Friday, February 26, 2021
Poetry Review # 42
Emma's Poem: The Voice of the Statue of Liberty
Illustrator: Claire A. Nivola
Publisher: HMH Books for
Reading Ages: 4 - 7 years
Genre: Children's Poetry, Immigration, Children's Sociology, Picture Book
I Gave This Book 5 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦
Why 5 Roars? This is a beautifully written book that should be in every library and classroom. It is hard to find anything negative to say about a wealthy woman that gave her voice to the poor and brought immigration into the spotlight.
Appeal: Children whose families are immigrants can relate to the experience of being in a new country or culture.
Connections:
Spotlight Poem -
~~ The New Colossus
Sharing—This would be a great book to read before taking children to New York or the Statue of Liberty.
Activity - The Statue of Liberty
Thursday, February 25, 2021
Poetry Review #41
Publisher: Balzer + Bray; Reprint, 2010
ASIN: B003MVZ5SQ
Format: eBook
Reading Ages: Teen & Young Adult - 9th grade & up
I Gave This Book 4 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦
Overall Quality: The author is more than capable of creating emotions with her poetry, and this is not her first book written in free verse.
"The expressive writing, masterful tension, and parallels to
modern group dynamics create a powerful and relevant page-turner."~~ Publishers Weekly
Layout: The layout is in a novel arrangement.
Connections:Spotlight Poem -
Sharing—A readers theater performance might work for sharing parts of this work.
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Poetry Review #40
Author: Kate Hosford
Illustrator: Jennifer M. Potter
Publisher: Running Press Kids, 2019
ISBN: 978-0762467143
I Gave This Book 4 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦
Why 4 Roars? The poetry and illustrations are beautiful. There is an additional short paragraph on the opposite page that talks about the sleeping habits of the selected animal in the poem. I would have liked to have seen a little more information about the animals and their sleeping patterns, but the information presented was interesting and fun.
Poetic Elements: The rhythm and simplicity of the poems make it a great book for younger children. The combination of scientific information and lyrical imagery merges well.
"Firmly in control of language and rhyme schemes but
varying tone and tempo as she goes, Hosford marvels at the sleep habits of 18
creatures. At once eye-closing and eye-opening."
~ Kirkus Reviews
Overall Quality:
"The work as a whole makes a unique, engaging read aloud
from start to finish, and children may well pull it from the shelves again and
again to revisit favorite excerpts."
~~Publishers Weekly
Layout: The poems are presented like a traditional children's picture book, with the addition of the informational paragraph opposite the poem. It does not feel disjointed or separate but reads more like a story.
Connections:Spotlight Poem—My favorite poem in this collection is "Mother Otter Gives Advice to Her Pup." The author discusses how sea otters sleep in the water and "sometimes hold hands."
Sharing—This collection of poems would be a great way to calm students down before nap time or inspire conversations about nature and the sleeping behaviors of animals.
Activity - Sleep Education For School
Saturday, February 20, 2021
Poetry Friday!
by Sylvia Vardell and Janet Wong
Thursday, February 18, 2021
Poetry Review #39
Lilah Tov Good Night
Illustrator: Noar Lee Naggan
Publisher: Nancy Paulsen Books, 2020
Genre: Poetry for Early Learning, Children's Jewish Fiction Books, Stories in Verse, Lyrical Lullaby
Appeal: This book is deceptively simple. On one level it is a simple children’s story about a little girl saying good night to common things around her, but on a deeper level you see a family leaving their home in search of a new one. The Jewish diaspora was a major part of Jewish history and is unobtrusively discovered in the lovely artwork that accompanies the poem.
“As the sun sets and the moon rises, an unnamed young child says good night to everything in the natural landscape. . . . Simple, brief, descriptive text... Lush, detailed, soft-edged landscapes provide another, deeper, and more nuanced level to the proceedings. . . . The protagonist is saying good night to the creatures and places spotted on what readers will see as a lengthy journey. . . . At the end of their travels, there is a new home awaiting them. They travel quietly and surreptitiously. . . . Each young reader will interpret the work differently depending on individual understanding and knowledge of history, or perhaps with a wise adult to help. Haunting and beautiful.”
~~Kirkus Reviews
Connections:
Tuesday, February 16, 2021
Poetry Review #38
Publisher: Scholastic, 2009
ISBN: 2009 978-0590371254
Reading Ages: 10 & up
Genre: Teen & Young Adult United States Historical Fiction, Teen & Young Adult Poetry
I Gave This Book 5 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦
I also think this book is significant because it was one of the few poetry books awarded a Newbery Medal before 2009.
“from 1987 to 1997, only 1 out of 42 books awarded was a poetry collection, the 1989 medal winner Joyful Noise, by Paul Fleischman. From 1998 to 2008, 3 out of 43 books were poetry (Carver, Show Way, and Out of the Dust)”
~~ Roxanne Hsu Feldman
It is not uncommon to remind future generations of the hardships that were overcome and the value of not repeating mistakes in history in the form of literature. I believe that more and more American classrooms and younger generations are struggling to read books that value important historical lessons because of the uncomfortable information. The “Dust Bowl” warns us of agricultural elements that could have been prevented and the horrors that follow when humans disrespect the land.
"Billie Jo tells of her life in Oklahoma during the Dust Bowl: Her mother dies after a gruesome accident caused by her father's leaving a bucket of kerosene near the stove; Billie Jo is partially responsible--fully responsible in the eyes of the community--and sustains injuries that seem to bring to a halt her dreams of playing the piano. Finding a way through her grief is not made easier by her taciturn father, who went on a drinking binge while Billie Joe's mother, not yet dead, begged for water. Told in free-verse poetry of dated entries that span the winter of 1934 to the winter of 1935, this is an unremittingly bleak portrait of one corner of Depression-era life. In Billie Jo, the only character who comes to life, Hesse (The Music of Dolphins, 1996, etc.) presents a hale and determined heroine who confronts unrelenting misery and begins to transcend it. The poem/novel ends with only a trace of hope; there are no pat endings, but a glimpse of beauty wrought from brutal reality." ~~ Kirkus Reviews
Connections:
Spotlight Poem -
He sat across Ma and blew his nose.
Mud streamed out.
He coughed and spit out
mud.
If he had cried,
his tears would have been mud too,
but he didn’t cry.
And neither did Ma.”