Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 April 2016

A trio of book spine poems

Blueprints

Talking to my body –
enormous smallness.
A book of luminous things.
Blind willow, sleeping woman,
black swan, white raven –
are you my mother?
Blueprints for building better girls:
everyone’s just so so special.
Blabber blabber blabber everything.

There

Picture this:
the narrow road to the interior
through the woods.
East of the sun and west of the moon,
everything is illuminated.
They do the same things different there.

The Shaman’s Coat

Meeting the shadow
remember remember
beware of God.
One hundred demons
kiss & tell
the angel of losses.
War and peace
mistakes in the background
the invisible partners.
The power of myth
tangles
beyond the words.
The shaman’s coat
travels with a circus
after dark.
* * *
Today’s NaPoWriMo prompt “comes to us from Lillian Hallberg. She challenges us to write a “book spine” poem. This involves taking a look at your bookshelves, and writing down titles in order (or rearranging the titles) to create a poem. Some fun images of book spine poems can be found here. If you want to take things a step further, Lillian suggests gathering a list of titles from your shelves (every third or fifth book, perhaps, if you have a lot) and using the titles, as close to the originals as possible, to create a poem that is seeded throughout with your own lines, interjections, and thoughts. Happy writing!”
I enjoyed this prompt so much, I ended up writing three different book spine poems!

Friday, 25 April 2014

These Old Cafés


Not the smart redecorated ones 
with mobile phone top-ups 
and take-home mugs. 
The archaic ones 
with walls that flake and puff 
where strange folk sit and pick 
their nails with toothpicks, coins,
the corners of matchbooks. 

A book of matches. A book of fire. 
A book of all the things that burn 
before your eyes 
and in that end regain their dignity 
like a viking warlord aflame in his boat 
pushed out to sea
lighting the night with his memory 
held in the minds of men 
who will drink long horns of ale to him 
and sing the ancient songs. 

In these cafés there are such things;
books of matches
books of the stories that cannot exist 
anywhere else in this world. 
Men who are not yet old 
prop themselves on the crumbling chair. 
A newspaper rests on the table 
but these men don’t read; 
they are busy with something else, 
some invisible work that eats up all their time. 

You wanted a take-away coffee 
but you have come to the wrong place. 
You have entered with too much speed. 
Your voice sounds too loud 
and disturbs the thick air. 
You realise it only once the words 
have left your mouth. 
This place doesn’t do take-away. 
It may take a while for any drink to come at all.