I love children's literature, poetry, and pugs (not necessarily in that order, mind). So when the three came together in one tidy package, I knew I had to read it. A companion book to
Animal Poems (Worth and Jenkins' first collaboration), Pug and Co. more than holds its own. Worth has constructed a number of exquisitely simple poems about everyday animals, the kind a child is likely to see while out and about, such as rabbits, geese, toads, and even the humble fly. The only featured animal a child would be unlikely to meet in town or countryside is the Bengal tiger, and even that creature is seen at a zoo, so there you go.
Jenkins, with his bold collages, does a marvelous job of showing each animal off to its advantage. The bull, "hacked-out, rough-hewn, from the planet's hard side," has its massive bulk placed against an intensely red background. Sparrows and pigeons cavort above silhouetted city buildings, while a cat winds its mysterious way through shadowy bushes, "like an old familiar spirit."
As for my favorite canine, Worth describes pugs as having "goggling eyes and stumpy noses, wrinkled brows and hairy moles." And if some people consider them "plug-ugly," perhaps that's because "for dogs, they look a lot like people." How true!
Pug and Other Animal Poems
by Valerie Worth
illustrations by Steve Jenkins
Farrar Straus Giroux, 40 pages
Published: March 2013
The last few days I've been featuring poems from Valerie Worth's Small Poems books. Today's comes from Small Poems Again. All of these are out of print, but have been repackaged in an omnibus with Still More Small Poems (which my library doesn't have) and 14 new ones in the bookAll the Small Poems and Fourteen More.
I love these poems for the way they look at the every day. I also love them for being serious. Don't get me wrong, I love silly poetry, but I think a lot of poetry aimed at kids is silly and rhymes and it's nice to see some variety.
jacks
The way
Jacks nest
Together in
The hand,
Or cupped
Between
Two palms,
Jingled up
And thrown,
Land in a
Loose starry
Cluster,
Seems luxury
Enough,
Without the
Further bliss
Of their
Slender
Iridescent
Luster.
Book Provided by... my local library
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Yesterday, I featured a poem from the collection Small Poems by Valerie Worth. Today, I give you one from Worth's follow-up, More Small Poems. Both books out currently out of print but! luckily for us, have been repackaged in an omnibus edition with other volumes and additional poems-- All the Small Poems and Fourteen More.
flamingo
The
Flamingo
Lingers
A
Long
Time
Over
One
Pink
Leg;
Later
He
Ponders
Upon
The
Other
For
A
While
Instead.
Book Provided by... my local library
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Poetry has always been one of my favorite ways to get kids writing during the first weeks of school. If you’ve done bio poems and are looking for an additional poetry activity, or just for something different, then this post is for you! All the Small Poems and Fourteen More is written by Valerie Worth [...]
Are you enjoying the snowy weather? Eaten any icicles lately?
For Poetry Friday, I give you Valerie Worth on "Icicles".
Icicles
When they
Finally fall
And litter
The snow
With splinters
Of clear
Rock candy,
How sad
To discover
That rather
Than sugar
They only
Taste of
The roof.

From: Peacock and other poems by Valerie Worth, illustrated by Natalie Babbitt.
Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2002.
Valerie Worth (1933-1994) is one of my children’s poetry idols. A recipient of the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children in 1991, Worth was an incredible crafter of poems. For the most part, her poetry spoke of little and seemingly insignificant creatures and things: crickets, a slug, an amoeba, pebbles, a safety pin, a hose, weeds, potatoes, and mud. Yet, in her “small” poems, she made the mundane seem marvelous; she carved the commonplace into fine art.

I was so excited when I opened a package from Farrar, Straus and Giroux a few weeks ago. Inside the large, padded envelope was
ANIMAL POEMS, the second book of Valerie Worth’s poetry to be published posthumously. It was a review copy sent to me by the publisher. Imagine a book with twenty-three new Worth poems—poems that were not published in her earlier collections. It was like a little miracle. What makes the book even more special is the art done by Steve Jenkins to illustrate Worth's poetry.

