Quote:
Originally Posted by Ashley Bowen
James: Yes! Thank you so much! You've captured what I couldn't quite see for myself what was wrong with this, why I found it unsuccessful. There is no danger to the poem, no risk. Everything is carefully explained from the safety of inaction. What's the point in that? Thank you! Thank you! This gives me something to think about in revision.
Matt: Yes, few surprises, and that's what this needs. I'm glad you, like James, were able to see the poem's greatest deficiency. Much, much appreciated for your read and response.
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I'm going to throw a small wrench in the discussion by offering a counter to the surprise angle.
I agree that the poem is slightly familiar. But I also don't believe that every poem
needs to be blazingly original. If a writer produces an original poem that works and resonates, that's great, but I don't think originality is a requirement of a great poem. At some point, somewhere along the line, someone's going to touch on a theme that's been touched on before, and they're going to write about it in a way that relies on familiar imagery, because that's what the narrative requires.
If everything always has to be original all the time then eventually we're going to get to a point where we're removed from everyday experience and what actually resonates emotionally. The language might be sharp, but does the poem hit.
In my view this poem hits. Once I was in the middle school parking lot with you every romantic interest of my past came rushing back. If I wanted to write a similar narrative your poem is how I'd want to write it. You could inject a few surprises but I wonder if what you've done here is more intuitive and natural. You relayed the narrative, you nailed the rhythm, the emotional punch, and that's it. If it needs to have surprises you might be writing a different poem.
But I do agree with
Matt's comment that you could leave a little more mystery in the poem and not spell out the entire story. See what you can subtract to keep the basic idea intact, but let the reader make some inferences and use their imagination. It's an effective parlor trick. If it were me this is what I'd focus on.