Thursday, April 16, 2026

Day 16 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 90


Welcome, friends! My poem today is #90 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #455, including my poems in last year's Stafford Challenge).

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “Today, try writing a poem in which you describe something that cannot speak, and what it has taught or told you.”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, write a new poem [— that is, a poem] about something or someone new.”


I'm combining the two prompts again in a single poem, a Quadrille Quaiku, a new poetic form invented by David Hoffmann — exactly 44 words like a quadrille, with 4 linked haiku using strict 5-7-5 syllables, and 11 words per stanza.

New Bass

            —quadrille quaiku

New Fender Jazz Bass,
in brilliant electric blue,
active and passive,

five bright roundwound strings,
sounds wonderful, smooth thunder
in springtime rainstorm.

It doesn't speak but
it has a beautiful voice,
deep, mellifluous.

It boldly declares
to me, confidently, I'm
your new number one.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

My photo of the new bass when it arrived in late February.


Today, Alan is also working with both prompts — a new interaction with a voiceless family member.

The Last Lesson My Dad Taught Me

You can take a retractable pen
and a small spiral-bound notepad,
lift the suit’s lapel, and slide them
into the shirt pocket underneath,
where he always kept them,
still without touching
the room-temperature skin
of his folded hands. You can look
at his closed eyes—you have seen
him sleep before, but never with his jaw
set quite that way. You can ask
yourself if he needs the glasses.
You can admire how white
his hair got, how full and straight
although at almost eighty years
his hairline receded a bit.
You can do all of it
as if you have done it before
outside of steeling yourself for this time,
but you have never before placed
your right hand over his
folded that way, and you do,
and you have never before
kissed his forehead
without his showing some feeling
in return, and you do that, too,
new, necessary, wrenching
gestures that do not comfort
you both, because you’re not the same.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Wow. That's an amazing poem, Alan.


Thanks for coming by today. See you again tomorrow!

Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Day 15 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 89


Hello again, friends! My poem today is #89 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #454, including the number of poems from last year's challenge).

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “Today, we’d like you to write [a] poem that muses on love, but isn’t a traditional love poem in the sense of expressing love between romantic partners.”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, take the phrase 'Under (blank),' replace the blank with a new word or phrase, make the new phrase the title of your poem, and then, write your poem.”


I'm combining the two prompts again in a single poem.

Under My Thumb — What?

            —curtal sonnet

“Under My Thumb” by the Rolling Stones was
one of my favorite radio songs
in seventh grade. A guy calls his girlfriend
“squirming dog,” docile “pet,” and “Siamese
cat.” I didn’t notice anything wrong
with those slurs back then. I hope I didn’t

think that was how love was supposed to be.
With my parents, my dad was controlling
towards my mom. Just the same with my friends.
A wonder we learned to love tenderly,
                                    passion and care entwined.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Photo Source


Today, Alan is also working with both prompts.

Underwear

After forty-something years
Everything means something more,
so when I cannot see
(my belly in the way)
whatever the hell is going on
at the top of my thigh,
just below the hem of my shorts,
not even flirting this time,
and I ask her to take a look,
in some ways it’s like asking
the luthier to check the buzz
from the B string.
We hold the ideal
of the note and can
only approximate it
with the earnest care
of our seasoned instruments
and continued practice.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

That's a subtly sweet meditation on love, Alan.


Thanks for coming by today. See you again tomorrow!

Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Day 14 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 88


Great to see you, friends! My poem today is #88 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #453, including the number of poems from last year's challenge).

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “a poem that . . . bridges . . . the seeming divide between poetry and technological advances.”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For the second Two-for-Tuesday prompt:  1) Write a poetic form poem, and/or . . . 2) Write an anti-form poem.”


I'm combining all three prompts above in a single poem — for "form and anti-form," I begin with a curtal sonnet and then move to free verse. Actually, four prompts, however, because this is also a tribute poem for the Eye to the Telescope call for submissions on the theme of tribute.

