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How To Write Great Children's Poetry & Rhyming
Stories
Children love rhyme. The rhythm of the text, the way the words
bounce off the tongue can be especially appealing to young
children who are mastering language and reading. There are two
vehicles for verse in the children's market: poetry and rhyming
stories. Both have special guidelines.
* Rhyming Stories. Often at writers' conferences editors will
say they don't like stories with rhyming text. That's not
exactly true - rhyming stories are published all the time. What
these editors are really objecting to is bad rhyming text. Too
many writers try to copy Dr. Seuss, the master of the rhymed
story. They imitate the form of his work but not the substance.
The rhyme is a vehicle to tell the story, not the other way
around. It must still follow all the rules of a good picture
book: a strong opening, believable characters, an interesting
plot, a satisfying ending. Every word must advance the story -
you can't throw in extra phrases simply to complete the rhyme.
Consider the opening lines of The Cat in the Hat. In eight
short lines Dr. Seuss establishes setting, mood and conflict.
Few books written in prose do so much with so little.
Roy Gerrard is another author who writes engaging stories in
rhyme. His text is more sophisticated and appeals to slightly
older children. Rosie and the Rustlers, an old West adventure
story, begins like this:
Where the mountains meet the prairie, where the men are wild
and hairy, There's a little ranch where Rosie Jones is boss.
It's a place that's neat and cozy, and the boys employed by
Rosie Work extremely hard, to stop her getting cross.
Again, the opening lines tell us a lot about the setting and
establish Rosie as the main character. The droll tone of the
book is evident by the end of line one.
Notice that the meter differs in the above examples. It doesn't
matter what meter you choose to tell your story, as long as it
fits the subject and reading level.
What's more important is that the meter has some kind of
pattern - these books must work when read out loud. A good test
is to have someone unfamiliar with your story read it into a
tape recorder. Note where this person stumbles over lines or
has to stretch words to fit the pattern. These are the places
that need revision.
* Poetry. Children's poems tell little stories or highlight
moments of life. The best poems evoke strong visual images or
emotions. If your poem is funny (children love humorous poetry)
give it a punch line at the end that surprises the reader.
Don't try to do too much with a poem. Pick a little event from
a child's day (catching the school bus in a rainstorm, taking a
math test) and explore feelings involved.
Take an ordinary situation and turn it into an extraordinary
episode (as Shel Silverstein did in "Jimmy Jet and His TV Set,"
a poem about a boy who turned into a television). For funny
poems, action is key.
If your poems are quieter you can add more description, but
don't get so caught up in flowery language that you lose your
reader.
The best way to learn how to write good poetry is to read it.
Some books to study: Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel
Silverstein; Now We Are Six by A.A. Milne; The Random House
Book of Poetry for Children selected by Jack Prelutsky.
Writing poetry can be a great warm-up for writing prose because
every word is so crucial. And remember, your poems must sound
good when read aloud as well as look good on the page, so use
the tape recorder test as you did for your rhymed
stories.
by Laura Backes - 8th June 2008
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Laura Backes publishes Children's Book Insider, the Newsletter
for Children's Writers. For info about writing children's
books, free articles, market tips, insider secrets & more,
visit http://Write4kids.com. Visit the
Write4Kids blog for many more articles by visiting http://write4kids.com/blog
Source: http://www.creativewriter.me.uk
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