Howdy, Campers and Happy Poetry Friday!
I am feeling particularly happy today. I've been dealing with a stupid health issue and have been in pain for quite a while. But guess what?
NO PAIN last night! No pain today!
And: it's SUNNY again in So Cal! Not rainy, not wildly windy.
So: No pain, a sun-shiny day, two poems in a new anthology, and Poetry Friday...what more could a girl ask for?
At the end of this post is the Poetry Friday link, info about my summer class, and my poems from Pomelo Books' newest anthology, What is a Family?
Our topic this round is "Offer our readers a writing exercise or prompt."
Like many friends in the Poetry Friday family, I write a poem a day. Surely I'm not alone when I say that sometimes my brain stands up, puts on its coat says, "Nope. No ideas. I'm outta here."
· 1) delicate balance
· 2) I wanted to stab my hand with a fork
an ...and began playing with them. I sliced the second sentence into pieces with which to start new lines:
========================
DELICATE BALANCE
I wanted to slice watermelon but you wanted
to stab a steak or maybe spear a pimento olive.
My hand hesitated. I offered you a fig, which you ate
with a fork.
DELICATE BALANCE
I wanted it to stop. I wanted
to stab the newspaper, rip it to shreds, or swipe right with
my hand. After, I went to the ocean and made circles in the
sand
with a fork.
DELICATE BALANCE
I wanted to find the pulse of a poem. I wanted
to stab this page with surprise.
My hand wants that, too. But it’s distracted by that guy
with a fork.
DELICATE BALANCE
I wanted stars, stars, and stars
to stab this night. I wanted to lift
my hand to them, conducting their murmurs
with a fork.
DELICATE BALANCE
I wanted you to speak,
to stab that diaphanous curtain.
My hand goes to my lips. You are, you are! I listen
with a fork halfway to my mouth.
DELICATE BALANCE
I wanted to call this exercise How
to Stab a Sentence to Death. But
My hand disagreed. Hands are very opinionated, especially
hands
with a fork.
poems © 2022 April Halprin Wayland
===============
It was a so much fun! I asked my husband what I should call this form. He was eating at the time. He said, "Serial Deconstruction. Or," he said, looking down at his granola, "you could call it Cereal Deconstruction."
Ha!
I like presenting these poems in groups. Try it. Let me know how it goes!
=============
Many of you know Pomelo Books ~ I call them the publisher with the ๐big heart๐. At its helm are Sylvia Vardell and Janet S. Wong, the proud parents of their newest book, WHAT IS A FAMILY? born on March 31st.
The 40 ekphrastic poems in this
book—inspired by a wide variety of diverse and inclusive black-and-white
photos—explore extended families, blended families, classmates and sports teams
as families, animal families, and family occasions such as birthdays, holidays,
weddings, funerals, and much more.
As with the companion book WHAT IS A FRIEND? and also their books in the "THINGS WE" series (THINGS WE DO; THINGS WE EAT; THINGS WE FEEL; THINGS WE WEAR), 100% of the profits will be donated by this truly big-hearted publisher to the IBBY Children in Crisis Fund (IBBY.org). (Worth joining; I'm a member.)
Here are my ekphrastic poems from WHAT IS A FAMILY?:
CLASSROOM
And once again I'll be teaching a one day, three-hour class called Intro to Writing Children's Poetry for the Big-Hearted, Brave,and Curious! (my title, not necessarily UCLA's). It's on Wednesday, July 12th from noon-3pm PST. The course won't be visible until April 10th; Summer enrollment opens April 24th.
Tah-dum! I started writing this happy, and I'm ending it happy that
Margaret is hosting Poetry Friday!
April, I've clicked your link first because I definitely wanted to learn about Serial Deconstruction--and I am not disappointed. You really pushed those nine words, pressed them hard into all kinds of service! My favorites are "I wanted stars...conducting their murmurs with a fork" and the diaphanous curtain one. It's a HIIT prompt! I'll give it a try...and your freshly unpained happiness is catching. Thanks!
