Friday, May 24, 2013

Longing for the Riviera - Memories inspired by a painting


Any picture can tell a story
And any story can create a picture
 
     On the wall of my guest room hangs a framed poster of a tranquil and romantic work executed by Pierre Bonnard—Table Set in a Garden.  Bonnard painted it circa 1908.  But the setting is timeless. 

     One can almost feel the delicate warmth of sunlight filtering through the greenery, nearly inhale the fragrant freshness of the air.  It makes me want to take a deep breath and slowly let it out, releasing all my tensions and relaxing in the perfect moment. 

     And it recalls to me some wonderfully similar settings I found in various ports of call several years ago while cruising the western Mediterranean—Monte Carlo, Italy’s ports of Livorno, Civitavecchia, Naples, and Sorrento, as well as Palma and Valldemossa on the Isle of Mallorca.  What a fabulous trip that was.  The sunshine, the air, the flowers – bellisimo!
   
     Unfortunately, back home here there aren’t nearly so many lovely casual outdoor cafes where one can enjoy a brief respite and a cup of coffee.  We have very few such charming retreats in which to spend a refreshing pause while out shopping. Well, at least that’s true if one tends to do one’s shopping at the mall!


“No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee’s frothy goodness.”
~Sheik Abd-al-Kadir
 

Photo by Hank Kellner


Longing for the Riviera

  
Coffee in the food court
amid plastic potted palms         
fast food and flashing neon
in the air conditioned mall


lacks the carefree charm of

Pierre Bonnard painting - Table Set in a Garden, c.1908

latte at an open air cafĂ©  
in the dappled shade of trees
on cobbled streets
lined with cottage shops.


There's really no comparison.

                                                          

                              ~Elizabeth Guy


                                                                               


     No comparison indeed.  And the food!  The Mediterranean cuisine suited me to a tee.  Pasta, roasted summer vegetables, fresh fruits, cheeses, crusty Italian breads—and the wine!  Let us not forget the wine. 

     I dined like a pincipessa on that cruise.  Scrumptious!  And the best part was that I actually lost a few pounds on that vacation.  Mediterranean magic! 

What pictures do you have that recall a fabulous experience?
                                            
                                    
 Coming next week...

Summer daze

Also, visit my co-author's blog at http://hank-englisheducation.blogspot.com
See his ten-part series on photo prompts to inspire writing at http://www.creativity-portal.com/prompts/kellner/

And Don’t Miss…

            English teacher Mara Dukats and writer-photographer Cynthia Staples’ poems “white on white” and “The Absence of Color.” They’re in Part Four of Hank Kellner’s  twelve-part series THE POWER OF PHOTOS TO INSPIRE WRITING at the Creativity Portal  website http://gazette.teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/hank-kellner/using-poems-and-photos-to-inspire-writing-part-4/,  as well as Anna J. Small’s writing assignment in "Viewing and Writing about Photos from Around the World"
            Also, read more about Reflect and Write in the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL http://www.slj.com/2013/03/curriculum-connections/meeting-the-ccss-through-poetry-professional-shelf/

Another Helpful Source for Inspiration

For more photos and information not included in this blog, please visit http://www.prufrock.com/Reflect-and-Write-P1752.aspx. Reflect and Write contains more than 300 poems and photos; keywords; quotations; either “Inspiration” or “Challenge” prompts; a “Themes to Explore” section; a “Twelve Ways to Inspire Your Students” section; a special “Internet Resources” section, and more. Includes CD with photos and poems from the book. Reflect and Write: 300 Poems and Photos to Inspire Writing by Hank Kellner and Elizabeth Guy (Prufrock Press, 2013), 153 pages, $24.95.




Friday, May 17, 2013

Childhood Dreams and Growing Up - in photos, prose & poetry

If one picture is worth a thousand words,
can one picture inspire a thousand words?
     Well, this photo by Hank Kellner inspired at least forty words in poem form that tumbled out like the rippling tresses cascading down this little girl’s back.





