Fourteen poets express (mostly) affection for their beloved pets.
With the sole exception of Charles Ghigna (“I pray some day I’ll learn to love / a friendly snake or two. / But heaven knows I’m grateful that— / this one belongs to you!”), the contributors offer misty-eyed sentiments sure to warm the cockles of any pet owner’s heart. Between opening odes by Ann Whitford Paul and Rebecca Kai Dotlich to (respectively) a kitten and a puppy and closing tributes to aging companions of the same furry sorts by Prince Redcloud and the late Hopkins, each entry pours warm feelings on a different type of animal, from goldfish to guinea pig to galloping steed. Judge’s lyrical but realistic watercolor and colored pencil scenes enhance the overall mood with portraits of cute, button-eyed creatures, usually in intimate pairings with children of racially diverse presentation…or at least glimpses of hands offering tasty treats or bare feet being warmed on a fuzzy tummy. The title for this work is appropriate, with several of the poems framed as prayers. Along with being short enough to read at one bedtime go, the book artfully transitions from poems about dancing and galloping to those about rest and sleepy coziness.
Short and sweet.
(Picture book/poetry. 5-8)