Saturday, August 04, 2007
Should all Poets Move to Australia and More Stuff
Posted by Robert

"Out of the garrets," by Fiona Scott-Norman for The Age, looks at performance poetry in Melbourne, Australia. "Poets are becoming the new pop stars," writes Fiona. Which begs the question: Should all poets be booking flights to Australia? Or, are all poets already there?

*****

"Charles Simic Receives Poet Laureate Post, Plus $100,000 Award," by Jeffrey Burke for Bloomberg, shows that Simic has had one helluva week with the poet laureate announcement and now a separate $100,000 prize as winner of the American Academy of Poets' Wallace Stevens Award.

*****

Also, my latest edition of Faulty Mindbomb is out. Rachel Carlson wrote the poem "My Fat Content." Check it out at http://faultymindbomb.blogspot.com/2007/08/fmb0027.html.

*****

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Personal Updates | Poetry News | Poets
8/4/2007 11:26:50 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, August 03, 2007
Friday SPAM Poetry Prompt #803
Posted by Nancy

SPAM prompt line:  Don't be silly, enjoy life

 

I don't know about you, but I can't enjoy life unless I am silly. For the sake of this exercise, though, let's accept this statement as sage advice from some mountaintop guru (i.e., if you want to enjoy life, don't be silly!). Write a poem "meditation" on this advice and how hard (or easy) it is for you to expel silliness from your life--and be sure to explain how it makes life more enjoyable. You can be serious or tongue-in-cheek (you know--silly). Interpretation of "silly" is up to you.

 

--Nancy

 

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Poetry Prompts
8/3/2007 4:49:49 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Mom Jokes & Insult Poetry
Posted by Robert

Back in the days of track & field and cross country, the guys and I would be running for literally miles and miles with little to occupy our minds but the joys of breathing and muscle fatigue. Maybe joy isn't the proper word.

Anyway, we would distract ourselves by talking on most of our longer runs. We'd make small talk, sing songs we knew, and often joke around. And a common way to joke around was through making silly "mom" jokes. (If mothers are reading this, these "mom" jokes weren't really directed at the mothers; when you're running 12 miles, you just get desperate for ways to pass the time.)

I didn't know it at the time, but mom jokes are relevant to poetry through a format called the insult poem. There are no hard and fast rules to the insult poem, but it's usually done in a joking (all in good fun) fashion as opposed to seriously trying to annoy anyone.

Many insult poems also have a repetitive form or recurring method of delivering the insults. The insult poem is a good way to show just how clever you are (or think you are). But beware writing them! Once you attack someone (even in jest), you are suddenly fair game to receive an insult poem retaliation. 

And now, mothers everywhere will be able to retaliate to me. Oh gosh, here goes my attempt at an insult poem about yo' mamma.

"Your Mom"

Runs like a squirrel with her hands always leading;
has eyes in the back of her head, but she can't see
anything; smells like boiled cabbage or, on bad days,
the dumpster behind Burger King on a triple
digit summer day; tells children her favorite
day is everyone that includes the Golden
Girls, as if children know who any golden girl
is--besides her; belches when she thinks no one listens;
farts in public; picks her nose; clips her toe nails in
front of company; sells bad news to anyone
who'll listen, whether by their own will or not; sends
me Christmas cards confessing her love for midgets
and that she was drunk when she wrote the freaking thing.

 

I guess I could go on about "Your Mom," but this kind of gets the point across. This piece incorporates a repetitive method of using the the verb directly following "Your Mom" to start each insult, but also varies the length and depth of each insult. Just to keep things interesting.

So now that you're aware of the insult poem, I encourage you to strike out and insult your parents, siblings, milkman, political candidates, pets, friends, etc. Just don't insult me, because that would hurt my feelings. ;)

*****

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Advice | Personal Updates | Poetic Forms | Poetry Craft Tips
8/3/2007 8:18:04 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Thursday, August 02, 2007
Thinking about bridges...
Posted by Nancy

Yesterday Robert linked to a Washington Post story about "the world's worst poet," William McGonagall of Scotland. The article quoted McGonagall's "The Tay Bridge Disaster," which is too painfully bad to repeat here in light of what happened in Minneapolis (the catastrophe struck long after the McGonagall story had appeared).

