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 Thursday, April 23, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 23
Posted by Robert
After today's poem, we'll just be a week away from completion! Can you dig it? I don't know if you're the same as I am, but I've found doing this prompts actually encourages me to write more during the month. I've probably written at least 30-40 first draft poems and/or random lines for poems that aren't posted on the blog. It's like each morning's prompt and poem is a jumpstart to thinking for the rest of the day.
For today's prompt, I want you to write a poem of regret. Get creative with this one, but there should be some form of regret either expressed or hinted at (even if ever so slightly). You do NOT have to use the word "regret" in the poem, though it's fine if you do.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"The Stupid Things We Do"
Where to go from here: Keys locked in the car with her 2-year-old strapped in his seat and crying himself red with her new cell phone in center console, she knows she cannot enter her house with out breaking windows or abandoning her little baby.
Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Thursday, April 23, 2009 1:55:07 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, April 22, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 22
Posted by Robert
For today's prompt, I want you to write a work-related poem. Work doesn't have to be the main feature of the poem, but I want you to "work" it in somehow. And remember: There are different types of work. Of course, there are the activities that gain you fortune and fame (or not), but then, there's also housework, exercise, volunteering, etc. I'm sure you'll "work" it out.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"Dream job"
In the dream, he can't open his eyes or his e-mail messages. The dream dictionary he bought at the thrift store has no answers; but, in his dream, he also almost won a prize, which suggests he'll almost be successful in his current endeavors. Maybe more important: Why was he shopping at a thrift store anyway? He could blame the economy or the price of healthcare, but he really enjoys hunting for discarded treasures--he'd still haunt these stores even if he won the lottery. In fact, he would still work the same job that gives him nightmares, because these things are the things he loves.
Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Wednesday, April 22, 2009 1:06:01 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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Interview With Poet Sage Cohen
Posted by Robert
Sage Cohen is the author of Writer's Digest Books' most recent poetry title, Writing the Life Poetic. She's also the author of Like the Heart, the World (Queen of Wands Press). She's taught poetry at universities, hospitals and writing conferences as well as online. As principal of Sage Communications, Cohen writes the words that connect businesses with the people they want to reach.
Though I admit I'm usually suspicious of self-published titles (Queen of Wands Press is Sage's own press, named after one of the poems in the collection), both Tammy and myself found her collection Like the Heart, the World to be a great read. Here's one of my favorites:
The Irony of the Small Horn
Paul says the Great American Music Hall should be called The Great European Music Hall.
Its gold flourishes and imperial balcony feel more like something you'd yearn for from across the ocean.
Nothing is named right in this world. I don't know what to call Paul's body against mine.
Dancing, maybe, but that's not enough. It's more like a question before it is born
gathering force among the margins of what is already known or believed.
Paul has his hand on my stomach where my shirt rides up and I press into the beat coming through his chest.
My hips rotate with the room. Singular surrenders to plural. Sweat and smoke and beer and bodies pulse in the darkness.
The music is a fire. Dancing is the flame. We all depend on each other to burn.
Paul points out the enormous man playing the tiny trumpet. All the big guys have small horns, we agree.
This poem was supposed to be about that. About the trumpet, because that was how Paul and I planned it.
But nothing ever turns out the way you think it will. The music ends, and then it's time to go home.
*****
What are you up to?
National Poetry Month has been great fun over here. I've launched my Writing the Life Poetic book tour by speaking at a few chapters of Willamette Writers and appearing on a variety of writing blogs throughout the month. It's week five of my six-week Poetry for the People online class, and my students have been dazzling me with their dedication and fine poems. My full-time "day job" of marketing communications consultant is clipping right along, and I've been dedicating every scrap of free time to your Poem-A-Day Challenge. Because my son Theo has been waking up every two hours or so throughout the night for the past seven months, I'm in a perpetual sleep-deprivation daze that I've decided to embrace as a poetic state of mind.
Like the Heart, the World is a self-published title. Why did you choose this route of publication?
