Today is a treat for rhyming writers! We’re flies on the wall as author Anne Marie Pace talks about her newest book MOUSE CALLS with Cassandra Whetstone, an educational consultant and writing mentor. Anne Marie reveals her process, her picture book philosophy, and some special devices, like the visual refrain.
Anne Marie Pace is an author whose eleven published picture books include three rhymers. With Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen, she has co-taught workshops in rhyming picture books for the Highlights Foundation. Her newest rhyming picture book is MOUSE CALLS, illustrated by Erin Kraan, from Beach Lane Books/Simon & Schuster.
Cassandra Whetstone is a former classroom teacher and is the co-founder of Sequoia Gifted & Creative, where she is an educational consultant and writing mentor. She has published poetry in Cricket, Ladybug, and other children’s magazines.
Cassandra: Thanks for taking the time to talk to me today, Anne Marie. You know I’m a huge fan of your writing, and I’m excited to have this time to explore your expertise with rhyme. Are you ready to dive in?
Anne Marie: Let’s do it!
Tell me about how you got into writing in rhyme? What were your early influences?
As a child, some of my favorites included Mother Goose, MADELINE, and Dr. Seuss books, so I suppose my immersion into rhythm and rhyme began early. However, writing rhyming picture books isn’t something I set out to do. It just happened as I experimented in my writing. Like many writers, I composed my share of angsty free verse as a teenager, but I don’t consider myself a poet. However, I do love the sounds of words, playing with words, reorganizing words, and the rhythm of language, so writing in verse has become something I really enjoy.
I am a long-time choral singer and I think my musical skills have definitely helped me understand rhythm and meter in a way that can escape some new writers with less musical training. Of course, I always try to make it clear that you can’t write picture books in verse the same way you’d write a song. In music, the songwriter uses time signatures and rests and note values to help the singer know exactly how to create the desired meter. In picture books, we really have only words (with their various lengths and stresses), punctuation, and page breaks. Also, a lot of songwriters use near rhyme at least some of the time, and it doesn’t matter as much because the singer sustains the tone on the vowel; the ending consonant is enunciated, but less obvious, far briefer in length. In a picture book, near rhyme is much more jarring.
You seem like such a natural at it. When you start with a new idea, do you hear the rhyme right away? How do you decide if this idea is going to be in rhyme or not?
I’ve published three rhyming books, BUSY-EYED DAY (which was originally titled BIG-EYED BUG), SUNNY’S TOW TRUCK SAVES THE DAY, and my brand-new title, MOUSE CALLS. For two of the three, the title came first in conjunction with a rhyming couplet, so the story developed from the rhyme.
For example, in BUSY-EYED DAY, the couplet “Big-eyed bug/Stalk-eyed slug” came to me first. What did that give me to work with? It’s a rhyming couplet, with alliteration of the first and third words. That said Verse to me, so I began creating similar couplets. The story of kids spending the day at the park came later, as I looked at the couplets I’d written and figured out what they had in common (things kids could see at a big city park).
With MOUSE CALLS, I had the title for several years before I knew what to do with it. I liked the play on “house calls” but a doctor mouse didn’t spark anything for me. When I remembered the classic game of Telephone, I started playing with rhyming animals, and developed the structure, which has plenty of alliteration and both end rhyme and internal rhyme: “Mouse calls Moose/Moose calls Goose/Goose calls Dog and Hog and Hare. Hare calls Bat/Bat calls Cat/Cat calls Frog and then calls Mare.” Even after I was satisfied with the text, which I believe is a great read-aloud, we were still missing a story. My Beach Lane editor Andrea Welch and I hashed out a few ideas and settled on the premise of Mouse helping his friends take shelter from a storm. That story is completely in the illustrations, not the text.
What do you love about writing in rhyme? What are the unique challenges of the form?
I love it because it is both easy and hard–sort of a perfect balance of fun and challenge. As I said before, I love the sounds of words. I love the rhythm of a well-constructed sentence. Sometimes, even when writing prose, I hear the rhythm of a sentence before I find the words that fit that rhythm. So using sounds and beats to create something that children will enjoy is simply a good time. But rhyme and meter really need to be close to perfect. If you set your reader up to expect a rhyme or a particular beat, you need to keep that promise. Perfect may not be possible, but you can aim for it. For most writers, that means the easy way should not be the final way.
