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Inside Out & Back Again by Thanhha Lai (2013, HarperCollins, 262 pages, for ages 8 to 12)Synopsis (from the publisher): For all the ten years of her life, Hà has only ever known Saigon: the thrills of its markets, the joy of its traditions, and the warmth of her friends close by. But now the Vietnam War has reached her home. Hà and her family are forced to flee as Saigon falls, and they board a ship headed toward hope—toward America.
Why I recommend it: The text is spare, with lots of white space on the page. Yet the imagery is gorgeous and colorful. I could taste the papaya, see the cramped boat on which they escape, feel Hà's anger and frustration at leaving home and starting over. Hà's voice is honest and childlike. Based loosely on the author's own childhood, the story is a deeply moving one. Like Hà, Thanhha Lai fled Vietnam with her family when she was ten, and moved to Alabama. Today she lives in Kansas.
The paperback edition includes suggested activities and an interview with the author.
Thanhha Lai's websiteFavorite lines: (from a poem called
Twisting Twisting on p. 37)
Mother measures
rice grains
left in the bin.
Not enough to last
till payday
at the end of the month.
Her brows
twist like laundry
being wrung dry.
Bonus: Use this as a starting point for classroom lessons about the Vietnam War, and timely discussions about refugees and prejudice.
Have you read
Inside Out & Back Again or any other novels in verse? What did you think of them?
By:
rgarcia406,
on 4/7/2016
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We are always excited to hear about unique ways in which our books are being used, and were thrilled to come across this review of Under the Mesquite that outlines how to use the book in a very special way: to help medical students gain cultural awareness and insight into the experiences of patients from different backgrounds. Author Mark Kuczewski kindly gave us permission to cross-post this review from the Reflective MedEd blog.
Helping medical students to gain cultural awareness and insight into the experience of patients and families from backgrounds different than their own is no small task. And the search for poignant materials that are easily fit within the demanding environment of a medical school curriculum is never-ending. The good news is that I can unequivocally recommend Under the Mesquite by Guadalupe Garcia McCall (Lee & Low Books, 2011). This narrative will help students to gain insight into the meaning of illness within families, especially within the context of a particular contemporary newly-arrived Mexican-American family…
The author, known as “Lupita” within the story, recounts experiences from her high school years when her mother suffered from cancer and underwent extensive treatment, sometimes for long periods at a medical center far from home. Because the author’s father accompanies his wife on these journeys, Lupita, the oldest daughter, takes on responsibility for the family. We are treated to her perspective in coping with her mother’s illness from spy work to find out the secreto that the adults guard in their hushed whispers to the difficulties that come when her parents are away such as being unable to keep order among her siblings. Lupita paints a portrait of a prudent family that begins a savings account with the birth of each child but whose resources are exhausted by the medical bills leaving her struggling each day to procure food to put on the table. And we come to know the importance of the arts, acting in school plays and writing in journals, as means to channel her anxieties and craft something beautiful.
Of course, the particular flavor of the narrative comes from the perspective of one who has significant roots on both sides of the border. She simultaneously gives us a window into the challenges of growing up bicultural and navigating the conflicting demands of loyalty to la familia that nurtured her and pursuing the dream of achieving a different kind of life that is available in the new world. The author lets us taste the bittersweet nature of this ambivalence both in her day-to-day growth as she is accused by her adolescent peers of trying to be something she is not as she loses her accent and in the more profound and cyclical heartbreak of separation. She relates her grief at abandoning her precious sunflowers when her father uproots her from her familiar home in Mexico and she in turn must break his heart as she heads off to college to pursue her dreams.
In sum, this book is among the most usable I’ve found with medical students for two reasons. First, it meets the main requirement of being an enjoyable and quick read. This autobiographical account is most likely to be devoured within a single day. The author is a superb writer and some of our medical students repeatedly commented that they wish she said more in most passages. Second, she enables us to easily identify with her struggles. Because all adults were once adolescents, we have a framework regarding the struggle for self-discovery and identity into which her cultural context is infused. She enables us to access the different through the familiar. Guadalupe Garcia McCall is a first-rate guide and mentor to those of us who seek insight into the Mexican-American experience and the particular strengths and means of coping that a family steeped in this hybrid culture might possess.
Mark G. Kuczewski, PhD, is the Chair of the Department of Medical Education and the Director of the Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics at the Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.
Purchase Under the Mesquite by Guadalupe Garcia McCall here.
Yes.
