"I had many things to write, but I will not with ink and pen write unto thee..."   POETRYrepairs v07.09:113
Napping with my Daughter Tips On Writing Well The Woman Who Loves Maps PoetryRepairShop navigation

BACK | HOME
SUBSCRIBE


Advertise on poetryREpairs

Pestiside.hu

PS : Sponsor Poetry
visit Poetry Sponsors


JANELLE H. RODGERS
Napping with my Daughter			

Is like wrapping my arms 
Arouns a snoozing cumulonimbus, 
Stirring and grumbling in wheezes of air. 
A lightening bolt kick to my thigh, 
As quick as the storm has come and gone, 
She is grown.


JANELLE H. RODGERS is "Southern through and through-- born in Mississippi, educated in South Carolina and Kentucky, and currently residing in Tennessee."
"Poetry endangers the established order in the soul."   poetryREpairs v07.09:113
Napping with my Daughter Tips On Writing Well The Woman Who Loves Maps PoetryRepairShop navigation BACK | HOME
SUBSCRIBE




abhazia.com

PS : Sponsor Poetry
visit Poetry Sponsors

DAWN GOLDBERG
Tips On Writing Well

Writing an E-zine is more than just a pretty packaging for words. Those words are the meat of your E-zine and your message. You have to think about content and your audience and writing it well and getting your readers' attention and keeping your readers' attention and.... The list goes on and doesn't ever seem to stop.

Today I'm going to focus on one facet of writing, writing well. If you write well, then your E-zine will accomplish all those goals: getting your readers' attention, keeping their attention, and meeting their needs. Now, we're not talking about correct grammar and sentence mechanics, although that is important to writing well. We're talking about how to make the writing come alive, to be yours and yours alone.

Be creative. Whether you're writing titles or giving examples, come up with your own ideas. It seems clever to riff off the "Got Milk?" slogan, but after a while (and sometimes a very short while), that gets old. You don't have to worry about your writing being cliche or old when you come up with your own creative ideas.

Be yourself. You're not the answer for everyone, and not everyone is going to be attracted to your stuff. However, if you write authentically, then you have a better chance of people sticking around to see what you have to say. It's basic Law of Attraction.

Be original. You don't have to do it like everyone else. You don't have to follow all the rules. You don't have to incorporate all the great advice you read in E-zines (even in mine!). Do it your own way and stand out from the crowd. If you're like everyone else, what would make people gravitate toward you? Give them a reason to pick you.

Be strong. Choose a stand and believe in it. If your writing is filled with "I think" and "I guess" and "I believe" and "it seems," you come across as wishy-washy. Take those words out and stand firm. Say what you believe and believe what you say.

Be human. We all make mistakes. Don't try to pretend you're perfect. If you make a mistake, own up to it. Your audience wants someone to whom they can relate. If you come across as perfect, how can they relate to you? Admit your weaknesses and be authentic.

Be fun-filled. Enjoy what you're writing about. Write from the heart. Be passionate. If you like humor, be funny. If you like word play, add a few puns. If you're thrilled with what you're doing, let that joy come out in your writing.

Makes you want to go off and write, doesn't it? Enjoy, and may you all write well!


poetryREpairs.com invites your essay on poetry, or on a poet or poets, and, also, essays on all things related to poetry, its theory and its practice. Or, simply comment on the poems here at poetryrepairs.com

"Repair Your Mind...Read More Poetry!"   poetryrePAIRs v07.09:113
Napping with my Daughter Tips On Writing Well The Woman Who Loves Maps PoetryRepairShop navigation BACK | HOME
SUBSCRIBE





AutoBanner 3

PS : Sponsor Poetry
visit Poetry Sponsors

from MM.10:118

LYN LIFSHIN
The Woman Who Loves Maps			

doesn't want any
triple A or Frommers
no Michelin. she doesn't
want what's clear and
exact, accurate mileage,
highways and definite
entrances and exits.
She'd prefer what's 
more like a handwritten
letter, old maps where
countries not still
around glow bronze under
a blue wash in the shape
their maker wanted them,
fantastic as shapes in
a children's book, a
dream, flying cats
and waltzing mammals,
cannibals and lovers
merging in a wreathe of
grass skirts and bluish
leaves. She's wild for what
she won't find on earth,
a map with an island
that's a Rorschach, her
hair spills over the
cove. She dreams she
abandons her thighs to its
almond, its tincture of
myrrh and rose. She locks
her map in the dark drawer,
still imagines its crushed
coral, lush indigo and
garnet. She spreads it out
on the bed like a lover
lets this place that does
not exist, except in her,
hands be the paradise she'll
move thru smoke to be lost in


poetryREpairs.com seeks volunteer editors to expand poetryREpairs via "language specific" subdomains; for example: fr.poetryrepairs.us to create a network of truly 'Contemporary' and 'International' sites. If you are fluent in a language other than English and you wish to help, please edit a one or two poems; send the poems and a paragraph 'about you' to editor@poetryrepairs.zzn.com .
link to PoetryRepairs   www.poetryrepairs.com v07.09:113   site navigation
Napping with my Daughter Tips On Writing Well The Woman Who Loves Maps PoetryRepairShop navigation BACK | HOME
SUBSCRIBE




PS : Sponsor Poetry
visit Poetry Sponsors

poetryrepairs ©1997-2009 JohnHorvathJr



v07.09:navigation   097 | 098 | 099 | 100 | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104 | 105 | 106 | 107 | 108



07.09 | 07.10 | 07.07 | 07.06 | 07.05 [special edition: LYN LIFSHIN | 07.04 | 07.03 | 07.02 | 07.01 | 06.12 | 06.11 | 06.10 |