In writing longer forms, like novels, it can be a huge overhaul to change the point of view of the writing, but the outcome is often a fresh look at the story. Picture books are, of course, a shorter work to craft, but have you ever done a total overhaul of the meter or rhyme scheme and what was that like?
I have done a total overhaul of the story, but once I’ve developed the structure, I stick with it–or at least, I can’t think of any examples where I’ve really changed the structure. SUNNY’S TOW TRUCK SAVES THE DAY began as a story about a family running late for school, but it didn’t seem fresh. It ended up as a story about a family on their way to a picnic. They get a flat tire and have to wait for a tow truck. Because they are waiting, the concept of the passage of time (9:00, 10:00, etc.) found its way in, along with lots of food and trucks. But it was always a story in rhyming couplets.
Can you talk a bit about how you turn a story in rhyme into an actual picture book with line breaks and page turns?
My published rhymers are for the youngest listeners, so usually the complete couplets or stanzas stay on the same spread. However, in BUSY-EYED DAY, the climax of the story occurs when a spider startles a little girl, who runs to her mother for a hug. That couplet takes place over three pages, which shines a spotlight on the importance of the moment and gives it some oomph. My friend Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen has a new book coming out this fall called ROXIE LOVES ADVENTURE. There’s a spot where the rhyme scheme leads you to believe a certain word is next and there’s a page break before the word–and then the actual word is something completely unexpected. It’s brilliant.
Something I’ve included in two of my books (BUSY-EYED DAY and MOUSE CALLS) is a refrain. My editor Andrea Welch encouraged me to add a refrain to each book as sort of a pause, or grounding. A refrain becomes familiar to the reader, and it relieves what might be an otherwise monotonous structure. In BUSY-EYED DAY, the refrain is text which appears after each three couplets: “Busy-eyed day at the park.” But in MOUSE CALLS, I never found a refrain I was happy with, but Andrea still asked for a pause. So we ended up with a sort of visual refrain. The illustrator Erin Kraan included several wordless double-paged spreads, all set in a cave, with a growing number of animals as the book progresses. It works well, and with no words on the page, it forces the reader to stop and examine the wonderful details Erin included in the illustrations.
This is so interesting. Your writing is so lovely to read and to listen to. When I share your books with my students, I appreciate that you are meeting them at the page in such a gentle and respectful way. What is your advice to new writers?
I try not to talk down to readers. Just because they are young and have less experience with life and a smaller vocabulary doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be respected. New writers who are just learning to write picture books are still finding their voices, and that includes their willingness and their ability to meet kids where they are. Hopefully, they’re studying mentor texts, especially new and outstanding books that manage to feel comfortable, yet fresh. The more they write, the more they’ll develop their craft.
How have rhyming picture books evolved over the years and why is it important for writers to study new works as well as old classics?
Of course, it’s most important to write from the heart and our heart is often full of the books we loved as children, or the books we read to our children.. But some people embark on writing picture books without knowing the wonderful creators of today.
I mentioned before that as a child I loved Dr. Seuss. He certainly earned his place in the canon. His books were published as many as eighty-five years ago, with his best-known books coming in the 1950s and 1960s. Honestly, we don’t need another Dr. Seuss because most of his books are still in print.
When writers try to emulate his style now, their work tends to seem dated. As a technical point related to writing rhyming picture books, Dr. Seuss had a unique, clever voice, but one of the reasons he was able to write so seamlessly in anapestic tetrameter (aside from sheer talent!) is that he invented words. If he needed a three-syllable noun that rhymed with some other word, and an English word didn’t exist, he would just create one. In his time, that was exciting and fun; today, it just isn’t often done.
But we can still learn lessons from his work. The mastery of anapestic tetrameter and creation of crazy vocabulary aren’t what’s necessary. Meeting kids where they are intellectually and emotionally, making them laugh, making them think–those are the things a modern writer can take away from Dr. Seuss.
My younger students are usually quite willing to jump in with their creativity, but often those inner critics start to get really invasive by the time they are in upper elementary grades. What’s your advice to kids and adults who want to tap into their creative ideas but the editors on their shoulders get in the way?
All of us have editors on our shoulders. The only real advice I have, and something I should take to heart more than I do, is to keep writing. Write through the block, even if it’s painful. The more words you produce, the more likely you’ll be able to pull gems from your output.
