get your poem on #20

by Jill Crammond Wickham

So what did you hear this week? We want to know!

From now until midnight one week from today, comments on this post will be open, so you can leave a permalink (one per comment, please!) to your blog post for this week’s contribution.

We hope you took the time to write something based on snippets of overheard conversations , but we won’t mind reading any of your inspirations.

Please, link back here in your posts, either with a hyperlink to Read Write Poem or by using the badge in your post. Sidebar links are great but it helps our “internet health” when you link in every post you contribute to the project. And please add “Read Write Poem” in your tags, if you don’t mind.

For the new folks: Please take a few moments to read the About pages, including our Copyrights page. If you have any questions about the project after reading through those pages, email us at info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org.

informal talk about forms: a brief napowrimo approach

by Christine Swint

Here’s the long and short of it …

Can we really write 30 poems in 30 days? Yes, we can!

This past November, I participated in NaBloPoMo, National Blog Posting Month. After joining Dana’s group, Read Write Poem, I used the challenge of posting every day to write a poem a day. I was able to write 30 poems by exploring the world of short forms.

In light of the upcoming NaPoWriMo, we thought it would be helpful to round up several short forms for everyone to play with. Who knows, it might become your new favorite way to write!

  • Pleiades: This is a modern form invented in 1999 by Craig Tigerman. The Pleiades, named after the constellation also known as the seven sisters from Greek mythology, consists of seven lines of seven syllables each. The title is one word, and each line starts with the same letter as the title.
  • Cadae: Another form based on counting syllables, the cadae follows the sequence of the first seven digits of Pi (which equals 3.141592). The first line consists of three syllables, the second one syllable, and so on. You could include several stanzas, or just one. Another variation would be to write three words for the first line, one word for the second line, etc.
  • Fib: The fib is similar to the cadae, in that the form is based on a sequence of numbers (0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21). It too is a modern form. There are several ways to write a fib, but the most common way I’ve seen is to write a one syllable line for the first two lines, two syllables for the second, etc. This form creates a great visual effect, because the Fibonacci curve found in nature reveals itself on the page. (See Prompt # 11 where we explored this form in Januray.)

You can also read more about the fib at Gottabook, site of author Gregory K., who coined the title “fib”:

  • Rothko: I’ve never written a Rothko poem, but I’m going to soon. There are three basic guidelines to writing one: have a Rothko painting in front of you, write three lines of poetry, each containing three words, and include three colors. If you follow this link to About Poetry, you can also read about the Pollock. Maybe you have your own favorite painter. Why not invent your own short form based on that artist’s work?
  • Nonet: The nonet contains nine lines. The first line contains nine syllables, the second eight, etc … (9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1).

Besides these forms, you might already enjoy American Sentences, a form Dana brought to us for our first prompt (way back in November).

This is a short but sweet list to get you started. If you have a favorite little form you’d like to share, leave us a link, and we’ll thank you!

read write prompt: #20 overheard at the ________ (insert location here); a writing prompt in two parts

by Jill Crammond Wickham

1.
“I’ve done nothing but cry all day. All day I’ve cried.” “It looks pretty gloomy for the first day of Spring.” “Then he took my cat outside.” “It’s perfect for a bachelor.” Random words. Anonymous opinions. Sad truths. Humorous observations. Snippets of other people’s conversation can serve as great inspiration for your writing. Actually, writing prompts are all around you if you just listen. Oh, I know it’s not polite. Your mother probably told you not to do it. But, this week you have permission to eavesdrop!

That’s part one of your assignment. Eavesdrop on other people’s conversations. Record some choice sentences, words, turns of phrase. Then, choose your favorite and use it as a prompt to begin a poem.

You don’t need much. One sentence, simply uttered, could send you off on a wonderful poem tangent. Maybe you’ll be inspired to complete someone’s thought. Maybe you will imagine a confession. Maybe the words will spark a memory of your own. Let other people’s words take you away.

2.
Part 2 of your assignment, if you choose to accept it, is to craft your piece in the form of a prose poem. Prose poems break the traditional rules of poetry. They read left to right across the page. The whole page. Poets.org provides a pretty good explanation, as well as some examples, here.

So. There you go. Break the rules. Eavesdrop. Steal some words. Then write a long poem that doesn’t look like a poem, but really is. Have fun!

Come back starting next Monday after midnight Central Standard Time to share anything you might have heard lately, or any poem at all.

napowrimo: the button is here

by Deb Scott

We’ve made a NaPoWriMo button that you are most welcome to add to your blog or posts.

Button sample and code

napowrimo: we're here to help

by January O’Neil and Deb Scott

Next Tuesday is April Fool’s Day. (You’d think it would end March Madness- the State’s NCAA college basketball championship, but no, the final four is April 5 and the final game is April 7.)

