Spring 2021 Teeny Tiny Writing Contest Winner!

Congratulations to our Spring 2021 Teeny Tiny Writing Contest Winner: Katie Hoff. Under the image, you can find her lovely poem, “The Tree.”

This image of a tree with exposed roots in silhouette inspired our Spring 2021 Teeny Tiny Writing Contest Winner: Katie Hoff.

The Tree

by Katie Hoff

Deep within a forest

In a clearing stands a tree

Shorter than the rest of them

Out of all the eye could see

This tree had weaker bark

And was plainer too

With fewer leaves than others

And flowers that seldom grew

It had no fruit to eat

Nor branches you could climb

Yet out of all the other trees

I’d wish this one could be mine

Even though it might not seem

To be as good as the rest

This one is the only one

That stands up to the test

I couldn’t notice other trees

For they all look the same

But this one has a different feel

So this one I shall claim

The few leaves that grew there

And the flowers too

Were the most delicate

Through and through

This tree had truly tall branches

The bark I thought was plainer

Had just made me blind

Just not within its kind

It may not be the best

But between you and me

I really think I’m growing

Quite fond of this tree

I tried to show my peers

But they all laughed at me

They told me it was pretty strange

To be fond of a tree

I wasn’t sad

I wasn’t even mad

I would say

I felt rather glad

For when I had first seen my tree

I had thought it strange

But after a little while

My perspective began to change

After that I realized

I didn’t have to be

Like anybody else

For I am just the tree

(In full disclosure, the Spring 2021 Teeny Tiny Writing Contest winner was also the only entrant, which made judging super easy, and I didn’t have to stress about being related to contest entrants. That makes it a bit less like a contest, though. Fortunately, this is a decent poem. But, if you think you have an equally good or better story or poem in you, the Pencil Princess Workshop will try at least one more of these contests. Details on the Contest tab. )

Humility

blue handprint on light green background, illustrating first image of Humility poem

His hands are strong and gentle

pushing lawn mowers

opening jars

soothing babies

His fingers, long and sensitive

typing code

untangling knots

wiping away tears

His heart is large and growing

leaking love

dispensing comfort

serving all

This is an attempt at a poem in response to a prompt from my Sunday School class, Imago Dei: Make an artistic representation of humility. My response (as might be obvious to those who know him) is inspired by my husband, Craig Hoff.

You can find another Imago Dei poem here.

Want to make your own artistic representation of humility? Feel free to add your own poem/story/? to the comments. (And if you’re local and don’t have a church, I recommend mine)

Spring 2021 Teeny Tiny Writing Contest

Write a poem or short story about this picture. –Deadline Extended to midnight US Mountain time, June 26, 2021

Black Silhouette of a tree with its roots exposed--on a white background.
The Pencil Princess Workshop will award $25 & publication in the RLS Hoff Newsletter to the winner. I will also publish both the winning entry and honorable mentions on this website.

Rules:

  • Entries must be 1000 words or fewer, must be written in English, and must be appropriate for a general audience that may include children.
  • The deadline to enter is midnight at US Mountain Standard Time on June 26, 2021
  • Entries must be original poems or stories, written by the person entering the contest.
  • Writers of the poems or stories retain all rights.
  • Writers entering this contest grant The Pencil Princess Workshop the non-exclusive right to publish their entry in the RLS Hoff Newsletter and on this website.
  • Submissions are open to anyone from anywhere.
  • Young writers are welcome and encouraged to enter. However, they must get a parent or guardian’s permission to do so if they are under 18 years of age.
  • RLS Hoff will decide which piece is best based on (her admittedly subjective opinion of) the quality of the writing and the connection to the picture.
  • Look for the winning entry in the June 30, 2021 RLS Hoff Newsletter. Winners will begin to appear on the website June 30 as well.

How to Enter:

Download this form, fill it out, and send it to rlshoff@pencilprincessworkshop.com. Use “Spring 2021 Writing Contest” as the subject line.

You Are

A drawing of flowers in grass to accompany the poem "You Are."