I sometimes work with learners in grades 3-5 who are still developing their phonemic awareness and need to play with rhyme and manipulating sounds, but often when I pull out a rhyming picture book they are resistant because it looks like it’s for younger kids. Once I crack the book open and begin reading, they relax and enjoy the rhythmic ride, but what are the rhyming books that you might recommend for older readers?
Some of my favorite authors are Julia Donaldson and Mary Ann Hoberman. They’re just so skilled in telling lengthier stories with rhyme. I can see why a student of that age might feel that way. Verse allows for a lot of white space on the page and kids alternately embrace it, fear it, or hate it, depending on their mood.
To prepare for this interview I reviewed your booklist on your gorgeous website and wow! You’ve written some wonderful books and the adorable MOUSE CALLS was just released. I’ve ordered my copy of MOUSE CALLS and can’t wait until I get to share it with the kids in my life! One last question, what’s on the horizon for you? What are you working on next?
Right now, I’m doing weekly MOUSE CALLS events, including some book signings and school visits. I wrote a biography of Anne Hutchinson for the Core Knowledge Foundation and I’m excited to see that when it comes out. As far as new writing goes, I am mostly revising some manuscripts I wrote in the spring. Hopefully, I’ll take some big steps forward in the next few months with those.
That sounds busy. Thanks so much for taking the time to talk with me today. I’ve learned so much from you and I’m looking forward to reading what you do next!
Thank you Cassandra and Anne Marie for this inspiring and informative talk!
Blog readers, you can win a copy of MOUSE CALLS by Anne Marie and Erin Kraan, released by Beach Lane/Simon & Schuster just a couple weeks ago!
Leave one comment below answering this question: do you write in rhyme? Why or why not?
A random winner will be selected next month.
Good luck!
73 comments
Comments feed for this article
September 7, 2022 at 11:22 am
erintsiska
I do not write in rhyme, because it is so hard to do! But I admire those who can do it, because I really enjoy reading rhyming picture books. Big Julia Donaldson fan here!
September 7, 2022 at 11:27 am
Claire A. B. Freeland
Thank you for this informative post. Mouse Calls sounds fabulous.
September 7, 2022 at 11:36 am
Emily Durant (@emilydurwrites)
I love writing in rhyme and can’t seem to stop myself! I find that I usually come up with the last line first – my “punch line,” if you will. Then putting the rest of the rhyming story together is like fitting puzzle pieces together. (I also love puzzles…)
September 7, 2022 at 11:40 am
mlyablonaolcom
I often write in rhyme because it seems to come naturally to me, and I think it’s fun!
September 7, 2022 at 11:44 am
maureenegan
Mouse Calls sounds super fun!
September 7, 2022 at 12:02 pm
Sylvia Mary Grech
I’ve written a couple of stories in rhyme but I certainly need to educate myself more about rhythm and about Do’s and Don’ts.
September 7, 2022 at 12:02 pm
supermario6
Yes! I write in rhyme when the story tells me to!
September 7, 2022 at 12:03 pm
Carrie A. Pearson
My first two books had rhyming elements but because they are informational fiction and I needed to weave in accurate animal facts, I swore off rhyming for future books! You’ve piqued my curiosity again. Mouse Calls looks fabulous.
September 7, 2022 at 12:06 pm
paperwitheverything
I think writing in rhyme can be daunting. I feel as if the rhyming words are sometimes overused so they can be predictable. This article is quite enlightening and encouraging, though. Thank you!
September 7, 2022 at 12:06 pm
Christine Pinto
I don’t write in rhyme because I’ve been told it doesn’t sell, and I’m not sure I can do it well. Your post gives the lie to that myth, and makes me think twice about the fun rhymes that come into my head. Maybe I’ll look at them again!
September 7, 2022 at 12:08 pm
Chelle Martin
I enjoy writing in rhyme. I’m also a musician and that probably helps. I just ordered your book at my local library. Can’t wait to read it.
September 7, 2022 at 12:09 pm
Hannah Roy LaGrone
I started off writing in rhyme, and have had to really push myself to try prose in order to possibly seem more versatile to the agents I’m querying. I also have a fairly musical background which definitely helps with “hearing” the rhythm as I write. This post gave me a lot of hope and I’m excited to read all of your books, Anne Marie!
September 7, 2022 at 12:15 pm
writeremmcbride
What a great interview! Thank you both for the information and for pointing out both your inspiration sources and techniques. I do write both rhyming and non-rhyming picture book texts, and having done school read-aloud for many years for elementary school students, the comment about a reader or listener’s expectations of both meter and rhyme is welcomed! I rehearsed many times before presenting my lessons. Refrains are also very nice, in that they generate participation from the listeners. Thank you! I look forward to seeing your book!
