Category Archives: Letter Poem

NaPoWriMo 2024 Challenge Day 16: The Corner Shoppe

The Corner Bookstore 

She lost me in Whispering Leaves…
“Only need a few minutes,” I said,
“go ahead…run your errands,
I’ll be here when you get back.”
She smiled that smile and said,
“See you later then.” I’m a terrible
liar. As I stepped through the portal
of this urban nook, books stacked
floor to ceiling, in eccentric, hoarded fashion, shelves, if there were any,
buried deep beneath dusty tomes begging to be touched, to feel
the gentle caress of fingertips
sliding along the page edges,
turning each sepia-stained leaf
to reveal hidden treasure.

It had only been minutes when the
store clerk weaved toward me
through narrow pathways banked
by beautiful books, my wife in tow,
“Here she is…” she declared, while
glancing at the title of my recent find.
“That’s a good one,” she winked,
“you should take it with you…”
My dear partner, my heart, smiled
that smile again, “you should, take
that book home, and a maybe few others.”

I don’t deserve her, I mused, as she
carried my new, old books to the register.

~kat

NaPoWriMo 2024 Day 16 Challenge: write a poem in which you closely describe an object or place, and then end with a much more abstract line that doesn’t left seemindaysgly have anything to do with that object or place, but which, of course, really does.


NaPoWriMo 2024 – Day 2 – dear Luna

dear luna, 
how you move me
as if my soul were water
given to tidal swells and ebbs
you call me to sway, to dance
with my sisters and our mothers,
ancients who reside on veil’s cusp
summoned by your full kind face
‘round the rhythmic pyre’s crackle
you’re my North Star, my guide
illumine the darkest of nights,
full, gibbous, crescent, new
every night I look to you
dear sweet Luna
I see you
~kat~


NaPoWriMo 2024 Day 2 Challenge:

Write a platonic love poem. In other words, a poem not about a romantic partner, but some other kind of love – your love for your sister, or a friend, or even your love for a really good Chicago deep dish pizza. The poem should be written directly to the object of your affections (like a letter is written to “you”), and should describe at least three memories of you engaging with that person/thing.

Poetry Forms used:

On prompt, this is a Letter Poem, but I also added another twist, by creating a Concrete Poem.

Concrete poetry—sometimes also called ‘shape poetry’—is poetry whose visual appearance matches the topic of the poem. The words form shapes which illustrate the poem’s subject as a picture, as well as through their literal meaning.

This type of poetry has been used for thousands of years, since the ancient Greeks began to enhance the meanings of their poetry by arranging their characters in visually pleasing ways back in the 3rd and 2nd Centuries BC.