Category: Archive

  • Impromptu poem 8 (Found Poetry Review)

    Harold Abramowitz suggested this prompt: “Write something you cannot remember: a memory of something – a story, an anecdote, a song, another poem, a recipe, an episode of a television program, anything, that you only partially or imperfectly remember. Write multiple versions, at least 6, of this memory.”

    What came to me were distinct ‘verses,’ using the syllable discipline of the tanka form and relating to the same TV broadcast, parts of which I remember, though not all of it.

    Reflections: “On the Beach”

                                                         (after Nevil Shute’s novel and subsequent films)

    Black and white flicker:
    men, women, well-dressed,
    standing on Florida sand.
    They face west, the ‘mushroom’ cloud,
    armageddon, now upon them.

    *

    Unwilling witness,
    my eleven year-old self
    watches the action;
    cannot tear myself away
    from panic or acceptance.

    *

    Services all off,
    a woman on insulin
    sees her future
    without electricity:
    A two days’ supply of life.

    *

    What happened to them,
    the characters in that play?
    I do not recall.
    It could not end well for them
    as their world, their lives collapse.

    *

    I’ve walked that shore since,
    never thinking of the outcome,
    of their hopelessness,
    but I’ve shuddered in my dreams
    at how being trapped would feel.

    *

    What I can’t forget:
    The anguish of no way out;
    scavenging, begging;
    my survival unlikely;
    desperation palpable.

  • April 7, Impromptu poem (Found Poetry Review)

    Simone Muench  suggested the following prompt: “write a cento that is a self-portrait, or anthology of your life, utilizing lines and fragments from your own work,” an intriguing and somewhat daunting task.

     

    You’re lost if you look, if you listen, if you follow

     

    Austere, without edges or colour,
    small-smiling, she looks down,

    watches, waits for a sign, any sign,

    listens for the story
    as cardinals sing a requiem among apple blossoms.
    Otherwise, she feels invisible.

    Her life lies on her lips like a mystery,
    like the ice that coats trees when you thought it would rain.

    And I begin to understand
    the legacy of those cruel shards,

    to be herself
    what will shatter with her
    in a way both welcome and not.

                                         

    Cento Gloss: Each line in this ‘self-portrait’ poem is taken unaltered from the following poems written over the past decade+: “Panorama,” “Woman of ice, woman of glass,” The April Dead II,” “Fairy Tales,” “Nero fiddled while Rome burned,” “Huis clos,” “The days of billy boy bad,” (a line from which furnished the title for the cento,) “Debut,” “Elegy for a Thrush,” “Post Partum,” “Vanishing point, “ “Where does it hurt”, “No regrets.”

     

     

     

  • Impromptu poem: Day 6 (Found Poetry Review)

    In response to Noah Eli Gordon’s prompt to “write a poem comprised of a single sentence, spread across at least seven lines of no fewer than 5 words each. Repeat one of your lines 3 times, but not in succession. Include the following: the phrases ‘as when the,’ a scientific term, a flower’s proper name, the name of a country in South America, a person’s proper name, the phrase ‘which is to say,’ something improper.”

    Uncle

     You make me do what I don’t want to

    but I can’t pretend I don’t understand —

    you: Self-satisfied, self-pleasured, self-absorbed, self-ish Sam—

    you speak to me in dialects I wish were foreign

    or that I’d need a cochlear implant to hear

    but I can’t pretend I don’t understand

    which is to say I’m like helianthus facing south and west

    as when the sun goes down toward Ecuador

    and I turn, too, because you make me do what I don’t want to

    but I can’t pretend I don’t understand

  • Impromptu poem: Day 5

    Here’s Garnett’s response to Sarah Blake’s prompt in the Found Poetry Review Impromptu series for National Poetry Month. She suggested choosing a song and having its dynamics open the door to a poem.  The song Garnett chose is Carole King’s “You’ve got a friend, ” which Garnett sang and read until this poem happened. Perhaps Garth Brooks will be taken by the lyrics and turn them into his next hit! LOL!