September 7, 2022 at 12:49 pm
Juliana Jones
Thanks so much for sharing your feelings on rhyming. Your words on page breaks were very inspirational! I’m a singer myself but can’t make the leap to rhyming picture books. The stresses in words stress me out. 😉
September 7, 2022 at 12:59 pm
Katie Mills Giorgio
How fun…thanks for sharing!
September 7, 2022 at 1:01 pm
Mia Geiger
Yes. This book looks adorable! Thank you for this enlightening interview! Congratulations on your newest book!
September 7, 2022 at 1:05 pm
lmconnors
I have tried writing in rhyme and love the process, but I have only subbed something once.
This post was very helpful. Thanks! And congrats!
September 7, 2022 at 1:12 pm
Judy Y
I do write in rhyme, when the project wants it and it works 😉 It’s fun, for all the reasons you note. I love your points about near rhyme. Looking forward to reading Mouse Calls!
September 7, 2022 at 1:32 pm
Annette Martin
Most of the time
I write in rhyme. 🙂
September 7, 2022 at 2:04 pm
Barbara Kimmel
So much helpful information! Thank you! I do write in rhyme (well, I TRY to…) which makes me so appreciative of those who do it so beautifully making it effortless to read.
September 7, 2022 at 2:20 pm
Michele Helsel
I have tried to write in rhyme, but I agree it is hard. I have a hard time with the stresses. Sometimes I try to make stresses where maybe they don’t belong. Thanks for all of your advice! It was fantastic!
September 7, 2022 at 2:30 pm
Kim A Larson
Great interview. Thanks for sharing, Anne Marie! Congratulations on another book. My first rhyming story won the Ann Whitford Paul award – but has yet to find a publisher. I’ve only written one rhyming since, but I enjoyed it.
September 7, 2022 at 3:03 pm
Bethanny Parker
Congrats on your books! I love the idea of a visual refrain done through illustrations.
September 7, 2022 at 3:05 pm
Donna Rossman
So much great info! Thanks for sharing and congrats, Anne Marie! My first PB (years ago) was in rhyme, but was advised to put it in prose—which I just did. I did take a rhyming course. Unfortunately, I need a refresher.
September 7, 2022 at 3:26 pm
Barbara Senenman
I am writing in rhyme and having a heck of a time. I tried non-verse, but made it worse!
I’m trying!
By the way, enjoyed this post and congratulations on Mouse Calls. Love the title.
September 7, 2022 at 3:49 pm
rosecappelli
I enjoy writing in rhyme and have a few manuscripts that rhyme. I think I’m better at sifting out the meter and rhythm, though. I agree with Anne Marie that a musical background helps a lot. Looking forward to MOUSE CALLS!
September 7, 2022 at 3:50 pm
heylookawriterfellow
I don’t write in rhyme, but I’ve tried on several occasions. Dang, it’s hard!
September 7, 2022 at 3:57 pm
Kathryn Powell
I do write in rhyme. I’m a musician and I’ve been a songwriter forever, so I can’t help hearing the steady beat, rhythms, and dynamics in words. Plus it’s a lot like working puzzles and solving problems. So it’s just fun.
September 7, 2022 at 4:09 pm
anchance
I love this blog post. My very first manuscript was written in rhyme. I have had no luck so far with it, but I don’t want to give up on it. As a teacher, I believe that rhyming picture books hold a very important role in a child’s phonemic awareness and development. They are also fun to read and become quick favorites for parents and teachers reading them aloud. Thank you for your insight and gentle push to keep going!
September 7, 2022 at 4:42 pm
Tamara Rittershaus
I often write in rhyme! Writing in poetic meter is like solving a puzzle — like a sudoku of words — and I love the challenge!
September 7, 2022 at 5:10 pm
Kathy Doherty
There is nothing like a darling, well-written, rhyming picture book!
September 7, 2022 at 5:23 pm
Rosi Hollinbeck
I do write in rhyme when a story comes into my head that way.
September 7, 2022 at 6:35 pm
Debra Shumaker
Oh my, what a great interview! Excited to read MOUSE CALLS! It sounds absolutely delightful!
September 7, 2022 at 7:24 pm
Brenda Huante
Thank you! I can’t wait to read MOUSE CALLS!
