Poetic Mind 2: The Collection
Posted by Literary Titan

Poetic Mind 2: The Collection felt to me like a long, earnest conversation between bravado and vulnerability. Across poems about self-belief, grief, love, fantasy, war, exhaustion, and social cruelty, John Nevel keeps returning to the same central impulse: to turn pain into encouragement, and imagination into a kind of shelter. The book moves from the chest-thumping creative comeback of “Return of the Machine” and “Born a Legend” into more tender and wounded terrain such as “Shadows,” “PTSD,” and “Operation Iraqi Freedom,” then loops back toward resilience in poems like “Like a Phoenix” and “Change.” What held it together for me was that sense of a mind trying, over and over, to wrestle darkness into language and come out with something useful for another person.
What I responded to most was the book’s emotional directness. Nevel isn’t coy, and he isn’t interested in hiding behind irony. When “Shadows” lingers with the dead through scent, television reflections, and the strange comfort of almost-seeing someone again, it has a real ache to it; when “Take My Hand” and “Keep Your Head Up” insist on dignity for the lonely, the poor, the traumatized, and the judged, the tenderness feels lived rather than borrowed. Even the poems that lean hardest into uplift carry some friction under them, because again and again the speaker sounds like someone who has actually been bruised by the world he’s trying to repair. I liked that sincerity.
The collection is at its strongest when the swagger relaxes and the image gets room to breathe. The blizzard in “Snowfall,” the resurrected beast of “Revenge of the Dragon,” the handmade panic and recovery in “Destruction of Words,” and the barracks-to-Iraq movement in “Operation Iraqi Freedom” all gave me something concrete to stand inside. At the same time, the book’s habits are very clear: it loves repetition, declarative endings, motivational refrains, and an almost performative intensity. Sometimes that gives the poems a pulse and a stage voice. Even when I found the rhetoric a little relentless, I rarely doubted the conviction behind it. And I did admire how fully Nevel commits to his ideas, especially his belief that poetry should comfort, testify, and push back against humiliation, prejudice, and despair.
Poetic Mind 2 is heartfelt and thought-provoking. It’s not a chilly, mannered collection that wants to be admired from a distance. It wants to reach across the table, grab you, and tell you to keep going. I think that urgency is the book’s identity. I’d recommend it most to readers who like accessible, emotionally candid poetry, especially anyone drawn to themes of resilience, recovery, faith, military memory, and everyday encouragement. This is a book for readers who want poetry to mean what it says.
Pages: 193 | ASIN : B0GSKK2TWC
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on March 30, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, goodreads, John Nevel, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, poet, Poetic Mind, Poetic Mind 2: The Collection, read, reader, reading, short story, story, writer, writing, writing process. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





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