March/April 2009 Project: In the Garden

I’ve got gardens on the brain right now, so I’m sharing my obsession with all of you. The theme for March/April is In the Garden, and I’m so sorry it’s late, but as I’ll be away through the fifteenth of April posting it now may work out after all.

I also want to apologize for not commenting much – I read EVERY submission, but just haven’t had words lately for meaningful comments.

Remember that previous Projects are now closed, and that this Project will remain open until the next is posted.

Thank you for your continued participation.

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Option One Poetry


Weather means more when you have a garden. There’s nothing like listening to a shower and thinking how it is soaking in around your green beans.

~Marcelene Cox

Using the quotation above as your inspiration, write a poem (any form is fine) about weather meaning more

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Option Two:Fiction

It is good to be alone in a garden at dawn or dark so that all its shy presences may haunt you and possess you in a reverie of suspended thought.
~James Douglas, from Down Shoe Lane

Using the above quotation as your inspiration, write a flash-fic, scene, or short story involving being alone in a garden.

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Option Three: Timed Writing

I used to visit and revisit it a dozen times a day, and stand in deep contemplation over my vegetable progeny with a love that nobody could share or conceive of who had never taken part in the process of creation. It was one of the most bewitching sights in the world to observe a hill of beans thrusting aside the soil, or a rose of early peas just peeping forth sufficiently to trace a line of delicate green.
~Nathaniel Hawthorne, from Mosses from an Old Manse

Take fifteen minutes (use all fifteen, but don’t go over), and write on the subject of the process of creation.

This is a timed exercise and it’s expected that it won’t be perfect. Any format – fiction, essay, verse – is welcome.

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Option Four: Seven Things

Gardening is about enjoying the smell of things growing in the soil, getting dirty without feeling guilty, and generally taking the time to soak up a little peace and serenity.
~Lindley Karstens

In improvisation, one of our exercises is a game called “Seven Things,” in which we go around in a circle giving each other the challenge, “Give me seven things that [whatever].” We are not going to go around in a circle here, but if you’re drawn to lists, this prompt is for you.

Give me seven of your favorite guilty pleasures. You’re not required to explain the items in your list, but it’s more fun for readers if you do.

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Option Five: Pick Three

Garden writing is often very tame, a real waste when you think how opinionated, inquisitive, irreverent and lascivious gardeners themselves tend to be. Nobody talks much about the muscular limbs, dark, swollen buds, strip-tease trees and unholy beauty that have made us all slaves of the Goddess Flora.
~Ketzel Levine

Pick at least three of the following words, and build a piece of writing around them. The form is up to you: poem, scene, flash-fic, essay, or general blog entry. If you want to be really daring, write a love letter, instead.

beauty, daring, inquisitive, irreverent, limbs, opinionated, strip-tease, unholy, waste

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Option Six Can You Picture That?
Use the following photo to inspire a piece of writing in any form (poetry, prose, whatever).
(Please remember to copy the image to your own server, and include photo credit when it is known.)

2009marchapril


Photo Credit: Alex Rath via iStockPhoto

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Don’t forget to leave a comment with your name as you wish it to be posted, the direct link to your piece, and the option number.

Thanks! And happy writing!

February 2009:Love Letters – Participants

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Option One Can You Picture That?
februaryproject2009


Photo Credit: Xaviarnau via iStockPhoto

  1. Enough of Love, by Little Wing
  2. It’s Not What It Looks Like, by James Steerforth
  3. Bang! Bang!, by Bobbi
  4. He Was Nice, by The Light Bearer

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Option Two Poetry


If I did have an honest — or dishonest — desire to kiss just one or two people, I might — but I couldn’t want to — my mouth is yours.

~Zelda Fitzgerald (in a love letter to F. Scott Fitzgerald)

  1. Others, by Ofira Sephiroth
  2. L’Agent Provacateur, by Carl Colaco
  3. Vessel, by Rob Kistner
  4. My Life-Saver, by Bobbi
  5. Empty Words, by Melanie

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Option Three:Fiction

What can I tell you by letter? Alas! nothing that I would tell you. The messages of the gods to each other travel not by pen and ink and indeed your bodily presence here would not make you more real: for I feel your fingers in my hair, and your cheek brushing mine. The air is full of the music of your voice, my soul and body seem no longer mine, but mingled in some exquisite ecstasy with yours. I feel incomplete without you.
~Oscar Wilde (in a letter to Constance Wilde)

  1. Sending You a Piece of My Heart, by Amercanising Desi
  2. The Consequences, by Jenn

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Option Four: Timed Writing

…should I draw you the picture of my heart it would be what I hope you would still love though it contained nothing new. The early possession you obtained there, and the absolute power you have obtained over it,leaves not the smallest space unoccupied..
~Abigail Adams (in a letter to John Adams)

  1. For Fuzzy: A Picture of My Heart, by Melissa A. Bartell
  2. Picture of My Heart, by Becca
  3. My Yellow Heart, by Jessie
  4. Finger Paints, by sister AE
  5. Eat Your Heart Out, by Floreta
  6. The Picture of My Heart, by James Steerforth
  7. My Heart, by Bobbi
  8. A Picture of My Heart, by The Light Bearer

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Option Five: Seven Things

I don’t like it at all. All the Chairs are staring at me in the most frightful way — And there is a Lady on the Mantel piece who has taken a Great objection to me — and I’m awfully scared —

This is no place for a person with a nice cheerful disposition like me — it looks like those parlors in the Novels where they plot things –
~Isadora Duncan (in a letter to Gordon Craig)

  1. 7 Unromantic Places We’ve Kissed, by Bobbi

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Option Six: Pick Three

Do not imagine, because you find these lines in your journal that I have been trespassing. You know I have not – and where else shall I leave a love letter? For I long to write you a love-letter tonight.

You are all about me – I seem to breathe you, hear you, feel you in me and of me.
What am I doing here? You are away. I have seen you in the train, at the station, driving up, sitting in the lamplight, talking, greeting people, washing your hands… And I am here – in your tent – sitting at your table.
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~Katherine Mansfield (in a letter to John Middleton Murray)

  1. Untangling the Past, by Jane Doe
  2. Good Things Come in Pairs, by Annie McLennon
  3. Ex-Varsity, by Tiel Aisha Ansari
  4. Love Letter, by Tamy
  5. Rants, by Jeeves
  6. Unwritten Loveletter, by Leonard Blumfeld
  7. Dearest Love, by Becca
  8. On Peace, by This Girl Remembers
  9. Love Letters, by Janet
  10. Dear, by Dreamer

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Thank you all for your comments and participation, your words of condolence, and your understanding. Welcome to the new folks: Melanie, Dreamer, The Light Bringer, Floreta, and anyone else I’ve missed.

Just a note…

My 14YO chihuahua, Zorro, started coughing blood and had to be put down on Sunday the 22nd, so I pretty much spent last week hiding from the world. He was totally a child-substitute (I love my other dogs, but we don’t have the same bond.)

February participants page will go up this week, and March project will open by the end of Sunday.