Love in iambic pentameter
Young Chang
Just stay away from rhymes like “June-tune-moon.” Try not to be
“drippy” in describing love or a first kiss and avoid letting
five-syllable words take over the poem.
Other than that, “anything goes, as long as it’s good,” said Lee
Mallory, a Newport Beach poet and organizer of Friday’s Valentine’s love
poetry contest at Alta Coffee House.
The first 15 contestants to sign up will get five minutes at the mike
to read their poem aloud. The works will not be screened beforehand,
Mallory said. Winners will get cash or other prizes and, hopefully, a
positive reaction from the special someone they’re reading to or about.
Neil Miranda, a Costa Mesa guitarist and songwriter who is part of a
band called Liquid Muse, will accompany the readings with acoustic-rock
and middle-eastern sounding love songs.
“I really enjoy the poetry,” Miranda said. “I think it compliments my
music and vice versa.”
Daniel and Lori McGinn, Fullerton poets who are titled “the ultimate
love poets,” will judge the poems.
In it’s sixth year now, the contest emphasizes the importance of
writing poetry about love. Mallory said he believes the craft can save
people from the adverse effects of technology.
“We’re caught up in computers, we’re tied up with the television, and
instead of hugging or giving a kiss, we just sit in front of the TV and
watch the color of the channel,” he explained. “I think high-technology
is estranging [us from] one another.”
Honest poetry written from strong feelings about a loved one,
especially if presented dramatically, can effectively communicate love,
he said.
Winners from past years have varied -- from older men in Pendleton
shirts writing about their first loves, to younger poets writing about a
love they’ve just found. The poetry has taken the forms of contemporary
free verse and haikus to the more traditional sonnets, Mallory said.
First, second and third place winners will probably receive cash
prizes, though organizers of the contest have not yet decided the exact
amounts. Other prizes and winners will get free dinners and services
offered by local businesses.
Material awards aside, the poets may be rewarded in a deeper way.
“I really believe in poetry. I really believe poetry can bring us back
together,” Mallory said. “And I really believe love is the most important
reason we’re on the planet.”
FYI
WHAT: Valentine’s Love Poetry Contest: From the Erotic to the
Tastefully Sublime.
WHEN: Sign-ups begin at 7 p.m., the contest starts at 8 p.m. Friday
WHERE: Alta Coffee House, 506 31st St., Newport Beach
COST: Free to watch, $4 to compete
CALL: (949) 675-0233
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.