Pryde is the author of the Wisp, a paranormal fantasy. The Wisp is available at the link below at amazon.com and through your local libraries and bookstores.
The Wisp
Bara dreams of the dark-haired boy, but one blustery day, the dark-haired boy is replaced by a silvery spectre who haunts her even when she is awake, pulling her deeper into dreams and closer to secrets she is better off not knowing. Waking up is no relief. The fictional east-coast town of Windfall offers its own surprises: immortal witches, coffee-loving werewolves, and dream boys come to life. A dead man’s diary names Bara a Clavigen and calls upon her to cage the evil. She must defeat the witch who has ensnared the Wisp in a piece of enchanted amber. Unfortunately the dreams have not revealed all. Always watching, a demon waits to prey upon her young soul.
A wonderful yet original tribute to Poe. I love it when people have the power to be inspired by others works and yet still manage to create something that is all their own. You can see that Poe formed the idea, but it was definitely you who wrote this poem :)
exceptional, I love Poe and The Raven is a favourite always brings to mind Vincent Price in the movie from long ago, another priceless gem no pun intended, thank you Pryde :)
Every single one of us carries within us that unique individuality so when you read this although I have read this and fragmented it,studied it, metabolized and God knows how many other form of adulation and deep respect through admiration I still find it to be breathtaking. Is not only that the poem speaks to me but is you Pryde your soft and gentleness brought about a different element, one that I hadn't noticed before and maybe the search, the enticement and the lack of sanity portrayed by you is more of an intrinsical part of our human outfit as it was through his words only. I also felt a certain humblness through your tone as if to say I know you took Lenore yet I will wait as I confess I can't fathom you. As he said: "Words have no power to impress the mind without the exquisite horror of their reality." your reality in the reading was less haunting yet equally challenging.
Thankyou
Posted 10 Years Ago
10 Years Ago
Thank you, Rene. The narrator has lost the love of his life … he is grieving and heartbroken and I.. read moreThank you, Rene. The narrator has lost the love of his life … he is grieving and heartbroken and I saw this as the main driver of the poem … the madness and the horror spring from the grief. It is not so much death that haunts him but grief. At least that is how I saw it:) Thanks again for this lovely review:)
What a fantastic job you did Pryde. I love this poem and you performed it perfectly.The abject loneliness and despair of the poem is enhanced by the supernatural pauses in your performance. A bleak poem read with style and éclat. You made the poem hang in the air with bated breath and then made the it, for a moment, very real for the listener. Great job.
the thing that is oft missed with Poe is the sadness. Much of his work is saturated not just with horror but with the ache of regret and loss. Your reading brought that ache to the forefront. it is what makes Poe transparent to me - what makes his writing resonant.
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