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  • Attie Lime
  • Nov 13, 2022
  • 1 min read

This is a mini blog post. A postling, a postette, a posticle.

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Image: Unsplash, Mae Mu


If you write anything today, make it new. Make it fresh, make it just a little bit different. I don’t mean surreal, or wacky (don’t get me started on screwball and zany). Just promise me that you won’t write about diaphanous skies, or anything being as calm as a millpond. Instead of putting cheese and ham in your writing omelette, chuck in some pistachios (if you did this in real life, you know who you are), or a dollop of mayo. Just a little taste of something to tickle the reader’s tastebuds in a way they have never been tickled before. A fresh image, a made-up word, a twist in a rhythm or a sting in the tail.


Some days all we want is to write blankets-and-mashed-potato familiarity (plenty of those days here recently), but if you’re lucky enough to have writing time on your hands today, chuck in some metaphorical pistachios, and see where they take you. Or don’t. (But do write. Please write.)



 
 
 
  • Attie Lime
  • Nov 9, 2022
  • 2 min read

Hi, it's been a while! Thanks for sticking with me - my plan is for this to be the first of a new wave of blog posts about children's poetry: writing, reading, imagining, and everything in-between. Thanks to @dreambeastpoems for encouraging me just to be me. Here I am!


What a year! Today I have been trawling my Twitter account (exciting reasons) and I discovered that from August 2021, when I set up my Attie Lime account, until now, I have posted over 125 poems that I've written for children. Not counting every single hasty prompt piece dreamed up while the spuds boiled, or the published pieces. I knew I was sharing regularly, but I even surprised myself! Of course, a pesky fleeting thought came - imagine if I'd put them in a book, instead.


But the thing is, it's not about money, it's about LOVE. I love to write. Of course, when people tell me they have enjoyed my poems, it's wonderful, especially if they have been shared with children. I really enjoy school visits, and another job on today's to-do-list is to begin rescheduling community events. I can't wait to pop on a Santa hat and get kids joining in with some festive rhymes, in the village hall. That's the point of writing for children, after all: to share poems with young people, and hope that in them they find joy, resonance, hope, laughter, escape, or even (trying not to sound too icky here), themselves.


I am absolutely chuffed to bits that 2023 will see my first collection published, by Beir Bua Press (title TBA), and in 2024 Ventorros Press will publish my collection of poems for bedtime, Lullaby Pie. I might even make a few pennies (I still happily wear a pair of pyjamas from around 1998, so you can make your own assumptions about what motivates me, in life). I hope to publish more books. I hope to visit many more schools, perhaps even festivals, plus bookshops and libraries. I hope to round up the village children and make them laugh with poems in the school holidays. I have more ambition for this, than for anything that has come before, but at the end of the day, if none of it were possible, I would still write. For the pure and absolute love of putting words on paper. I'm head-over-heels in love with writing poems for children and feeling all the more joyful for the fact that people enjoy reading them, too. Thank you.

 
 
 
  • Attie Lime
  • Jun 8, 2022
  • 1 min read

If I could dive

what would I see

beneath the sea,

the sea?


A cave of mermaids

shucking shells

all of them

for me?


A school of fish

in Literacy

learning

A, B, C.?


A coral reef

quite undisturbed

thriving

peacefully?


A litter-picking lobster

clearing

up debris?


A blue whale singing

songs of joy

so very happily?


If I could dive

what would I see

beneath the sea,

the sea?


Attie Lime



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Photo by Jeremy Bishop on Unsplash
 
 
 
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