You read that right. I'm nearly finished writing the rough draft of my fifth novel. In the past nine years, I've written four MG novels and one YA, in addition to more than a dozen picture books. And no, in case you're wondering, I don't yet have an agent or a book contract. I've had fourteen publication credits to date, but they're all poems or flash fiction or micro fiction for adults.
Still, I keep writing for children and teens. Perseverance is my mantra.
But I have to admit, Novel #5 is, well, a little different. In what way?
Read on.
I started an idea notebook for my fifth novel back in the late spring of 2015, so nearly a year ago. After gathering ideas, and working out character sketches and a setting and a conflict, I wrote three chapters. Almost immediately, I became stuck. Something didn't feel right about it. So I put it aside and revised my fourth novel instead.
And then, in September, after reading Full Cicada Moon by Marilyn Hilton (even though it wasn't the first verse novel I read), I had an epiphany.
This new novel? The one I was stuck on? It was meant to be written in verse.
I spent two months reading and studying verse novels and then in November 2015 I started writing Novel #5 all over again.
Am I crazy? Well, this doesn't feel crazy. It feels... right. Since making that decision, the process has changed for me. Writing a verse novel is the hardest thing I've done as a writer, but at the same time, it's like I've grown wings. I look forward to writing every day, which is something I never did with a rough draft before. Rough drafts are usually agony.
I've been accepted into the Highlights Foundation workshop on Novels in Verse which will take place in May. Who knows where this will lead? Maybe nowhere. But maybe, just maybe, something good will happen.
For the rest of April, in honor of Poetry Month, I'll be looking at a few of the verse novels I've studied in my quest to learn this new (for me) form.
Over the past few years, I've read, in approximately this order:
Out of the Dust by Karen Hesse
42 Miles by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer
May B. by Caroline Starr Rose (this made me first fall in love with verse novels)
Pieces of Georgia by Jen Bryant
The Surrender Tree by Margarita Engle
Impulse by Ellen Hopkins
Because I am Furniture by Thalia Chaltas
Where I Live by Eileen Spinelli
Another Day as Emily by Eileen Spinelli
Full Cicada Moon by Marilyn Hilton
Blue Birds by Caroline Starr Rose
The Crossover by Kwame Alexander
Home of the Brave by Katherine Applegate
Inside Out & Back Again by Thanhha Lai
Libertad by Alma Fullerton
Mountain Dog by Margarita Engle
Make Lemonade by Virginia Euwer Wolff
Love That Dog by Sharon Creech
(I've also read Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson, which is actually an autobiography, and The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate, which some consider prose poetry.)
What verse novels do you recommend? All suggestions are welcome.
2015, HarperCollins
Tippi and Grace are nervous. Most of their lives, they've been safely tucked away in their home, out of the prying and hurtful eyes of the public. But homeschool is no longer an option. Their dad hasn't found another job and their mother is working as hard as she can. Dragon, their sister, is glad they don't have to go to a public high school like her, but is just as worried about them as the rest of the family. Today is the first day at Hornbeacon High...
Being conjoined twins is their normal. While most people look at them and react to their conjointedness, they see it so much differently. When they hear people whisper about how they wouldn't want to live like that, Tippi and Grace can think of so many other ways to live which could be worse. They've always had each other. Sometimes it's a good thing, sometimes it's frustrating, but the love is always there, even if the two girls personalities are so different.
But now, they have to walk through the halls of a new high school. Dread churns until they meet an unlikely girl named Yasmeen. Loud, colorful, and not intimidated by anyone, Yasmeen makes their circle a threesome and the girls become fast friends because of their uniqueness. Then along comes Jon. Another outcast at Hornbeacon High, he rounds out the circle of friendship and slowly slips into Grace's heart.
But one day, Grace faints. She lies to her parents, saying it was nothing, but Tippi knows better. She knows something isn't right. And the accidents go from mild to more severe. The sisters now have to make a decision that will forever change their lives. Although both of them have dreamed about it, being separated, in reality, is the scariest thought they've ever faced. And it's their choice, a matter of life or death...
Sarah Crossan's novel in verse is a beautiful story about life, love, and happiness; struggle, hardship, and choices. She combines all of these feelings into a story which ultimately makes readers' understand someone else's normal, although not your own, is what makes them who they are - unique, different, valuable. The twins' family weave in and out of their lives, and while at first being most important to them, now become second-most important as they step out of their bounds and create new lives based on friendships, breaking some rules to show independence, and living like they never thought would happen - a normal life. Excellent addition to junior high and high school collections. Highly Recommended.
