
Breakup Nonet
Write a nonet poem about a relationship breakup.
Prizes
- Grand Prize:
- $500
- Second Place:
- $200
- 25 Runners-up:
- $20
Status
CompletedTimeline
Submissions opened
Jul 09, 2024
Submissions closed
Aug 02, 2024 3:59 AM CUT
Results
Aug 19, 2024
Prizes
- Grand Prize:
- $500
- Second Place:
- $200
- 25 Runners-up:
- $20
Status
CompletedTimeline
Submissions opened
Jul 09, 2024
Submissions closed
Aug 02, 2024 3:59 AM CUT
Results
Aug 19, 2024
About this challenge
The Prompt
Write a nonet poem about a relationship breakup.
For this contest, we challenge you to write a nonet poem about a relationship breakup. Capture the emotions and reflections of a breakup in a concise, powerful way. Whether it’s the pain of parting, the journey of healing, or the lessons learned, use the structure of the nonet to tell a story. We look forward to feelings all the feels in your heartfelt poems and hope that the writing process for this challenge can be cathartic.
What is a Nonet?
A nonet is a nine-line poem that starts with nine syllables in the first line and decreases by one syllable per line, ending with a single syllable in the final line. This form allows for a gradual narrowing of focus that packs a punch. Here is the syllable structure of a nonet:
Line 1: 9 syllables
Line 2: 8 syllables
Line 3: 7 syllables
Line 4: 6 syllables
Line 5: 5 syllables
Line 6: 4 syllables
Line 7: 3 syllables
Line 8: 2 syllables
Line 9: 1 syllable
How will we count syllables?
For clarity and fairness, we will use this syllable counter to judge the challenge:
UPDATE: We have received some feedback that the syllable counter is inaccurate. Please see our resource here on how we count syllables. We recognize that there are different ways of pronouncing words by region and dialect, and we appreciate that! We do count syllables using this syllable counter, however, we allow room for a one syllable difference based on varying pronunciations of words.
In order for your submission to qualify, it must be:
- A nonet. The poem must be nine lines, starting with nine syllables in the first line and decreasing by one syllable per line, ending with a single syllable in the final line.
- Submitted to Poets community. Choosing a community is a final step in the submission process. Your poem may be rejected for word count requirements if it is submitted to any other community.
The Prizes
Special shout-out to Maureen Y. Palmer for inspiring this challenge idea in Share Your Ideas to Shape the Future of Vocal Challenges.
How to enter
For your poem to be eligible, it should be submitted to the Poets Community, follow the rules above, and adhere to our Community Guidelines. Poems published on Vocal and entered into the contest up until 11:59 PM ET on August 1, 2024 will be entered for consideration. Official Rules for the Challenge can be found here.
The Breakup Nonet Challenge is exclusive to Vocal+ members. To learn more and upgrade to Vocal+ visit https://todaysurvey.today/vocal-plus%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/span%3E%3C/a%3E.%3C/p%3E%3Cp class="css-1923z11-Text">To be eligible to win the grand prize, second place, or runners-up prizes, you must be over the age of 13 and residing in a country where Stripe is available at the time of entry. A complete list of countries where Stripe is available can be found here—winners will need to have a Stripe account created and connected in order to receive the prizes. For this reason, entrants located outside of any of these countries will not be eligible to win.
Any content that is determined to be generated by artificial intelligence will be disqualified and will not be eligible to place in any challenge. Read more on our stance here.
Open challenges
Challenges you can enter now for a chance to win.
Craft Over Catharsis
Write a story that prioritizes structure, technique, or form over emotional release.
$200 Grand Prize5 days leftInstructions for a Feeling
Write a poem that gives instructions for how to experience, create, or avoid a feeling.
$200 Grand Prize10 days leftRituals of Affection
Write a story about a recurring ritual tied to love, romance, or connection. Something about it is unusual, unsettling, or unexplained.
$200 Grand Prize12 days leftThe Unnecessary Line
Write a poem that includes one line that does not strictly belong and let the tension it creates remain unresolved.
$200 Grand Prize19 days leftA System That Isn’t Working
Write about a system, whether social, economic, cultural, technological, or otherwise, that feels broken or misaligned.
$200 Grand Prize26 days leftEveryone Is Acting Normally
Write a story in which something is clearly wrong but all characters behave as if everything is normal.
$200 Grand Prize33 days leftThe Haiku of Now
Write a haiku that captures a small, precise moment from the present without reflection or commentary.
$200 Grand Prize37 days leftWhat the Myth Gets Wrong
Write a story set in a world where a well-known myth exists that focuses on a detail the myth simplifies, ignores, or distorts.
$200 Grand Prize39 days leftSomething Is Beginning, I Think
Write a story that opens at the edge of a beginning that feels uncertain, partial, or reluctant and avoid resolution.
$200 Grand Prize46 days leftSay It Plainly
Write a poem that states its central concern directly without metaphor, indirection, or symbolic substitution.
$200 Grand Prize53 days leftThe Rule Everyone Knows
Write a story centered on an unspoken rule that everyone in the story understands and follows, allowing the rule to emerge through behavior.
$200 Grand Prize58 days left
Challenge resources
Instructions Included Challenge Winners
For the Instructions Included challenge, we asked writers to tell a story through instructions and to trust the form to carry what could not be said outright. Across the top entries, that trust paid off in many different ways.
By Vocal Curation Team4 days ago in Resources
The Ritual of Winter Challenge Winners
Welcome to the Winners Announcement for The Ritual of Winter challenge. This prompt focused on winter rituals and the meaning that settles into them over time. The top pieces stay grounded in ordinary acts and repeated routines, letting winter shape the work through pace, attention, and restraint.
By Vocal Curation Team24 days ago in Resources










