Category: Prompts

  • Random Words #163

    Lola.200Use these words in a freewrite:

     elaborate, bitter, cool, leave, mist, arm, moon, bare, peach, vision

     Post your writing on The Write Spot Blog.

  • Hands. Prompt #162

    Today’s Writing Prompt:  Hands

    Hands

     

  • Tweak, form, shape and sculpt . . . Prompt #161

    Choose one topic from below, these are prompts that have recently been posted here on the Write Spot Blog:

    Prompt #158: If pets could talk

    Prompt #159: Unforgettable

    Also Prompt #159:  Strange But True

    Prompt #160: Only in America

    Also Prompt #160:  Happy Endings

    Today’s writing prompt:  After you have written a freewrite (from above list), write one line for every four sentences from that freewrite. Take out all unnecessary words.

    Condense or distill your writing to the most important aspects.

    Tweak, form, shape and sculpt until you have a poem.  Then . . .

    Submit to The Voices of Lincoln Poetry Contest.

    WinnerNo fee to enter. You don’t have to be a resident of Lincoln to submit.  Send by July 25, 2o14  Go for it!

     

     

  • Only in America or Happy Endings. Prompt #160

    Today’s Writing Prompt is either/or.

    Write about “Only in America.”

    Or write about “Happy Endings.”

    Today’s prompts are inspired by Voices of Lincoln Poetry Contest. Deadline: July 25, 2015.

    You don’t have to be a resident of Lincoln to submit to this contest, sponsored by Lincoln Public Library.

    Lincoln Library Poetry Contest

  • Unforgettable, or Strange But True . . . Prompt #159

    Another prompt inspired by Voices of Lincoln Poetry Contest. Deadline: July 25, 2015

    Writing Prompt:  Unforgettable . . . or . . . Strange But True

    Laffing SalLaffing Sal is “one of several automated characters that were built primarily to attract carnival and amusement park patrons to funhouses and dark rides throughout the United States. Its movements were accompanied by a raucous laugh that sometimes frightened small children and annoyed adults.”  Wikipedia

    One version of Laffing Sal currently resides at Playland-Not-At-The-Beach, which I had the “pleasure” of seeing and hearing recently at a friend’s birthday party.

    She definitely scared me as a child. I tried to avoid her when my family went to Playland-at-the-Beach in San Francisco, California.

  • If pets could talk . . . Prompt #158

    Today’s prompt is inspired by Voices of Lincoln Poetry Contest. Deadline: July 25, 2015

    Bird by Breana Prompt:  If pets could talk . . .

     

    Photo by Breana Marie

  • What really happened? Prompt #157

    What really happened?

    Humphrey BogartYour story could start out like this:  [Read in a Humphrey Bogart nasally voice]:

    “This is what really happened. . . See. . . .”

    Got it?  Now write it!

    Prompt: What really happened?

    Humphrey Bogart [actor]:  Maltese Falcon, CasaBlanca, The Treasure of Sierra Madre, High Sierra and many more unforgettable movies.

  • Broken . . . Prompt #156

    Broken . . .

    Broken bowl 180

    Today’s Writing Prompt:  Broken

  • The Language of Your Childhood is Poetry. Prompt #155

    April is Poetry Month. Let’s talk about poetry.

    The following is inspired from a workshop with Pat Schneider.

    Poetry is about music of language and comes in all forms: Music, nursery rhymes, hymns, jump rope rhymes.

    Look in anthologies for different kinds of poetry, different styles, different authors as poets.

    Guess what . . . You don’t have to like all poetry.

    Think about the language of your childhood. Imagine sitting around your kitchen table, or the living room couch or sofa . . . depending on where you grew up, you might call this item of furniture ” the davenport.”

    Remember your family’s way of talking. Hear poetry in music that was spoken around the kitchen table. Remember the language of your childhood.

    When writing poetry, don’t strain the language. Use normal words. Fall into the poetic playground.

    One way to write poetry: Take the melody from a song that you know and sing new words to make up your own song.

    Lola.200Prompt: Write a short poem – using a theme running in your head – a song you like, a rhyme, hymn, nursery rhyme, jump rope rhyme. Or, don’t even worry about a rhythm. Just go with whatever comes up.

    Write a poem about a time at the kitchen table when you were little.

    Or a poem about night time.

    Or a summer memory.        Just Write!