Tribute to George Jetson

            —curtal sonnet, at first

Most people are clueless I’m a poet.
They only see George J, with Jane his wife,
daughter Judy, his boy Elroy, our dog
Astro —Rastro, he growls — and our robot
maid Rosie. I write poems on our lives
in the sky, living high above the smog,

jetting around in flying saucer cars.
I work at Spacely Space Sprockets, where life
is pushing buttons all day, just a cog.
In between button pushes, I write verse.
                  Here’s my new monologue.

“I don’t tell people I write poems
because everyone in 2062 thinks poetry is
passé. Who needs poems
when we have such incredible
technology: flying cars, apartment buildings
up in the clouds like Googie drums,
moving slidewalks to go everywhere (who needs
walking?), humans living in outer space, aliens
living here on Earth, jetpacks, robot pet
animals, and robot housekeepers. Poetry is
old hat, old-fashioned, obsolete, they say.
But writing poems makes me happy,
just like drumming, like when I got to jam out
with Jet Screamer. That kid’s A-okay . . .
eep opp ork ah-ah! I just can’t let anyone know,
especially Jane. She would think
I’ve gone bananas.
Maybe I have. Uh-oh, this poem-machine is
careening out of control, spinning in zero-g.
Jane! Stop this crazy thing!”

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Photo Source


Today, Alan is working with the "poetic form" prompt, using a form he invented, described below.

Controlling Modes of Speech
Is Infringing on Free Speech


My institution’s architect has made
aesthetic plans affecting how we speak
to one another, but it’s not unique
designing offices where we’re displayed
behind glass walls; of course, he was dismayed
to learn no bookcases was a mistake—
we’re lit professors, after all; opaque,
fake frosting on the glass has not allayed
resentment we were wronged. Bulletin boards
face banishment by admin overlords,
replaced by screens that cycle an ICE raid,
corruption, shootings, broken peace accords,
but no “reward” sign or “top wages paid”
or invitations to potlucks next week.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Alan said about this poem, "This is a form I invented that begins with a Petrarchan octet. I call this sonnet form the Uvalde sonnet; I invented it about four years ago in response to the Robb Elementary School shooting. I have moved the culminating couplet one would expect from a Shakespearean sonnet to follow the octet so that it feels as if it occurs prematurely." It's an interesting form, and here Alan is employing slant rhyme with the "-eek" and "-ake" rhyming sounds.


Thanks for coming by today. See you again tomorrow!

Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Monday, April 13, 2026

Day 13 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 87


Hello again, friends! My poem today is #87 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #452, including the number of poems from last year's challenge).

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: a “poem about a remembered, cherished landscape. . . . includ[ing] language or phrasing that would be unusual in normal, spoken speech.”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, write a problem poem.”


I'm combining both prompts, again, in my poem today. The "language or phrasing that would be unusual in normal, spoken speech" is the word that jumps across from the second-to-last line to the last line.

San Francisco's Cityscape

            —curtal sonnet

Just a year after I finished high school,
the Transamerica Pyramid was
finished in San Francisco. Amazing
structure, just about fifty stories tall,
beautiful spire that transformed the city’s
skyline from mostly square, boxy buildings.

That tallest skyscraper a slim echo
of an age-old shape, tombs of the Pharaohs.
But now the city’s skyline has gone wrong:
the new tallest, Salesforce Tower’s phallo-
                              centric look — ugly thing.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

The Salesforce Tower is at the top center of this photo. The Transamerica Pyramid is in the foreground, bottom center. (Photo Source)


Today, Alan is also combining the two prompts. The "cherished landscape" is hinted at, and the "problem" is obvious.

His Legacy

When he is gone,
the country’s needs
will not permit
the funds required
to restore all
he has destroyed.
Rose Garden? Gone.
The East Wing? Gone.
The National
Forests? All gone.
Someone who spends
his life at meals
and golf courses
does not regard
pristine deserts,
crystal water,
verdant meadows,
ancient mountains
as valued for
themselves; he sees
undeveloped
real estate, land
to be taken
and used all up.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Only too true, Alan. Your poems on you-know-who in DC are so true.


