Attached at the brain. The Barnes family pumpkin, courtesy of Miranda |
I've been waiting a long time for this day to arrive...
Welcome to the Poetry Friday Parlor of Horrors!
Those who know me, know that I have a bit of a dark side... especially when it comes to limericks. Cases in point: Bridget, Sinclaire, and last year's Halloween zombie encounter.
Grab a cup of Joe and stay a while! |
While I'm sorry to say I do not have a limerick to share with you today, with a little help from a friend, I do have a HalloZEEN-O!
THOUGHTLESS
My dear, I'm rotten to the core.
How repulsive
could I
be?
Forgive my brain-
eating
spree...
though yours tasted
heaven-
ly.
© 2014 Michelle Heidenrich Barnes. All rights reserved.
By now you've probably heard that J. Patrick Lewis challenged us to write a zeno this month. This week I featured ditties by Jan Gars, Margaret Simon, Laura Purdie Salas, and Gayle Krause. But did you know that today's zeno satisfied another challenge as well?
David Harrison is celebrating five (count 'em: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5!) years of his Word of the Month ("W.O.M.") poetry challenges. This month he's looking for 100 (no counting required) poets to share work inspired by the word "spree." I dare you to leave a ditty on David's blog! Adult W.O.M. poems may be shared HERE. Young poets may post their W.O.M. poems HERE.
And speaking of leaving a ditty, let's get to the Poetry Friday roundup, shall we?
Oops! Sorry, there's a catch.
Some time ago, Tabatha Yeatts fed my hungry inner creature with a set of horror themed refrigerator poetry magnets. I have been dying to use them (ha! dying... get it?) and what better way than a Poetry Friday Five for Friday?
I've chosen 15 words from the magnet set:
Choose one or more of the words above (a form of the word is also okay– for example, "possessed" instead of "possess") and leave your five-word, horror-inspired ditty in the comments, along with your Poetry Friday link and a short description.
Before you curse me for such an onerous task, yes, this is optional. You may:
1. come up with 5-word ditty on the spot (please don't stress over it),
2. leave your link now and come back to add your 5-word ditty later,
3. choose not to participate in the Five for Friday at all, or
4. participate in the Five for Friday without a link.
I will get you... er... love you, my pretties, all the same.
1. From Michelle at Today's Little Ditty:
rotting flesh:
It's my second post on a new poetic form called the Golden Shovel, featuring original poems by Linda Baie, Michelle H. Barnes (our hostess!), and my Golden Shovel based on "The Red Wheelbarrow."3. From Jama at Alphabet Soup:
Devour moaning tentacles:
fresh sushi
At Alphabet Soup, a mini celebration of Claude Monet (poem + his favorite madeleines au citron).4. From Robyn Hood Black:
ditties
splatter
across the page
splatter
across the page
I'm in travel mode today (i.e., didn't have act together for PF), but I hope to get out the broom later and visit more posts!5. From Penny at a penny and her jots:
Shivers!
Bloodcurdling beast,
chilling, moaning
nightmare!
chilling, moaning
nightmare!
I have Episode 4 of A GREAT Nephew & A GREAT Aunt over at my blog.6. From Matt at Radio, Rhythm & Rhyme:
Corpse-beast rotting,
nightmare chilling.
nightmare chilling.
I see we both have zenos AND Halloween on the mind! I have a new poem posted at Radio, Rhythm & Rhyme.7. From Bridget (who is glad there is not a limerick about Bridget again this year)
at wee words for wee ones:
bloodcurdling moan
devour rotting beast
devour rotting beast
It seems food is never too far from my mind or my poetry. My offering for PF is for those poor souls who must avoid dairy.8. From Carmela at Teaching Authors:
Bloodcurdling beasts
possess my dreams.
possess my dreams.
I'll also work on something for David Harrison's Word of the Month challenge, since he was kind enough to allow me to share his poem, "cicada ghosts" in my PF post. I'm also celebrating the publication of my article "Writing for Boys (and other 'Reluctant Readers')" in the 2015 CHILDREN'S WRITER'S AND ILLUSTRATOR'S MARKET with a giveaway of the book. So I hope everyone will stop by to enter our drawing!9. From Diane at Random Noodling and Kurious Kitty:
Dust to Dust...
