Festival continued…

Saturday, March 13th, 2010 - exercises, Quickstart

Great workshops with great kids.  We did some awesome travelling with out imaginations over the last couple of days and had many neat ideas on pages. 

One thing I was reminded of is that writing has to be fun!  Try writing a nonsense poem to help remind you of this – it doesn’t have to mean anything, just get some sounds and words down.

Nuf Evah (Have Fun!)

Share On Facebook
Share On Twitter
Share On Pinterest
Share On Youtube

For Bailey

Saturday, February 27th, 2010 - exercises, Places for writers, Quickstart

In the selection of quickstart ideas on this site, number five suggests writing a prose poem. This is a great form for those of you who have written stories and who want to try poetry, or those of you who’ve written poetry and who want to try something new. I wanted to use today’s post to explain prose poetry a little more…

Simply put, a prose poem is a poem that doesn’t have line breaks. It reads like prose on the page, but like poetry in the language used – think about rhythm, sound, internal rhyme, and imagery, just like you would if you were writing a poem.

Remember:

  1. There are no rules of form or rhyme.
  2. Think about an image that makes you want to write. Why does it?
  3. Keep in mind, you’re writing the poem in sentences and fragments of sentences but you don’t have to think about punctuation.
  4. As you write, use language that is poetic – can you find internal rhymes or rhythms to make the words sing?

When you’ve finished the prose poem read it outloud to yourself. Have you brought an image and an emotional truth together? Do you need to do this, do you think? Does the prose poem work for some reason that is hard to explain but you just know it does? If so, then you’ve done it, you’ve written a prose poem.

If I’ve got ten minutes, I chose a word from the dictionary and use it as a title for a prose poem. I try to let the words flow freely, I try not to get in the way of what I’m writing. I use the word and see if it brings an image to mind that I can capture on the page. Ten minutes isn’t enough to write a finished or polished piece, but it gives me a little writing time in an otherwise busy day.

Today, I’m packing to head on a four month trip. I look forward to writing lots, to taking some photos that’ll inspire you to write and to meeting readers and writers on the road. First stop, Toronto. Maybe I’ll have time to write a rough prose poem on the plane… now there’s an idea…

Share On Facebook
Share On Twitter
Share On Pinterest
Share On Youtube

Quickstart ideas are up

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010 - Quickstart

I’m getting this website up and running as the days go by.  I’m really enjoying putting together ideas for you to get you writing.  Now there are 10 quickstart ideas to get you going – all ideas that I’ve tried and tested in one of the workshops I’ve taught.  I started teaching another workshop last night, this one for adults, and they used one of the quickstart ideas (number 4) to get themselves writing.  It’s great to sit in a room full of people putting pen to paper, getting their ideas on the page.

I’ve been slowed down reading The Hunchback Assignments because of getting the workshop ready for my students, but I’m itching to get back to it.  Especially because when I finish it I get to interview the author, Arthur Slade.  Very exciting.

Get going on one of the quickstart ideas if you feel like writing.  And let me know how it goes!

Share On Facebook
Share On Twitter
Share On Pinterest
Share On Youtube
 
CONFESSIONS AND COFFEE
   

 

BUY ALICE'S BOOKS:
Chapters Indigo | Amazon | Buy Local | Kindle | iBookstore | Google Play

©2024 Alice Kuipers. Design by Janine Stoll Media.

Show Buttons
Share On Facebook
Share On Twitter
Share On Pinterest
Share On Youtube
Hide Buttons