Thanks for reading our poems today. See you again tomorrow!

Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Sunday, April 12, 2026

Day 12 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 86


Welcome back, friends! My poem today is #86 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #451, including the number of poems from last year's challenge).

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “We’d like to challenge you to write [a] poem that recounts a memory of a beloved relative, and something they did that echoes through your thoughts today.”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, write a set poem [as in] set my alarm [or] set things in motion.”


I'm combining both prompts, as usual, in today's poem. The photo below is my mom, Candida, a little over 50 years ago. This poem, incidentally, will be a part of a collection of poems I'm writing about her.

What Mom Would Always Say

            —curtal sonnet

When I became a young teen and started
going out more with my buddies, my mom
would always tell me, each time, “Be careful.”
The tone of any outing always set
by those inevitable words. One time,
I had already crossed the street, when Bill

said, “Hey, your mom’s calling you.” I looked back.
She was on the porch waving. What could Mom
possibly want that was so darn crucial?
It was embarrassing, but I went back.
                      “Love you, Vin. Be careful.”

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]



Today, Alan is working with the "set" prompt. If only George H, a character in the poem, were a relative of the speaker, Alan would have satisfied both prompts. But George H. can't be related to the speaker because it would ruin the point about unexpected kindness.

Radio Song

More than a quarter of a century ago,
my wife and I were stuck in awful jobs
in Knoxville, Tennessee—we followed work
(I had a brand-new PhD) and left
beloved Tuscaloosa, settled long
enough to start another search for jobs,
and hunkered down. The spring of ’91,
the best of bands released the album Out
of Time, and I bought all the single discs
in local Knoxville shops, but none of them
had gotten the fourth disc, which had the last
few songs of a live set. What could I do
but call George H., Vinyl Solutions’ chief,
and ask him please to ship it to me, years
before the internet or Amazon,
and, yes, he did, and I will not forget
the kindness of a man who knew I loved
a band, his shop, and Tuscaloosa, how
it was to be a broke grad student, kept
in time with porches, midnight croquet, cheap
and filling food along the strip, and George,
whose last name, Hadjidakis, stays with me
now as the world collapses ’round our ears.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

A lovely poem, Alan. Thank you.


Thanks for swinging by. See you again tomorrow!

Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   






13th floor elevators (1) 3d (1) 9/11 (3) a schneider (1) abecedarian (14) aboriginal art (1) acrostic (7) adelaide crapsey (1) african american (1) aids (1) aisling (1) al robles (2) alberta turner (1) alex esclamado (1) alexander chen (1) alexander pushkin (1) alexandra bissell (1) alexandrines (4) alien (1) alliteration (3) alphabet (1) alphabet poem (2) altered books (1) altered pages (2) altered reality magazine (2) amanda blue gotera (7) amelia blue gotera (6) american gothic (1) american sonnet (1) amok (1) amy lowell (1) anacreon (1) anacreontics (1) anaphora (4) andre norton (1) andrea boltwood (19) andrew davidson (1) andrew marvell (1) andrew oldham (1) andy warhol (1) angelina jolie (1) angels (1) animation (1) anna montgomery (3) anne reynolds (1) annie e. existence (1) annie finch (2) anny ballardini (1) anti- (1) antonio taguba (2) apophis (1) aprille (1) art (7) artemis ii (1) arturo islas (1) asefru (1) ash wednesday (1) asian american (4) assonance (3) astronomy (2) aswang (13) aswang wars (1) atlanta rhythm section (1) axolotl (1) bakunawa (1) balato (1) ballad (4) barack obama (7) barbara jane reyes (1) barry a. morris (1) bass (3) bataan (5) becca andrea (1) beetle (2) belinda subraman (2) benjamin ball (1) beowulf (1) best american poetry (1) beverly cassidy (1) bible (1) bill clinton (1) billy collins (2) blackout poetry (1) blank verse (12) bob boynton (1) body farm (1) bolo (1) bongbong marcos (3) bop (1) brandt cotherman (1) brian brodeur (2) brian garrison (1) bruce johnson (1) bruce niedt (6) buddah moskowitz (2) buddy holly (1) burns stanza (1) caleb rainey (1) callaloo (1) candida fajardo gotera (5) cardinal sin (1) carlos bulosan (1) carlos santana (2) carmina figurata (4) carolina matsumura gotera (1) caroline klocksiem (1) carrie arizona (3) carrieola (3) carriezona (1) catherine childress pritchard (1) catherine pritchard childress (37) catullus (1) cebu (1) cecilia manguerra brainard (1) cedar falls (6) cedar falls public library (1) cento (1) charles a hogan (2) ChatGPT (1) cherita (1) chess (2) childhood (1) children's poetry (1) China (1) chorus of glories (1) chris durietz (1) christmas (2) christopher smart (1) chuck pahlaniuk (1) cinquain (1) civil rights (1) clarean sonnet (2) clarice (1) classics iv (1) cleave hay(na)ku (2) clerihews (3) cliché (1) common meter (1) computers (1) concrete poem (2) concreteness (1) consonance (6) coolest month (1) cory aquino (2) couplet (5) couplet quatrains (2) crab (1) craft (5) creative nonfiction (1) crewrt-l (1) crucifixion (1) curtal sonnet (83) dactyls (2) daily palette (1) damián ortega (1) dan hartman (1) danielle filas (1) dante (5) dashiki (1) david foster wallace (1) david hoffman (1) david kopaska-merkel (1) david shaw (1) david wojahn (1) de jackson (2) decasyllabics (4) denise duhamel (1) deviantART (3) dick powell (1) diction (1) didactic cinquain (1) dinosaur (2) disaster relief (1) divine comedy (1) django reinhardt (1) dodecasyllables (1) doggerel (2) doggie diner (1) doidotsu (1) don johnson (1) donald justice (1) donald trump (8) double acrostic (1) dr who (3) dr. seuss (1) draft (2) dragon (1) dragonfly (17) dreams & nightmares (1) drug addiction (1) drums (1) duplex (1) dusty springfield (1) dylan thomas (1) e e cummings (1) e-book (1) earth day (1) ebay (2) eclipse (5) ecopoetry (1) ed hill (1) edgar allan poe (2) edgar lee masters (1) edgar rice burroughs (1) editing (1) eeyore (1) eileen tabios (9) ekphrasis (3) ekphrastic poem (19) ekphrastic review (1) election (2) elegy (4) elevenie (1) elizabeth alexander (2) elizabeth bishop (3) elvis presley (1) emily dickinson (9) emma trelles (1) end-stop (3) english sonnet (1) englyn milwer (1) enita meadows (1) enjambed rhyme (1) enjambment (5) enola gay (1) envelope quatrain (1) environment (1) epulaerya (1) erasure poetry (10) erin mcreynolds (4) ernest lawrence thayer (1) exxon valdez oil spill (1) f. j. bergman (1) f. scott fitzgerald (1) facebook (3) family (4) fanny (1) fantasy (1) fashion (1) ferdinand magellan (2) ferdinand marcos (5) fib (3) fiction (3) fiera lingue (1) fighting kite (4) filipino (language) (1) filipino americans (6) filipino poetry (1) filipino veterans equity (3) filipinos (5) film (3) final thursday press (1) final thursday reading series (2) flannery o'connor (3) florence & the machine (1) flute (1) fortune cookie (1) found poem (1) found poetry (6) found poetry review (2) fourteeners (1) fox news (1) frank frazetta (1) frankenstein (1) franny choi (1) fred unwin (1) freddie mercury (1) free verse (13) fructuosa gotera (1) fyodor dostoevsky (1) gabriel garcía márquez (1) gambling (1) garrett hongo (1) gary kelley (1) gaston nogues (1) gawain (2) genre (1) george w. bush (1) gerard manley hopkins (13) ghazal (3) ghost wars (6) ghosts of a low moon (1) glossalalia (1) gogol bordello (1) golden shovel (5) goodreads (1) google (1) gotera (1) grace kelly (1) grant tracey (1) grant wood (11) grateful dead (1) greek mythology (1) gregory k pincus (1) grendel (1) griffin lit (1) grimm (1) grinnell college (2) growing up (1) growing up filipino (2) guest blogger (1) guillaume appolinaire (1) guitar (9) gulf war (1) gustave doré (3) guy de maupassant (1) gwendolyn brooks (4) gypsy art show (1) gypsy punk (1) hades (1) haggard hawks (1) haibun (4) haiga (1) haiku (34) haiku sonnet (3) hank williams jr. (1) hart crane (1) hawak kamay (1) hay(na)ku (24) hay(na)ku sonnet (16) header (1) hearst center for the arts (2) heirloom (1) herman melville (1) hey joe (1) hieronymus bosch (1) hiroshima (1) hiv here & now (1) homer (1) honky tanka (1) how a poem happens (2) humboldt state university (1) humor (1) hybrid sonnet (4) hymnal stanza (1) iain m. banks (1) iamb (1) iambic pentameter (1) ian parks (1) ibanez (1) icarus (1) imagery (1) imelda marcos (4) immigrants (1) imogen heap (1) indiana university (1) inigo online magazine (1) ink! (1) insect (2) insects (1) international hotel (1) international space station (1) interview (4) introduction (2) iowa (2) iowa poet laureate (11) iran (1) iran-iraq war (1) irving levinson (1) italian bicycle (1) italian sonnet (2) ivania velez (2) j. d. schraffenberger (4) j. i. kleinberg (3) j. k. rowling (1) jack horner (2) jack kerouac (1) jack p nantell (1) jackson pollock (1) james autry (1) james brown (1) james galvin (1) james gorman (2) james joyce (1) jan d. hodge (2) janis joplin (1) japan (1) jasmine dreame wagner (1) jeanette winterson (1) jedediah dougherty (1) jedediah kurth (31) jennifer bullis (1) jesse graves (1) jessica hagedorn (1) jessica mchugh (2) jim daniels (1) jim hall (1) jim hiduke (1) jim o'loughlin (2) jim simmerman (3) jimi hendrix (3) jimmy fallon (1) joan osborne (1) joe mcnally (1) john barth (1) john charles lawrence (2) john clare (1) john donne (1) john gardner (1) john mccain (1) john prine (1) john welsh iii (2) johnny cash (1) joseph solo (1) josh hamzehee (1) joyce kilmer (1) justine wagner (1) kampilan (1) kathleen ann lawrence (1) kathy reichs (1) kay ryan (2) keith welsh (1) kelly cherry (1) kelly christiansen (1) kenning (1) kennings poem (3) killjoy (1) kim groninga (1) kimo (6) king arthur (1) king tut (1) knight fight (1) kumadre (1) kumpadre (1) kurt vonnegut (1) kyell gold (1) landays (1) lapu-lapu (2) lapwing publications (1) laurie kolp (2) leigh hunt (1) leonardo da vinci (2) les paul (1) leslie kebschull (1) lester