     Little Girls



Temper tantrums
Goofy grins
Ballet shoes and hairbows
Pom-poms
Books
and Barbie dolls

That’s what girls are made of

Riding lessons
Dancing classes
Swimming lessons, too
Cheerleading sessions
Girl Scouts                              
That’s what some girls do

Then they discover boys
The end

                                ~ Elizabeth Guy
“If growing up means it would be beneath my dignity to climb a tree, I'll never grow up, never grow up, never grow up! Not me!”
J.M. Barrie

     Childhood is all too brief, at least from the standpoint of parents.  But I remember as a child it seemed to stretch all too long, and I was always anxious for it to end.  I wanted to grow up.  I wanted to be tall, not small.  I wanted to know everything, like grownups did.  Boy!  Was I in for a surprise! 

     One of life’s great discoveries upon achieving “adulthood” was that we not only didn’t have all the answers, we didn’t even seem adequately prepared for the “test.”  There was so much more to be learned – a whole lifetime of learning ahead.  What could be more exciting? 

     And even though I’m in my eighth decade, I’m still not quite finished growing up.  There are many more trees for me climb.  You really can’t beat the view from up there.

What trees have you climbed lately?

  Coming next week...
Table Set in a Garden - painting by Pierre Bonnard, c.1908
 
Also, visit my co-author's blog at http://hank-englisheducation.blogspot.com
See his ten-part series on photo prompts to inspire writing at http://www.creativity-portal.com/prompts/kellner/

And Don’t Miss…

            English teacher Mara Dukats and writer-photographer Cynthia Staples’ poems “white on white” and “The Absence of Color.” They’re in Part Four of Hank Kellner’s  twelve-part series THE POWER OF PHOTOS TO INSPIRE WRITING at the Creativity Portal  website http://gazette.teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/hank-kellner/using-poems-and-photos-to-inspire-writing-part-4/,  as well as Anna J. Small’s writing assignment in "Viewing and Writing about Photos from Around the World"
            Also, read more about Reflect and Write in the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL http://www.slj.com/2013/03/curriculum-connections/meeting-the-ccss-through-poetry-professional-shelf/

Another Helpful Source for Inspiration

For more photos and information not included in this blog, please visit http://www.prufrock.com/Reflect-and-Write-P1752.aspx. Reflect and Write contains more than 300 poems and photos; keywords; quotations; either “Inspiration” or “Challenge” prompts; a “Themes to Explore” section; a “Twelve Ways to Inspire Your Students” section; a special “Internet Resources” section, and more. Includes CD with photos and poems from the book. Reflect and Write: 300 Poems and Photos to Inspire Writing by Hank Kellner and Elizabeth Guy (Prufrock Press, 2013), 153 pages, $24.95.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Windows of Opportunity - in photos, prose and poetry

Every Photo Tells a Story

     Once again I woke to the sound of rain running through the downspout outside my bedroom window.  As I peered through the rivulets streaking down the pane, disappointment settled like a gray gloom on my spirits.  It had been raining for three days, and I was tired of it.  The weatherman had predicted a break in the sodden skies, and I was hoping for the gladness of sunshine this morning and the resumption of my daily walk.  But Mother Nature had thwarted me and made a mockery out of the forecaster. 

     With a sigh, I heaved myself from the bed and went to seek solace in my ritual morning cup of coffee – sweet, with extra cream.  There I sat at the kitchen window watching my hopes for the day dashed to the ground and forming puddles.  A poem swirled into my restless mind, and headed straight for my fingertips.  Where’s my pen?


     Rainy Day Reverie


rain runs in rivulets down the pane
blurring the world beyond                         
through the window mottled light
dances swirling through the glass
shifting shadows twist
moving, melting
one into the other
ever changing memories
rain-washed dreams
long gone
dreaming all that was
dreaming all that might have been

                        ~ Elizabeth Guy
                                   
 “A rainy day is the perfect time for a walk in the woods.”  - Rachel Carson

     A walk in the woods!  Slog through a muddy forest in this downpour?  I don’t think so.  I know!  Instead of mucking about in the rain, I’ll take this opportunity to go mall walking.  And who’s to say no if I want to do a little window shopping while I’m at it?  Mother Nature would approve.  After all, she’s a woman, isn’t she? 

     Who knows?  Maybe I’ll get another poem out of it.  




Life can box me in
Like a girl kept in a frame
Still I shop for shoes!




What windows of opportunity have you peered into?

Coming next week...
Little girls!  Sugar and spice?

