7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #145-Too Darn HOT

Some days it’s just too darn HOT! So hot you stick to every chair. So hot you can’t move. So hot it feels like you’re melting.

Writers use figurative language to convey feeling. They compare things in new and unusual ways. Similes are comparisons using “like” or “as”. Metaphors are comparisons that don’t have to use “like” or “as”. Hyperbole is exaggeration.

Poetry Challenge #145

IT’S TOO DARN HOT!

Try writing a poem describing how hot it is without using the word “hot”.

Use figurative language to show what hot feels like, smells like, tastes like, sounds like.

To help you get started, think of ways to finish this sentence—and then leave out the prompt. 

You know it’s hot when…

Too Hot.jpg

Set your timer for 7 minutes

Start writing!

Don’t think about it too much; just do it!

In case it’s not quite toasty enough where you are, here’s a song:

Too Darn Hot by Cole Porter, sung by Anthony Strong:

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge MORE THAN 1525 days ago! (without a miss!!!) We now take turns creating our own prompts to share with you. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

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7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #144-Global Garbage Collector Day

Boy howdy, where would we be without those garbage trucks to roll down the street gobbling up trash! Buried under piles heaps mounds of smelly yuck is where. Pee-yew!

It’s not easy or safe being a garbage collector. In fact, it’s one of the “Deadliest jobs in America”—and that was before CoVid struck.

An “average” garbage day in NYC

An “average” garbage day in NYC

One fella, John D. Arwood, (Pres. of Arwood Waste), knowing what a smelly world this could be, designated June 17th as Global Garbage Collector Day, in honor of the hard-working, under-appreciated trash collectors who keep our communities clean. Let’s join in the celebration!

Poetry Challenge #144

Hip-Hip-Hooray! It’s Global Garbage Collector Day

Write a garbage poem—it can be about a garbage truck, garbage collector or kinds of garbage. Toss in as many words that include the letter g as you can. And, at least one onomatopoeia.

Can you make your poem sound like a garbage truck roaring down the street?

Set your timer for 7 minutes

Start writing!

Don’t think about it too much; just do it!

For extra fun, read Trashy Town by Andrea Zimmerman & David Clemesha, illustrated by Dan Yacarrinao. Here’s a link to the Trashy Town Read-aloud.

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge MORE THAN 1500 days ago! (without a miss!!!) We now take turns creating our own prompts to share with you. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

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7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #143-Click My Bic

Quill & Ink.jpg

There’s a saying that “Necessity is the mother of invention.” Before ballpoint pens, people used fountain pens—pens that needed to be dipped or refilled with ink and whose sharp points worked only on paper. If you wanted to write on any other surface (wood, coarse wrapping paper, leather) you were out of luck.

The first patent for the ballpoint pen was issued in 1888 to John J. Loud, a leather tanner who often needed to write on the leather. This pen had a metal ball for the point (where it got its name!) that couldn’t fall out or in but rolled on the surface. It worked well on leather but was pretty messy on paper. Many years passed before the Biro brothers found a solution for a new sharper point.

June 10, 1943, recognized as National Ballpoint Pen Day is actually the date Laszlo Brio applied for a fresh patent for their ballpoint pen design. What made it fly was the British Government bought the licensing rights for the war effort as they needed a pen that would not leak at higher altitudes. It wasn’t until many leaky pen efforts later, in 1954, when Parker Parker Pens introduced “the Jotter,” that ballpoint pens became popular.

Poetry Challenge #143

All I Do Is Click My Bic!

In honor of Ballpoint Pen Day and inventions, write a poem about your favorite pen (and if possible, use your favorite pen to “pen it!”)

Is your favorite pen a ballpoint? Or some other kind? What does it feel like? What does it look like? What color does it write? What’s the best thing it has ever written?

ballpoint pen.jpg

Set your timer for 7 minutes

Start writing!

Don’t think about it too much; just do it!

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge MORE THAN 1500 days ago! (without a miss!!!) We now take turns creating our own prompts to share with you. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link below and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

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7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett 7-Minute Poetry Challenge Kelly Bennett

Poetry Challenge #142-You Can Say That Again...

“Play it again, Sam!”

“Play it again, Sam!”

Today is National Repeat Day! (What? Care to repeat that?) Today is National Repeat Day. As if we need an excuse, it’s a day set aside for folks to “seek out activities and experiences” to do over again. Repeating a root canal or Hurricane Katrina are not suggested for this day.

dentist.jpg

Celebrate by repeating some of the tasks of the day.  Wash the dishes twice.  Make the same meal for lunch as you do for supper. Watch Groundhog Day twice.

Send duplicate text messages. Or? As the saying goes “If it’s worth doing once; it’s worth doing again,” or if you’d prefer Bogie: “Play it again, Sam!” (Even though, in Casablanca, he never actually said that.)

Poetry Challenge #142

You Can Say That Again! . . . “That”

Repetition can be used in poetry in many ways. You can repeat a sound like a long o sound or an l or t sound.

You can repeat a word several times in the poem like the word “bells” in a famous poem by Edgar Allan Poe.

You can repeat a phrase or a whole line. Or you can repeat a verse like the refrain in a song.

Choose a way to repeat from the list above and write a poem that uses some repetition.

Set your timer for 7 minutes

Start writing!

Don’t think about it too much; just do it!

just do it! just do it! just do it! just do it! just do it!

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge MORE THAN 1500 days ago! (without a miss!!!) We now take turns creating our own prompts to share with you. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

Click on Fishbowl link below and sign up to receive email notifications from Kelly's blog (aka The Fishbowl):

SUBSCRIBE TO THE FISHBOWL

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