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Recipe for Success / Disaster · Poetry Minific ·
Organised by Anon Y Mous
Word limit 15–1000
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#1 ·
· · >>Baal Bunny
Hopefully this is either a success or a disaster.
#2 ·
· · >>Heavy_Mole
>>Heavy_Mole

Maybe the recipe:

Will be for cookies. Can cookies ever be a disaster?

Mike
#3 ·
·
>>Baal Bunny
I'll tell you, it depends very much on the kind of googly-eyed company you keep.
#4 ·
· on The Last Pie · >>Baal Bunny
Well, this is impressive. Pantoum form, but much longer than the standard. The only hiccup is the "She learned appeals—not to kings" lines that come up a syllable short. The story feels maybe a little drawn out with lots of exposition. I get the gist from the start that there's some civil unrest, and along with the title, some hints that cooking will tie in to that, but then there's a long stretch in the middle that doesn't mention the baking any, so it loses the thread of what it's about. Of course it's hard to write a rigorous form, period, much less while getting it to tell a story, so it's easy to say this, but maybe weave in the baking more regularly throughout to keep that connection going the whole way?
#5 · 1
· on Lessons · >>Heavy_Mole
I'm kind of stumped as to what this means. Bored students during an economics lecture, I think? But I don't know what the orange is supposed to be symbolic of, and I don't know what's happening at the end. How is it chiming? Is this a dream? The split between the teacher's and students' attitude doesn't seem to come to a point. A few of the lines are a syllable off or have a stress pattern a little off. I do like the mood it creates.
#6 ·
· on The Last Pie
>>Pascoite

Thanks, Pasco:

How I always manage to miss one metrical glitch in these Writeoff poems, I'll never know, but this one's easily fixed at least. :)

Mike
#7 ·
· on Lessons
>>Pascoite
Hmm.

A major part of the premise of this poem was left out: the students are children, maybe eleven or twelve. Something like a home economics class. The orange then symbolizes the kind of thoughtlessness kids have, vis-à-vis the large struggle of life with which the teacher is familiar (summer & autumn).

Thanks for reading, as always.