And in between
putrefying rot.
And in between
putrefying rot.
At Random Noodling I have a summary of my visit last weekend to Salem, MA. Kurious Kitty has a poem by Richard Eberhart.10. From Joy at Poetry for Kids Joy:
Blood-curdling scream
cemetery at midnight
cemetery at midnight
Joy has another zombie zeno!11. From Crystal at Reading Through Life:
My Poetry Friday post is all about construction. Our bodies feel the rumbles of the equipment as we teach and learn each day so the feeling of change is seeping into our bones. The renovation of our school is kind of taking over my mind.12. From Tara at A Teaching Life:
My contribution is inspired by an old bike I saw tossed by the street.13. From Iphigene at Gathering Books:
We aren't in Halloween mode yet at Gathering Books, but our offering for today's Poetry Friday is "The Moon Stares" by Neal Imperial.14. From Carol at Beyond Literacy Link:
My five-word piece is embedded in a meme that was an original photo turned into a graphic design via PicMonkey. My original poem was inspired by a photo taken at the beach at night giving a totally different feeling to my summer serenity scenes. I want you to see the full effect of the five-word ditty as it sits on the page so thank you in advance for taking a stroll over to my blog.15. From Julie at The Drift Record:
Getting Up from the Sofa on Halloween to Pass Out Candy to Trick-or-Treaters
Muscles groaaannning,
Old bones mooooaannning.
Muscles groaaannning,
Old bones mooooaannning.
My Poetry Friday offering is Alastair Reid on kids and counting rhymes.16. From Catherine at Reading to the Core:
Frankenstein revives
rotting corpse.
Nightmare!
rotting corpse.
Nightmare!
I've been reading Frankenstein, so I'm sharing "Mutability" by Percy Bysshe Shelley.17. From Carol at Carol's Corner:
My Poetry Friday entry is a review of FRIDA, a biography of artist Frida Kahlo, told through poetry.18. From Margaret at Reflections on the Teche:
Bloodcurdling splatter
Nightmare's the matter.
Nightmare's the matter.
My students are loving the zeno form and are choosing it freely. Today I have poems about starling murmurations with two zeno poem movies.19. From Laura Purdie Salas:
A Cannibal's Menu
One corpse, chilled (just-killed)
One corpse, chilled (just-killed)
I'm in with a poetryaction poem on my site today, inspired by a character in The Tree House That Jack Built, by Bonnie Verburg.20. From Tabatha at The Opposite of Indifference:
Escape from the Zombie Aquarium:
Rotting tentacles
can't hold me
can't hold me
Hooray! Tabatha has another zeno: "Ode to Lucy's Ears."21. From Irene at Live Your Poem...:
I've got a beautiful kind of darkness in Lilian Moore's poem "Letter to a Friend."22. From Mary Lee at A Year of Reading:
...in which I'm thrilled to receive some validation for my bad housekeeping.
Octopus Bike Ride
Halfway uphill:
tentacles moan.
Halfway uphill:
tentacles moan.
23. From Karen Edmisten:
Moan.
Chilling nightmare:
No coffee.
Chilling nightmare:
No coffee.
I'm in with Louis Jenkins this week.24. From Katie at The Logonauts:
Survivable nightmare?
Impromptu, chilling poem
Impromptu, chilling poem
I am celebrating the poetry of Paul Fleischman over at The Logonauts.25. From Violet Nesdoly:
My poem today is "October Fashion," wherein:
Autumn's style
survives the chill
survives the chill
26. From Becky at Tapestry of Words:
Forbidden words
Bleed life’s stories
Bleed life’s stories
On my blog today, I am sharing a fall poem by Arthur Guiterman and a poem I wrote after a trip to the mountains last weekend.27. From Sylvia at Poetry for Children:
I'm off-topic with a look at memoirs in poetry.28. From Doraine at Dori Reads:
I'm a bit off topic, too, with a Georgia poetry project on watersheds.29. From Renée at No Water River:
What Mama Zombie Says When Zombino Misbehaves
Beast!
Go to your tomb.
Beast!
Go to your tomb.
Today I have another installment in the NCTE Poets series with Lee Bennett Hopkins, this one featuring the work of Arnold Adoff.30. From slayground at Bildungsroman:
Simply put:
I was born to survive.
