Poetry Friday: Think Again

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Think Again is JonArno Lawson‘s latest book of poetry.   Published just this spring (2010) by Kids Can Press and illustrated by Julie Morstad, the book is a delightful exploration of the feelings of early adolescence — and indeed, of adults, as well!  The poems are short meditations written in pithy quatrains like this one called  “The Heart”:

Make sure that your heart
isn’t too well defended.
Your heart is designed
to be broken and mended.

Accompanying each poem is a lovely illustration by Morstad that gets at the ‘heart’, so to speak of the poem.  There are 61 poems altogether and one can easily read through the book in a short time, but the poems are of the kind that are worth revisiting.  They are loosely based on the feelings of  young lovers, sometimes towards or about each other;  at other times, the poems are just about the individuals themselves.  Though not quite as linguistically acrobatic as Lawson’s earlier book on lipograms, Think Again is nontheless a charming collection of poems that are witty and playful in their own way.

I have to quote the last poem in the book, “An Attempt at Description”, because it’s about tigers(!) and about what poets try to do with their words.

How to describe the natural world?
I think I know how to begin:
A tiger has terrible, beautiful eyes,
And the night has lovely skin.

Hope you’ve enjoyed this small taste of Lawson’s recent poetry and seek out your own copy of Think Again. It will be well worth it.

This week’s Poetry Friday host is Mary Ann at Great Kid Books.

Poetry Friday extra – Kolbee's Poetry Postcard!

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Sally has already written a post for today’s Poetry Friday, hosted by Mary Ann at Great Kid Books, but I’m going to sneak this extra one in too… Today is the last day of National Poetry Month in the US: but, of course, that doesn’t mean we stop reading poetry until next year – on the contrary. Hopefully the focus on poetry over the past few weeks has inspired lots of young people to read and write more themselves…

I was very excited to receive a Poetry Postcard from Vancouver, Washington last week, part of Ms Mac from Check It Out’s Poetry Postcard Project. In this age of computerized communication it’s really nice to receive a tangible missive through the letterbox. Thank you, Kolbee. I wasn’t sure if it was going to make its way across the Atlantic in time, with all the disruption caused by the dust plume from Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland, but it did and I’m delighted to share it with you all now:

Duke Ellington, Kolbee's Postcard Poem

Kolbee’s poem is also featured on Day 11 of Ms Mac’s Thirty Days~Thirty Students~Thirty Poems series, which has been running all through April – do head on over and check them out.

Thank you again, Kolbee, for your lovely poem – you made my day – and I also had to go and seek out some Duke Ellington music!