April is National Poetry Month (in the US). Read Write Poem will be supporting you as you celebrate, in a variety of ways. Read on to find out how! — Deb

With the arrival of April comes National Poetry Month, a whole month devoted to poetry. And with that comes the Olympian-like challenge known as National Poetry Writing Month, or NaPoWriMo. The challenge? Write a poem a day for the month of April—30 poems in 30 days. For many of us who have done this in the past, we’re saying to ourselves, “Has it been a year already?” But like childbirth, it’s a pain soon forgotten, yet replaced by the joy of writing enough poems to fill a chapbook.

Why do this? Well, think of it as your way of supplementing the activities of National Poetry Month. This is your contribution to the larger poetry community. And on a personal level, if you’re suffering from lack of motivation or writer’s block, this will force you to chain the Muse to the chair next to you. The pressure is part of the fun.

So this is a roll call of sorts. Let us know you’re participating and why. Be sure to visit other NaPoWriMo-ers because, by golly, they’ll need the support. And don’t worry about skipping a day, because the goal is to write. Don’t think, just do. At the end of month, you’ll look back to see 30 poems in your wake – many of which will be throwaways. But a few may turn into the drafts to start – or finish – that collection you’ve always wanted to write.

If you need help igniting your creativity, check out RWP’s random prompt generator (Christine has uploaded a bunch of new ones!), or check out the prompts from previously weeks to get you through the rough spots.

Warning: NaPoWriMo is not for the faint of heart. But if you’re willing to go for the ride, the journey is worth it. — January.

Deb here again. We’re going to add “NaPoWriMo” behind the blog names in the “Participants tab” of those folks who tell us (in the comments below, or by an email to info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org), that they are doing it this year. (Yup, just like Poetry Thursday did last year.)

We’re also adding a sidebar category – just for April – that will give you a quick link to the latest NaPoWriMo buzz.

The polls might just talk about National Poetry Month activities, too.

And look for a button. A new button (I love buttons) just for NaPoWriMo. I may have to do NaPoWriMo just to be able to get the button. (Bad advice — don’t listen to us — do it because you love poetry.)

Join in right here, in the comments below. You know you want to, no matter what you said last year! (Oh, that’s my line.)

(And for those who don’t want to do NaPoWriMo, no worries – we will be here for you, too. With plenty of non-NaPoWriMo content.)

Additional information about NaPoWriMo
Maureen Thorson started NaPoWriMo and says,

I have been doing this for around five years, and many have followed in my wake! If you plan to participate, go forth and do so! NaPoWriMo is free, requires no license, and wants you to propagate it in new and foreign soils.

Ivy Alvarez has made a number of buttons for NaPoWriMo, including those of an international flavor: IntPoWriMo. We here at Read Write Poem have participants from around the globe. It may be you’d like to use one of Ivy’s, or just ask, and we’ll make a RWP one for you.

Ivy also has some great prompt ideas listed on her blog, for NaPoWriMo 2007.

read write poem news

  • read write poem napowrimo anthology
    June 20, 2010 | 1:36 pm

    The Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Anthology is still in production. Selection, placement, layout and copyediting are taking longer than anticipated. Thank you for your patience. I hope to have the piece completed in July. For those who have emailed asking if they can be included, the May 7 deadline for submission of work stands. Those who met that deadline will be included. Please check the post on this site listing who I received submissions from by that date. If you submitted your work by the May 7 deadline in accordance with our guidelines and your name is not listed, send an email to info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org.

  • read write poem napowrimo anthology
    May 5, 2010 | 3:09 pm

    Remember that Friday* is the deadline for submitting work to the Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Anthology. Check out the guidelines for submission in the main column (to the left). On May 8, we’ll post a news item listing everyone we’ve received work from. If you submitted work and your name is not on that list, please let us know. Thanks!

    *I initially said “tomorrow,” but I meant to say “Friday.”

  • napowrimo congratulations, and a reminder
    April 24, 2010 | 12:05 pm

    It’s the final week of the Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Challenge! Just 7 days left. With that, a reminder that Read Write Poem will culminate with the anthology featuring work from those who complete the challenge. A post with details for submitting to the anthology will be published May 1. Be sure you remove any information from the site that you want preserved — such as group content and personal messages. Those elements of the site will be removed May 1 as well. The main site will remain up as an archive.

  • ‘underlife’ tour at january gill o’neil’s blog
    April 20, 2010 | 8:11 pm

    January Gill O’Neil’s virtual book tour has moved to her site and is underway now. Check out the lineup at Poet Mom.

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