| Creating Poetry | 
enlarge | Author: John Drury Publisher: Writers Digest Books Category: Book
List Price: $14.99 Buy New: $8.39 You Save: $6.60 (44%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 87092
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6 x 0.7
ISBN: 1582974632 Dewey Decimal Number: 808.1 EAN: 9781582974637 ASIN: 1582974632
Publication Date: July 29, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description "*Nuts-and-bolts instruction helps budding poets become comfortable using poetry terms, forms and different styles *Includes a reading list, basic submission information and study plans Designed to encourage budding poets to explore language, subject matter, free and measured verse, imagery, metaphor, and moreCreating Poetry is the must-have resource for anyone who wants to write or teach poetry. Readers will find in-depth instruction, definitions of poetry terms and examples, challenging exercises and more."
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Creating Poetry. April 7, 2008 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
This book is more suited for one who has started writng poetry. There are numerous exercises which may discourage the novice.
At the same time it covers well all aspects of poetry. On reflection my original judgement may have been somewhat hasty.
The Best Introduction To Poetry Since Introduction To Poetry August 18, 2007 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
A fun and easy-to-read introduction to poetry for anybody. A must for a beginning poet. There is something to chuckle about on every page, I wrote a poem about one:
Assignment No. 12
Read something that seems impossibly difficult. John Drury, you say things so impossibly easy, You may as well be a Zen teacher.
Do you care to explain what you meant, Or shall I tie you to a chair and torture you To get a confession out of you?
Wait, Billy Collins told us to waterski And wave at your name on the shore. I know it was an assignment, not a poem. But you wrote it so poetically, I won't bring out a hose to beat you To find out what you really meant.
Anyway, that's why I love to write poems: I can leave a line hanging in the air, Without explaining why or what it means, For readers to imagine and discover.
The Music of Words October 17, 2006 14 out of 15 found this review helpful
"The first line of any poem is a kind of door, an entrance into the rooms of the stanzas, an opening. There are many kinds of doors, some plain, some ornate..." ~John Drury
Creating Poetry is not a book, it is a muse disguised as pages of paper within a cover! I cannot express my appreciation enough for this beautiful gift. John Drury's wisdom and attention to detail is inspiring and the warmth with which he writes inspires you to write poem after poem.
You can literally read this book and compose poems instantly as the inspiration flows through you. I was amazed at how Creating Poetry invoked the muse so effectively! Most of my poems appear as a singular thought or moment and then the first sentence will keep repeating itself until I start writing, then a poem flows through the pen. Reading this book, you need to keep paper and pen nearby because poems will appear as if called from a never-ending well of creativity.
"Some poets do depend on a flash of inspiration, maybe a good first line, before they sit down to work...waiting is their discipline. Like all poets, they are constantly preparing for the poems they will write." ~ John Drury
John Drury explores a wide variety of poetic forms and teaches poets how to develop style and feeling that will be conveyed to the reader and enhance the experience. For a long time I wrote poems without knowing what I was doing. In fact, my first book of poems appeared so spontaneously, I had no idea I could even write poems.
One of the suggestions he gives in this book is to read lots of poems and to indulge in the experience of reading them frequently. I cannot agree more! He also talks about playing music while you write. These suggestions are all very helpful. Some of the brilliant ideas include thoughts on myths. You can put yourself into the story and write about yourself as a mythical creature or you could write a poem about a painting or sculpture. The main sections introduce you to:
Developing your poetic sensitivity Learning the fundamental tools of poetry Refining sight - image, metaphor, symbols, vision Sensitizing yourself to the music of words - alliteration, assonance, rhyme, sound effects Developing the rhythmic qualities that make poems sing Understanding the basic units of which poems are made - visual shape, stanzas, lines Taking advantage of poetic forms - Ballad, Haiku, Ode, Villanelle, Song, Pantoum Becoming aware of fine nuances - tone, understatement, dramatic monologue Opening to potential sources - love, dreams, chance, thinking, memory, journals Things to write about - stories, people, occasions, modern life, objects, subjects Appreciation for Life - history, science, music, myths, painting, photographs Bringing each poem to completion - revision, omissions, endings
Reviewing poetry stirred my interest as I noticed similarities within the uniqueness of style. What was it that so captured me in some poems and drew me in deeper into a poet's world? How do poets create a connection of souls in just a few lines? Often what a poet needs is an idea and then the full experience appears.
This book inspired me to write poems about love, silence, cinnamon, bookshelves, reviewing, bubble baths, candles, travel, eternity, hunger, dreams, music, friendship, autumn, wolves, castles, plum blossoms and even a poem about ships in a sea of emotion.
Reading "Creating Poetry" will inspire you to the point where reading this book may in fact inspire you to write 50-70 poems! You can read a book and write your own book at the same time! I'm working on publishing the book this book inspired, but I keep writing more poems! Creating Poetry Creates Poets!
~The Rebecca Review
An excellent comprehensive guide to poetry writing! March 19, 2006 16 out of 17 found this review helpful
There are a few books in my personal library which I have acquired without really knowing the exact reasons for my ultimate decisions at the point of purchase. It could be the spur of the moment. Or something just grabs me. I really don't know.
This is one particular book (in fact, the only one of its genre, which I had bought) that fell under those impulses.
But there is something I am very sure of & that is, I am often fascinated by people who write literature, plays & poems, as well as the aesthetics of their creative work. I once heard this story from a government minister: "Math & Science give you the capability to build a gun. Literature & Poetry help you make the decision when to use it."
Neverthless, I took the trouble to read - & reread - this book on how to begin a poem. Through the hundreds of practical exercises to get going, I even invoked my muse & wrote a few short poems along the way. Not the best, but not bad for a beginner after all!
Personally, I really appreciate the author's constant encouragement: explore, practise, open yourself to all the potential sources of poetry - all around you & within you. I also like his beautiful presentation through twelve thematic chapters (each a self-contained unit), to name a few as follows:
- Preparing: developing your poetic sensitivity; - Language: learning the fundamental tools of poetry & using them effectively; - Sight: refining sight & insight to make your poetry come alive within themind's eye...& the heart's eye, too; - Sound: sensitizing yourself to the music of words - both singly & in combination; - Movement: developing the rhythmic qualities that make poems sing...& shout, match, croon & whisper; - Voice: becoming aware of the fine nuances of how the words are said & connected, revealing each poem's implied speaker & "stance"; - Finishing: bringing each poem to successful completion;
As far as I am concerned, the author has also done a terrific job in addressing the imagery, metaphor & different methods of constructing & experimenting with new poetic forms.
On the whole, even though I cannot compare this book with others (this is the only one of its genre in my library & the only one I have perused), I would like to rank it with the highest marks.
A Wonderful Resource August 22, 2005 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
Beginners and veteran poets alike are sure to find inspiration in this complete guide to writing poetry.
There is inspiration here in the form of exercises to invoke your muse, as well as practical advice on the "nuts and bolts" of writing and submitting your work.
Just about every aspect of writing poetry is covered, making this a wonderful resource for any poet.
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