    Country, western

    So it’s a dark day, and a darker night
    And the rain’s still coming down

    You wanna put down the bottle
    but instead you take another swig

    And when I call you say you love me
    And I hesitate, oh I hesitate

    ‘Cause it’s hard to believe, so hard to believe
    after all that you’ve done, done to me

    I wanna say I love you, too, because I do
    But I hesitate, oh I hesitate

    So I ask, “is it still pourin’? Are the streetlights all on?
    Do they shine up the pavement? Ain’t they pretty”?

    You take another swig
    Then you tell me again you love me

    And I wanna say I love you, too, because I do
    Still I hesistate, oh I hesitate

    till it’s late; time to get off the phone
    watch the rain through my tears

     

  • April 4 Impromptu Poem through the Found Poetry Review

    The prompt from Woody Leslie involves meanings that have multiple words. He said “write a word, make list of other words related to it, combine these words into a woodblock sharing letters, keep rearranging, adding or subtracting words till you have a woodblock you like aesthetically both visually and linguistically… it can stand alone as a one-word poem or….)” Garnett began with one word: ‘reconciliation.’ This is what resulted.

    Afterwar

    image1

  • April 3, Impromptu Poem

     

    Kay lied to us. She
    couldn’t cope with such colour.
    Her vision shattered
    like stained glass, kinetic: An
    apocalypse on that day.

     

    Here is the prompt: “Stare at a word until the letters start to discorporate. You will find that letter cohesion, the letter glue that keeps letters stuck inside a word, is disrupted and dissolves. Fragments of letters will dislodge too. You are then free to visually interpret or document the life of letters outside their word existence as loosely or succinctly as possible.”

    While the idea was to dissociate the letters and come up with a visual interpretation/imagery that departs from the word, here’s what happened to me. Having chosen the word ‘kaleidoscope’ and having stared at it for quite a while, I found the components of the word suggested the lines above. I also tried to import a visual to add a view through the instrument as background, underneath the words, but couldn’t find a way to do that. So the short piece above appears untitled and unadorned. And I used the syllabic discipline of the tanka, BTW.

  • April 2 Impromptu ‘Lite’ Poem in Response to Found Poetry Review’s Prompt of the Day

    Drunktime is even more spectacular

    Whatever your potion
    it’s all here
    in the liquor cabinet
    packed with endless blends
    perfect proofs and an unrivalled flood
    of possibilities.
    There are so many drinks to discover
    everyday this way.

     

    Prompt: go to an ad, take out the nouns and add others as you will.

    Source: Ad for the Cayman Islands, The Globe and Mail, Section T, page 1, April 2, 2016

    Original text: “Paradise is even more spectacular when it’s up to 50% off. Whatever your passion, it’s all here in the Cayman Islands. Packed with endless activities, perfect beaches and an unrivalled culinary scene, there are so many reasons to discover Cayman this summer. “

  • A. Garnett Weiss to write a poem-a-day in Found Poetry Review’s April challenge

    Starting yesterday, (yes, is a day late, explanation to follow), JC, using her pseudonym A. Garnett Weiss, will follow prompts from the Found Poetry Review (FPR)  to create a poem a day during National Poetry Month.

    She intends to post them on this website at a minimum. “What can I say? I am a luddite and have as yet to figure out how to participate in this challenge on FPR’s website, except by adding the poem to my ‘what’s new’ page each day,” she sighed. “That’s why I’m a day late starting out.” She sighed again.

    “This is my first experience with writing to a regime imposed by such relentless cues. I may decide some of the ‘output’ should stay as drafts, in which case, I’ll post a ‘gap’ message, just to keep me honest.”

    Here is the first piece for April 1

     

    they came in May on
    the breeze; blown like tumbleweeds
    dandelions seed

     

    Prompts: word–tumbleweed; First 5 words–“They came in May on”

    Source: ad for Fibre Containers in Oct. 1918 monthly Magazine

  • JC’s New Cento Honours Award-winning Poems in the 2016 Awesome Authors Contest

    JC delighted in announcing the winning poems and identifying the poets who entered the winners’ circle at the 21st Awesome Authors Awards ceremony on March 29 at Centrepoint Theatre, Ottawa.

