
OctPoWriMo 2023: Facing Our Fears
For today’s poem, pick a piece of prose: a piece of horror flash fiction, or short story, and pick through its bones to create a piece of found poetry. You don’t have to present it as an erasure poem, but that can be fun. Here’s an example of an erasure poem I did last year:

Writober 2023
To start off our second week, our image prompt is another gif. This form looks to be made of something other than bones.
Halloween Photography Challenge

I switched from Tourmaline .’s “Skeleton” to “Bones” to line up with A. Rich Writing‘s Writober list.
Please link to your creations in the comments. I can’t wait to see what you come up with.

And how fun is this Lantern fish skeleton for some bones Halloween decor?

Here’s Laura De Bernardi’s found poem for today:
Here’s my found poem, each line sourced directly from the novel – Bradbury’s language so brilliant it was easy pickings:
Look What I Found
in Ray Bradbury’s
Something Wicked This Way Comes, 1962
For some, autumn comes early
stays late through life,
fall is the ever-normal season,
there be no choice beyond.
Does blood stir their veins?
No: the night wind.
They sift the human storm
for souls, eat flesh of reason,
fill tombs with sinners.
They frenzy forth.
In gusts, they beetle-scurry,
make all moons sullen.
The spider-web hears them,
trembles—and breaks.
Such are the autumn people.
Beware of them.
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I like how you did the erasure poem. Very spooky presentation.
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Thank you. I found that text in an old Playboy. I thought it was funny that it was written by Bill O’Reilly. 👻🎃
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: O Now that’s entertainment! 🙂
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