The Complete Idiot's Guide to Writing Poetry

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Writing Poetry

by Nikki Moustaki
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Writing Poetry

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Writing Poetry

by Nikki Moustaki

eBook

$8.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Discover the poet within! You’ve read poetry that has touched your heart, and you’d like to improve your own writing technique. But even though you have loads of inspiration, you’re discovering that good instruction can be as elusive as a good metaphor. 

The Complete Idiot’s Guide® to Writing Poetry will help you compose powerful, emotion-packed poems that you can be proud of. You’ll learn:
•  Simple explanations of poetry building blocks, such as metaphor, imagery, symbolism, and stanzas.
•  Steps to the poetic process.
•  Easy-to-follow guidelines for writing sonnets, sestinas, narrative poems, and more.
•  Fun exercises to help you master the basics of poetry writing.
•  How to avoid clichés and other poetry pitfalls.
•  Advice on writers’ conferences and workshops.
•  Tips on getting your poetry published.
•  Good poems that will inspire your own work.
•  Strategies to beat writer’s block.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781440695636
Publisher: DK
Publication date: 04/01/2001
Series: COMPLETE IDIOT'S GUIDE Series
Sold by: Penguin Group
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
Sales rank: 570,432
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

About The Author
NIKKI MOUSTAKI is a published poet and teacher and the recipient of a 2001 National Endowment for the Arts grant in poetry. She received her M.A. in creative writing from New York University and her MFA in the same from Indiana University, where she taught poetry workshops. She currently teaches writing in New York City in addition to her full-time work as a freelance writer and editor.

Table of Contents

I. WHAT IS POETRY AND HOW DO I WRITE.

1. What Is Poetry and How Do I Begin to Write?


Where Does Poetry Come From? Reading and Writing. What Is a Poet? Do You Have to Have Talent to Write Poetry? Why Write Poems? Uses for a Poem. Exercises.

2. Exposing Poetry's Bones: What Poetry Is Made Of.


Rivets and Beams. Nuts 'n' Bolts. Content (What Are You Going to Write About?). Basic Types of Poems. How Do I Put All These Things Together? Exercises.

3. Getting Started (and Over the Fear of Starting!): The Poetic Process.


The Poet's Toolbox. The Blank Page. Great Openings. How to Know If What You Are Writing Is “Good”. Exercises.

4. All Your Words Fit to Print (and Some That Aren't!): Keeping Journals.


What Is Journaling? Types of Journals. The Short Course in Journaling. Extracting Poems from Your Journals. A Poem a Day. Exercises.

II. OPENING THE STANZA'S DOOR: ENTERING POETRY.

5. Painting with Words: Imagery.


No Ideas but in Things. The Five Senses. Painting with Words: How to Create an Image. Exercises.

6. Metaphorically Speaking.


Metaphor. When Good Metaphors Go Bad: Mixed Metaphor. How to Create a Metaphor. Exercises for the Metaphorically Impaired.

7. Repetition, Repetition, Repetition.


Repeating Words. Repeating Phrases and Refrains. Beginning and Ending Repetition. Anaphora. Image and Symbol Repetition. Syntactical Repetition. Metrical Repetition. Sonic Repetition. Exercises.

8. The Sound of Music.


The Music of Poetry. Rhyme. Rhyme Scheme. Alliteration, Assonance, and Consonance. Tone, Voice, and Diction. Meter. Exercises.

9. You've Got Rhythm: Metrical Poetry.


Why Poets Use Meter. What Is Meter? Blank Verse. Accentual and Syllabic Meter. Exercises.

III. POPULAR TYPES OF POEMS AND HOW TO WRITE THEM.

10. Tell Me a Story: Narrative Poetry.


Cause and Effect. Who's the Speaker? Point of View. Dialogue. The Ballad. Exercises.

11. Love and the Great Beyond.


Wooing 101: Love Poems. Death and Grieving. Exercises.

12. The Three Faces of Eve: Persona Poems and Letter Poems.


Persona Poems. The Epistle Poem. Exercises.

13. Spellbinding!: List Poems and Rituals.


Starting with a List…. Rituals. Exercises.

14. Some Fun Fixed Forms.


Sonnets. Villanelle. Sestina. Canzone. Pantoum. Ghazal. Haiku and Tanka. Poems to Dance By. Triolet. Exercises.

15. More Fun Forms.


Acrostic. Ars Poetica. Aubade. Cento. Concrete Poetry and Calligrams. Found Poems. Light Verse. Ode. Pastoral. Prose Poem. Other Fun Forms to Try. Exercises.