smith (1) library (1) library of congress (2) limerick (3) linda parsons marion (1) linda sue grimes (2) lineation (6) linked haiku (9) linked tanka (3) list poem (5) little brown brother (1) little free libraries (3) lorette c. luzajic (1) lost (tv) (1) louise glück (1) luis buñuel (1) lune (2) lydia lunch (1) lynyrd skynyrd (1) machismo (1) magazines (1) magnetic poetry (1) mah jong (1) man ray (1) manananggal (2) manong (3) margaret atwood (2) maria fleuette deguzman (1) marianne moore (1) marilyn cavicchia (1) marilyn hacker (1) mark jarman (1) marriage (1) martin avila gotera (18) martin klein (1) martin luther king jr. (1) marty gotera (5) marty mcgoey (1) mary ann blue gotera (9) mary biddinger (1) mary roberts rinehart award (1) mary shelley (1) matchbook (1) maura stanton (1) maureen thorson (432) maurice manning (2) meena rose (3) megan hippler (1) melanie villines (1) melanie wolfe (1) melina blue gotera (3) mental illness (1) metapoem (1) meter (7) mfa (2) michael heffernan (3) michael martone (2) michael ondaatje (1) michael shermer (2) michael spence (1) michelle obama (1) mickey mouse (1) micropoem (1) middle witch (1) minotaur (1) mirror northwest (1) misky (1) molossus (1) monkey (1) monorhyme (4) monostich (1) monotetra (3) morel mushrooms (2) mueller report (1) muhammad ali (1) multiverse (1) murder ballad (1) mushroom hunting (1) music (3) muslim (1) my custom writer blog (1) myth (1) mythology (3) nagasaki (1) naked blonde writer (1) naked girls reading (1) naked novelist (1) napowrimo (439) narrative (2) nasa (1) natalya st. clair (1) nathan dahlhauser (1) nathaniel hawthorne (1) national geographic (3) national poetry month (437) native american (1) neil gaiman (2) neoformalism (1) New Formalists (1) New York School (1) nick carbó (5) ninang (1) nonet (1) north american review (7) north american review blog (2) ode (1) of books and such (1) of this and such (1) onegin stanza (2) ottava rima (2) oulipo (1) oumumua (1) ovillejo (2) pablo picasso (2) pacific crossing (1) padre timoteo gotera (1) painting (1) palestinian american (1) palindrome (1) palinode (1) palmer hall (2) pantoum (3) paradelle (2) paranormal (1) parkersburg iowa (1) parody (7) parody poetry journal (1) parol (1) pastoral poetry (1) pat bertram (2) pat martin (1) paul maccready (1) paula berinstein (1) pause for the cause (2) pca/aca (1) peace (2) peace of mind band (1) pecan grove press (2) pepito gotera (1) percy bysshe shelley (2) performance poetry (1) persephone (1) persona poem (3) peter padua (1) petrarch (1) petrarchan sonnet (26) phil memmer (1) philip larkin (1) philippine news (1) philippine scouts (6) philippine-american war (1) philippines (8) phish (1) pinoy (1) pinoy poetics (1) pixie lott (1) podcast (1) podcasts (3) poem-a-day challenge (437) poetics (6) poetry (5) poetry imitation (1) poetry international (1) poetry palooza (2) poetry reading (4) poets against (the) war (2) pop culture (2) popcorn press (1) prejudice (1) presidio of san francisco (1) prime numbers (1) prime-sentence poem (1) prince (3) princess grace foundation (1) promotion (1) prose poem (7) proverbs (1) pterosaur (1) ptsd (2) puppini sisters (1) puptent poets (2) pushkin sonnet (3) pyrrhic (1) quadrille (1) quadrille quaiku (1) quatrain (4) quatrains (1) r.e.m. (1) rachel morgan (3) racism (1) rainer maria rilke (1) rap (2) rattle (1) ray fajardo (1) ray harryhausen (1) reggie lee (1) rembrandt (1) ren powell (1) renee lukehart wilkie (1) reverse golden shovel (1) reviews (1) revision (1) rhyme (8) rhysling awards (5) rhythm (1) richard fay (1) richard hugo (1) rick griffin (1) rime (1) rippled mirror hay(na)ku (1) robert bly (1) robert frost (3) robert fulghum (1) robert j christenson (1) robert lee brewer (440) robert mezey (1) robert neville (1) robert zemeckis (1) rock and roll (2) roger zelazny (1) rolling stones (1) romanian (1) ron kowit (1) ronald wallace (2) rondeau (1) ross gay (1) roundelay (1) rubaiyat (1) rubaiyat sonnet (1) run-d.m.c. (1) saade mustafa (1) sally ann kueker (2) salt publishing (1) salvador dali (4) san francisco (8) sandra cisneros (1) santa claus (1) santana (1) sapphics (1) sarah deppe (1) sarah palin (1) sarah smith (26) sascha feinstein (1) satan (1) sayaka alessandra (1) schizophrenia (1) science fiction (2) science fiction poetry association (1) science friction (1) scifaiku (2) scott walker (1) screaming monkeys (1) scripture (1) sculpture (1) sea chantey (1) sena jeter naslund (1) senryu (5) sestina (13) sevenling (1) shadorma (10) shaindel beers (2) shakespeare (1) shakespearean sonnet (10) shakespearen sonnet (1) sharon olds (2) shawn wong (1) shiites or shia (1) shoreline of infinity (1) sidney bechet (1) sijo (2) skateboard (1) skeltonics (2) skylaar amann (1) slant rhyme (6) slide shows (1) small fires press (1) smashing pumpkins (1) sniper (1) somersault abecedarian (1) somonka (1) sonnet (50) sonnetina (4) soul (1) southeast asian american (1) spanish (1) specificity (1) speculative poetry (1) spenserian stanza (1) spiraling abecedarian (1) spondee (1) spooky (1) sprung rhythm (1) st. patrick's day (2) stafford challenge (84) stanford university (1) stanley meltzoff (1) stanza (1) star wars (3) stars and stripes (2) stereogram (1) steve hazlewood (1) steve mcqueen (1) stevie nicks (1) stone canoe (2) sue boynton (1) suite101 (2) sunflowers (1) supremes (1) surges (1) susan l. chast (1) syllabics (1) sylvia plath (2) synesthesia (1) syzygy poetry journal (2) t. m. sandrock (1) t. s. eliot (2) tamandua (1) tanka (36) tanka prose (4) tanka sequence (4) tanya tucker (1) tarzan (1) taylor swift (1) teaching creative writing (2) ted kooser (1) tercet (1) term paper mill (1) terrance hayes (2) terza rima (10) terza rima haiku sonnet (8) terzaiku sonnet (4) terzanelle (1) tetrameter (1) the byrds (1) the coolest month (1) the warning (1) the who (1) theodore roethke (1) thomas alan holmes (261) thomas crofts (4) thomas faivre-duboz (1) thomas hart benton (1) thunderstorm (1) thurifer (1) tiger (1) tilly the laughing housewife (1) time travel (1) tokyo groove kyoshi (1) tom perrotta (1) tom petty (1) tom phillips (1) tone hønebø (1) toni morrison (2) tornado (1) total eclipse (4) tower of power (2) translation (2) translitic (4) tribute in light (1) trickster (1) tricube (1) triolet (8) triskaidekaphobia (1) tritina (1) trochee (1) trope (1) tucson (1) typhoon haiyan (1) typhoon yolanda (1) university of northern iowa (6) unrhymed sonnet (2) us army (8) uvalde sonnet (1) valentine's day (1) vampire (2) ven batista (29) verses typhoon yolanda (1) veterans' day (2) via dolorosa (1) video poetry (6) vietnam era vet (1) vietnam war (8) viktor vasnetsov (1) villanelle (5) vince del monte (1) vincent van gogh (1) virgil wren (1) virtual blog tour (1) visual poetry (3) vladimir putin (1) volkswagen (1) w. somerset maugham (1) walking dead (1) wallace stevens (3) walt mcdonald (1) walt whitman (4) war (7) war in afghanistan (2) war in iraq (2) wartburg college (1) waterloo (1) whypoetrymatters (1) wile e. coyote (1) wilfred owen (1) william blake (1) william carlos williams (1) william f tout (1) william gibson (1) william morris (1) william oandasan (1) william shakespeare (3) william stafford (3) willie nelson (1) wind (1) winslow homer (1) winter (1) women's art (1) wooster review (1) wordy 30 (1) writing (1) writing away retreats (1) writing show (1) wwii (6) young adult (1) yusef komunyakaa (7) zipode (1) zone 3 (1)