 All photos courtesy of Hank Kellner



Also, visit my co-author's blog at http://hank-englisheducation.blogspot.com
See his ten-part series on photo prompts to inspire writing at http://www.creativity-portal.com/prompts/kellner/

And Don’t Miss…

            English teacher Mara Dukats and writer-photographer Cynthia Staples’ poems “white on white” and “The Absence of Color.” They’re in Part Four of Hank Kellner’s  twelve-part series THE POWER OF PHOTOS TO INSPIRE WRITING at the Creativity Portal  website http://gazette.teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/hank-kellner/using-poems-and-photos-to-inspire-writing-part-4/,  as well as Anna J. Small’s writing assignment in "Viewing and Writing about Photos from Around the World"
            Also, read more about Reflect and Write in the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL http://www.slj.com/2013/03/curriculum-connections/meeting-the-ccss-through-poetry-professional-shelf/

  
                        Another Helpful Source for Inspiration

For more photos and information not included in this blog, please visit http://www.prufrock.com/Reflect-and-Write-P1752.aspx. Reflect and Write contains more than 300 poems and photos; keywords; quotations; either “Inspiration” or “Challenge” prompts; a “Themes to Explore” section; a “Twelve Ways to Inspire Your Students” section; a special “Internet Resources” section, and more. Includes CD with photos and poems from the book. Reflect and Write: 300 Poems and Photos to Inspire Writing by Hank Kellner and Elizabeth Guy (Prufrock Press, 2013), 153 pages, $24.95.







Saturday, May 4, 2013

Détente in the Battle of the Sexes ~ in poetry, prose, & photos


“Words and pictures can work together
to communicate more powerfully than either alone.” 
~ William Albert Allard, American photographer


     Having reached a stage of my life where I no longer need to pretend to be drawn to vigorous outdoor activity, I sometimes find myself passing a few idle hours at the mall.  Being of the female gender, I often spend one or two of those hours in casual “shopping.”  Actually, I don’t enjoy shopping, but sometimes do enjoy simply looking at the endless kaleidoscope of presumably must-have bells, whistles and bows for both body and home.  More often than not, I don’t actually buy anything.  I just look.  And chuckle to myself. 

          Just last week I was at the mall on one of my pseudo-shopping sprees, and I decided to grab a cup of coffee and rest awhile in the ersatz oasis of plastic palms that comprise the food court. So, I sat and sipped, and indulged in one of my favorite past times—people watching.  And, dare I admit, the occasional eavesdropping.

          Nearby on one of the many benches that are found strategically placed throughout the vast maze of the mall, sat an older man reading a newspaper and tapping his foot.  It wasn’t long before an attractive white-haired woman, surely his wife, walked up to him carrying several shopping bags.  She settled on the bench next to him.  He looked at his watch and shook his head. 

     As the man’s wife, began drawing one item after another out of various shopping bags for him to see, I couldn’t help but overhear his wry remarks about women and their predilection for purchasing what to his way of thinking was a completely unnecessary array of merchandise.  All that money wasted.  As if some special cream were going to magically keep or make them young.  Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. 

     Given that I rather agree with this point of view, but still am perfectly willing to spend at least some money on dreams and wishful thinking, I had to smile at his wife’s serene response.  She happily packed all her loot away again, and patted his knee.  “I know, dear,” she said.  Then she cast an appraising eye at him, undoubtedly wondering when he would finally break down and buy a new shirt instead of wearing that favorite old fraying-at-the-seams one.  And perhaps a new pair of “old sneakers” might not be a bad idea either..  Hmmmm….

     Now, I imagine it’s taken a lot of years and a lot of “putting up with” on both sides for that couple to have made it to what appears to be a pretty advanced age and still be together.  So, for all you young girls out there just starting out, I’d like to point out the following:
  
“American women expect to find in their husbands a perfection that English women only hope to find in their butlers.”      ~ W. Somerset Maugham

     Photo by Molly Bennett, student contributor to
     Reflect & Write (Prufrock Press, 2013)


Advice

Listen up, girls!
Men don’t understand women.  
But it’s not their fault—
it’s just the rules of the game.
Remember, Martians and Venusians
have decidedly different brains.

He doesn’t get
why she loves shopping,
or why she wears
those come hither clothes
and then says, “Don’t you dare."
                                                                                                                          
He just doesn’t get all that makeup—
the lipstick, the liners, the hairspray,                                
the perfumes, the creams for her skin,                                                        
ten different polishes for her nails,                                            
a purse you could cram a car in.