I was born to survive.
I posted "Good Hours" by Robert Frost at my blog.31. From Ruth at There is no such thing as a God-forsaken town:
Day off school: survived nightmare!
We have a day off school today, to celebrate Dessalines Day.32. From Amy at The Poem Farm:
Forbidden words.
Forbidden poems.
Chilling.
Over at The Poem Farm, I share a wee kitten poem and the words of a wise young poet, Emily.33. From Donna at Mainely Write:
I decided to give emaze a try combining my poems and photos of fall in "The Fall of the Leaves of Fall". I was inspired to give it a go by Margaret Simon's work with her students' zenos displayed in emaze.34. From Buffy Silverman:
No post for me this week, but I'll still ditty:
beast moans,
corpse splatters--
nightmare?
corpse splatters--
nightmare?
35. From Heidi at my juicy little universe:
beast's tentacles--
devour them deep-fried
devour them deep-fried
I'm here with the second in my Science Series--a classic from Robert Frost.36. From Ramona at Pleasures from the Page:
Scrambling to meet the midnight deadline - five word ditty is title for blog post: Students Succumb to Poetry's Spell.
37. From Robyn Campbell:
Bloodcurdling beast
hayride gone bad
hayride gone bad
38. From Charles Waters:
Satanic beasts
possess
forbidden tomb.
possess
forbidden tomb.
The parlor doors are now closed.
...unless you have come back to leave a 5-word ditty. Creature LOVES ditties.
...unless you have come back to leave a 5-word ditty. Creature LOVES ditties.
Thank you, my beloveds, for your links and the
delicious morsels of ditty horror!
Hi, Michelle. Thanks for hosting Poetry Friday this week! I love your Zombie-zeno.
ReplyDeleteFor now: It's my second post on a new poetic form called the Golden Shovel, featuring original poems by Linda Baie, Michelle H. Barnes (our hostess!), and my Golden Shovel based on "The Red Wheelbarrow."
http://authoramok.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday-golden-shovels.html
I'll come back later to try the challenge.
Thank you for featuring my Golden Shovel today, Laura! :)
DeleteEeeeek! This post is horribly fun! Attached at the brain - double terror! I did not know you had such a dark side, Michelle. How gruesomely delicious *she says licking the blood off her fingertips*
ReplyDeleteAt Alphabet Soup, a mini celebration of Claude Monet (poem + his favorite madeleines au citron):
http://wp.me/p1GE6P-3zX
(My link goes live at 6 a.m. EDT)
My ditty:
Devour moaning tentacles:
fresh sushi
YUM! BTW, I think I have to cancel our dinner date on Oct 31st.
DeleteHere's my Poetry Friday Five. Thanks -- this was a fun challenge.
ReplyDeleteNightmare's tentacles
devour my day
Wow! Nightmare creeping into day makes for a scary movie.
DeleteOh my, my imagination is on overdrive. This is sure to give me nightmares, Laura!
DeleteBwahh haaa haaaa... I love Halloween, too, Michelle! And your post.
ReplyDeleteditties
splatter
across the page
I'm in travel mode today (i.e., didn't have act together for PF) but did leave a pointer to here from my blog, along with your delightfully horrifying PF graphic. Hope to get out the broom later and visit more posts! Thanks for hosting.
Power up your broom Robyn for a ride of your life this Poetry Friday.
DeleteOh, how I LOVE splatted ditties, Robyn! Thanks for the giggle. :)
DeleteShivers!
ReplyDeleteBloodcurdling beast,
chilling, moaning
nightmare!
Yikes! I scared myself. Hope I can sleep :-)
I have Episode 4 of A GREAT Nephew & A GREAT Aunt over at my blog. (The link will go live at 4:00 am CST.) http://wp.me/p22d5X-10L
Thanks for the fun and your Zeno is wonderfully gross!
Should've been a line space between Shivers! and my Friday Five...oops!
DeleteThanks for hosting, Michelle! I see we both have zenos AND Halloween on the mind! I have a new poem posted at Radio, Rhythm & Rhyme (goes live shortly after midnight): http://wp.me/p2DEY3-165
DeleteI used 5 of your words for mine:
Corpse-beast rotting,
nightmare chilling.
