Poetry Friday

Poetry Friday: New Places for Poetry

 
Heidi at my juicy little universe is our host today. Hop on over there for the roundup.
 

New Poetry Anthology

 
Fellow Poetry Friday friend, Carol Labuzzetta, has edited a new ekphrastic poetry anthology called Picture Perfect Poetry.
 
 
I have three ekphrastic poems and three photos featured. There are lots of different types of ekphrastic poems in this anthology, and it’s great for students ages 8 and up.
 

New Eclipse Poem

 
Georgia Heard also featured poems on her blog from the poetry community for Poetry Month. I sent in an eclipse poem called, “The Impending Eclipse: Sun’s Op-Ed.”
 

Poetry Month Project

Every day in April, I’ve been writing a poem inspired by some interesting fact(s). This week, I was able to attend a poetry workshop with Shutta Crum where we talked about short forms. I wrote a Pensee, which is a French form of poetry.
 
 
Pensee
 
5 lines (2, 4, 7, 8, 6 syllables)
 
Line 1—introduces subject
Line 2—description of subject
Line 3—action taken by subject or for subject; has a verb
Line 4—info about time and setting
Line 5—final thoughts
 
 
Last week, I was on a local-ish writing retreat. Saturday’s wind was fierce. I didn’t take this picture until Sunday once the wind had calmed down. But it was my inspiration for the poem.
 
Potomac River: A Pensee 
 
river
Potomac flows
pummeled by furious wind
winds along borderlines into
Chesapeake’s waiting arms 
 
 

Haiku of the Week

evening wind
tulips purse their lips
wait for sun
 
Haiku & Photo © 2024 Marcie Flinchum Atkins
 
Photo Taken: April 5, 2024, Burnside Farms
Haiku Written: April 11, 2024
 
 

Poem as Picture Book

 
by Michelle Schaub
Illustrated by Blanca Gomez
Norton Young Readers 2024
 

This is a 275-word celebration of rain. 

Poetry Connections

  • Rhyme
  • Onomatopoeia
  • Word play
  • Alliteration
  • Use of space and line breaks

Links

 
 

Grow

It’s been a great week. I spent most of last weekend writing and writing and writing. I took a whole bunch of projects to work on, but I chose to spend most of my time pushing forward on one project—the one closest to being ready to send out. While I didn’t move the needle on a bunch of projects, I did move the needle far on one, and that feels like a win.

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