thoughts kept my
narrative 'head-voice' from achieving any sustained rhythmic flow. For this
reader (and I should emphasize "this reader"), establishing that flow is
crucial. More seriously, the ambiguous use of the pronoun 'she' in the
paragraph that introduced the names of the dream characters had me associating
"Akana" and "She-al" with the wrong people -- a very frustrating experience.
Finally, as a reader I would liked to have seen a better-described sex scene
between Lori and the dream women. The setting was all there, but the heat
wasn't.

From a purely technical standpoint (grammar, spelling, punctuation) the story
rates a ten -- I don't think I can take off points for the pronoun problem.
Plot and character (or rather, the story idea itself) is this tale's strong
suit -- again, a ten. For the above-mentioned reasons "appeal to reviewer"
rates a six.... but understand that all my reviews come with this disclaimer:
Numbers mean nothing without context -- read the damned review.

Ratings for "March Twenty-First"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 6