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1. Poetry Friday: Postcard from Japan

 It’s been awhile since I’ve done a Poetry Friday post, but then I’ve been away for awhile from my home digs in Canada.  Right now I’m in Japan for a couple of months – however, being here hasn’t kept me away from good books for children in English as there are plenty of such books to be had here.  One great short little book I was introduced to by mothers in a reading group for my daughter’s elementary school (see my Postcard for Japan post on this group) was this book A Friend by Japanese poet, Tanikawa Shuntaro (Trans. by Arthur Binard, illus. by Wada Makoto, published by  Tamagawa University Press, 2004.)    The original edition (Tomodachi) in Japanese contains pithy sayings by Tanikawa about the nature of friendship like “A friend is someone you think about even when you’re not together” or “Even if you speak different languages, a friend is a friend.”  The simple and  plain illustrations of Wada Makoto supplement the statements nicely.  At the end of the book, the statements philosophically expand their horizons.  For example, by showing a photograph of a disabled child in a wheelchair, the book asks “A friend might be someone you  haven’t yet met.  How can you lend a hand to this friend?”  or showing a child in a tent-city squatting in the sand, the book asks “Is there anything you can do to help a friend faraway?”  The book ends with a poem by Tanikawa on the nature of friendship and on how it essentially removes one’s notion of self-centeredness to create an awareness of the other in a way that is truly compassionate.  I enjoyed reading this book aloud to both my children — teenager and child alike — and found them nodding in agreement to many of the statements.  The woman who lent the bookto me  told me she read the Japanese version to her child when she was in elementary school, and then bought the English version for her when she was in junior high school and just beginning to learn English.   Both books provide thoughtful meditations on the nature of friendship that are not always so obvious but true nontheless – it was certainly not surprising to me that it was penned by one of Japan’s more well known contemporary poets, Tanikawa Shuntaro.   

Poetry Friday this week is hosted by Heidi at My Juicy Little Universe.

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2. friday feast: heidi mordhorst's lasagna factory


#5 in the Poetry Potluck Series, celebrating National Poetry Month 2011.


amandabhslater/flickr

Chances are very good that if you drop in unexpectedly at Heidi Mordhorst's house, you won't go hungry.

After flashing her beautiful smile and serenading you with "Fields of Gold," she'll pop open her amply stocked freezer, take out a pan of homemade lasagna and toss it into the oven. 


joshbousel/flickr

Then, while you're waiting for this symphony of tomato sauce, mozzarella, ricotta, crushed tomatoes, roasted eggplant, Italian sausage and spinach to emerge all bubbly-oozy and garlicky from its fiery kiln, she'll recite the poems she contributed to the just-published Life in Me Like Grass on Fire: Love Poems (Maryland Writers' Association, 2011).

Squisito! *kisses fingertips*

Ever ready with poetry and pasta, busy working mom Heidi likes to be prepared for visitors, whether they be two or twenty. Her food is so delicious you'll probably eat everything in sight.

But don't worry, she'll hand you an apron and spatula, so you, too, can be part of her Lasagna Factory, the perfect family food project. After all, you never know who'll be dropping in next.


teenytinyturkey/flickr

Heidi: The efficiency of the bulk-cooking idea has always attracted me, but it hasn’t fit well with my pledge to stop shopping at places like Costco, or with the creative challenge of opening the fridge at 6:00 and having dinner on the table at 6:30. However, on a few occasions I’ve made enough of a thing to put some away in the freezer—and there’s hardly a better feeling than realizing you already have a nice loaf of pumpkin bread just waiting to be delivered to the Teacher Appreciation Breakfast at school. 


food_in_mouth/flickr


Rcakewalk/flickr

So when my partner took a few hours and whipped up four delicious pans of assorted lasagna for a holiday party, it occurred to us that we could do the same on a Sunday afternoon with the kids, and have that domestic-artiste, prepared-as-a-Boy-Scout feeling for a whole month at a time….  

Colleague had the baby early? Lasagna in the freezer!

Youth group dinner at the UU church? Lasagna in the free

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