Penny, perhaps you shouldn't show this particular 5-word ditty to Landon. I don't think I could handle whatever he dreams up.
DeleteMatt, great minds think alike, no? Goodonya for your 5-word grand slam!
Fun post and fun challenge. I'm glad there is not a limerick about Bridget again this year.
ReplyDeleteHere's my yummy Friday Five:
bloodcurdling moan
devour rotting beast
It seems food is never too far from my mind or my poetry. My offering for PF is for those poor souls who must avoid dairy.
http://weewordsforweeones.blogspot.com/2014/10/got-milk.html
Bridget, better bloodcurdling than milk curdling, I suppose. ;)
DeleteWhat a fun post and challenge--I'll have to come back later with my ditty. My brain needs sleep first. :-)
ReplyDeleteI'll also work on something for David Harrison's Word of the Month challenge, since he was kind enough to allow me to share his poem, "cicada ghosts" in my PF. I'm also celebrating the publication of my article "Writing for Boys (and other 'Reluctant Readers')" in the 2015 CHILDREN'S WRITER'S AND ILLUSTRATOR'S MARKET with a giveaway of the book. So I hope everyone will stop by to enter our drawing!
Here's the link:
http://www.teachingauthors.com/2014/10/CWIM-giveaway.html
It goes live at 2:00 am, CST.
I had to title it to have it make sense.
ReplyDeleteDust to Dust...
And in between
putrefying rot.
Thanks for the challenge!
Poetry Friday offerings: at Random Noodling I have a summary of my visit last weekend to Salem, MA http://randomnoodling.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday-my-trip-to-witch-city.html.
Kurious Kitty has a poem by Richard Eberhart http://kuriouskitty.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday-richard-eberhart.html.
Wow. How joyful can a little ditty get? ;)
DeleteHey, if you set forth a challenge, you get what you get!
DeleteFair enough.
Delete
ReplyDeleteFriday Five
Blood-curdling scream
cemetery at midnight
Thanks for the challenge and the list of Halloween words.
I'm still working on Halloween poems, so I'll get a Halloween poem up sometime Friday afternoon at http://www.poetryforkidsjoy.blogspot.com
JOY
Love how your 5-word ditty is a preview of your zeno, Joy!
DeleteMy Poetry Friday post is all about construction. Our bodies feel the rumbles of the equipment as we teach and learn each day so the feeling of change is seeping into our bones. The renovation of our school is kind of taking over my mind. http://readingtl.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday.html
ReplyDeleteI love the invitation to poetry fun, Michelle - I'll have to take it up in the morning (after some sleep!).Here's my contribution, inspired by an old bike I saw tossed by the street:
ReplyDeletehttp://ateachinglifedotcom.wordpress.com/2014/10/17/poetry-friday-night-bicycle-by-jonathan-johnson/
Michelle, your Poetry Friday Parlor of Horrors was a creative fun escape for me tonight. I was not expecting that when I strolled over to your blog site after communicating with you this week about other posts. I must say,
ReplyDeleteI am delighted with your offering and decided to challenge myself further so I created my own little corner of Halloween paradise at http://beyondliteracylink.blogspot.com/2014/10/playing-with-words-for-ghoulish-delight.html with my post, "Playing With Words for Ghoulish Delight."
My five-word piece is embedded in a meme that was an original photo turned into a graphic design via PicMonkey. My original poem was inspired by a photo taken at the beach at night giving a totally different feeling to my summer serenity scenes. I want you to see the full effect of the five-word ditty as it sits on the page so thank you in advance for taking a stroll over to my blog.
Sorry that hand startled you, Carol. It's just my inner creature wanting to come out to play! ;)
DeleteI love "Thoughtless," Michelle, from the empty-head title to the heaven-ly rhymes! Here's my Friday Five (like Diane, I needed a title for it to make sense.)
ReplyDeleteGetting Up from the Sofa on Halloween to Pass Out Candy to Trick-or-Treaters
Muscles groaaannning,
Old bones mooooaannning.
