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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: anagrams, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Ann and Nan Are Anagrams: Mark Shulman & Adam McCauley

Book: Ann and Nan Are Anagrams: A Mixed-Up Word Dilemma
Author: Mark Shulman
Illustrator: Adam McCauley
Pages: 36
Age Range: 5-8

Word-loving kids often go through a phase of appreciating anagrams. Many word-loving adults (present company included) never leave that phase. And so it is that I quite appreciate Ann and Nan Are Anagrams by Mark Shulman. This book is just one extended celebration of all things anagram. The narrative is a bit madcap, but at least there is one. Mostly, though, this book defines anagrams, and then gives pages and pages of examples. They start out pretty simple, and get a bit more complex throughout the course of the book. Like this:

"Anagrams are easy to SPOT
but hard to STOP."

and

"Then, DOWN THE STREET in THE DESERT TOWN,
what I SAW WAS ... a DINER, IN RED. 

The publisher uses fonts and text colors to highlight the anagram pairs, which is necessary, because some of them are relatively subtle. (In the last example above, there are three anagram pairs). There are, in fact, tiny anagrams sprinkled everywhere throughout the book. The aforementioned diner serves "CURLY FRIES" and "FLY CURRIES" as well as "LEMONS" and "MELONS". The pantry of the Grandma in the story is filled with things like "RAIN VEG VINEGAR". There are occasional quiet conversational exchanges like "AYE?" "YEA!". 

Mark Shulman also wrote one of my favorites, Gorilla Garage, which has a similar sense of playful fun. And I have to conclude that he got a bit carried away with the anagrams in the book, and couldn't stop himself, either. This is a book that will encourage kids to see anagrams everwhere, too. 

Adam McCauley's mixed media illustrations add to the fun, ranging from icon-like (tops and pots, a spot and a stop sign) to quirky ("She's A NUT" is illustrated by an acorn with clearly feminine features). Everything is rendered in bold primary colors, and with energetic, varied fonts and words at interesting angles. The red-headed, blue-eyed narrator has an odd, flag-like head of hair, but this helps him to stand out, even in silhouette. 

Ann and Nan Are Anagrams is not a picture book that you'll want to read aloud to your two year old before bed. Too much of following the book is visual for it to be a great read-aloud. Rather, it's a book that your new young reader will want to pore over (with you or on her own), giggling at the silliness of the examples, but also making connection after connection. If I were, say, homeschooling a first grader, or just trying to keep an early reader engaged and entertained, Ann and Nan Are Anagrams is a book that I would definitely want to add to my collection. Anagrams are hard to resist, and so is this book. 

Publisher: Chronicle (@ChronicleKids
Publication Date: October 1, 2013
Source of Book: Review copy from the publisher

FTC Required Disclosure:

This site is an Amazon affiliate, and purchases made through Amazon links (including linked book covers) may result in my receiving a small commission (at no additional cost to you).

© 2013 by Jennifer Robinson of Jen Robinson's Book Page. All rights reserved. You can also follow me @JensBookPage or at my Growing Bookworms page on Facebook

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2. friday feast = a steady riff


#5 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

     
    photo by kazenka03

Happy Spring!!

It's finally here! We've got sunny blue skies and daffodil shoots coming up. The birds are singing and busy building nests. Flocks of robins have been touching down in the back yard, on their way north after long winter vacations. Slowly but surely, nature is awakening -- time to dust off cold, dark days, and shake things up.

That's why I've invited 26 of my closest friends to help us celebrate today.

All winter long, they've been lying around like this:

photo by obsessed scrapbooker

But now, they want to go outside and play -- with anagrams!

With a little letter rearranging, you can discover hidden meanings in words. They say anagrams never lie. They contain provocative bits of wisdom and are sometimes wonderfully magical. Besides, letters love it when you toss them around and mix them up. Let's get the party started.

Here are some ice breakers:

Postmaster = Stamp Store
The eyes = they see
Mother-in-Law = Woman Hitler
Western Union = No wire unsent.

What about:

Poetry Friday  = Ready for pity.
Poem = mope.
William Shakespeare = I am a weakish speller.

Uh-Oh. I see a negative pattern developing.

Instead, how about a nod to the lovely Elaine Magliaro of Wild Rose Reader, who is hosting the Roundup today?

Elaine Magliaro = Agile Ear Oilman.

You must admit, she's great at making up funny-sounding words and tuning up our poetic and political sensibilities. Recently, she started a new blog called Political Verses, where she posts humorous poems about people in the news who drive you crazy. It feels so good to vent!

Perhaps, then, we should go with this one:

Elaine Magliaro = I am a genial role.

No doubt, she would appreciate, George Bush = He bugs Gore.

The other day, while browsing a Billy Collins anthology (loony bloats chillingly), I discovered this cool poem by Peter Pereira. It's playful on the outside, serious on the inside, and provides a new spin on the transforming power of poetry. It's pretty clever word-jinks, and does, indeed, make me wonder how I could rearrange my own life even just a little, to find my true path.

ANAGRAMMER
by Peter Pereira


photo by obsessed scrapbooker

If you believe in the magic of language,
then Elvis really Lives
and Princess Diana foretold I end as car spin.

If you believe the letters themselves
contain a power within them,
then you understand
what makes outside tedious,
how desperation becomes a rope ends it.

(Rest is here.)

Time for dessert:

I couldn't help myself (it's spring, after all, and too much fun). I anagrammed all 7 of the Poetry Princesses, who wrote an awesome Crown of Sonnets last April. I'll leave it to them to decide whether these reveal any hidden truths:

Elizabeth Garton Scanlon = brazen lethal contagions (?)
Kelly Fineman = leafy men link
Tricia Stohr-Hunt = ah hit instructor, or, runtish hit actor
Laura Salas = Aural salsa (she speaks Spanish?)
Cloudscome = close um, doc
Tanita S. Davis = a distant visa
Sara Lewis Holmes = a wireless shalom

As for me?

Jama Kim Rattigan = I am a jam tart king!

photo by minimallyinvasivenj

Okay, okay, since I like you, you can have one.

And, Alphabet Soup = A Potable Push or Spatula Be Bop!

P.S. For all the non-believers, who ask me, "Why all the fuss over soup?", here's my answer:

Every day, I look into my kettle, and find this:


But after stirring things around a little, I can sometimes create this:


Moral: Alphabet = Able path.

P.P.S. chocolate = cool cheat
          editor = redo it
          publisher = Lib Pusher

Somebody, stop me!

If you want to anagram some more, try this website, or this one! Warning: it's very addictive :).

Don't miss the Anagram Hall of Fame, which lists all the ones Mr. Pereira used in his poem!

For more alphabetica, click here.

Certified authentic alphabetica, handmade just for you with love and a decided passion for wordplay.
 

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