Before deciding to self publish, I spent about a year sending my manuscript out to publication contests. It placed as finalist or semi-finalist four times, which was exciting. That was enough validation for me...I didn't want to spend any more time waiting for someone to choose my book for publication. I felt a sense of urgency to have that body of work in the world, and to have it look and feel exactly the way I wanted. I've spent years creating marketing communications materials for clients, and I always enjoy the opportunity to design and produce my own pieces. So I hired my favorite illustrator/designer to layout the book and create the cover, and within a few months, had a finished product in my hands.
What do you think is the most rewarding part of self-publishing your collection? What do you consider the most challenging?
It was very empowering deciding that my book was ready to be born, and then making it happen. The poems in Like the Heart, the World span more than 15 years and reflect time periods and thematic cycles in my life that felt complete. With this publication, I feel that they've been well honored, which gives me more breathing room to embrace the poems of this life chapter. There really haven't been any challenges or regrets.
I hope that my experience will remind other poets who feel helpless about the poetry publishing waiting process that they have options. We can decide when our manuscripts are ready to go forth into the world as books, and we can do that however we like...the traditionally prescribed way or our own way.
You've taught poetry at universities, hospitals, and writing conferences. What's the most common question you receive? What's your answer?
While the questions take many different forms, what people studying poetry seem to universally need is permission to write poems--and encouragement about their capacity to do so. I see my role as a mirror...I reflect back to my students what is powerful and true in what they are doing so they can have more fun and be more successful doing it.
Why should a poet buy a copy of Writing the Life Poetic?
The craft of poetry has been well documented in a variety of books that offer a valuable service to serious writers striving to become competent poets. Now it’s time for a poetry book that does more than lecture from the front of the classroom. Writing the Life Poetic was written to be a contagiously fun adventure in writing. Through an entertaining mix of insights, exercises, expert guidance and encouragement, I hope to get readers excited about the possibilities of poetry––and engaged in a creative practice. Leonard Cohen says: "Poetry is just the evidence of life. If your life is burning well, poetry is just the ash." My goal is that Writing the Life Poetic be the flame fueling the life well lived.
Practicing poets, aspiring poets, and teachers of writing in a variety of settings can use Writing the Life Poetic to write, read, and enjoy poems. Both practical and inspirational, it will leave readers with a greater appreciation for the poetry they read and a greater sense of possibility for the poetry they write.
Like the Heart, the World is broken into three sections (New York, San Francisco, and Portland). How important is location to your writing?
I wouldn't say that location is important to my writing, per se, but that the writing processes that I chose in each of the cities I lived seemed to yield a kind of poetry that resonated with that particular place. In New York, I walked everywhere and carried a small, handheld tape recorder where I whispered my little slivers of street-sightings and trash tracings. Then I'd transcribe these observations into the computer later and write from there. In San Francisco, I had a regular rhythm of freewriting (in longhand, in notebooks) in cafes, often while listening to live acoustic music. These days, I have somewhat of a hybrid of my previous two practices. I carry 3x5" index cards everywhere and write down everything that comes—usually while hiking in a rainforest or taking a bath. As a result, the New York poems often echo urban alienation and are laced with street grit. The San Francisco poems are often thematically and craft-wise a little looser and more musical and the Portland poems feel to me watery and deeply green.
Do you have a favorite poetic form?
I'm fascinated by haiku. This form represents to me the quintessential art of compression that poetry asks of us: to reveal a panoramic truth in a thin, velum layer of words.
Who are you currently reading?
Tess Gallagher, Paulann Petersen, Mari L'Esperance, Jack Gilbert, Jericho Brown, Jay Leeming.
If you could pass on only one piece of advice to your fellow poets, what would it be?
Welcome what comes. The poems choosing you are the ones that need to be written. Don't judge them or worry if they're "important" enough. Your poems will teach you who you are as a poet and a person. Just follow the golden thread and let them write you.
*****
If you wish to learn more about Sage Cohen, check out her website at www.sagesaidso.com.
Or you can stop by her blog at www.writingthelifepoetic.typepad.com.