You are

The sun I turn toward

The rain that quenches my thirst

The earth that stabilizes

me

And not only me

But also every flower

in this field

in this world.

You are.

This is an attempt at a poem in response to the prompt given in my Sunday School class, Imago Dei, this week: “Write a poem, story, or other ? using metaphor to describe God.”

If this prompt inspires you, feel free to add your own poem/story/? to the comments. (And if you’re local and don’t have a church, I recommend mine)

Fibonacci

A spiral of feathers in burnished brown and black. The word "Fibonacci" printed atop them

a poem, inspired by conversation with my middle child (the one who is all into programming and mathematics)

Neither random

Nor entirely ordered

Spirals

And Dots

Synced

In Dancing

Rhythmic

Progression

© 2021 R.L.S. Hoff.

StarRacer Update 2021-01

One woman hugs another tightly. (We only see the back of the woman being hugged.)

StarRacer Update 2021-01: My rewrite is coming along. Here’s a mini-excerpt from a recent chapter:

“Oh, yes. Thank you, Bria!” Danielle transferred her hug to Bria who looked about as uncomfortable with it as Anya had felt when Danielle was hugging her. Maybe Anya wasn’t as strange as she imagined she was. She smiled as she got moving on the last afternoon of training.

Tomorrow, they’d finish loading StarRacer.

Free Hope Gardens Chapters

Sam’s too smart to fall for the captain’s daughter–or to get stuck in the greenhouses. Isn’t he?

Get your free Hope Gardens chapters HERE.

Note: If you are a newsletter subscriber, you have probably seen all of these chapters already.

Hope Gardens is a story in the Golden Terrace Colony Universe (This is also the world of Leaving Hope). The remainder of the story is coming out chapter by chapter in R.L.S. Hoff’s twice-monthly(ish) newsletter (You can sign up to receive it here.)

Hope is still a couple of generations away from Shindashir, but the ship is already nearly worn out. Sam’s family lives in one of most delapidated sections, and he knows they’ll likely have to move to an even more crowded area soon. With his academic skills, Sam’s his family’s best hope for changing their fortunes.

He knows all that, and still Sam is strangely attracted to two things that could derail his hopes to land a scholarship and good job that will pull his family out of poverty—the greenhouses (a dead-end work detail if anybody ever saw one), and the captain’s daughter (a thoughtlessly rich beauty who couldn’t possibly bring him anything but trouble).

Sam must do right by his family, but he also can’t help his greenhouse fascination—or his growing interest in Eleanor.

2020 Successes

Children’s author Julie Hedlund challenged participants of her 12 Days of Christmas for Writers series to post 2020 SUCCESSES (rather than resolutions) on our blogs this year. She believes traditional New Year’s resolutions come from a place of negativity. They focus on what DIDN’T get done or achieved in the previous year.  Instead, she suggests we set goals for the New Year that BUILD on our previous years’ achievements. I decided to participate in this Anti-Resolution Revolution! Here is my list for 2020:

2020 Successes--covers for Leaving Hope, Hope Gardens and a paperback mock-up of Songs of Healing. Also the illustration for The Aersyla Tree (by Heidi Black)
  1. Published Leaving Hope.
  2. Published Songs of Healing.
  3. Wrote and sent out a bi-monthly newsletter beginning in June.
  4. Finished and revised a draft of DragonPets: The Sacrifice.
  5. Wrote two new picture book manuscripts

6. Revised two (different) picture book drafts.

7. Put out a new chapter of Hope Gardens at least twice a month.

8. Learned how to format manuscripts for Kindle, epub, and print.

9. Held a fun book launch party.

10. Designed a covers I like for a Channillo channel and for Hope Gardens.

11. Made a book trailer.

12. Started networking with readers and other authors on a variety of social media sites and other platforms.

13. Received multiple four and five star reviews for my books on Goodreads and Amazon.

How about you? What are your 2020 Successes? I’d love to hear them, so if you’re willing to share, please leave a comment with yours (or if you’ve done a blog post like mine, feel free to link to it in the comments.)