 

It's natural for a poet, or any writer, to react to or want to commemorate a tragedy through their written words. Some poets are up to the task. Many are not. I usually find myself in the latter category.

 

My phobias don't include crumbling bridges, but I do sometimes think about collapses--especially when crossing a massive, highly traveled span like the double-decker Brent Spence Bridge here in Cincinnati. I blame the apprehension on two bridge disasters that have impacted me deeply.

 

The Silver Bridge between Point Pleasant, West Virginia, and Gallipolis, Ohio, went down on a Friday evening a week before Christmas, 1967--the year I was thirteen. Even at a much younger age I was easily haunted by tragedies, but this one hit me especially hard. Perhaps it was because it was so easy to imagine; we were always driving over one bridge or another to and from Northern Kentucky. The personal details of the Silver Bridge disaster layered associations (and horror): Some of the people on the bridge were driving home from work. Some were going Christmas shopping. Grandparents died together. A mother went down with her two young daughters, as did a married couple expecting their first child in January. Such stories made me heartsick, and still do.

 

Because the Silver Bridge crashed into the Ohio River, there was eventually speculation that some of the victims not yet recovered would float downriver to our area. That reinforced the connection to an event in a place I'd never been, and I stared at the Ohio whenever we crossed in a way I never had before.

 

It was decades before I knew about The Mothman (book, movie, or cult). As creepy as the stories are, I didn't need a mutant with moth wings and bulging eyes to scare me. Real life was frightening enough.

 

The second time the aerial shot of a collapsed bridge made my heart stop was when I was flying home from Europe in 1989.  I was watching the CNN weekly recap when the image of a broken bridge came up and I heard the words "Miamitown, Ohio." My mother, stepfather, and sister lived a couple of miles up the pike from Miamitown and used that bridge daily. The story gave few details and didn't name any of the fatalities. Panic threw my imagination into overdrive as I pictured every possible scenario and wondered if any of my loved ones were gone and whether some weird decision had been made not to contact me and ruin the last of my trip to Europe.

 

To my relief, my mother and sister were waiting at the airport, and they confirmed that everyone was safe. It had been too close for comfort, though. My sister had crossed the bridge on her way home from work, just minutes before it fell into the Great Miami River. She was only minutes from home, but news of the collapse broke before she arrived, and there were some anxious minutes (and phone calls) for the family before she drove up the driveway.

 

I never tried to write about the Silver Bridge disaster. I couldn't bring myself to make someone else's sorrow my own. I did attempt a poem about the Miamitown collapse, but it was awful and I gave up trying to make it readable. One "The Tay Bridge Disaster" is more than enough.

 

--Nancy


Commentary
8/2/2007 4:28:38 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3] 
New National Poet Laureate Named
Posted by Robert

Librarian of Congress Appoints Charles Simic Poet Laureate

From Library of Congress News Release: "Librarian of Congress James H. Billington has announced the appointment of Charles Simic to be the Library's 15th Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry."

Simic will replace Donald Hall as poet laureate in the fall.

For more information on Simic (specifically an author bio and around 10 of his poems), go to http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/27

*****

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Poetry News | Poets
8/2/2007 9:10:05 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
Women Dominate!
Posted by Robert

"Women dominate new writing awards shortlist," by Michelle Pauli for Guardian Unlimited, announces that eight of nine writers shortlisted for the New Writing Ventures awards are women. Three finalists are selected for three prizes: Poetry, Fiction and Creative Nonfiction. The poetry shortlist includes the only male finalist, Mir Mahfuz Ali, in addition to Jemma Borg and Jacqueline Gabbitas.

