Eye of newt: Write a spell to make something happen or to change something. Be sure to use lots of relevant details to help the casting.

Eye of newt: Write a spell to make something happen or to change something. Be sure to use lots of relevant details to help the casting.

Pretend that when you were born, you came with an instruction manual for your parents. What would it say?

Read some Russell Edson pieces. Then write one of your own.

From A Poetry Handbook by Mary Oliver: Read Elizabeth Bishop’s The Fish. Write a poem using lots of specific descriptions: metaphors, similes, and details (which Oliver calls “texture.”)

From Approaching Poetry by Peter Schakel and Jack Ridl!!
Try to remember the sounds you heard and loved as a child. Write a poem that incorporates these sounds.
Eliabeth Kerlikowske
From The Mind’s Eye by Kevin Clark:
Think of a common everyday activity that you might do: feed the cat, scratch your head, make the bed, etc. Choose one activity. Let your imagination go wild. How can you make this activity into something weird, wild, or bizarre (or beautiful)? Write a poem that does that. Since you want to emphasize the physical as well as the strange, concentrate on good verbs. Limit the poem to fifteen lines.

Reading poetry can be good in hard times. Writing poetry can be better. How else do we figure out what is truly on our minds unless we set it down on the page? Because we are not seeing many people now (I have seen four people other than my husband and the mail carrier since early march) it is more important than ever that we communicate, even if it is with ourselves.
Available from Kelsay Books and at Amazon.com.
Poetry Society of Michigan Chancellor and founding editor of 3rd Wednesday Magazine Laurence W. Thomas turns 93 today!

One of Chancellor’s prize winning poems from the fall contest issue of Peninsula Poets by Nancy Cook of St. Paul, Minnesota.
