by Emily Dickinson ; edited by Ryan G. Van Cleave ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 2, 2022
Visually and editorially unworthy of Dickinson’s incandescence.
This title in the Illustrated Poets Collection presents 25 notable selections from Dickinson, with questions to enhance critical thinking.
The poems fall into three sections: “The Natural World,” “Ideas & Imagination,” and “Heart & Spirit.” Each poem garners a double-page spread and a sidebar with three components. “Engage” poses questions designed to help students grapple with Dickinson’s imagery and emphatic yet delicate use of metaphor. “Imagine” suggests activities for playfully approaching the poems, like drawing a map or making a portrait of a poem. “Define” assists with the poems’ less familiar words. The sidebars and appended thumbnail commentary provide clues to interpreting Dickinson’s linguistic elision, but editorial missteps occur. “She sweeps with many-colored Brooms”—a gorgeous poem that metaphorically casts the setting sun as a housewife at her work—is described thus: “This poem shares how a beautiful sunset is created by a housewife sweeping….The poem sheds some glorious light on the impressive work that homemakers do every single day.” (It’s all the odder considering Dickinson’s own quest to advantage her writing over household drudgery.) Digital collages, created from public domain and stock images, pair cutouts of flora and fauna with landscapes and interiors in haphazard combos. For “These are the days when Birds come back”—a subtle poem limning late summer’s cusp—the book depicts a landscape plastered with geese, ignoring the theme. The people depicted are mostly light-skinned.
Visually and editorially unworthy of Dickinson’s incandescence. (biographical facts, bibliography) (Poetry. 8-11)Pub Date: Aug. 2, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-63819-107-0
Page Count: 64
Publisher: Bushel & Peck Books
Review Posted Online: June 7, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2022
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by Bonnie Christensen & illustrated by Bonnie Christensen ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 9, 2001
A powerful, lyrical tribute to the musician whose music is so much a part of our lives.
This moving biography honors the life and work of the legendary folk singer who celebrated the lives of working people all over the US.
Guthrie, born in Oklahoma in 1912, came from a poor family filled with music, but devastated by death and illness. As a youngster, he absorbed the sounds of country living and the traditional music of Oklahoma and Texas. Later, during the Great Depression, he used these memories to become a popular voice for the dust bowl refugees, writing and singing about them and performing on radio in Los Angeles. He spent years moving from place to place in support of the union movement, migrant field workers, and coal miners. Christensen (Moon Over Tennessee, 1999, etc.) writes briefly of his marriages, his children, and his eventual tragic death from Huntington’s disease, but the thrust is his devotion to the cause of downtrodden workers. The words of his signature song “This Land is Your Land” run along the top of each page and are printed in their entirety at the end along with a timeline and Web site citation. (No bibliography or source notes are included.) Christensen’s text is strong and beautiful, as rich in images as her subject’s music. Through them, the reader will get a wonderful sense of the soul of her subject and his times. Read aloud, this could work for younger readers, but the dramatic mixed media, woodcut-like illustrations in a picture-book format will attract older ones as well.
A powerful, lyrical tribute to the musician whose music is so much a part of our lives. ((Biography. 8-10))Pub Date: Oct. 9, 2001
ISBN: 0-375-81113-3
Page Count: 32
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2001
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edited by Lee Bennett Hopkins ; illustrated by Guy Billout ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 1, 2013
A poor performance, “[s]ans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.” (introduction, indexes) (Poetry. 8-11, adult)
Like the old man’s hose, Shakespeare’s “Seven Ages of Man” speech is “a world too wide” to be well-served by this paltry selection of 21 poems, three per “age.”
Hopkins tries to inject some color into the mix with Walt Whitman’s “When I heard the learn’d astronomer,” Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s “How do I love thee?” and Lewis Carroll’s “You are old, father William.” Unfortunately, these, combined with passages from the speech itself, only make his other choices look anemic. To the “infant, / Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms,” for instance, Rebecca Kai Dotlich offers a bland “Amazing, your face. / Amazing”; on the facing page, a “traditional Nigerian lullaby” is stripped of music: “Sleep my baby near to me. / Lu lu lu lu lu lu.” Along with Joan Bransfield Graham’s “A Soldier’s Letter to a Newborn Daughter,” which ends with a condescending “I’m coming home / to my girls… / With All My Love, / DAD,” most of the rest are cast in prosaic free verse. Hopkins’ “Curtain,” probably written for this collection, closes the set with theatrical imagery. Billout supplies pale, distant views of small figures and some surreal elements in largely empty settings—appropriate, considering the poetry, but they lack either appeal for young audiences or any evocation of the Shakespearean lines’ vigorous language and snarky tone.
A poor performance, “[s]ans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.” (introduction, indexes) (Poetry. 8-11, adult)Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2013
ISBN: 978-1-56846-218-9
Page Count: 40
Publisher: Creative Editions/Creative Company
Review Posted Online: Sept. 17, 2013
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2013
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