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Making a Easy Poem Dr Seuss Day

How to write like Dr. Seuss

Who is Dr. Seuss?

Theodor Seuss Geisel was born March 2, 1904, in Springfield, Massachusetts, near Mulberry Street, which he would memorialize 33 years later in And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street. After graduating from Dartmouth College in 1925, he went to Oxford but dropped out before getting his doctorate in English Literature, a degree he awarded his pseudonym, which he began using around this time.

How to write like Dr. Seuss

Zany though Dr. Seuss' writing style may be, there's a method to the madness. Here are five simple tips that will make your next poem sound solidly Seussian.

1. Start with two big, scary words: Anapestic Tetrameter

Don't be afraid! This part is the hardest, but it's also the most rewarding.

2. Utter nonsense!

If you can't make it rhyme, just invent a word, as Seuss does at the outset of his 1961 story, " The Sneetches."

3. Keep it simple, and repeat, repeat, repeat

Sometimes restriction can unleash your creativity. This was certainly true for Seuss. As A&E Television explained in 2014, "A major turning point in [Seuss'] career came when, in response to a 1954 LIFE magazine article that criticized children's reading levels, Houghton Mifflin and Random House asked him to write a children's primer using 220 vocabulary words."

4. Ask questions

Questions are an important part of Seuss' poems. Characters ask each other questions ("Do you like green eggs and ham?"). They ask the reader questions ("Should we tell her about it? Now, what SHOULD we do? Well … what would YOU do if your mother asked you?"). And, ultimately, they encourage readers to ask themselves questions after the book is over via our fifth and final writing tip ….

5. Include a lesson

As Rien Fertel notes, the books of Dr. Seuss aren't complex at first glance. "Nearly all adhere to the same basic plot: the protagonist encounters a new world (a new street, new zoo, new alphabet, an egg or pair of siblings to babysit) and chaos ensues (strange creatures! letters! and words!) set to rhyme."

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Source: https://katherineluck.medium.com/how-to-write-like-dr-seuss-125a4fc8bf9b

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