    Then she shared her decision to step down as English poetry judge after more than a decade of serving in this capacity, for which the Ottawa Public Library (OPL) awarded her the Order of Friendship in 2010.

    “I love the contest and will remain its biggest fan,” she promised.

    She asked everyone who had submitted a poem to the contest in English or French or English and French to raise their hands and declared it awesome that so many emerging writers aged 9-17 had the courage to do so.

    In the autumn, winning poems and short stories will be published in the anthology, Pot Pourri. Copies can be ordered directly from The Friends of the Ottawa Public Library.

    To honour the poets who won awards this year, JC has created a cento (pronounced ‘sento’), a form of poetry, which uses lines or parts of lines written by different poets and combines them into a poem, which is new in form and meaning. JC (often writing as A. Garnett Weiss) is focusing now on this form, and a number of her centos have been published and won awards.

    Ask me anything you want takes lines or parts of lines, unaltered from how they appeared in the winning poems in this year’s Awesome Authors Contest. The gloss links to the source of each line, including the title of the poem and the poet’s name.

    Ask me anything you want

    Drunk on madness and intoxicating fun,
    head spinning, feeling awfully faint,
    I wish for you in my dreams,

    wishes long forgotten
    where all birds sing as if it were the same song
    if only they could be heard.

    I have too many names, I can’t even count them,
    and, having no one to turn to for love,
    to withstand any enemy
    my candles and matches do nothing to fight against,
    something blocks all open gates,

    moving with sudden purpose
    a mixture of your blood with the waters.
    However no one can know except for you and me.
    Wherever you go, whomever you meet,
    no one understands who we are.

     

                Cento gloss: Ask me anything you want
                 Title: Alyson Moncur-Beer, “Girl Power”
                 Line 1: Shannon Noah, “Awakened”
                 Line 2: Irine Stripinis, “Fall from Grace”
                 Line 3: Maariya Toman, “Breathless”
                 Line 4: Julia Dolansyky-Overland, “Lost”
                 Line 5: Owen McKibbon, “What’s Around You and Living in Love”
                 Line 6: Mitra Dadjoo, “Summer”
                 Line 7: Francine Stripinis, “Eternally Cursed”
                 Line 8: Kara Cybanski, “The Mistake of Solitude”
                 Line 9: Lucy Boyd, “Lily flies”
                 Line 10: Belinda Xu, “Pins and Needles”
                 Line 11: Maleeka Ellaithy, “Hand in Hand”
                 Line 12: Lily Inskip-Shesnicky, “Solo”
                 Line 13: Sara Rwentambo, “Creativity”
                 Line 14: Leah Sullivan, “The Seamstress”
                 Line 15: Shannon Creelman, “Fly like a bird”
                 Line 16: Zara Hewson, “Powerless or Powerful”

     

  • Award Ceremony on March 29 for OPL’s Awesome Authors Contest Winning Poets and Writers

    JC Sulzenko, English poetry judge for the 2016 Awesome Authors contest wants to encourage poetry-lovers of all ages in the region to come out for the awards ceremony honouring the best English and French poems and short stories written by local poets and writers, ages 9-17.

    The culminating event of the the 2016 Awesome Authors Contest starts at 7:00 PM on Tuesday, March 29 at Centrepoint Theatre, Ben Franklin Place.

    “I really look forward to the ceremony, particularly after having read all the poems submitted in English. What a challenge it was to choose the winning entries!  The quality and impact of the poetry these emerging writers crafted will amaze you, as it did me,” JC guaranteed.

    Here’s the link to all the information on the contest. Winning stories and poems will appear in Pot Pourri, the anthology to be published by the Friends of the Ottawa Public Library in the autumn.

    https://biblioottawalibrary.ca/en/about/awesome-authors