Friday, December 23, 2011

Welcome to Poetry Friday


At a lovely Lessons and Carols service this month, I discovered a poignant poem by Dorothy Parker. Composer Nicholas White turned the poem into a carol.

The poem was a total surprise. I had thought of Parker as a witty writer and sometimes dark and even sarcastic. But this poem helps us imagine what a new mother in a stable may have longed for.

Prayer for a New Mother

The things she knew, let her forget again-
The voices in the sky, the fear, the cold,
The gaping shepherds, and the queer old men
Piling their clumsy gifts of foreign gold.

Let her have laughter with her little one;
Teach her the endless, tuneless songs to sing,
Grant her her right to whisper to her son
The foolish names one dare not call a king.

Keep from her dreams the rumble of a crowd,
The smell of rough-cut wood, the trail of red,
The thick and chilly whiteness of the shroud
That wraps the strange new body of the dead.

Ah, let her go, kind Lord, where mothers go
And boast his pretty words and ways, and plan
The proud and happy years that they shall know
Together, when her son is grown a man.

Schongauer painted The Holy Family. See more of his gorgeous art here.

Thank you to Dori who is hosting Poetry Friday today at Dori Reads.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

2012 Award-Winning Books Challenge


A Winter Solstice Commitment

I keep intending to read those award-winners I’ve missed. Now I’ve found my opportunity. I joined the 2012 Award-Winning Books Reading Challenge sponsored by Gathering Books.

I’ll read and write reviews to recommend award-winning books right here on my blog. I’m headed for the Silver Medal level, between 11 and 25 books. The books can be for children or adults. What fun!

Check out this challenge at Gathering Books. Local and regional awards and recognition count also, not just national and international awards.

Hosts Myra and Iphigene are Poetry Friday contributors, always posting phenomenal poems from creative poets we might not find on our own.

Wish me good reads as I add old and new award winning books to my reading journal. I’ll take your recommendations, too!

Friday, December 16, 2011

Tribute to Father of Frances


Poached egg on toast, why do you shiver
With such a funny little quiver?

So sings the adorable picky eater badger named Frances in Bread and Jam for Frances when she would rather have

Jam on biscuits, jam on toast,
Jam is the thing that I like most.


As others will, I pay tribute this Poetry Friday to Russell Hoban, author of the beloved Frances books, the classic The Mouse and His Child and a host of other children’s titles. Hoban passed away on December 13.

Hoban’s books were part of my children’s childhoods and I love the books, too. But I did not know that Russell Hoban wrote poetry.

I’m captivated by the sounds in these lines from "Long, Lone" in Hoban’s book The Last of the Wallendas.

Long, long, long and lone
Is the selkie's song when the storm winds moan,
is the sigh of the sea as it rubs the stone,
is the word of the sea that lives in the bone.

“Ice Bears” is a haunting poem that challenges the reader to think of the effects of climate change.

Huge, silent-moving like
white dreams hungering for
the yester-prey,
what will they do when
the ice is gone?

Read the whole poem here. Don't miss the last stanza!

I’ll be reading more of Russell Hoban in the future. Lawrence Downes wrote this editorial about Hoban in the NY Times.

Thanks to Book Aunt for today's Poetry Friday round-up.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Batty Poets




“Once upon a time there was a bat—a little light brown bat, the color of coffee with cream in it.” So begins The Bat Poet by Randall Jarrell with Maurice Sendak’s terrifc illustrations.

I’ve been reading Jerome Griswold’s The Children’s Books of Randall Jarrell. It’s fascinating literary analysis. Jarrell sold the Bat Poet’s poems about the mockingbird and the chipmunk to the New Yorker. He didn’t tell them they were children’s poems! My favorite of the Bat Poet’s poems is about the owl.

A shadow is floating through the moonlight.
Its wings don’t make a sound.
Its claws are long, its beak is bright.
Its eyes try all the corners of the night.

The entire poem is included in a critical analysis of The Bat Poet printed in the Children’s Literature Association Quarterly. Scroll down to p. 21.

When the Bat Poet says this poem to the mockingbird, he only notices the technical aspects of the poem. But the Chipmunk experiences the poem and shivers. It’s interesting that Jarrell’s wife has said that the vain Mockingbird is a caricature of Robert Frost and Robert Lowell.

Head on over to Read, Write, Howl for more wonderful batty poets.