read write prompt #1: in a sentence

Welcome to the first-ever Read Write Prompt. This week, we’ll focus on American Sentences. Some people don’t like the name, but please don’t be put off by it. It’s simply the name Allen Ginsberg chose for this poetry form, which is a single sentence of 17 syllables. You can read more about American Sentences at www.americansentences.com, where Paul Nelson talks about them in detail.

So this week, let’s focus on writing some American Sentences. You can write just one, or a whole list of them. You might try writing one every day of the week.

You can also pair up with another participant to write some of these collaboratively. If you want to work with another participant, just check out their blog on the participant page and shoot them an e-mail to see if they are interested in working with you.

If you go the collaborative route, try taking turns, with each of you writing one word at a time. Or you could try e-mailing an American Sentence to another participant and then having the recipient write a response American Sentence and sending it back to you — and so on and so on, until the two of you have a whole conversation going in American Sentences.

For this post, I thought we could try something fun and a little risky. I’m very interested in seeing how American Sentences might be combined to form a single poem, with different people each contributing a sentence to the overall poem. If you would like, leave one American Sentence in the comments section of this post. When we post the Get Your Poem On post, we’ll include our group poem at the bottom of that post.

Here’s how we’re going to do it:

  1. Contribute one and only one line to the group American Sentence by leaving a comment in this post that is an American Sentence.
  2. Please read through Paul’s site so you know what an American Sentence is before leaving one. Remember, one sentence, 17 syllables, direct observation.
  3. Do not leave any comment on your sentence or any comment that is not an American Sentence. If you have any questions, please use e-mail: info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org. We want to restrict comments on this post to the sentences so nothing else gets in their way.
  4. Don’t feel you have to leave a sentence that relates to the one above it. You can, but it’s not required. The sentences might be really interesting if they aren’t related but end up being read as a whole in the resulting poem.
  5. Be aware this might not work. Everything we do here in terms of collaborating is an experiment, and it’s OK if it doesn’t work out. These are just poems after all, and if we write one together that’s a dud, that’s totally cool. We’ll always have more group poems in the future.

OK, that about sums it up. Don’t forget to check out the Get Your Poem On post, which is where you can leave your permalink(s) to your contribution(s) this week. That post will go up Monday, Nov. 19 at midnight EST and will remain open for one week.

This is probably obvious, but please reserve permalinks until that time, but have fun leaving your American Sentence for the group poem on this post. Remember that you can post individually and collaboratively written American Sentences on the Get Your Poem On post. We won’t limit you to one contribution for the week.

That about does it. Now let’s all roll up our sleeves and start writing.

Poem On!
~Ceridwen.

P.S. Remember: In the comments section HERE, type an American Sentence for the group poem. Then, in the comments section of the Nov. 19 “Get Your Poem On” post, leave a permalink to your own American Sentences contribution (the one on your own blog or on your blogs, if you worked on a contribution collaboratively).

P.P.S. Also, go take the Read Write Poll while you’re here. It’s at the top of the right sidebar.


39 Responses to “read write prompt #1: in a sentence”

  1. 1 me

    Oh me first, let me see, that’s eight, but that might be more than one sentence.

  2. 2 dogfaceboy

    The American Sentence has seventeen syllables—period.

  3. 3 Dennis

    She once told me GIRTH was an acronym for God It’s Really Thick Hon!

  4. 4 the polka dot witch

    my lawn’s frosty fingers plead with morning rays: “sun, take away our fears.”

  5. 5 Clare

    Your intoxicating spice lingered in my bed three days and three nights.

  6. 6 Linda Jacobs

    Deb hangs her head, greasy hair hanging. No homework again. Now, no home.

  7. 7 Catherine

    You can sit on your porch here and watch your dog run away for three days

  8. 8 Kimberley

    Ghosts try to weave into reality zigzagging through mini blinds.

  9. 9 Rose Dewy Knickers

    Fall leaves please, I concentrate and squint, hoping for snowfall and reindeer.

    Rose

    xo

  10. 10 Clay

    Wicked thoughts between Chardonnay and pizza blond delivers wife waits.

  11. 11 slynne

    In the street- you drop my hand when a man walks by: I want to reach out.

  12. 12 Shelley

    At the doctor’s, confounded by forms: not single, not married.

  13. 13 Derek

    Ghosts, fall leaves and your hands all remind me of sweat: I can’t forgive that.