IV. POETRY AND PRACTICALITY.

16. Cursed Be He Who Stirs My Bones!: Avoiding Poetry Pitfalls.


Using Poetic Conventions. Language Problems. Lack of Focus. Punctuation Problems. Grammar in a Poem? Telling, Not Showing. Musical Matters. Subject Matter Matters. Exercises.

17. How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall?: Revision, Revision, Revision.


Revise Away! Murdering Your Darlings. Why Revise? When Good Poems Go Bad: The Quick Fix. Enough Is Just Enough. The Death of a Poem. A Sample Revision. Exercises.

18. To Slam or Not To Slam?: Reading Your Poetry in Public.


Why Should I Read Poetry in Public? Where to Read. What to Expect at a Reading. Audience Etiquette. Reader Etiquette. Slamming and the Spoken Word. Writing for Listeners. Starting a Reading Series or a Slam. Exercises.

19. Writing in a Vacuum: Workshops, Colonies, Conferences.


What Is a Poetry “Workshop”? Starting a Workshop. Finding Mr. or Mrs. Critic “Right”. Writers' Conferences. Writers' Colonies. The Creative Writing Degree. Exercises.

20. Your Name in Print: Getting Published.


Why Do You Want to Be Published? How to Get Your Poems Published. Paying for Publication. Organizing Your Submissions. An Insider Look at the Acceptance/Rejection Process. Rejection…and More Rejection. The Big Day: Publication! Contests. A First Book. What a Tangled Web We Weave. Exercises.

21. Pen Out of Ink?: Beating Writer's Block.


Exercise #1: I Gotta Use Words When I Talk to You: From Diann Blakely. Exercise #2: A Rose Is Not a Rosa: From Richard Blanco. Exercise #3: About the Author: From Catherine Bowman. Exercise #4: The Swing Shift Blues: From Richard Cecil. Exercise #5: Obsessive Definitions: From Denise Duhamel. Exercise #6: The Day the Pleasure Factory Broke Down: From Stephen Dunn. Exercise #7: Clustering: From Lola Haskins. Exercise #8: Poetic Dialogue: From Dean Kostos. Exercise #9: The Best and the Worst: From David Lehman. Exercise #10: What's in a Name?: From Lyn Lifshin. Exercise #11: Graphing Your Life: From Campbell McGrath. Exercise #12: Not This, Not This, …but That: From David Rivard. Exercise #13: Detail Scavenger Hunt: From Maureen Seaton. Exercise #14: Two Exercises: From Reginald Shepherd. Exercise #15: Bedroom Catalogue: From Maura Stanton. One Exercise: From Charles Harper Webb. Exercises.

22. Poetry Appreciation 101.


Appreciating a Poem. Exercises.

23. Writing Poetry FAQs: Most Frequently Asked Questions.


What Is Poetic License? Why Does Poetry Have So Many Rules? Do I Have to Capitalize the Beginning Word of Each Line in My Poem? Why Do Some Poets Shorten Words, as in O'ercast, E'er, 'Mong, 'Twould, 'Twas, Etc.—You Get the Point. Someone Told Me I Shouldn't Use Thee, Thy, Dost, and Other Words Like Them. Why Not? Where Should I Break My Lines? Can't I Just Break Them Anywhere I Want? What Do I Do If a Line in My Poem Is Too Long and Runs Over onto the Next Line? How Do I Title My Poems? Do I Have to Use Stanzas in My Poems? I Had an Idea for a Poem but Then I Found Out That Someone Else Wrote One with the Same Subject Matter. Can I Still Write It? What Does It Mean When a Poet Writes a Poem After Another Poet? I'm a Free Spirit and I Just Want to Express My Feelings, So Why Do I Have to Know Anything About Meter or Form? Aren't Those Things Passé Anyway? I Want to Try Writing Some Fixed Forms. Do I Have to Adhere Strictly to the Form, or Can I Play Around with It a Bit? If I Do, Is It Still a Formal Poem? Does Anyone Still Take Rhyme Seriously? Can I Use Modern-Sounding Details (Cell Phone, Coke Can, E-Mail) in a Poem and Still Have It Be Considered a Serious Poem? I Feel Very Misunderstood by My Workshop. They Just Don't “Get” What I'm Trying to Do. Should I Try to Find a New Workshop or Quit Trying the “Group Thing” Altogether? Isn't Poetry Just About Creating Something Beautiful? Making Beauty out of the Language? Do I Have to Copyright My Poems? How Do I Get a Book of Poems Published? If I Keep Writing Poetry, Will I Be “Discovered”? I've Never Shown My Poems to Anyone Else Before and I'm Afraid To—but I Want Some Feedback—What Should I Do?

V. APPENDIXES.

Appendix A. Glossary of Poetic Terms.


Appendix B. Resources.
Index.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews