#WaterPoemProject: Day 11, Kara Laughlin

It's Day 11 of our #WaterPoemProject -- 30 days of water-themed poetry prompts from your favorite children's authors.If you’re looking for National Poetry Month writing prompts, we’ve got you covered. Start with Day 1 and you’ll have poetry prompts from now through the end of April.New to this project? Please read the Introduction and FAQ. Or you can watch this video of me describing how to participate. It’s on the YouTube channel Authors Everywhere.I'm happy to welcome my friend, author Kara Laughlin to share a writing prompt with us today.Kara’s poetry prompt is: Frozen Fog

You’ve seen ice. You’ve seen fog. But have you ever seen ice fog?Ice fog is a kind of freezing fog that happens only in very cold places. Fog is usually like a cloud on the ground—tiny droplets of water hang in the air, making it hard to see and getting everything wet. Ice fog contains tiny needles of ice. Freezing fog covers everything it touches with a thin layer of ice. This can be dangerous for driving, but it makes for beautiful walks outside.Today your challenge is to write a frozen fog poem in two voices. In a two voice poem, the writer imagines two different speakers talking about the same thing from different points of view. They are usually written in two columns and read by two people, each reading down one column.You might write about frozen fog:
  • in the voices of a driver and a walker.
  • in the voices of the ice and the fog.
  • in the voices of Spring and Winter.
  • in the voice of the fog and the voice of a tree getting covered by ice.

Here is a video that explains freezing fog (and shows a forest covered by it):https://youtu.be/kksN1-U6J9UHere are some two-voice poems by Paul Fleischman:https://sites.google.com/site/childrenspoems/paul-fleischmanhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-5t8lFIzI4

***Your task is to draft a two-voice poem about freezing fog before the end of the day tomorrow, Thursday, April 2, 2020.If you’re doing the #WaterPoemProject with a group, be sure to share or post your rough draft, read other people’s poems, and cheer for their efforts. Or leave your poem here, in the comments.Kara Laughlin is the author of over fifty nonfiction books for kids (some under the pen name Juniata Rogers). When she isn’t writing, she volunteers as a Girl Scout leader, Odyssey of the Mind coach and Sunday School program coordinator. Find all four of her weather books here.***#WaterPoemProject Series Posts:Project IntroductionFAQPrompt 1: Irene Latham, The Language of WaterPrompt 2: Elizabeth Steinglass, What Would a Raindrop Say?Prompt 3: Linda Mitchell, Found HaikuPrompt 4: Shari Green, Fogbow FibonacciPrompt 5: Margaret Simon, The Taste of WaterPrompt 6: Heather Meloche, The Shape of a WavePrompt 7: Amy Ludwig VanDerwater, A Water MemoryPrompt 8: Laura Shovan, Rainy Day OppositesPrompt 9: Kathryn Apel, Silly SolagePrompt 10: Buffy Silverman, A Watery HomePrompt 11: Kara Laughlin, Frozen FogPrompt 12: Debbie Levy, Jump into a LimerickPrompt 13: Joy McCullough, What Are Water Bears?Prompt 14: Linda Baie, Frozen Water SkinnyPrompt 15: Chris Baron, The Hidden World of WaterPrompt 16: Michelle Heidenrich Barnes, Water WordplayPrompt 17: Susan Tan, The Sound of WaterPrompt 18: Mike Grosso, Waterplay!Prompt 19: R. L. Toalson, Wishing WellPrompt 20: Margarita Engle, Ode to the ShorePrompt 21: Faye McCray, Poem in a BubblePrompt 22: Meg Eden, Surprising ConnectionsPlease support the #WaterPoemProject authors by buying their books from your favorite independent bookstore.

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#WaterPoemProject: Day 12, Debbie Levy

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#WaterPoemProject: Day 10, Buffy Silverman