And here's my Poetry Friday link: Alastair Reid on kids and counting rhymes at The Drift Record, http://julielarios.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday-alastair-reid-not-to-be.html
Ha! Love this 5-word ditty and its too-many-words-to-count title, Julie. Thanks for the laugh. :)
DeleteLove your HalloZEEN-O! I've been reading Frankenstein, so I'm sharing "Mutability" by Percy Bysshe Shelly.
ReplyDeletehttp://readingtothecore.wordpress.com/2014/10/17/poetry-friday-mutability/
With Frankenstein on my mind, this ditty came quickly:
Frankenstein revives
rotting corpse.
Nightmare!
Thanks for hosting today, Michelle!
"Frankenstein on my mind"... isn't that a song? Oh sorry, I guess that's "Georgia." Well done with the ditty, Catherine!
DeleteI need to mess around a bit before I can add my five word poem. My Poetry Friday entry is a review of FRIDA, a biography of artist Frida Kahlo, told through poetry.
ReplyDeletehttp://carolwscorner.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday.html
Love your Hallozeeno. It inspires my lesson for next week. My students are loving the zeno form and are choosing it freely. Today I have poems about starling murmurations with two zeno poem movies. http://reflectionsontheteche.wordpress.com/2014/10/17/murmuration-mysteries/
ReplyDeleteBloodcurdling splatter
Nightmare's the matter.
I confess, as much as I enjoy this creepy stuff, I will take a murmuration over a zombie any day.
DeleteGreat zeno! I love the dark side, too:>) I'm in with an un-dark poetryaction poem on my site today, inspired by a character in The Tree House That Jack Built, by Bonnie Verburg--http://www.laurasalas.com/blog/for-teachers/prxn-treehouse/
ReplyDeleteHere's my ditty:
A Cannibal's Menu
One corpse, chilled (just-killed)
Thanks for hosting!
What a deliciously gruesome ditty, Laura– I love it!
DeleteWhat fun! Thanks for hosting and for the party! Here's my link: http://tabathayeatts.blogspot.com/2014/10/ode-to-lucys-ears.html
ReplyDeleteAnd here is my poem (I used five words for the title and another five for the poem):
Escape from the Zombie Aquarium:
Rotting tentacles
can't hold me
Ack! I never should have included "tentacles" on the list.
DeleteHi Michelle, and thank you for hosting! I've got a beautiful kind of darkness in Lilian Moore's poem "Letter to a Friend." Will save your challenge for after the morning madness! xo http://www.irenelatham.blogspot.com/2014/10/letter-to-friend-by-lilian-moore.html
ReplyDeleteI'll come back...I promise...but for now, here's my post:
ReplyDeletehttp://readingyear.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday-my-new-hero.html
in which I'm thrilled to receive some validation for my bad housekeeping.
Good morning, Michelle! Here's my contribution to your challenge:
ReplyDeleteMoan.
Chilling nightmare:
No coffee.
Thanks for hosting today! I'm in with Louis Jenkins this week. The link is here.
You're so funny, Karen! What a great 5-word ditty... good for any time of year really.
DeleteSurvivable nightmare?
ReplyDeleteImpromptu, chilling poem
I am Celebrating the Poetry of Paul Fleischman over at The Logonauts
http://www.thelogonauts.com/2014/10/paul-fleischman.html
Glad you survived the 5-word ditty, Katie. Now, about that zombie over your shoulder....
DeleteHi Michelle, Thanks for hosting and posing such a shivery challenge.
ReplyDeleteMy poem today is October Fashion, wherein:
Autumn's style
survives the chill
It's here: http://vnesdolypoems.wordpress.com/2014/10/16/october-fashion/
Great job linking your 5-word ditty to your PF offering, Violet!
DeleteThis was fun, Michelle! Here is what I came up with:
ReplyDeleteForbidden words
Bleed life’s stories
Thanks so much for hosting Poetry Friday this week! On my blog today I am sharing a fall poem by Arthur Guiterman and a poem I wrote after a trip to the mountains last weekend: http://beckyshillington.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday-guitermans-harvest-home.html
Oooh, I really like your 5-word ditty, Becky! I'm intrigued– I think you've got the core of a much longer poem here.
DeleteHi, Michelle, what an amazing Halloweeny round up! I'm off-topic with a look at memoirs in poetry. http://poetryforchildren.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting, Michelle. I'm a bit off topic, too, with a Georgia poetry project on watersheds. http://dorireads.blogspot.com/2014/10/georgia-project-wet.html
ReplyDeleteI'm Baaack!
