Esther Derby and Diana Larsen's Agile Retrospectives book is a great resource!
A couple of activities I've recently run and found valuable are "Liked, Learned, Lacked, and Longed for", and the Scrum Values (Commitment, Focus, Openness, Respect, Courage), starting with a Team discussion of what those Values mean and coming to a common understanding, each member dot-voting on a Fist-of-Five (0-5) scale where they felt (separately) both the Team and the overall Organization were in terms of each of those Values, and looking for insight from the resulting data.
A foundational Retrospective format is:
- Set the Stage
- Gather data
- Derive insights
- Determine actions
- Appreciations
Setting the Stage varies, depending on the 'where the Team is'. As needed/helpful, rereading Norm Kerth's Prime Directive, and/or reinterating the Team's rules can be valuable.
Gather data is a good place for the activities above, Mad/Sad/Glad, and many, many more. The 5 Why's is a great tool to help find insights. I believe actions to try in the next iteration should be limited to 1, or 2 at the most, to provide focus, and avoid any sense of being overwhelmed. I find it very useful to check-in with the Team during the next Sprint on how the chosen actions are proceeding, as well as in the following Retrospective.
Appreciations are simple - Team members state "I appreciate [name(s)] for [something they did during the Sprint/a general attribute]. These can be slightly awkward when first begun, but within 2-3 Sprints all of my Teams have embraced it, to the point that I can change Retrospective activities almost completely, but can't mess with Appreciations.
Here's a couple of links you may find helpful:
http://agileretrospectivewiki.org/index.php?title=Main_Page
http://www.agileadvice.com/archives/2006/02/interation_retr.html
Every iteration should deliver working software, customer value, stronger individuals, and a better Team. The Retrospective is an important component of realizing all of these, particularly the last two.
Good luck!