Showing posts with label poetry book recommendation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry book recommendation. Show all posts

Friday, January 4, 2013

I Understand - a Villanelle

Chester
Photo by Honour V.

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Click on the arrow to hear me read this poem to you.

Students - I have set myself a Poetry New Year's Resolution!  I'll be writing a poem every day of this year, and I will share some of them here.  This will give me an opportunity to explore many different forms and deepen my skill as a writer.  Sometimes we all get into ruts, and I do that with sound.  I like and often write in certain meters, so experimenting with new ones will help me grow.

Do you have a New Year's Resolution for writing?  It's not too late!

Today's poem is a villanelle, a form you may remember from V is for Vulture of my Dictionary Hike last April.  This is quite a complicated form, 19 lines with 5 tercets and 1 quatrain.  You'll notice that there are two repeating lines, and they repeat in a very particular order.  There are only 2 ending rhymes, and those, too, are in special places.  You can see exactly how this whole form works at poets.org or at the Poetry and Prose Writers' Blog.  There are many other places to look as well, but these two helped me yesterday.

Villanelles do not have a particular meter, but I chose to write in imabic pentameter (daDUM daDUM daDUM daDUM daDUM).  Next time I'll try something different, but since I wrote a sonnet on Monday, I was in the groove of that meter!

Below you can see the beginning drafting work of today's villanelle.  I followed the advice I read and began with a theme - becoming different animals and understanding all creatures, a theme I return to often.  Then I wrote out the form to help me, like a skeleton.

When I awoke this morning, after this post had been up for 5 hours, I read today's offering at The Writer's Almanac, also about the connection of creatures.  Today's poem at The Writer's Almanac is "The Fish" by Billy Collins.

I took these process photos at a ski lodge while writing during my children's ski club afternoon.  You can see how I left blanks for needed lines and how I wrote dots and letters to help me know which lines and rhymes were needed where.

Notebook and Paper with Villanelle Draft
Photo by Amy LV

Computer Villanelle Draft
Photo by Amy LV

If you would like to read lots and lots of villanelles (I just might), here is a whole book about them.


Thank you to Matt Forrest Esenwine over at Radio, Rhythm, and Rhyme for hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup, the first of this new beautiful year.  Be sure to stop by and celebrate 2013 with poems!

Please share a comment below if you wish.
To find a poem by topic, click here. To find a poem by technique, click here.
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Monday, May 24, 2010

MyPoWriYe #54 - Poem for Two Voices


I have always enjoyed reading poems for two voices, poems like the ones in Paul Fleischman's book Joyful Noise.  And while this poem began with a back-and-forth structure, it was only as I kept writing that I imagined it as being read by two people.  The ending was the trickiest part, trying to put those voices together.

If you have never read a poem for two voices, it is like a see saw.  Two people take turns with the different sides, alternating lines.  If the two parts are written directly across from each other, both people read them at the exact same time, expressing two different thoughts in the air at once.  It was fun to experiment with this kind of writing.

I am a mother now, but we moms don't always feel like adults.  Sometimes we remember exactly what it felt like to be children, and how some grown up answers did not make sense at all. 


This poem may have sprung from Georgia's question on Saturday.  As soon as we left the driveway for a 4-H event, she asked, "How much longer?"

Here are a few titles with poems for two voices.  Or four! 



 

Shop Indie Bookstores


This book by Georgia Heard includes two poems for two voices.
Shop Indie Bookstores

If anyone out there tries writing a poem for two voices and would like to share, please let me know.  It'd be fun to feature a few of these.  Of if you have favorite books to add to the list above, please do tell!

Last week, Tricia at The Miss Rumphius Effect focused her "Monday Poetry Stretch" on colors.  She posted the submissions yesterday, and my brown poem is cuddled in with the other colorful poems.

'Waiting for more lambs...

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Friday, May 14, 2010

Poetry Friday & MyPoWriYe #44 - Bridge



                                  "Ink runs from the corners of my mouth.
                                   There is no happiness like mine.
                                   I have been eating poetry."
                                   Mark Strand
                                  (Reasons for Moving)

Today I would like to recommend two poetry anthologies from Garrison Keillor.  In addition to sharing a daily poem and highlights at National Public Radio's The Writer's Almanac, in addition to his radio show Prairie Home Companion, in addition to novels and joke books...these two anthologies are solid, real, human.  I have consulted Good Poems and Good Poems for Hard Times over and over when seeking "just the right poem" for a person, happy occasion or difficult time.  Each time I open these pages to poems such as Mary Oliver's "When Death Comes", I am reminded that poetry is a life-teacher.

  

As Poem #44 of my quest to write and post a new children's poem each day for a year, this one comes from a simple and oh-so-satisfying activity of childhood:  building a rock bridge.


Today's Poetry Friday is hosted by Jama at Jama Rattigan's Alphabet Soup.  If you click your heels on over there, you will find many interesting links to poetry in the kidlitosphere today.

If you are a regular reader here and would be willing to pass The Poem Farm's address along to a friend, post it on your own website, or join on as a follower, I would be very grateful.  If you do, please let me know so that I can thank you properly.

Happy Poetry Friday!

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Friday, April 23, 2010

Poetry Friday, Poem #23, & TV Turnoff #5

It's Poetry Friday today, and if you seek a review of children's poetry posts floating in the blogosphere this week, Elaine has herded everything up at Wild Rose Reader.  Thank you, Elaine!

After today, there are two days left of TV Turnoff week.  How about a magic trick?  You can find the complete directions for an old favorite at ehow or just learn the trick from this poem.


Last week at The Miss Rumphius Effect, Tricia shared some interesting thoughts and questions about poems set to music, asking, "Are they still poetry?"  Tricia's words made me think about two favorite old family CDs of classic poetry set to music by Ted Jacobs - A Child's Garden of Songs and The Days Gone By.  On car trips and in the house, I loved these as much as our children did, and Music for Little People still carries them (actually on sale right now).  They are beautiful.

Music or no music, poems beg to be read aloud alone or with friends.  Reading poetry out loud, we feel the marble-y words rolling in our mouths, and together we fill empty spaces with rollicking syllables.  

When we're writing, reading our poems aloud highlights where we "nailed a line" and where words sound off-meter or strange.  Listening to poetry aloud strengthens our ears, tuning our bodies to rhythm and sound.  Here are three excellent children's poetry books with CDs included.






How might we invite poetry to serve as our daily thread at home and at school? After all, rituals sew our lives together: prayers at bedtime, kisses when we leave the house, read aloud after lunch, three horn blows for "I love you".  Starting today, we might regularly memorize a poem together, tuck poems into lunchboxes, or read a poem to end the school day.  Some teachers begin each week with a new poem to read and illustrate; our own children's teachers bookmark parts of every day with ritual verses.

Birthdays are one good way to spread poems around.  In East Irondequoit last week, Jackie (third grade teacher) read us poems she's written for teachers turning "important ages".  Over at Two Writing Teachers, you can read about how Stacey gives poems to students as birthday gifts.    

Next Thursday, April 29, is Poem in Your Pocket Day, and you can find many resources and ideas online to help get some fun pocket things rolling.  Here at NCTE you can find some poetry lessons, and at the New York City Department of Education, you will find a variety of poetry resources including bibliographies and units.  I'll highlight some poem-in-pocket events next Friday...please join in.  

Happy Poetry Friday!

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