More prompts from Ethel Rackin, author of Crafting Poems for #NPM26
Prompt #3: Lyric Address
Posts by Ethel Rackin
There’s so much to choose from in Ethel Rackin’s Crafting Poems and Short Stories 📝 buff.ly/g6JygpV
“A distinguishing feature of Crafting Poem and Stories: A Guide to Creative Writing is the pairing of historically important literary models next to notable contemporary ones.” Read the blogpost here 📕 broadviewpress.com/rules-are-ma...
Not sure which volume is best for your upcoming creative writing course?
Submit a request to compare all three! buff.ly/WFSEMKf
Sneak peek at Crafting Poems and Stories 👀 Click the link to read a short sample chapter from Broadview Press: broadviewpress.com/wp-content/u.... *exam copies are free from Broadview Press!
Headed to Baltimore? Come by and say hello.
There’s so much to choose from in Ethel Rackin’s Crafting Poems and Short Stories 📝 buff.ly/g6JygpV
In a winter of many discontents, Carolyn Kuebler's thoughtful review of In Time (Word Works) on @onlypoemsmag.bsky.social is a balm. I'm grateful and humbled.
onlypoems.com/blog/in-time...
IN TIME welcomes you in, lets you be complicated, and somehow makes that just the right place to be.
Available from online booksellers or from the source: wordworksbooks.org/product/in-t...
At first, I thought I’d fill the cardinal enameled trinket with something—a lock of hair, an image of my love. But the longer I left it empty the less likely it was I’d find just the right thing. I kept thinking, invisible tattoo, boat adrift, permanent roam.
— Ethel Rackin, Cardinal 💙
The brutal realities of daily life work their way into dreams and poems, but it’s there that they become mutable. We have to dream and think our way out.
— Ethel Rackin, in our POTW interview 💙
It wasn’t that she’d died exactly but had to come through: through a co-op and a girls’ bathroom where an old woman made fun of the her. Meanwhile, I could hear my own assassin and realized this was beyond strange. No stupid girl I. Enjoy your life, said the ghost.
— Ethel Rackin, Vignette 💙
My poems always begin in rhythm and sound. I hear the lines first, write in long-hand in a notebook, put them aside, come back later, transcribe them multiple times, begin to revise them, type them up, continue revising, rinse, and repeat.
— Ethel Rackin, in our POTW interview 💙
Do drop by.