Today I am pelased to welcome children's author and poet, Laura Salas who has dropped in to guest blog about poetry. Thanks for coming, Laura.Stealing Poem IdeasMany of my poem ideas come out of real life. When my daughter Maddie had two teeth pulled, she put straws in the empty spaces and started kind of barking. She looked just like a walrus, and I wrote a poem about it. A mere 6 years later,
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: writing poetry, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 26 - 32 of 32
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: writing poetry, laura salas, Add a tag
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: pearl verses the world, writing poetry, verse off, this is the mud, Add a tag
Week Three of the Verse Off – and a special welcome to any who may be joining us for the first time! (Feel free to scroll below to past posts and see what we’ve been up to.)If you’ve played before, you know the routine.. If this is your first time, here’s the drill…May is a dual celebration with the release of Kathryn Apel’s This is the Mud!, a humorous rhyming picture book, and Sally Murphy’s
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: poetry, writing prompt, pearl verses the world, writing poetry, lorraine marwood, Add a tag
I am delighted today to have another guest blogger dropping by to help celebrate all things poetry in honour of the release of Pearl Verses the World.Lorraine Marwood is a fellow Australian children’s author and poet – and also an excellent verse novelist. Enjoy her post – an exercise in poetry writing. Welcome Lorraine.Patterning a poemThis is often a great technique to both read poems from
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: performance poetry, writing poetry, april wayland, Add a tag
May is rolling by, and I continue to celebrate all things poetry in honour of the release of my verse novel, Pearl Verses the World. Today another guest blogger drops in to share some wonderful advice on writing poetry. A big welcome to April Wayland. COPY CAT POEMI often write a poem in response to a prompt. Perhaps a friend has an anthology about bugs and needs a bug poem. Or a magazine
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sheryl gwyther, writing poetry, Add a tag
The month of celebration in honour of the launch of Pearl Verses the World continues today, with a visit by guest blogger, Sheryl Gwyther who shares a poem and some of the thoughts behind its writing. Welcome Sheryl.A MURDER OF CROWSThis little gathering is a tribute to a bird at the bottom of the popularity list – a bird we can't do without. Sheryl Gwyther May 6 2009 CROW Glossy black, green &
Blog: Shutta's Place (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: writing poetry, 30 days & 30 poems, poetry challenges, poetry techniques, News, Poetry, The Writing Life, Random Thoughts, National Poetry Month, Add a tag
I thought I’d take a few moments to catch my breath and make a few comments about what I’ve gleaned, thus far, from participating in the Writer’s Digest National Poetry Month challenge. Robert Brewer, who blogs for WD at Poetics Aside, challenged poets to respond to a given prompt everyday for 30 days—thus creating 30 new poems.
I decided—perhaps, a bit too rashly—to add another constraint to the challenge. I would write 30 new poems, one-a-day, using 30 different forms/techniques. (30 days/30 poems/30 forms) I challenged myself to this, reckoning it would be a good way to force myself to explore some poetical forms I might not otherwise study.
As of April 19, I’ve written 19 poems using varied formats and techniques. I’ve written a Fibonacci, a kyrielle, a pantoum, a prose poem, a Skeltonic poem, an ode, a rondelet, a roundel, a tanka, a list poem, a shadorma, and Sapphic verses. I’ve used unrhymed distich, Rime Couee’, blank verse, terza rima, ballad stanza, ottava rima, and rhymed tercets. I just hope there are enough forms/techniques to get me through the month! (NOTE: I have been saving Haiku, found poetry, and an acrostic poem for later this month when I have several gigs that will take me out of town.)
As to what I’ve learned thus far:
1.) It’s fun—though harrowing, at times. It’s like doing a puzzle under a time limit. There are days that I only have an hour or so to get the prompt for the day and get the poem done.
2.) The results: most of the poems are not polished. However, some contain gems that I will polish and work on later. A few are almost polished enough to be presentable. Some are lamentable. (Mere rough drafts.) And it does feel a bit strange to have posted these on my website, as I am used to waiting until I feel a poem is pretty much finished before I present it to others. But I did want to keep these in one spot to see the variety. (I will take them down later.)
3.) I am getting a little better at determining whether the form fits the function of the poem. I am learning this my making myself work with some forms that have refrains/repetition/certain rhyme schemes or meters. And although I am far from a formalist, I found certain forms to be quite comfortable, like the ballad stanza and the pantoum.
4.) It’s not easy writing to someone else’s prompts. I found these to be uneven—as expected. Some, like writing a love poem, were almost too easy to be much of a challenge and I was grateful to have my added constraint of a form/technique. Some of the daily challenges were quite good: like taking the title of a well-known poem changing it to its opposite and writing from that. I love the poem I did as a result. (A take off from Emily Dickinson in the ballad stanza format. See Day 17. )
5.) I discovered some new forms (the tanka, and the shadorma) that I love.
Well, I shall keep on with it—hoping to make it to day 30 with my sanity. At the end, I’ll have a few more notes to add about the pros and cons of participating in such a challenge. In the meantime, enjoy Poetry Month!
And here’s am informative interview Robert did recently with poet Katy Evans- Bush.
Ciao!
Shutta
Blog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: writing advice, poetry, poetic forms, writing poetry, Add a tag
April is poetry month. In the USofA it;s called National Poetry Month, but here in Australia I'm just calling it Poetry Month, since I've been unable to figure out if the month is officially recognised as such here. Anyway, whether it's only a US thing or not, how wonderful to have a month which celebrates poetry! And, because it's poetry month, I've been digging around looking for some
Imagination coupled<br />with a careless finger-doodle<br />brings a chance of forces meeting<br />as dragons in the sand
sand sculptures<br />litter the beach<br />like jellyfish<br />cast ashore<br />in high<br />tide
nothing indefinite<br />about tunnel hole<br />only the grain dribblings<br />sand scribblings<br />creating an address
'Is this a doodle<br />I see before me?'<br />'Nay, Hamlet, nay.<br />Tis but a Collywoggle<br />Calling its young <br />to a picnic<br />on the beach.'<br /><br />Mabel Kaplan<br />http://belka37.blogspot.com
Split jewels<br />seaweed pearls<br />flaunting undersea treasure<br />waiting for the tide<br />to reclasp<br />into necklaces<br />that buoy and glint.
crabform beads<br />expelled<br />onto sea-smooth sand<br />tunnel refuse<br />unburied treasure