The late Hoberman’s eclectic, posthumously published collection of high-spirited rhymes, riddles, and limericks focuses on the animal kingdom.
Hoberman selected her favorite bestiary poems from over six decades (some long out of print), then wrote an additional eight more for this stirring collaborative compendium with Frazee. Frazee introduces the concept of an animal hotel, and every entry slots so neatly into this form that readers will honestly believe the poems were written especially for this book. What was once a haphazard conglomeration of disparate poems becomes, with these pictures, almost a story about an assortment of quirky hotel guests. As one might expect, the poems vary in quality but have occasional flashes of brilliance, as with the poem “Dragonfly” (“You get what you eat with your feet when you hunt / While you fly which is why your six feet are up front”). Many of Hoberman’s poems adeptly incorporate scientific facts—for instance, a daddy longlegs can regrow its limbs, while ants follow one another based on scent trails. At times, the art provides a delightfully ironic contrast: “Lion” describes a threatening “Mighty beast,” while Frazee depicts the big cat getting a dye job at the hairdresser’s.
A labor of love, both a fitting tribute to its poet creator and a grand reimagining, thanks to incredible artistic skills.
(Poetry. 4-10)