Thursday, February 16, 2012

COMETS, STARS, THE MOON, AND MARS by Douglas Florian


Florian, Douglas. 2007. COMETS, STARS, THE MOON, AND MARS. Florida: Harcourt. ISBN 9780152053727

Review

Vivid and striking paintings with geometric cut-outs capture the audience’s attention and lead the reader into a glowing collection of space-inspired, educational poems.  Florian uses his writing to teach knowledge of planets and all things space including size, purpose, and color.

Rhyme is a constant pattern throughout the book, hence Skywatch,
you might try/the starry sky
and
good to sight/very bright.
Some poems also use pattern as in Pluto, which uses “Pluto was a planet” for every other line. 

Sense imagery is used throughout the book as Florian describes the planets in ways the reader can visualize.  Mercury uses movement words like speed, quick, fast, rush, and racing.  A Galaxy uses descriptive words such as round, flat, and spiral.  This poem is written in a swirl shape to resemble the swirling galaxy movement to enhance the written word. 

Other worthy notes include the use of metaphor in The Minor Planets to compare the small planets to breakfast buns.  This fun use might make you hungry! His poem, Martians, uses alliteration as it repeats the terms Mars and Martians in the lines.  Whether for educational purposes or just for fun, this book is one you will want in your child’s collection.


Poetry in Action:

Introducing the Poem:  Show students real life pictures from NASA’s website: http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/?s=1
which includes sand, ice caps, and even some unexplained things.

Follow up Activity:  Give each student a balloon to blow up and have them use markers to illustrate the description of Mars on the balloon.  Attach a string and piece of paper to the balloon and have students write a Martian-tale for Mars.  Then have students pass the balloons around so that everyone gets to see others’ illustrations and read their tales. 

Mars

Mars is red,
And Mars is rusty,
Sandy, rocky,
Very dusty.
Mars has ice caps.
Once had streams.
Mars has Martians…
In your dreams!

WORDS WITH WRINKLED KNEES by Barbara Juster Esbensen


Esbensen, Barbara Juster. 1986. WORDS WITH WRINKLED KNEES. Ill. by John Stadler. New York: Crowell. ISBN 0690045042

Review

Twenty animal words are described to evoke visualization through the eyes of Esbensen. Words like snake, wolf, and penguin are given characteristics which may show through the animal itself or the word and its letters.  Concrete items, these animals are abstractly portrayed in a fun and pensive way. Esbensen’s style is irregular and requires pauses and breaks to give meaning.  Sound is used throughout in poems such as Whale, Frog, and Snake with sound words like “splat!,” “whoooosh,” and “sssssssss.”  “Wide,” “Li” (the Li as in the first part of the word lion), and “white” are used in the poem Lion to create assonance.  Spider includes hyphenated, “ing” words to create rhythm and rhyme.  “Fast-biting,” “tight-wrapping,” and “eight-legged” make speaking about spiders roll off the tongue more easily.  In a collection where mosquito noses are compared to stilettos and penguins wear black slippers, a different approach is used to make animals and poetry a joyful experience.

Poetry in Action:

Introducing the Poem:  Including the letters from “giraffe,” add other letters and make cards with only one letter on them; enough for the class.  For instance, one card will have a g, another will have an I, while a third will have an r.  Have students hold letter cards up and without moving or talking, just by looking around, have them think about the letters and if they can spell an animal with the letters on student’s cards.  (We call this Words with Friends).  After a few minutes, let them get up and talk and try to create animal words with their letters, hoping that someone will figure out you can spell giraffe.  Before reading, give students a few fun facts about giraffes including height, average age, and habitat.

Follow up Activity:  In a box, write other animal names and have students draw for one.  The animal that they get, students should use other books to find a few fun facts and a poem or poetry book that goes with that animal.  If time allows, have students present their facts and poems. 