*****

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Poetry News | Poets
8/2/2007 8:42:30 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, August 01, 2007
OOOPS! post: Lo Galluccio
Posted by Nancy

I'm so glad I noticed this in the Comments to this post--my apologies, Lo!:

 

Thanks for the mention. I only wanted to let you know that my name is actually Lo Galluccio, not La Galluccio. Although I kind of like your variation. I also have an Italian website at http://unofficiallogalluccio.atspace.com. I'll be reading at Out of the Blue Gallery with Edward J. Carvahlo on August 18th. Again, thanks for the mention and your publicizing the Writer's Festival which I am proud to be part of this year.

--Nancy


Poetry News | Poets
8/1/2007 1:44:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
World's Worst Poet and Poetic Lies?
Posted by Robert

"How to Celebrate 'The World's Worst Poet'?," by Ben McConville for The Washington Post, covers the snubbing of 19th Century poetic flop William McGonagall by the Scottish literary establishment. The piece includes some of McGonagall's horrible lines.

*****

"300 Lies?," by David C. Ryan for Bright Lights Film Journal, looks at the movie 300, the subjectivity of history and poetry's role in it all. Pretty fascinating stuff.

*****

Click here to check out past Poetry News.

 


Poetry News | Poets
8/1/2007 1:01:10 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Vacation, Poetry Readings, Rejection, Stamps?!?
Posted by Robert

After a week in the Appalachians, I've got Internet access again. Not sure if that's a good or bad thing. Tomorrow, back to work! (We'll slot that into the good column, though the week did go by a bit too fast.)

*****

While in Georgia, I did happen to wander into a Sunday night poetry reading/open mic at a cool little coffee shop in Decatur. I was thoroughly impressed with the performances and with how so many of the poets knew their lines well enough to recite their work, as opposed to reading their work. Of course, many of the poets were slammers, and that's the name of their game.

If I can remember, I'll be sure to add the name of the place in my blog comments. :)

*****

Returned home to find two envelopes: one from Margie; one from myself to Black Warrior Review.

The Margie submission was rejected personally by editor Robert Nazarene. I thought that was rather nice (and a quick turnaround). I'll be sure to send him some more work in the future.

The Black Warrior Review submission was returned to sender, because I tried sending through an envelope stuffed with poems with only one stamp (as opposed to two). At the time, I thought I'd try sliding it through, because I only had one stamp for the submission after putting a stamp on my SASE--AND I didn't want to "procrastinate" until the next time I made it to the Post Office to buy some more stamps.

Anyway, lesson learned. And tomorrow morning, I'll re-send with two stamps instead of one.

*****

Hope everyone missed me while I was gone. Soon, you'll all want to send me off on another vacation, I'm sure. ;)

--Robert

(p.s. I still need to read the final Harry Potter book!!!!!)


Personal Updates
7/31/2007 5:59:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] 
Remembering Grandma
Posted by Nancy

I realized when I looked at the calendar this morning that it was 16 years since Grandma Martha died of breast cancer. The night before she passed, I told her (as she lay staring with open eyes--I don't know if she even heard me) that I'd think of her every day for the rest of my life. I'm pretty sure I have. Sometimes it's sheer nostalgia that conjures the memories; other times it's when I discover some genealogical fact about our lineage that would have surprised and amazed her.

At still other times I watch my sister with her kids and imagine the delight my grandmother would have taken in my niece and nephew--and the pleasure (possibly amazement) at the outstanding mother my sister turned out to be. (You see, my sister didn't seem to care much about kids as an adolescent and young adult, and she married after Grandma was gone.)

The poem below is one I wrote about 20 years ago about a special Sunday Grandma and I shared. Sometimes I swear I can still hear her humming those hymns. 

 

AT THE RIVER

for Grandma Martha

 

The Sunday before Grandma’s surgery

we sit along the bank

beside the General Store

at Rabbit Hash.  For an hour

we have debated taking the ferry

to Rising Sun, but the boat

chugs in, chugs out

and we stay put, lulled

by the backwash lapping

the stubbled beach.