September 7, 2022 at 7:51 pm
Sara Matson
Writing in rhyme is a new love for me, and I think it’s so much fun–and so challenging! I can’t wait to learn from your books! (Off to the library to request them….)
September 7, 2022 at 8:04 pm
Nancy Riley
Some of my stories are written in rhyme, but not all. Rhyme either flows out of me or not; I can’t force it. I’m in a wonderful rhyming critique group and we work our rhyming and storytelling skills. I love the idea of a visual refrain that Anne Marie mentioned! Thanks for a wonderful interview.
September 7, 2022 at 8:07 pm
Susan Johnston Taylor
I write in rhyme and prose, but for many reasons, I find rhyme trickier, especially the meter.
September 7, 2022 at 8:32 pm
Lisa Hudson
Thanks for the advice. I do sometimes write in rhyme, but I can’t explain why–the stories come to me that way.
September 7, 2022 at 9:20 pm
marty bellis
I love writing in rhyme because I love reading rhyming stories. But some work better than others, of course. So in the end, it depends upon the manuscript.
Mouse Calls sounds delightful! What a cute premise.
September 7, 2022 at 10:34 pm
jbbower
What an inspiring post. I’ve been dragging a title around for years too! Now, I know there is hope : ) Congratulations on your new book!
September 7, 2022 at 11:24 pm
seschipper
Wow, I truly enjoyed this post! Writing in rhyme is a gift. I love rhyming stories. As a K/1st grade teacher I found kids loved rhyming elements. I feel I need to take more classes to truly become “qualified in writing rhyme”!
Thanks for sharing! 🙂
September 8, 2022 at 12:49 am
Kaye Baillie
Great post with lots of helpful tips! Thanks Anne Marie and Tara!
September 8, 2022 at 12:59 am
seahorsecoffeeelektra79018
I dabble in rhyme some of the time although heaven knows prose is much easier. I’m quite anxious to take a look at your new book. Sounds fascinating!
September 8, 2022 at 4:48 am
Suzanne Lewis
Great post–so full of helpful advice and kind encouragement! Thanks you! I too am a lover of rhythm and rhyme, so that approach pops into my head and heart when new ideas are ready to be written. No stopping me now!
September 8, 2022 at 8:07 am
Rebecca Gardyn Levington
What a great interview! And yes, I pretty much ONLY write in rhyme these days. Like Anne Marie, I LOVE playing with words and their sounds. Getting the rhyme and meter just right is SO satisfying, like FINALLY getting Wordle after an agonizing first 5 tries. 🙂
September 8, 2022 at 9:35 am
Jill Purtee (P. J.)
Years ago, when I read the chapter on rhyme in Ann Whitford Paul’s book, Writing Picture Books, I finished the chapter and thought I’ll never write in rhyme . . . too difficult. I had to eat my words. Sometimes my pros becomes so lyrical (too lyrical), so I switch to rhyme. Rhyme appeals to the very young listener, so sometimes I write rhyme from the get-go. I enjoy the cadence . . . ironic . . . I was once a drummer.
September 8, 2022 at 9:59 am
Angie
So adorable! Love the word play! I do not write in rhyme because I am afraid of it! I recognize good and not-so-good rhyme, but haven’t had the experience or training in how to write rhyme. Other than the thousands of books I’ve read as a preschool teacher, mom, and nana. Congrats!
September 8, 2022 at 10:39 am
Danielle Hammelef
I have written in rhyme, but need to continue studying more mentor texts to help me improve my skills.
September 8, 2022 at 11:15 am
Sandy Lowe
I write in rhyme for some of the same reasons Anne Marie mentioned. I love that bounce of rhythm and often words just arrive in my head that way. It’s encouraging to know she started with titles and couplets and worked from there.
September 8, 2022 at 11:22 am
Darcee A Freier
Thanks for the informative interview. I’ve never written in rhyme. Mostly because it’s been discouraged and I’ve never had a story that called out so loudly for rhyme that I risked it. Maybe I’ll find one now. 🙂
September 8, 2022 at 12:39 pm
Teresa Rodrigues
Great post! Thanks, Tara, Cassandra, and Anne Marie. It’s fun (sometimes, lol) to write in rhyme!
September 8, 2022 at 3:40 pm
Marci Whitehurst
This book looks amazing! It sounds like you’ve made a fun read aloud with great rhyme. Congrats!