G I R A F F E

Quietly nibbling
Sneezing now and then
(because of the dust)   this word
munches on the leaves
of books lined up
on the topmost shelves
of high-ceilinged libraries
In the oldest
neighborhoods
in town

G I R A F F E

The whole word has been spray-painted
golden brown through a large
net    The pattern    (light
and shadow filtered through dirty
windows)     protects it
from sharp-eyed
librarians     who think they hear
someone eating paper
high above their heads

 G I R A F F E    a word with legs
so tall    with neck so long
it has never seen
its knees!

A shy word        G I R A F F E   might
take its favorite
food     right from your hand
Offer it a bite of
STEEPLE     TOWER     STRATOSHPERE and
Maybe it will follow you home

If you want to keep      G I R A F F E
in your room
you only need to take
the roof
off the house!

THIS BIG SKY by Pat Mora


Author Pat Mora
Photo by http://www.ncte.org/
Mora, Pat. 1998. THIS BIG SKY. Ill. by Steve Jenkins. New York: Scholastic Press. ISBN 0590371207

Review

With fourteen poems, Mora brings life to the American Southwest.  Deserts, coyotes, snakes, raccoons, and the hot sun, are just a few of the mentioned characters in Mora’s poems. 

A multicultural book, Mora includes Spanish words and provides a glossary of these terms at the end.  She uses words like “vibora” and “paisano” to bring the culture and environment to life in a different way.   It grabs the reader’s attention and either connects with them or intrigues them.  Her poem, Suspense, is a good use of onomatopoeia as the words make you feel the action.  “Plink, plink,” “splatter” and “splash” show the rain and its presence.  I can read this poem and transport myself to this place. These poems do not necessarily rhyme but the stories they tell make it easy to picture them.  Urban Raccoon is another favorite of mine in this collection.  Her use of the five-senses makes it hard to read through without seeping into the story.  In this poem, you feel it and hear it with phrases like “strrrrretch onto the roof” and “scratch, scratch, scratches.”  The reader can almost touch the raccoon as you read about her thick coat/ringed tail/rubs her roundness/pudgy lady. It makes me want to curl up in bed!  The illustrations are vibrant, clean, and textured.  The way they are cut and placed together adds dimension and their effect on the senses. 

The tone of Mora’s poetry in this book is of intoxication.  An environment sometimes portrayed as barren and negative, Mora’s tone is the opposite.  I sense her amazement and wonder in the poems.  Each poem carefully highlights a different aspect of the Southwest.  

Poetry in Action:

Introducing the Poem:  Take students on a nature walk and have them document, in pairs, the things they see including plants, living things, the sky, and the weather.

Follow up Activity:  While still sitting outside and having read the poem, have students revisit their list of things they see and have them add to or rewrite them in more descriptive, sense-provoking ways.  Give them examples of “boil purple” and “prickly cactus.”  Then compare their first words to their later words to see OR FEEL the difference. 

Suspense

Wind chases itself
Around our house, flattens
Wild grasses
With one hot breath.
Clouds boil purple
and gray, roll
and roil. Scorpions
dart
under stones. Rabbit eyes peer
from the shelter of mesquite.
Thorny silence.

My paisano, the road runner,
paces, dashes into the rumble.
races from the plink, plink
splatter into his shadow,    leaps
at the crash   flash
splash,
sky rivers rushing into arroyos and
thirsty roots of prickly pears,
greening cactus.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

MUNCHING: POEMS ABOUT EATING selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins

Author Lee Bennett Hopkins
Photo by Charles Egita
Hopkins, Lee Bennett, trans. 1985. MUNCHING: POEMS ABOUT EATING. Ill. by Nelle Davis. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company. ISBN 0316372692

Review

This compilation is a playful read about foods and eating.  Readers will enjoy poetry about eating foods, wanting foods, preparing foods, and playing with foods!  Most of the poems are short and contain vocabulary for early readers. 

The meaning of the book is concrete as all of the poetry pertains to physical acts of or with food.  Some authors use figurative language like similes and metaphors.  The poem, Artichoke by Maxine W. Kumin, compares artichokes to jokes and games.  Fruited Rainbow by Charles Egita compares a fruit salad to a rainbow.  Others use hyperbole to appeal to readers in the poems The Pizza by Ogden Nash and The Perfect Turkey Sandwich by Steven Kroll. 