 

Grandma talks

about rivers.  Immersion,

she states, is the only

salvation, to hell with sprinkling

over marble basins.  At fifteen,

pregnant, she swam each day

across the shallow tributary

near her home, buoyed

by her extended belly,

until Great-Grandma made her stop.

 

“I never was afraid

of a river,” she swears, eyeing

the ever-present ferry

which seems always to be just

leaving.  We could sit like this

all day, putting crossings off

as Grandma hums snatches

of old-time gospel hymns

where water saves, and the Almighty

pilots the holy ship to Zion.

(from Rites and Observances [Finishing Line Press], (c)2004)

--Nancy


Personal Updates
7/31/2007 4:28:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3] 
If You Write Poetry for Children...
Posted by Nancy

Alice Pope is the editor of Children's Writer's & Illustrator's Market, the premiere market guide for children's writers--including poets.  At Alice's CWIM Blog, she offers "not-quite-daily news and musings." It's a lively place, and in a couple of days Alice will be live-blogging from the annual summer conference of the Society of Children's Book Writers & Illustrators (SCBWI) in Los Angeles. Stop by and see what's happening in Alice's world (and the world of children's books).

 

--Nancy


General | Poetry News
7/31/2007 10:42:35 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, July 30, 2007
Congratulations to Jared Carter
Posted by Nancy

As I posted earlier this month, Jared Carter was nominated in the poetry category for the Best Books of Indiana 2007 awards. Jared sends word that Cross This Bridge at a Walk was honored with the poetry award, which "was presented by last year’s poetry winner, Karen Kovacik, of Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis. This year’s judges for poetry were Edward Byrne, Valparaiso University; Cornelius Eady, University of Notre Dame; and Michele Fenton, Indiana State Library," reports Jared. He adds that he and his wife, Diane, "wish to thank all those who attended--all those who gave the awards a boost online or in the print media--and all those who sent greetings and congratulations!" More information about the awards and the ceremony are available here.

 

--Nancy

 

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Poetry News | Poets
7/30/2007 1:57:51 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, July 27, 2007
Friday SPAM Poetry Prompt #727
Posted by Nancy

SPAM prompt line: I'm writing to find love

 

Sorry I haven't followed up on my promise to try these prompts myself--I'm a couple of poems behind. I'm going to try to catch up next week.

 

As for this week's prompt: Are you writing to find love? (Romantic love? The adulation of readers?) Are you writing to find something else? Or does "finding" something not enter into your writing at all?

 

For the sake of this exercise, even if you're pretending, say, "Yes, I am writing to find…" Then write a whole series of statements completing the sentence. Write the first thing that comes into your mind, whether it's true or not, whether it makes sense or not.

 

I'm writing to find the truth.

I'm writing to find readers.

I'm writing to find my youth.

I'm writing to find Nemo.

I'm writing to find the solutions to all my problems.

I'm writing to find salvation.

 

Finish these statements for as long as it feels fresh and interesting. When you're done, don't read the list--put it away for a day or two. When you pull the list out, select the statement that intrigues you the most and use that as the inspiration for your poem.

 

(There are no rules here, of course. If you want to group several statements that seem to relate to create a poem, that's fine. If you think your list makes a fine poem as is, or with some tinkering, that's fine, too. And keep the remaining statements on that list for future brainstorming.)

 

--Nancy

 

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Poetry Prompts
7/27/2007 4:26:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] 
 Thursday, July 26, 2007
The Blogging Side of Poetry
Posted by Nancy

The new 2008 edition of Poet's Market offers "Roundtable: Poets and Blogs" by Anne Bowling. Featured are bloggers Amanda Johnston, C. Dale Young (Avoiding the Muse), Kate Greenstreet (Every Other Day), Janet Holmes (Humanphone), Reb Livingston (Home-Schooled by a Cackling Jackal), and Jilly Dybka (Poetry Hut Blog).

 

Regarding the question, "What would you warn a potential poet-blogger against?", each blogger had this to say:

 

Johnston: A blog is a public space--always remember that. Know that thousands of people could potentially read and respond to your work. This really is no different than publishing work in books or anthologies, but publishing work to a personal blog makes you more vulnerable; it's more of a risk. 