September 8, 2022 at 4:53 pm
Jessica Milo
This was a wonderful interview, and I learned new things! Mouse Calls looks adorable, and the cover is just fantastic. I do write in rhyme! And in prose, but I love writing in rhyme and feel like it’s my sweet spot. I love writing informational fiction rhyming picture books (I have two on different insects) and am working on a nature-themed one right now about autumn changing into winter. I also have two short board books written in rhyme. What I love doing and what’s best for me is writing just a poem. And then from there, I find ways to give it tension, flush it out and add conflict, and play with the pacing.
September 9, 2022 at 10:04 am
Susan Jobsky
I do write in rhyme, but I’ve not considered submitting any of my rhyming stories for publication. I wrote them for my children long ago. I wonder, now, if the concepts might be relevant and I should dust them off and give it another go.
September 9, 2022 at 10:10 am
Karin Larson
This was a terrific interview, thank you. I loved hearing about your process and love writing in rhyme as well. Mouse Calls looks wonderful. Congratulations!
September 9, 2022 at 9:28 pm
evelynchristensen
A great post, Anne Marie and Cassandra! Thanks! I write in rhyme about half the time. I do so because it’s fun and the story seems to call for it.
September 10, 2022 at 11:20 am
Natasha Wing
I do write and publish in rhyme. I agree that it sounds like music and it allows kids to anticipate the rhyming word.
September 10, 2022 at 11:22 am
Natasha Wing
I write in rhyme for the challenge of making it work and for the fun of the beats.
September 10, 2022 at 4:27 pm
Andrea Mack
Sometimes an idea for a book will pop into my head in rhyme. But it takes longer to write a story in rhyme than prose, and I don’t think I’ve ever done it successfully yet. Maybe one day.
September 10, 2022 at 5:56 pm
Stephen S. Martin
Some wonderful stuff here. Thanx for sharing.
September 10, 2022 at 8:47 pm
Janet Smart
Thanks for the informative post. I love writing in rhyme because children and adults love rhyming stories and so do I.
September 10, 2022 at 10:06 pm
Charles Trevino
To write in rhyme a lot?
Why not?
September 10, 2022 at 11:44 pm
Janet Frenck Sheets
I only write in rhyme if I’m absolutely positive that it will make the story better. Rhyme is so hard to do well.
September 11, 2022 at 7:07 pm
Sandy
My first writing attempt was in rhyme, but it’s very difficult. So I write in prose with sprinkles of rhyme.
September 11, 2022 at 7:32 pm
Antoinette Truglio Martin
This is a w9nderful and 8nfirmatu e interview. Thanks a bunch.
September 11, 2022 at 10:57 pm
shirley301
I love the challenge of writing in rhyme.
September 12, 2022 at 10:37 am
Teresa 何 Robeson
I totally write in rhyme, though more for magazines than books. 🙂
September 17, 2022 at 2:05 am
Natalie Lynn Tanner
I’m IN LOVE with MOUSE CALLS, just from looking at the cover! CAN’T WAIT to read this one! And I SO APPRECIATE your advice about the importance of honoring kids by meeting them where they are. SO IMPORTANT! THANK YOU for the INSPIRATION!
September 18, 2022 at 12:55 am
Karan Greene
I have resisted writing in rhyme, but my most recent story insisted it must be written in rhyme. So I finally gave in and it was just right for that story.
September 27, 2022 at 10:53 am
Mary
I’ve been saving this to read more thoroughly when my life wasn’t so crazy. So glad I saved this and it was helpful to hear your way of writing in rhyme. I do write in rhyme and need to work on making the rhyme fit the story rather than the other way around.
September 29, 2022 at 11:28 pm
Elayne
I do sometimes write in rhyme. I usually don’t because it is harder to do, and it needs to be for the right reasons (some stories just don’t lend themselves to a sing-songy rhythm). But the stories that I have written in rhyme, I will say, have earned me the most accolades and editor interest (despite conventional wisdom). So it’s something I hope to do more and more of in the future, as I get more and more comfortable with it!
September 30, 2022 at 1:31 pm
Abigail Perry
I don’t write in rhyme because I would rather my stories not rhyme than be forced rhyme.
January 8, 2023 at 4:42 pm
Debbie Moeller
I do write in rhyme. Sometimes the story just comes to me that way. Sometimes I make the choice to write in rhyme. Nice interview.