Poetry Is Dead

The Geist Jackpine Sonnet Contest

What the jackpine sonnet is: 
A sonnet-like poem.

Where it comes from: 
Milton Acorn (1923 – 1986), a poet from Prince Edward Island, created the genre and named it after the jack pine, a tree that seeds itself in fire.

How to write one: 
Write a poem with 14 lines, each line containing 7 to 13 syllables. But, in Acorn’s words, “If your sonnet cuts itself off—click!—at, say line 12, 18 or 20, leave it at that.” An odd number of lines is okay too. Apply the rhyme scheme of your choice, and if no rhyme comes up, be patient. Acorn advised writers to write internal rhymes (rhymes within a line) or external rhymes (rhymes at the end of consecutive lines) “to keep the flow.” In the absence of rhyme, use assonance (the repetition of vowel sounds), “to keep the rhyme alive in order to come up with a true rhyme further on.”

How to enter the contest: 
Write a jackpine sonnet and send it to Geist online or by post with a $10 entry fee (includes a one-year subscription to Geist, digital edition).

For more information head over to the contest blog at Geist.com.

Contest deadline: Canada Day, July 1, 2010.

End Bug

tags poetry Milton Acorn Jackpine Sonnet Geist magazine contest

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