Poetry Friday people, help spread the word during this gift-giving season by linking, posting, Tweeting and facebooking about the poetry e-books out there. Here's my little commercial...Folks, there could not be an easier, cooler stocking-stuffer for your iGeneration kids than
p*tag, the downloadable poetry anthology for Kindle, Nook or iPad. For a mere $2.99, you can send a collection of fresh, original poems for readers 12 and older straight to their digital devices!
In addition to
p*tag for teens, there's
Poetry Tag Time, perfect for your elementary teacher friends, and
Gift Tag (pictured here), which features poems about presents. All can be enjoyed on iPhones, Kindles, Nooks, computers and interactive whiteboards.
For a taste of p*tag, here's my piece "The Wishing Tree," introduced this way:
People (adults, mostly) say that “money doesn’t grow on trees, you know,” like it’s no work at all to produce a crop of juicy peaches or shiny acorns. Other people (little kids, mostly) think that lots of things grow on trees, like corks and popcorn. This photo came with the title “Wishing,” so it was easy to embrace the intriguing idea that wishes grow on trees. Does that mean there’s a Come-True Tree somewhere?A Wishing Tree
on every star
every puff of birthday breath
every penny down the well
you wish for the same thing
on every four-leaf clover
every loose eyelash
every turkey’s furcula
you wish for the same thing
(can’t tell us, can you?
if you do it won’t come true)
you wish it every day
until one day you’re walking along,
secretly wishing on random things:
cloud shaped like a duck
three green punch-buggies in a row
your own lucky-left blue shoe
and you find—who knew?—a wishing tree
hung with white wishes as light as popcorn:
“I wish I could fly”
“I wish for a slumber party with a rock star”
and of course
“I wish to have three more wishes”
reaching deeper between the leaves
you find riper, heavier wishes:
“I wish my dog was still alive”
“I wish I had stuck up for myself”
and then—no way!—
“My wish is the same as yours”
this one you pluck, fold in half and
tuck into your right shoe,
waltzing away on the soles
of twin wishes
Heidi Mordhorst 2011
from
p*tag
I didn't think a
tag game would ever be quite so exciting again, but I was wrong: I have been invited to participate in the second poetry tag project coordinated by
Sylvia Vardell and
Janet Wong, champions for the dissemination of poetry for young people. Titled
p*tag (
you can play along here), it's the "first electronic-only anthology for teens" and will be illustrated with photos taken by Sylvia herself.
Even as I write I'm in the midst of the challenge: I have just been tagged by Stephanie Hemphill, an accomplished verse novelist. My mission is to a) immerse myself in a photo I selected from Sylvia's
intriguing gallery, b) select three words from Stephanie's fine poem, and c) compose my own poem inspired by the photo using Stephanie's three words and an as-yet-undetermined number of my own. I have 24 hours in which to do this, and to write a piece that describes my process and how the resulting poem is linked to the photo and to Stephanie's.
Then I get to tag another of the 31 poets who are participating (with respect for who's on vacation this weekend and who's working!). The project will all be complete and available for download at an irresistable price by October. How cool IS this? I just hope I can pull off something worthy of the concept and of
the first Poetry Tag Time volume, which was e-published in April.
So, back to Stephanie Hemphill. Her latest book is
Wicked Girls, which I confess I thought might be another girls-telling-lies-and-being-mean-to-each-other-book despite its subtitle: A Novel of the Salem Witch Trials. I took up HarperTeen's offer to "browse inside" and found myself reading way past my bedtime with fascination and admiration. Here's a selection called "Caught."
Caught
Margaret Walcott, 17
Past the crooked evergreen
and the brook what lost its water,
on my way home from playing
games on who'll make me husband,
I cross Ipswich Road.
I rub my eyes. His two blue ones
be looking straight on me.
My pulse starts to gallop
like a steed. But today I trip not.
I track on up to him and say,
"Be you following me?"
His arms be thick enough
to lift the axe of three men.
Isaac's laughter shakes
through him so fierce
it scatters the snow off his boots.
"Yea, Margaret Walcott,
betwixt tending the stables,
staking out the fields
and bringing wares to town,
I be scouting all the time after you."
He raises one brow.
"But where hast thou been?"
The color splashes over me,
drenching me red. I hold up my buckets.
"Fetching water," I say.
"Thou are far from any stream
I know of," Isaac says,
and shakes his head.
His eyes catch on me
like he be holding lightly
my face with his hand.
"I must then be lost," I say,
and I pick up my bucket
and my skirts and trot off.
And do so quite a bit like a lady.
~ Stephanie Hemphill
from Wicked Girls, Harper 2011
Love this poem, Heidi. Especially the way you describe lightness:
every puff of birthday breath
hung with white wishes as light as popcorn:
So great to see you at NCTE, btw!
wishing is hard work, too, sometimes. especially if you want it to be just right.
this photo seems to want to trigger a memory of something one of my classes did a long time ago where we... did we messages of peace? hang paper cranes? the memory flickers so much i can't even be sure it isn't imagined, like roger ebert realizing that a treasured childhood memory is really a scene from a movie he'd forgotten about.
anyway, well done. now off to checl out this p*tag thing...
I wish I were funny.
I wish I could sing.
and I wish, I wish I could write poetry.
Love the poem! I also love the idea of a poetry e-book for kids. I'll check it out later. Have to work now!
Janet over at The Write Sisters
I wonder if students would write beautiful poems if you just offered the prompt, 'wishing tree', then after, read your poem? I love that you used so many 'wishing' pieces. We always wished when seeing the rainbows, but I think my grandmother made that up. Thanks for the books; they will make excellent gifts!
"waltzing away on the soles
of twin wishes"
soles, or souls? could be either, methinks.
Fun snapshot from today's Poetry Friday in my classroom -- new principal was there to witness two girls reading aloud a poem...from our new classroom Kindle! (Gift Tag and Poetry Tag Time are favorites to Kindle-read alone or with a buddy!!)