  14. 14 Stickpoet

    I was only three cocktails or a stay away from execution.

  15. 15 jillypoet

    May I now present a man, a wife, two children, a stock Christmas card.

  16. 16 Ceridwen

    My hair, unwoven, remembers how it feels to be held in a braid.

  17. 17 Becca

    Police helicopter hovers overhead while I sit drinking my wine.

  18. 18 annieelf

    This is very intriguing, like a haiku without the end breaks.

  19. 19 This Girl Remembers

    As I write the cat stares at my efforts - clearly he is unimpressed.

  20. 20 Paris Parfait

    All public transport grinds to a halt to call Sarkozy’s bluff - who blinks?

  21. 21 Fabs

    Twin-sentence problems can be fixed with the magic of semicolons.

  22. 22 ...deb

    Last year’s gloves hide camouflaged under lint piles of a hundred worries.

  23. 23 wendy

    In seperate compartments, still, we all travel along the same tracks.

  24. 24 UL

    Tempted to attempt my very first American sentence, curiosity conquers fear of mess-up.

  25. 25 Whirling Dervish

    More shit from my pencil; how come I can’t write like Allen Ginsberg?

  26. 26 Christine

    Jets blast, geese cronk, wind rushes scarlet leaves: sound layers above my head.

  27. 27 WithSerendipity

    Staring in her blue eyes, he says: You will always just be my lover.

  28. 28 Jack

    It rains in the desert while I’m on the beach; the beach, of course, is dry.

  29. 29 Derek

    I pulled shut the door as soon as I realized where my keys remained.

  30. 30 gautami tripathy

    congealed oats- stuck to the walls of glass- reminder of my gelled life?

  31. 31 amber dawn (goldmourn)

    Spilled mocha on my blue winter coat. Rain washed it clean - but not me.

  32. 32 pauline

    Life is transitory; let your joy and your melancholy take turns.

  33. 33 Jessica

    Everything should be as easy to erase as cheap pink nail polish.

  34. 34 pepektheassassin

    She took nothing but crumbs, the dregs, left-overs, and tears: then she complained.

  35. 35 Dave Bonta

    Memo to Ginsberg:
    writing haiku in three lines
    IS American.

  36. 36 Glad

    sit…stay…down…over…good girl…daddy loves when you are obedient!

  37. 37 Roberta

    a cup of tea this chilly fall night, I simply sip the cold away

  38. 38 Read Write Poem

    Comment for this post are now closed.

  1. 1 American Sentences: Overhead « Mariacristina

WEEKLY READ WRITE PROMPT

July 2, 2008 — The current Get Your Poem On post is here. This is where you leave us a link to your blog, this week in response to Dana ShuffleWords idea, or any other kind of word play. (Or see if RWP-Twitter is for you!)

Next week's prompt will light you up. Thanks, Jill!



WEEKLY READ WRITE ARTICLES

June 26, 2008 — This month Jessica tells us which poets she first picked out to read, all on her own, because she wanted to. Who did you pick out?

Tom's Informal Talk About Forms has got more rhythm.

Christine's latest installment of Get The Lead Out discusses epigraphs. It's an inspired article.

We've been wanting more read here at Read Write Poem and Juliet brings it with her review of Spoken Word Revolution Redux.

January gives us a primer on revision.



POLL DANCE

July 5, 2008 — This time Carolee talks about how we talk about poetry we may not understand straight away in her "poll dance".

There's a new poll up. Yeah, a day early.



RANDOM PROMPTS

A different word or phrase will appear here each time you visit the site or refresh the page. Your current prompt is — junk



RANDOM WRITING TIP

Don't censor your experiences or ideas by telling yourself, "That's not important" or "Nobody would care about that." People write poems grass. Nothing is out of bounds. What you consider mundane or inane or insane may deliver to you a moment or clarity or a bit of joy.



RANDOM READING TIP

A great way to learn about a region is to read their poets. When planning your next vacation or trip, also research the region’s famous poets. (If you’re going out of the country, look for good translations.) You may be surprised at how well a poet can capture a regional spirit in verse. You’ll be more prepared for your trip and you can impress residents by knowing about their local writers.



RANDOM COLLABORATING TIP

Use instant messaging to write a poem with a collaborator by taking turns one word, one phrase or one line at a time. With group chat, you can do this with more than one partner.


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