2007
To quote the beginning lines of a poem by my friend, the late David McCord:
Books fall open,
you fall in,
delighted where
you’ve never been…
Yes, I fell right into Worth’s book of animal poems. I was delighted and dazzled by the way she wrote about rabbits and minnows, the gorilla and the hummingbird—by the way she perceived these animals with her poet’s eye.
ANIMAL POEMS is quintessential Worth—another tour de force of poetry writing. Its poems are imbued with rich vocabulary and the precise use of words. The images are original and fresh and the figurative language is par excellence. If words were carbon, I have little doubt that Valerie Worth would have been able to fashion flawless diamonds.
A Close-up Look at Some of the Animal Poems
Look at Worth’s use of the letter “l” in the poem Snake. As you read the following lines, you’ll see how her language slips off the tongue. With the sounds of words, she captures the fluid movement of this legless reptile.
From SNAKE
Loosed
From
Limbs to
Run like water,
Spilled to
A liquid
Silt, a
Slurry
Of scales…
She goes on to compare the snake and its movement…
To one
Glazed
Stream
Of latticed
Panes, or
Mottled mosaic
Of pebbles
Tumbled
Smoothly along,
Their slender
Landslide
Filing
Down
The narrow
Channel
Grooved by
The guiding
Head…
Look at Worth’s use of language and rhythm to describe how minnows, “glisteners that shine,” and their coordinated movements in a school make them appear to be the body of one fish.
From MINNOWS
That their slivers
Sift together
In a scintillating
Mesh,
A smooth-
Linked flesh,
Like the whole
Rushing shimmer
Of a solid
Silver fish.
Here is the full text of Bear—along with its accompanying illustration by Steve Jenkins. Note how the bear stares out at us from the page—how Jenkins captured the essence of Worth’s poem.
BEAR
The bear’s fur
Is gentle but
His eye is not:
It burns our
Way, while
He walks right
And left, back
And forth, before
Us: he
Looks, and we
Look, and his
Hot eye
Stings out
From the dark hive
Of his head
Like a fierce
Furious
Bee.

I am always surprised by Worth’s poetry, in awe of her exquisite use of language. Who else could describe a gorilla as “that/Glaring/Legendary/Ogre/Of rough/Black iron/And ebony?” Who else could imagine a porcupine to be “Held fast/In the thicket/Of its own/Thorns?”
For the book, Steve Jenkins set most of his animal collages against plain white or blue or black backgrounds. There is a simple elegance to his illustrations—just as there is an easy elegance to the words of Valerie Worth. His art is a fine and respectful complement to her poetry.
ANIMAL POEMS is an outstanding poetry book. Every two-page spread contains a gem—a finely cut, multi-faceted poem, which sparkles like a diamond in the sunlight—a poem that rests on a platinum setting carefully crafted by Jenkins. I think this will be one of the most notable children’s books of 2007.
Excerpts from ANIMAL POEMS by Valerie Worth, pictures by Steve Jenkins. Text copyright (c) 2007 by George Bahlke. Pictures copyright (c) 2007 by Steve Jenkins. Used by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC. All rights reserved.A Little More WorthValerie Worth was an artist who worked in a medium of words—and with words, she was able to create distinctly defined images that a reader could picture in his/her mind’s eye. She saw—and showed us how to see—the wonder of the “small” things. She could make the most mundane objects, insignificant creatures—and even garbage—seem like treasure.
From EARTHWORMS(This poem first appeared in MORE SMALL POEMS.)
Put on the palm,
Still rough
With crumbs,
They roll and
Glisten in the sun
As fresh
As new rubies
Dug out of
Deepest earth
Some people think that young children don’t like poems with lots of imagery and figurative language. Some people believe that young children only enjoy humorous poetry or poetry that rhymes. I do not agree with them. Children often come to value what the adults in their lives value. If children are exposed to fine poetry like that of Valerie Worth, most will come to understand and appreciate it. I shared Worth’s poetry with my second grade students often. Some of them came to appreciate her poetry so much that they tried to emulate her writing style when they were creating their own poems.
I believe there is no better way to teach children how to write well than to read them fine literature—especially poetry. And Valerie Worth was—and always will be—one of the finest writers of poetry for children.
For those of you who may doubt my words, I provide the following:
STARS
by Valerie Worth
(This poem can be found in STILL MORE SMALL POEMS and ALL THE SMALL POEMS AND FOURTEEN MORE, both published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.)
While we
Know they are
Enormous suns,
Gold lashing
Fire-oceans,
Seas of heavy silver flame,
They look as
Though they could
Be swept
Down, and heaped,
Cold crystal
Sparks, in one
Cupped palm.
BURNING STARS
by Shaina, Grade 2
March 25, 1996
When I look up in space
at night
I see stars
that look like cold silver crystals
so small they could fit
in my hand.
But I know
the stars are giants
exploding gases
and bubbling with red flames.
I hope I proved my point!
Other Poetry Books by Valerie Worth
AND FOURTEEN MORE
Illustrated by Natalie Babbitt
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1994
PEACOCK AND OTHER POEMS
Illustrated by Natalie Babbitt
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2002
Learn More About Valerie Worth
I love her poems. And this book is obviously a three-in-one winner for you.
Oh, so glad to hear from someone else who loved this book as much as I do! Thank you for sharing.
I've seen this cover before, I'll have to read it. Thanks for sharing.
I love, love, love Valerie Worth! And I love, love, love Steve Jenkins! I didn't know they had done a collaboration. This is one I definitely need to get hold of!
I love this book!