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DeleteI'm sorry, but I don't think your brain left you. These deconstructed line poems are miraculous. All the things you can stab and do with a fork! Thanks for sharing and inspiring me today to be open to deconstructing.
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DeleteStabbing newspapers, stabbing watermelon, the fork as a weapon. These poems made me laugh and that's a wonderful gift. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThey made me laugh, to, Janice. May a chorus of laughter arise๐
DeleteI was so curious about "Serial Deconstruction," too. These are wonderful! Love, love, love the idea of making circles in the sand with a fork. Given the news lately, I might have to try that soon.
ReplyDeleteExactly, Susan... exactly ๐
DeleteWhat great words you used! Excellent variety. Congrats on the pain-less day -- may you have many more!
ReplyDelete๐ฟYou're always so encouraging, Tabatha. I really appreciate you
DeleteFirst, I love your family poems! I only have two kids but a nearby family had six & my son spent a lot of time at their house! You took me back. Second, happy that the pain has gone, hoping forever! And I will carry that "Deconstruction" way of looking at things with me during the month, might even find a way to use my own fork. Thanks much for a special post, April. It's your month so 'Why not?'
ReplyDeleteLinda ~ why not indeed? (It's the month I get whiplash, thinking people are speaking to me when they are simply comparing calendar dates...)
DeleteDear April, thanks for being big-hearted, brave, curious YOU. I do love the serial deconstruction as a series. It shows you just how flexible words can be, how infinite the poem-possibilities. xo
ReplyDeleteIrene, hearing this from you, a GYMNAST of flexibility in the word world, makes me so happy. Have a beautiful day ๐
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ReplyDeleteApril, like Heidi, I was curious to uncover the term Serial Deconstruction. I like what I found. It's as if you have created a cutlery collection of forks in your poems. I particularly enjoyed the poem where you sought the poem's pulse. You have explored a range of poetic possibilities. You can select the fork of your choosing. This fork focus remainds me of the time I read a quote that said people are a bit like sausages. Every now and then they need a gentle poke with a fork...
ReplyDeleteAlan ~ we poets even write poetic comments! I love your phrase, "a cutlery collection of forks in your poems" ๐ Thanks for stopping by
DeleteSo. Much. Fun. I must try this!
ReplyDeleteMary Lee ~ please, please do! I want to hear how it turned out✨
DeleteClearly SoCal sun is a GREAT inspiration! Your post is bursting with joy - even joy that grows from serially deconstructing sentences! I really like how they evolved across stanzas; I could feel the frustration slip away. And congrats on TWO poems in WHAT IS A FAMILY?!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Patricia ~ I was giddy and I'm learning to share more of me with the world. (I'm grateful I've lived long enough to evolve. Imagine what Mozart would have produced if he lived past the age of 35!)
ReplyDeleteApril, what a marvelous post fully of bubbles. My favorite stanza of delicate balance was:
ReplyDeleteI wanted stars, stars, and stars
to stab this night. I wanted to lift
my hand to them, conducting their murmurs
with a fork.
Conducting like Leonard Berstein, almost.
The two family poems you wrote were so very precious! They warmed my heart and told beautiful family stories.
Denise ~ thank you for stopping by! And maybe that was an unconscious conection to Bernstein conducting in that stanza...I hadn't thought of that ๐ถ
ReplyDeleteApril, I'm so sorry you've been in pain but I'm very glad to know it left you. Hope you continue to be pain-free!
ReplyDeleteI love your two poems in the family anthology. They're both terrific!
Looks like your Serial Deconstruction was great fun for you! I know they were fun for me to read. :-)
Thanks, Marti ~ You know what fun it is to suddenly be so grateful for parts of our body when they stop shouting insistently... And yes, I had great fun with this new form of poetry play.
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