True rhyme is commonly used throughout the collection. In Spaghetti! Spaghetti! By Jack Prelutsky, the writer “can’t get enough” of the “wonderful stuff.”  Cake by David McCord uses assonance, “Take cake: a very easy rhyme for bake.”  Fun to read, this group of poems by well known and credible authors shows young readers just how much fun you can have with your food!

To name just a few of the authors included in the book, Ogden Nash, was noted by the New York Times as the country’s best known producer of humorous poetry. JackPrelutsky was awarded the Children’s Poet Laureate Award. During her career, Maxine W. Kumin was appointed Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. 

Poetry in Action:

Introducing the Poem:  With construction paper, help students create a food by cutting and gluing paper.  For example, students can cut and glue pizza toppings onto a pizza slice.  Ask students what their favorite food is to eat.

Follow up Activity:  Ask students when they are in the mood for food?  Teach students about meal times like breakfast, lunch, and dinner.  Have a felt chart (or something similar) with three columns labeled breakfast, lunch, and dinner.  With felt foods, have students place the foods in the meal time that they would like to eat it. 

The Clean Platter by Ogden Nash

Bring salad or sausage or scone,
A berry or even a beat,
Bring an oyster, an egg, or a bone,
As long as it’s something to eat.
If its food,
Its food;
Nevermind what kind of food.
Through thick and through thin
I am constantly in
The mood
For food.

JUMP BALL: A BASKETBALL SEASON IN POEMS by Mel Glenn


Photo located on www.authors4teens.com



Glenn, Mel. 1997. JUMP BALL: A BASKETBALL SEASON IN POEMS. New York: Lodestar. ISBN 052567554X

Review

A high school basketball season is experienced through the personal poems of the members of the basketball team as well as other key members to the story.  Competition, dating, pregnancy, and tragedy are explored throughout the pages.  We read about Garrett James, a player looking to go pro, and his love of the game and his dislike for the media’s questions.  Author Mel Glenn uses the poetry to convey attitudes of the characters.  We feel like James is somewhat quiet and prefers to do his talking on the court.  Mary Beth Hoskins’ poems reveals her tolerance for having a husband as a dedicated basketball coach but we also sense her loneliness as we read, “I often eat, sleep, and live alone.”  The poems give you glimpses into the accident that occurs at the end of the book and readers will be anticipating the outcome. 

Jump Ball is an abstract play on emotions.  The reader will connect with the lives and feelings of the characters and will develop their own hopes of what happens to them.  Readers will also connect with the cultural language that is used with words such as, “ain’t doin’ nothin’,” “outta here,” and “I ain’t no ball player, you is.”   Differentiated poem sounds and structure are used to keep readers interested.  For example, poems with same word endings like “zone” and “zone” in Garrett James (below) and slant rhyme poems like Dennis Carleton can spark interest among users with words that don’t rhyme but are similar like “enough” and “but” or “son” and “was.”  In addition, the Basketball Pulse poems are concrete poems which also appeal to young readers. 

Poetry in Action:

Introducing the Poem:  Have students share with a partner a time when they got to do their favorite hobby and it was a good time/moment. 

Follow up Activity:  Have students notice the middle of the poem where the author uses the same word at the end of the sentences.  Have students create a poem of their own using their hobby as a topic and having the same ending in a part of the poem. 

Garrett James

I’ve played in tournaments ‘round the country.
I’ve gone coast-to-coast,
From one baseline to another,
From one ocean to another.
I’ve flown over more time zones
Than u can remember.
But there is only one zone that counts,
Not the parking zone,
              hospital zone,
             loading zone,
             commercial zone,
Not the combat zone,
red zone,
end zone,
neutral zone.
When I am in THE ZONE,
Every pass connects; every shot clicks.
I can’t hear the crowd or the coach.
I am alone, alive, above the rim, above the arena,
Playin’ in a zone for which there is no defense.
Nobody can ever hurt me up there.
I am untouchable.