Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Narratopoet - Narrative Prose Poems - cover

Narratopoet - Narrative Prose Poems

Anwer Ghani

Publisher: BookRix

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Prose poetry can be narrative or lyric. If the style is lyric in both superficial and deep layers, there will be lyric prose poetry, while if the style was narrative in both superficial and deep layers; there will be the narrative prose poetry. But we can find the superficial narrative structure with the deep lyric structure. In this case there will be the hybrid of Narrato-lyric prose poetry, and this the second hybrid inside the first hybrid of proso-poetry. So the Narratolyric prose poetry is a hybrid inside a hybrid or a compound hybridization. 
I am happy to introduce these pieces of my experience in narrative lyricism, and for more details about the narratolrysicism you can read my book "Narratolryic Writing" on my website. 
 
Available since: 12/21/2023.
Print length: 13 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Thrice Welcome - cover

    Thrice Welcome

    Harrison S. Morris

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    LibriVox volunteers bring you 17 recordings of Thrice Welcome from Poor Robin's Almanac. This was the Weekly Poetry project for December 11, 2011.Poor Robin's Almanac first appeared in England in the 17th century. It ran until sometime in the 18th century.It was originally a satirical publication, although over the years it became less humorous and more of a source for traditional homilies.Poor Robin is a pseudonym whose original user is unknown. William Winstanley and Robert Herrick are both possible candidates. More works were published under this pseudonym in America in the 1800s.(Summary by Lucy Perry)
    Show book
  • The Tattoo Collector - cover

    The Tattoo Collector

    Tim Tim Cheng

    • 0
    • 1
    • 0
    "I moved to a country called writing" declares Tim Tim Cheng in this striking debut collection. The Tattoo Collector explores family history, displacement, politics, protest, and, as it moves between East and West, the uses of language to illustrate and interrogate what lies in between. As these poems range from Hong Kong, Scotland, and London, they unravel the relationship between the body, ecology and class with precise and haunting tenderness.
    Here, in Cheng's illuminating and needle-sharp poems, the tattoo is a narrative, the body a radical means of expression. In states of flux, between resisting and belonging, we enter museums, hospitals, graveyards, and gigs. These intimate and polyphonic poems invite us to be troubled and enthralled by exhibits and the stories they have to tell, to look inside the glass box and study what is on display. Close-up, the poems bring into the daylight details that can be seen skin-deep on the surface, as well as those which point to another meaning, inked indelibly, beneath.
    Show book
  • Our Karolina Fix Hi-5 Poems - 5 Poems Book Deal - cover

    Our Karolina Fix Hi-5 Poems - 5...

    Mike Blake

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Our Karolina Fix :: Hi 5 - Poems. 
    This now has all 5 Poems of the young and exuberant Karolina. 
    It includes the following titles: 
    1/ My Karolina Fix. 
    2/ A Loving Sonnet of Passion. 
    3/ Karolina's Sweet Dreams. 
    4/ Take Me On a Karolina Journey. 
    5/ Hallelujah Karolina. 
    *NO AI has been utilized in creating any of these Poems, as for all the Authors poems & S/Stories. 
    Normal price for all 5 Poems is $15.00 
    Buy all 5 here from this AUTHORS REPUBLIC offering for the *Special Pre-Order price of $8.99 ( 2 for free :) 
    These Poems were all newly released in 2023 for the insatiably elegant Karolina Protsenko and her 
    consummate Violin playing 'aired' on Youtube.
    Show book
  • Best of Rudyard Kipling The: A Collection of Essential Poetry - cover

    Best of Rudyard Kipling The: A...

    Rudyard Kipling

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Experience the timeless power of Rudyard Kipling’s poetry in this compelling audiobook, masterfully narrated by Will Stauff. With a voice that combines clarity, gravitas, and emotional range, Stauff brings new life to Kipling’s most enduring verses—poems of courage, discipline, empire, humanity, and moral resolve. From the quiet intensity of “If—” to the rhythmic force of “Gunga Din” and the stark wisdom of “The Gods of the Copybook Headings,” this audiobook captures both the musicality and the meaning of Kipling’s language. Ideal for reflective listening, commutes, or literary appreciation, this narration offers a dignified, immersive experience of one of English literature’s most influential poetic voices.
    Show book
  • The Book of Hours - a new poetic translation for devotional use - cover

    The Book of Hours - a new poetic...

    Rainer Maria Rilke, Brett Alan...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Written at the turn of the twentieth century, The Book of Hours is one of the most significant works of modern German poetry. There has never been an English translation that preserved the tight poeticism and Christian mysticism of the original until now. In this long poem, the narrator-poet is a monk and icon painter desperately trying to see God in a way that his art can’t capture. Over three sections (The Book of Monkish Life, The Book of Pilgrimage, and The Book of Poverty & Death), Rilke takes the narrator on a journey from the pastoral lands of his monastery to the bustling and inhuman cities of the world on a quest to make sense of God's central mystery. A variety of images recur: building, trees (roots and fruits), ripening, ore, and what Rilke simply calls "the things". Through these motifs, the narrator seeks to understand God by exploring imagery that is the inverse of the usual Biblical symbols. What can we learn by thinking of God as darkness, as son, as poor neighbor, or as the rock that runs through the earth...? And, ultimately, what truly are poverty and death to the holy pilgrim?
    Show book
  • The Canterbury Tales - cover

    The Canterbury Tales

    Geoffrey Chaucer

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    What do stories reveal about who we truly are?
    
    Written in the late fourteenth century, The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer is one of the greatest works in English literature. Framed as a storytelling contest among pilgrims traveling to Canterbury, the book presents a vivid cross-section of medieval society—knights, clerics, merchants, wives, and rogues—each revealed through their tales.
    
    Blending humor, satire, romance, and moral reflection, Chaucer's stories explore timeless themes of love, power, faith, greed, and human weakness. His sharp observation of character and society gives the work a freshness that still resonates with modern readers.
    
    This eBook presents the classic text in a clear, readable format, making it accessible to both new readers and longtime admirers of medieval literature.
    
    Inside this eBook, you'll explore:
    
    A diverse collection of stories told by unforgettable characters
    
    A rich portrait of medieval English life
    
    Satire, comedy, and moral insight woven together
    
    A foundational work in the history of English literature
    
    Studied worldwide and admired for centuries, The Canterbury Tales remains essential reading for anyone interested in classic poetry, storytelling traditions, or the roots of English literature.
    
    Travel with the pilgrims and hear the stories that shaped a literary tradition. Buy now and experience one of the greatest classics ever written.
    Show book