*****
Are you a poet or poetry publisher interested in seeing yourself (or your authors) interviewed here on Poetic Asides? Well, figure out how to get the ball rolling on that by clicking here.
*****
Looking for more poetry information?
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Check out our poetry titles (on sale in the month of April) HERE.
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Read the most recent WritersDigest.com poetry-related articles HERE.
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View several poetic forms HERE.
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See where poetry is happening HERE.
Personal Updates | Poet Interviews | Poetry News | Poetry Publishing | Poets
Wednesday, April 22, 2009 5:09:52 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, April 21, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 21
Posted by Robert
We're now 3 weeks into April! And to celebrate, we get a 2-for-Tuesday prompt. Hurrah!
Here are the two prompts for the day (you only need to choose one, unless you're all about pushing yourself to the limit):
1. Write a haiku. The haiku is not just a form but a genre of poetry. (Click here to read more about the haiku.) People sometimes go into writing a haiku and end up with a senryu or a faux-ku, but it's all good (and all poetry).
2. Write about the haiku. I know there are some poets (in this very group even) who are anti-form. So, I'm giving them the option to write their anti-haiku manifestos. Of course, if you pay attention to this 2nd prompt, it doesn't need to be anti-haiku; your poem could be questioning or even praising the haiku. Or something.
Here's my attempt for the day:
Flower blossoms covering the car hood; hidden bird poop.
Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Tuesday, April 21, 2009 1:09:16 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, April 20, 2009
Poetic Forms: Villanelle
Posted by Robert
(Okay, I'm going to try posting this again. Apparently, this blog is anti-villanelle.)
So, the French form I had not covered yet was not the rondeau, but the villanelle. Oh well. We got a nice rondeau refresher earlier this week. (Check it out here.)
The villanelle, like the other French forms, does have many of the same properties: plenty of rhyme and repetition. This French form was actually adapted from Italian folk songs (villanella) about rural life. One of the more famous contemporary villanelles is "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night," by Dylan Thomas.
The villanelle consists of five tercets and a quatrain with line lengths of 8-10 syllables. The first and third lines of the first stanza become refrains that repeat throughout the poem. It looks like this:
A(1) b A(2)
a b A(1)
a b A(2)
a b A(1)
a b A(2)
a b A(1) A(2)
Here's an example that I wrote:
Paralegal
Lawyers are not paid to be nice; they're expected to always win. She can say it once, say it twice,
"If you want to take their advice, you should know before you begin: Lawyers are not paid to be nice."
They have their sin; they have their vice-- some with drink, others with women. She can say it once, say it twice,
because she's seen every slice-- including both women and men-- "Lawyers are not paid to be nice."
But if you have suffered malice and do not want to lose again, she can say it once, say it twice,
"If you want to win, pay the price; let the legal process begin." Lawyers are not paid to be nice; she can say it once, say it twice.
*****
Check out the Wikipedia entry for villanelle by clicking here.
Check out the Poets.org entry for villanelle by clicking here.
*****
Looking for more poetry information?
-
Check out our poetry titles (on sale in the month of April) HERE.
-
Read the most recent WritersDigest.com poetry-related articles HERE.
-
View several poetic forms HERE.
-
See where poetry is happening HERE.
Personal Updates | Poetic Forms | Poetry Craft Tips
Monday, April 20, 2009 5:38:58 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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April PAD Challenge: Day 20
Posted by Robert
We're now 66.7% of the way through April (after finishing today's poem). Despite crazy technological snafus, I think we're going to make it. Only 10 days to go after today! Yay!
For today's prompt, I want you to write a poem of rebirth. There are many different types of rebirth available, including the changing of the seasons, the beginning of the day, religious or spiritual rebirth, a reconfirmation of good in people, re-learning how to love, etc. So think on it a bit, and create a stellar rebirth poem.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"No one would know"
This countertop was covered in potato peels, onions, and celery scraps. Flour, spilled tomato sauce. Every meal, a new mess. His movements are methodical, measurements precise. He imagines he is making up for Chemistry 101 when he adds a teaspoon of oregano and basil. He's already browned the beef, set everything to slowly cook as he scaped away ingredients left over, washed measuring spoons and cutting board now ready for the next meal.
