Write 30 poems in 30 days: a challenge

During the summer of 2010, I took up the challenge to write 30 poems in 30 days with two goals in mind:

  1. generate new material and
  2. unclutter my mind.

Yesterday I began a new cycle of poems with the goal of writing 30 poems and 30 days during National Poetry Month (if your following National Poetry Month on twitter, the hashtag is #NPM12).

April Poetrio at Malaprop’s Bookstore/Cafe

National Poetry Month begins at Malaprop’s Bookstore/Cafe with Poetrio this Sunday at 3:00 p.m. This month’s featured poets include Ed Madden, Ray McManus and Anne Harding Woodworth.

Here’s an abridged version of the poets bios from the Malaprop’s Bookstore/Café news release:

Anne Harding Woodworth is a member of the Poetry Board at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.  She is a part-time resident of both Washington, D.C. and the Western North Carolina mountains. On April 1 this year, she will read from her fourth book, THE ARTEMIS SONNETS, ETC.

Ray McManus teaches creative writing, Irish literature, rhetoric, and composition at the University of South Carolina, Sumter.  We are very pleased to welcome him back with his second poetry collection, RED DIRT JESUS, for which he won the Marick Press Poetry Prize.

At the November 2009 Poetrio event here at Malaprop’s, Ed Madden read from Signals, the 2008 poetry collection for which he won the South Carolina Poetry Book Prize.  His most recent collection of poetry is PRODIGAL: VARIATIONS.

Learn more about the April 2012 Poetrio at Malaprop’s Bookstore/Cafe at their web site.

Poem: There are only so many

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Poem: Splendid cup of tea

Poem: The honey bee

Poem: The honey bee
Poem sketch: The honey bee

Poem: The Storm Approaches

Poem: The Storm Approaches
Poem sketch: The Storm Approaches

Poem: There’s A Place

Poem: Theres A Place
Poem sketch: Theres A Place

Poem: Never Look A Doughnut Dealer in the Eyes

Never Look A Dealer in the Eyes
Poem: Never Look A Doughnut Dealer in the Eyes

Note: These poems are rough drafts and include typos, erroneous grammar and other literary warts. In this case, perfume is intentionally misspelled to represent a unique American accent.

Poem: Some days all you need

Some days all you need
Poem: Some days all you need