Always changing her clothes—
and changing her mind!
It makes a guy want to shout.
It just doesn’t make sense to a man.
What’s all the darn fuss about?                         

Nope, guys don’t understand girls
with their fripperies, fidgets and frills.
They just don’t get it.

But remember—
likewise,
much of the time,
girls don’t seem
to understand guys.

But the really smart ones will!

                        ~ Elizabeth Guy



     Meanwhile, happy shopping out there, all you sister mall crawlers!  Our men should remember, we’re simply being patriotic – supporting the economy.  Battle stations, ladies.  Credit cards ready.  Charge!

What’s in your wallet (besides pictures of your kids)?

Coming next week…

More window shopping

              Also, visit my co-author's blog at http://hank-englisheducation.blogspot.com.  See his ten-part series on photo prompts to inspire writing at http://www.creativity-portal.com/prompts/kellner/

 And Don’t Miss…

             English teacher Mara Dukats and writer-photographer Cynthia Staples’ poems “white on white” and “The Absence of Color.” They’re in Part Four of Hank Kellner’s  twelve-part series THE POWER OF PHOTOS TO INSPIRE WRITING at the Creativity Portal  website http://gazette.teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/hank-kellner/using-poems-and-photos-to-inspire-writing-part-4/,  as well as Anna J. Small’s writing assignment in "Viewing and Writing about Photos from Around the World"
             
            Also, read more about Reflect and Write in the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL http://www.slj.com/2013/03/curriculum-connections/meeting-the-ccss-through-poetry-professional-shelf/

 
                             A Helpful Source for Inspiration
For more photos and information not included in this blog, please visit http://www.prufrock.com/Reflect-and-Write-P1752.aspx. Reflect and Write contains more than 300 poems and photos; keywords; quotations; either “Inspiration” or “Challenge” prompts; a “Themes to Explore” section; a “Twelve Ways to Inspire Your Students” section; a special “Internet Resources” section, and more. Includes CD with photos and poems from the book. Reflect and Write: 300 Poems and Photos to Inspire Writing by Hank Kellner and Elizabeth Guy (Prufrock Press, 2013), 153 pages, $24.95.


   

Monday, April 22, 2013

Pictures & Paintings to inspire writing - a Monet-inspired memoir


Any picture can inspire a story

 
I have long been a lover of Monet’s art.  I cannot see his paintings without my mind wandering down lanes of discovery.  Sometimes they lead me to research the specific painting, sometimes they provoke questions about Monet himself.  But almost always they inspire me to write about my own responses to them.  For me, Monet’s paintings are always lyrical, and seem to lend themselves to poetry. 

Consider the painting below. The Magpie was painted in the winter of 1868-1869 while Monet and his family were residing on the coast of Normandy in Etretat.  I think of Monet alone, out braving the snowy winter cold, capturing the light and shadow on his canvas, rapt in a fever of creativity.  I can nearly feel the crisp edge of frosted air that bites his fingers.  And my mind drifts back to memories of my own.


Monet painting - The Magpie

 
Reflections on a Winter Painting

I saw a winter painting and I smiled.
Then once again my brother lived—
tall and strong, he pulled the sled
when I was just a little child.
           
Trees black laced against                                                                                    
an orange smear of sunset,                                                                  
the evening star a diamond in the dusk.

Below, the crunch of snow beneath the runners,
toes numb in buckled boots,
frozen misted breath, and mittens caked with ice,
riding like a small princess across a frozen tundra.

Home at last!
Stomping, laughing, pulling off our coats,
breathing in the kitchen’s fragrant warmth,
fingers tingling underneath the tap.

Winter memories of my brother.
Rest in peace my childhood knight,
and angels guard your soul.

Now the rising pearl of moon
casts its ghostly pale
upon my withered lawn.
Frost lies everywhere—
like fairy dust turned cold.

                         ~Elizabeth Guy


Winter, a lingering season, is a time to gather golden moments, embark upon a sentimental journey, and enjoy every idle hour.”  - John Boswell


So, my thanks to Claude Monet for a sentimental journey and a bittersweet memory that has me smiling through some tears—perhaps more precious for all of that.
 
Do you have pictures that inspire your memories?

Coming next week...                                         
Men don't understand women!