 

Holmes: Excessive self-exposure. I've seen a few young poets make some very foolish statements on their blogs that will likely haunt them for some time.

 

Dybka: I would caution them against some of the same things that one should be aware of on the Internet in general. Be careful what kind of information you share. Also, have some decorum.

 

Livingston:  Nobody wants to read a blog if it's just a list of publications, accomplishments and upcoming appearances. If that's the only goal, a general Web site is the way to go. Yes, there's a lot of opportunity to direct people to one's work, but if one doesn't have something to contribute, ideas or commentary, a reason for why readers would want to read your blog, there's no purpose in blogging.

 

Young: No warnings. I am always telling people to write what they want to write. If there is an audience for it, they will find you. I tell folks the same thing about writing poems.

 

Additional questions Bowling asks of her panel include "What do blogs offer that general Web sites do not?", "Has blogging affected the form of poetry?", and "Is blogging a helpful tool toward publication." See the 2008 Poet's Market for the entire discussion.

 

--Nancy


General | Poets
7/26/2007 4:09:11 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] 
 Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Poetry news from here and there
Posted by Nancy

If you live in the Boston, MA area or will be visiting in early November, mark your calendar for The Somerville News Writers Festival V, to be held at the Jimmy Tingle Theater on November 11 at 7 p.m. Featured poets include Gloria Mindock, Dainelle Legros Georges, Irene Koronas, La Galluccio, and Douglas Holder. The 2007 Ibbetson Street Lifetime Award will be presented to Robert Pinksy, former U.S. Poet Laureate and founder of The Favorite Poem Project.

 

A classic 1994 Dave Barry column explores the poetry anthology biz.

 

The poems are out there: poetry about aliens.

 

--Nancy

 

UPDATE FROM LO (not "LA") GALLUCIO (with apologies):

 

Thanks for the mention. I only wanted to let you know that my name is actually Lo Galluccio, not La Galluccio. Although I kind of like your variation. I also have an Italian website at http://unofficiallogalluccio.atspace.com. I'll be reading at Out of the Blue Gallery with Edward J. Carvahlo on August 18th. Again, thanks for the mention and your publicizing the Writer's Festival which I am proud to be part of this year.


Poetry News
7/25/2007 11:25:42 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Some Good News!
Posted by Robert

Yes, I'm on vacation, but I also have Internet access tonight. So, of course, I have to share some good news from today. You see, I received my contributor copy of Otoliths issue 5, part 1. To check out the issue online, go to http://the-otolith.blogspot.com and click on the Contents link. Good stuff.

For me, it was a real treat to be published in an Australian publication. Makes me feel all Internationale!

*****

Also, I recently posted another poem on my Faulty Mindbomb project. This time from David LaBounty, who I've seen published more and more recently. Click here to check out his poem "Nails."

*****

Okay, I think I might be leaving soon, and I'm pretty sure I won't have Internet access after tomorrow morning. ;)

 


Personal Updates
7/24/2007 9:36:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, July 23, 2007
Bon Voyage, Robert!
Posted by Nancy

As Robert notes below, he's going on vacation. I'm sure readers will miss him, and I definitely will! The nice thing about a blog done in partnership is the advantage of presenting two separate voices--and Robert's voice will be regrettably missing over the next several days.

 

I'd like to add that there's no one who deserves some R&R right now as much as Robert Brewer. He puts forth unimaginable effort editing Writer's Market and WritersMarket.com and deserves high praise for his dedication and the quality of his work. Then he willingly added to his responsibilities by founding this blog and taking super initiative to get it going with regular posts--not an easy thing when you're also doing customer service on your book and website, editing material, working on a newsletter, and more things in one day than you probably want to hear about.

 

Have fun, Robert. And be sure to let us know all about it when you get back!

