Weekly Short Stories Contest and Company! discussion
Weekly Poetry Stuffage
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Week 144 (November 9-16). Poems. Topic: Guitar Strings
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But since I love play of words, I think I know which one I'd go for... :)
Great work, everyone!

Loss and Gain
Paula, that's beautiful. The first two stanzas are so wistful and I love the repeating words. Then the third stanza causes a breath to hitch when I realize why the earlier tone was wistful. The last stanza just got me teary! Loved it.
My favorite line:
It plays on, still
callousing my fingertips with memories.

He fell from the cedar beside the stone lodge,
his mouldering pages stacked in the garage
M.--wow! I loved everything about this poem. So much imagery! And a sad nostalgia...I wish I knew more about them.

I found these guitar strings laying about.
I wondered who would throw them out.
Another poem to tug my heartstrings! I love that the poem ends on a positive note.
These are my favorite lines:
When I was six we were thrown out from our loving warm house that we cared not about.
No family to love us or talk about,
For our parents are dead and we are without, a loving warm house to walk about.
Ahh! So sad and sing-songy...

Just a Few Strings
I have been pounded
And struck.
Flicked violently with
A pluck..."
Thomas, that rocked! The first stanza is my favorite. It reminds me of song lyrics--actually the whole poem did. It left me thinking. Loved the structure, too.

Rock Baby
Strewn:
Heaps of
shackled lyrics...."
Ajay, your poem is so full of imagery and just feels good in my mouth. I love the word play and the repeating sounds throughout. Loved it!

Sitting on that balcony
with guitars on our laps
and beer by our feet, ..."
Ryan, so nostalgic! I loved this poem and the structure of it, especially with the two ending lines standing alone to remind us that everything's fleeting.
This is my favorite stanza:
A world away
from the pain of today
and the melancholy
that remains
as slowly but surely, each dream fades.
Wow!

By Al
His hands were cold but yet he played somehow
the guitar's strings worn out and old..."
Al, I can see why you were tearing up in a public place after posting this. I cried! That's it, right there. You wrought that emotion out of me. I loved it.


That is such a neat exercise, and look what it inspired you to write. Wow. If you don't mind my asking, what group? I'm trying to discipline myself into writing on a daily basis. I'm not there yet, but these groups on Goodreads have really been helping me. I'm writing a novel, and the shorter forms are great to get my juices flowing and just--fun.

It might be interesting to do one of the W.S.S.’s weekly poetry contests using a formula, like the one with ten names.
I like the W.S.S. better than any other writing group I’ve ever been in. My biggest problem is motivation. Interaction here has motivated me to write a lot of stuff! It’s the opposite effect, it seems to me, of a workshop approach, the purpose of which is to strip writing of its individuality, to make writing uniform.

I do WAY more writing here in the WSS than the other one (or any other one). And it is because in the WSS I am with a group of people for whom creative expression is the most important thing, and publication less so or not even a consideration. Hmmm. I hadn't fully made that association in my mind, that I am not really motivated in my creative expression by thoughts of being published. Interesting.
Thank you, M, for helping me to that insight.


M--LOL! How could they toss you when you write like that?
Anyway, I gotcha. Yeah, I'm not too "serious" about it, but maybe one day I will be again. I used to be really into poetry, but that haiku I wrote for the morgue contest a half hour before the midnight deadline was the first poem I've written in, oh, I don't know, 15 or more years. I do love to write poetry, so I'm hoping to use it more as a creative exercise to get my writing-self flowing.
Guy raises a point about this group and creative expression that I think is really key. I remember reading about an author who said he finally started getting published after he found a critique partner that agreed to only exchange positive feedback on each other's work for a long period of time. That just caused the two to do more of the good writing and less of the bad and they evolved organically into great writers and, subsequently, started getting published. I think that would work great for people who can only focus on criticism that discourages them. This group is kind of like that. You can ask for critique, but you can also just post your writing in the contests and only get the positive feedback. How awesome!

Thank you everyone for creating another great week of creative writing. And for making the choice a difficult one.

Ajay came in first place, Kate came in second, M arrived at third, Thomas and Al tied at fourth, and Ryan, Paula Tohline, and Shayma came in fifth.

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