Also, visit my co-author's blog at http://hank-englisheducation.blogspot.com.  See his ten-part series on photo prompts to inspire writing at http://www.creativity-portal.com/prompts/kellner/

 And Don’t Miss…

             English teacher Mara Dukats and writer-photographer Cynthia Staples’ poems “white on white” and “The Absence of Color.” They’re in Part Four of Hank Kellner’s  twelve-part series THE POWER OF PHOTOS TO INSPIRE WRITING at the Creativity Portal  website http://gazette.teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/hank-kellner/using-poems-and-photos-to-inspire-writing-part-4/,  as well as Anna J. Small’s writing assignment in "Viewing and Writing about Photos from Around the World."

            Also, read more about Reflect and Write in the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL http://www.slj.com/2013/03/curriculum-connections/meeting-the-ccss-through-poetry-professional-shelf/
 

                A Helpful Source for Inspiration
For more photos and information not included in this blog, please visit http://www.prufrock.com/Reflect-and-Write-P1752.aspx. Reflect and Write contains more than 300 poems and photos; keywords; quotations; either “Inspiration” or “Challenge” prompts; a “Themes to Explore” section; a “Twelve Ways to Inspire Your Students” section; a special “Internet Resources” section, and more. Includes CD with photos and poems from the book. Reflect and Write: 300 Poems and Photos to Inspire Writing by Hank Kellner and Elizabeth Guy (Prufrock Press, 2013), 153 pages, $24.95.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

A Photo, a Poem ~ and a happy chair!


If one picture is worth a thousand words,
can one picture inspire a thousand words?


Oh, easily!  In fact, I think a picture could inspire a thousand words more readily than a question would.  Pictures by their very nature stimulate the imagination.  They provoke a response in any language.  They provide an instant connection.  They pop!

When I’m searching for inspiration for a poem, I often find it in photographs.  In fact when I’m not searching for inspiration, but am trying instead to sort my boxes of family photos which stretch back for generations, so many writing ideas begin swirling into my head I could never put them all down on paper.  My own photos have volumes to tell.  It’s exhausting.

Sometimes it’s simpler to focus on someone else’s photos and pick one that “speaks” to me—like this one from Hank Kellner’s collection.  I came upon it unexpectedly there among so many other street scenes.  As if by magic then, the photo just spoke a poem right onto the page.

Imagine walking down a city street, people passing by without eye contact, everyone intent upon their own business.  One could feel almost invisible on a busy city street.  And then you come across something as whimsical and charming as this chair.  It smiles at you as if it were a friend.  How could I possibly resist it?  Why would I want to?


"A table, a chair, a bowl of fruit and a violin: what else does a man need to be happy?"            ~Albert Einstein

A Happy Chair 


Behold, a happy chair!
Were I to rest upon it
Surely warmth would fill me.

Surely all my cares
Would disappear
Dissolve into the smile
That seeped right through me.

I could be a little child
Again
If only for little while

And then,
Restored, renewed, refreshed
I could continue on.

            ~Elizabeth Guy


When I’m feeling down, or tired, or worried – or just plain old – I think about that happy chair.  And the smile does indeed seep right through me. 

Do you have a picture that always brings a smile to your face?

Coming next week...                                   
“The Magpie” by Monet inspires a poem



Also, visit my co-author's blog at http://hank-englisheducation.blogspot.com.  See his ten-part series on photo prompts to inspire writing at http://www.creativity-portal.com/prompts/kellner/
  
And Don’t Miss…

             English teacher Mara Dukats and writer-photographer Cynthia Staples’ poems “white on white” and “The Absence of Color.” They’re in Part Four of Hank Kellner’s  twelve-part series THE POWER OF PHOTOS TO INSPIRE WRITING at the Creativity Portal  website http://gazette.teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/hank-kellner/using-poems-and-photos-to-inspire-writing-part-4/,  as well as Anna J. Small’s writing assignment in "Viewing and Writing about Photos from Around the World"
            
           Read more about Reflect and Write in the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL http://www.slj.com/2013/03/curriculum-connections/meeting-the-ccss-through-poetry-professional-shelf/



                        A Helpful Source for Inspiration
For more photos and information not included in this blog, please visit http://www.prufrock.com/Reflect-and-Write-P1752.aspx. Reflect and Write contains more than 300 poems and photos; keywords; quotations; either “Inspiration” or “Challenge” prompts; a “Themes to Explore” section; a “Twelve Ways to Inspire Your Students” section; a special “Internet Resources” section, and more. Includes CD with photos and poems from the book. Reflect and Write: 300 Poems and Photos to Inspire Writing by Hank Kellner and Elizabeth Guy (Prufrock Press, 2013), 153 pages, $24.95.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

A Photo of a Boy ~ a poem called Loneliness


The human brain processes visuals 60,000 times faster than it processes text 

 

Goodness, how do they measure something like that?