 

--Nancy


General | Personal Updates
7/23/2007 3:36:19 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
How Thunder Gets Stolen
Posted by Nancy

I came across this interesting post by Pamela Redmond Satran (hat tip to The Poetry Foundation's Dispatches: News feature online) about "Maya Angelou's Best Poem Ever"--which was actually written by Satran as a list column for Glamour in 1997.

 

Satran's experiences, including having the "poem" produced as a book and poster for sale by third parties without credit to her, sound like the kind of worst case scenario nightmare beginning poets envision when they contact me about copyright, publishing rights, having work stolen, etc. If anything, Satran's list proves that rights and original source of publication don't have much impact. If your work isn't safe from being stolen, borrowed, or misidentified when it's been published in something as high profile and commercial as Glamour, you're probably really up the creek when you publish in small journals or post your poems online.

 

Note that I definitely am NOT saying you shouldn't publish in small journals or post your poems online. My caveat is more about not wasting too much energy worrying about someone stealing your work, a favorite obsession of beginning and unpublished poets (and possibly some experienced ones, too, if they were honest about it). Deal with it if and when it happens, but don't inhibit yourself with too much fretting about it.

 

There are a lot of issues associated with Satran's incident that are prime discussion material: intellectual property rights (no matter which side of the fence you're on about that), the viral nature of e-mails and the Internet, whether the "fame" of the work should be weighed against the notoriety the original author is cheated out of. I certainly sympathize with Satran--I guess I'm one of those egotists who wants my name associated with something I wrote, if it originally appeared with a byline. But it also steams me that when something gets passed on and on as a "poem," so often it turns out not to be a poem at all--while there are so many great poems, old and new, that do deserve to go viral. (As Satran says regarding her frustrations in trying to regain credit for the piece, "People believing that's Angelou's best poem ever, I figured, is justice enough.")

 

Pamela Redmond Satran's website has more information about the author and her work--beyond "Maya Angelou's Best Poem Ever."

 

--Nancy


Commentary
7/23/2007 3:02:47 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] 
Mathematics and poetry, as well as 2 tributes
Posted by Robert

Before I launch into the news today, I should let you know that I may not be posting much between now and next Tuesday. 'Tis the season for summer vacations, and my time has come up. I'll be haunting the Appalachians of Tennessee and Georgia over the next week or so. I'm sure I won't be missed too much though with Nancy holding down the fort. :)

*****

"60 Second Interview," by Alistair Baptista for Gulf Daily News, features an interview with mathematics professor and poet Dr. Khalid Amin, who draws comparisons between math and poetry.

*****

"Tragic vision of poetry," by Muhammed Nafih for Deccan Herald, provides a short tribute of the Iraqi poet Nazek al-Malaika, who passed away recently at the age of 85.

*****

"IU professor emeritus was pioneer in concrete poetry movement," by Sarah J. Deuser for the Indiana Daily Student, looks at poet and critic Mary Ellen Solt, who passed away on June 21 at age 86.

*****

Click here to read more Poetry News.


Personal Updates | Poetry News | Poets
7/23/2007 1:03:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, July 20, 2007
Friday SPAM poetry prompt #720
Posted by Nancy

SPAM prompt line: Are you still with short ramrod?

 

(Sorry for the late prompt post--it was a distracting day.)

 

That squirt Ramrod. What a character! Everyone in your class got a kick out of Ramrod, he wasn't like anyone else. What a shock when he got together with HER. Did they marry? Did it last? What did their kids look like?

 

Look into your past and see if you can identify a "Ramrod" kind of guy: rather unattractive yet appealing, always kept things lively, maybe foreshadowed a loser taint that would pull him down over the years. And then somehow he made a romantic match with an unlikely partner--amazing everyone and generating buzz that never completely died down.

 

Write a poem, any style, any form, about a Ramrod-esque person you knew, or knew of. Don't write an epic. Portray "Ramrod" as deftly as you can while exploring the ironies and mysteries of true love.

 

--Nancy

Go here for more poetry prompts...


Poetry Prompts
7/20/2007 11:34:43 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [4]