ReplyDeleteAnd here's my little ditty for you:
Bloodcurdling beasts
possess my dreams.
Thanks so much for hosting, Michelle!
That's some ditty, Carmela... for your sake, though, I hope it's not true!
DeleteMichelle, you ghoulish gal. Your HalloZENO is slimily delicious. Here's my Friday Five:
ReplyDeleteWhat Mama Zombie Says When Zombino Misbehaves
Beast!
Go to your tomb.
And for my link, today I have another installment in the NCTE Poets series with Lee Bennett Hopkins, this one featuring the work of Arnold Adoff.
http://www.nowaterriver.com/spotlight-on-ncte-poets-arnold-adoff-with-lee-bennett-hopkins/
Thanks for ghosting!
Oh Renée, you've outdone yourself with punniness! LOVE :)
DeleteThank you, Michelle. This is great fun. Surprising how much one can do with only five words. I appreciate your challenge to all to write a poem and post it on my blog this month. We're already getting a lot of excellent efforts.
ReplyDeleteNever too many spree poems, David! Thank YOU for the inspiration.
DeleteDay off school: survived nightmare!
ReplyDeleteHmm, kind of lame, but we do have a day off school today, to celebrate Dessalines Day. I have a post about that. http://thereisnosuchthingasagodforsakentown.blogspot.com/2014/10/poetry-friday-dessalines-day.html
We have a day off of school today too, to celebrate the University of Florida's homecoming... yes, you heard right. What can I say?
DeleteFrom Amy Ludwig VanDerwater:
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun, spirited post. I am so glad I'm here. Thank you for hosting! Wonderful pumpkins and photo by Miranda too.
Over at The Poem Farm, I share a wee kitten poem and the words of a wise young poet, Emily.
http://www.poemfarm.amylv.com/2014/10/curled-kitten-poetry-peek-with-emily.html
Happy Poetry Friday...boo!
Thank you! I forgot (sent the comment so many times incorrectly I guess) my five word thing!
DeleteForbidden words.
Forbidden poems.
Chilling.
That IS a chilling thought, Amy, with so many wonderful words and poems to celebrate!
DeleteI decided to give emaze a try combining my poems and photos of fall in "The Fall of the Leaves of Fall". I was inspired to give it a go by Margaret Simon's work with her students' zenos displayed in emaze.
ReplyDeletehttp://mainelywrite.blogspot.com/2014/10/the-fall-of-leaves-of-fall.html
No post for me this week, but I'll still ditty:
ReplyDeletebeast moans,
corpse splatters--
nightmare?
For this, you get a gold medal and a big EWWW!
DeleteSurvival is good. Poetry helps, no?
ReplyDeleteSo much fun to read all of these talented entries. :)
ReplyDeleteYipes! Is it still Friday??? I'm here with the second in my Science Series--a classic from Robert Frost--and about to choose five of your deliciously deranged words. Hmmmm....
ReplyDeletebeast's tentacles--
devour them deep-fried
My link is at http://myjuicylittleuniverse.blogspot.com/2014/10/science-series-ii.html. Thanks for hosting, Michelle!
Scrambling to meet the midnight deadline - five word ditty is title for blog post!
ReplyDeletehttp://pleasuresfromthepage.blogspot.com/2014/10/students-succumb-to-poetrys-spell.html
Here's my five word ditty. I was the octopus yesterday. Thankfully, all my tentacles seem to be intact (and not too achey) this morning!
ReplyDeleteOctopus Bike Ride
Halfway uphill:
tentacles moan.
Those uphills are beasts, that's for sure. Thanks for coming back to leave your fiver, Mary Lee!
DeleteThis was one of the most fun Roundups in recent memory. You are SO creative!!
DeleteThank you, sweet lady. :)
DeleteBloodcurdling beast
ReplyDeletehayride gone bad
Hahaha. I just wanted to try this. Thanks!
So glad you stopped by with your bloodcurdling ditty, Robyn! You're welcome anytime. :)
DeleteSatanic beasts
ReplyDeletepossess
forbidden tomb.