Still, it does seem obvious that it is far easier to "read" a picture than it is to read the cryptic black marks and  squiggly lines that constitute text.  Show a picture of a smiling face to an infant and the infant often will respond with a smile of its own, but a picture of a frowning or angry face is likely to elicit tears.  It will take a few years and a lot of teaching for that same child to be able to read text.

Furthermore, pictures lend themselves to a wide range of possible interpretations and responses. That's why I love using them for my own creative writing.  It's like an immersion in inspiration.

Below, I present one of Hank Kellner’s photos of a young boy sitting on a ledge, seemingly reflecting on something. What could he be thinking?  Almost anything, really.  He seems relaxed – perhaps he’s daydreaming, or trying to solve a problem.  Or perhaps he’s simply lonely.  We all know what that feels like. 

Here is my response to the photo - the "text" produced by my imaginings about what this picture might portray.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

     ~The young man sat alone outside the cabin high in the mountains—his family's mountaintop retreat—the surrounding woods so still, his ears seemed deafened by the silence.  A suffocating loneliness engulfed him.  The weight of his father's death sat heavily on his chest—a solid mass of sorrow.  It had been six months then.  Six months of grieving isolation.  Walled off from the world around him even as he walked through public places, no one knowing, no one realizing, no one seeing the raw and gaping hole where his heart used to be, he was truly alone.


      There, in the deafening silence of that remote mountaintop, he examined the nature of his loneliness as it felt at that moment.  And he sought its deeper meaning.

loneliness

                                      

loneliness is loud—                                                                                 
a white noise roar                                                                                               
a tinny taste that’s swallowed                                                                                      
like a solid lump of air

it turns the green soul brown and dry
with edges sere and crumbled
it stretches thin and bare
its taut threads tug

yet—
it seems to sit so loose
a prison with an open door
through which one cannot pass

and emptiness fills one's every space—                           

to eat it and yet live
and even laugh
is one's greatest test of faith.

              ~Elizabeth Guy


"So lonely 'twas that God himself / Scarce seemed there to be."
~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge
      
     He composed the poem for himself.  And as he wrote, birdsong lilted in from somewhere. Somewhere there among the green-leafed trees, a small bird sang out its joy.  It settled on him like a promise of healing, and a testament of love.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Have you seen photos that capture a mood about which you could write?

 Coming next week~                             
A happy chair!

Also, visit my co-author's blog at http://hank-englisheducation.blogspot.com
See his ten-part series on photo prompts to inspire writing at http://www.creativity-portal.com/prompts/kellner/

And Don’t Miss…

            English teacher Mara Dukats and writer-photographer Cynthia Staples’ poems “white on white” and “The Absence of Color.” They’re in Part Four of Hank Kellner’s  twelve-part series THE POWER OF PHOTOS TO INSPIRE WRITING at the Creativity Portal  website http://gazette.teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/hank-kellner/using-poems-and-photos-to-inspire-writing-part-4/,  as well as Anna J. Small’s writing assignment in "Viewing and Writing about Photos from Around the World"
            Also, read more about Reflect and Write in the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL http://www.slj.com/2013/03/curriculum-connections/meeting-the-ccss-through-poetry-professional-shelf/
  
                            A Helpful Source for Inspiration
For more photos and information not included in this blog, please visit http://www.prufrock.com/Reflect-and-Write-P1752.aspx. Reflect and Write contains more than 300 poems and photos; keywords; quotations; either “Inspiration” or “Challenge” prompts; a “Themes to Explore” section; a “Twelve Ways to Inspire Your Students” section; a special “Internet Resources” section, and more. Includes CD with photos and poems from the book. Reflect and Write: 300 Poems and Photos to Inspire Writing by Hank Kellner and Elizabeth Guy (Prufrock Press, 2013), 153 pages, $24.95.