*****
Looking for more poetry information?
-
Check out our poetry titles (on sale in the month of April) HERE.
-
Read the most recent WritersDigest.com poetry-related articles HERE.
-
View several poetic forms HERE.
-
See where poetry is happening HERE.
Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Monday, April 20, 2009 2:06:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Sunday, April 19, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 19
Posted by Robert
I apologize for the problem some people were having yesterday with posting their poems. I think it is fixed now, because I was just able to successfully leave a comment on Day 18.
Perhaps appropriately, today's prompt is to write an angry poem. That is, a poem about someone or something that gets angry. Could be a person, animal, or even them there angry clouds. As usual, I'm excited to see which unexpected directions y'all take with this prompt.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"Stepson"
He is always angry when he returns from his father's house. But I can't say why or if it's just normal from taking turns. He is always angry when he returns! After a day, he loses his concerns and is once again happy. Little guy, he's always so angry when he returns from his father's house, though I can't say why.
Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Sunday, April 19, 2009 2:23:06 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Saturday, April 18, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 18
Posted by Robert
After today's poem, we'll be 60% of the way through this challenge. Woo-hoo!
For today's prompt, I want you to write a poem with an interaction of some sort. The interaction does NOT have to be between people, though it can. For instance, you could write about the interaction between a bee and a flower; or an owl and a field mouse. Or just write about a traffic cop getting into an argument with a speeder. Just as long as there is some sort of interaction going on.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"Only Gets Worse"
I watch the boys run around the new playground. Another father approaches me and says, "Kids," chuckling to himself. I don't know how to respond, so I don't. "Yeah, my little one--that girl in the green dress--she's a handful for sure." I never understand why some people feel the need to talk about nothing when there's nothing to talk about. He exhales a long sigh, "Yeah, her mother's a bitch." He waves gnats away from his face with his hand. "How long you been married?" He apparently hasn't noticed I haven't been communicating, and he obviously doesn't care, because he says, "It only gets worse," and then adds, "It only gets worse." He waves away some more gnats, takes his leave of me, and makes his way to a single mom on the other side of the play area. She watches him approach, clutches at her purse, and smiles nervously when he laughs.
Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Saturday, April 18, 2009 1:37:14 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, April 17, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 17
Posted by Robert
As with so many others who've been participating in this challenge, I am amazed not only by the quantity of poems submitted to Poetic Asides, but also the quality. And the creativity. You guys rock!
For today's prompt, I want you to write a poem with the following title: "All I want is (blank)," where you fill in the blank with a word or phrase of your choosing. Some example titles, then, could be: "All I want is to eat fried chicken"; "All I want is world peace"; "All I want is for everyone to tell me I'm beautiful"; or "All I want is a handful of quarters."
Here's my attempt for the day:
"All I want is this moment"
Something as simple as a father rolling a groundball to his son and showing him how to pivot and throw.
*****
Looking for more poetry information?
-
Check out our poetry titles (on sale in the month of April) HERE.
-
Read the most recent WritersDigest.com poetry-related articles HERE.
-
View several poetic forms HERE.
-
See where poetry is happening HERE.
Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Friday, April 17, 2009 1:12:28 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Thursday, April 16, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 16
Posted by Robert
If you feel up for it, be sure to share your favorite poem from the first 15 days of the challenge here.
*****
For today's prompt, I want you to pick a color, make that the title of your poem, and write a poem that is inspired by that color.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"Blue"
Eyes in the morning look for the moon unsure of the time they wake. An ache for violence, dull throbbing of wind through trees. She doesn't know how things got to this; she doesn't know what will be next.
*****
Looking for more poetry information?
-
Check out our poetry titles (on sale in the month of April) HERE.
-
Read the most recent WritersDigest.com poetry-related articles HERE.
-
View several poetic forms HERE.
-
See where poetry is happening HERE.
Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Thursday, April 16, 2009 1:41:56 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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