By: Shelf-employed,
on 10/27/2014
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Woodson, Jacqueline. 2014. Brown Girl Dreaming. New York: Penguin.
Despite the title, Brown Girl Dreaming is most certainly not just a book for brown girls or girls. Jacqueline Woodson's memoir-in-verse relates her journey to discover her passion for writing. Her story is framed by her large, loving family within the confines of the turbulent Civil Rights Era.
Sometimes a book is so well-received, so popular, that it seems that enough has been said (and said well); anything else would just be noise. Rather than add another Brown Girl Dreaming review to the hundreds of glowing ones already in print and cyberspace, I offer you links to other sites, interviews and reviews related to Brown Girl Dreaming. And, I'll pose a question on memoirs in children's literature.
First, the links:
And now something to ponder:
As a librarian who often helps students in choosing books for school assignments, I have written many times about the
dreaded biography assignment - excessive page requirements, narrow specifications, etc.
Obviously, a best choice for a children's book is one written by a noted children's author. Sadly, many (by no means
all!) biographies are formula-driven, series-type books that are not nearly as engaging as ones written by the best authors. Rare is the author of young people's literature who writes an
autobiography for children as Ms. Woodson has done. When such books exist, they are usually memoirs focusing only on the author's childhood years. This is perfectly appropriate because the reader can relate to that specified period of a person's lifetime. Jon Sciezska wrote one of my favorite memoirs for children,
Knucklehead, and Gary Paulsen's,
How Angel Peterson Got his Name also comes to mind as a stellar example. These books, however, don't often fit the formula required to answer common student assignment questions, i.e., birth, schooling, employment, marriages, accomplishments, children, death. Students are reluctant to choose a book that will leave them with a blank space(s) on an assignment.
I wonder what teachers, other librarians and parents think about this. Must the biography assignment be a traditional biography, or can a memoir (be it in verse, prose, or graphic format) be just as acceptable? I hate to see students turn away from a great book because it doesn't fit the mold. If we want students to be critical thinkers, it's time to think outside the box and make room for a more varied, more diverse selection of books.
By: JOANNA MARPLE,
on 9/29/2014
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Title: Rumble Written by: Ellen Hopkins Published by: Margaret K. McElderry Books, Sept. 2014 Ages: 14+ Novel in verse Themes: bullying, gay teens, faith, religion, forgiveness, hypocrisy, ptsd, suicide, gun management Reviewed from an ARC. All opinions are my own. Opening … Continue reading →
Viking Childrens, 2014There is no stronger bond than....what? Daisy isn't sure about her life anymore. She remembers her family and the memories they shared, the little brother that came into her life, the music, her parents' laughter. Although those same memories exist today, it's a completely different dynamic, especially when the entire family's loyalties are put to the ultimate test.
Daisy has friends, and she has a boyfriend. She's musically gifted (more like a prodigy) and has been asked to attend prestigious schools and academies. Her grades are good and her parents allow her to go out, but it's all dictated by her little brother Steven, who is autistic. While their mother takes care of him most of the time, she also needs time away. Their father works long hours and comes home worn out, taking on the night time rituals, including the wrestling match that is more common than showers now. They all walk on eggshells, afraid to make any sudden moves, noises, or modifying a different routine that will spiral Steven into an outburst. No longer a child, Steven has gotten stronger and while his autism was more controlled when he was little, it has now become dangerous. When Daisy comes home one day, she sees what Steven's unintentional outbursts did to her mother. It wasn't an easy decision and one that wracked her parents longer than Daisy knew, but it's now come to a point where her mother doesn't feel strong enough to help Steven. Something had to give, and Steven will be leaving soon.
A part of Daisy wants to be happy. She can have her freedom back. This could mean sleepovers at her house, going out on dates without such stringent time limits, going to music camps, playing her trumpet in the house instead of the basement. But Daisy is also struggling with the change. How could her parents want to do this to their only son? How could she have helped more to prevent this? What could her parents do more of so Steven can stay home? It's an emotional battle that only Daisy can fight, and it will be the most difficult one she's ever had to. Can the family survive this huge change in their lives when Steven has been in their lives creating the familiar habits they are now accustomed to, or will they fall apart over this controversial decision that will make each one of them re-evaluate what their roles in life and family are?
Stasia Ward Kehoe writes a beautiful novel in verse about a topic that seems to only capture lurid headlines without looking at the entire situation a family goes through. Daisy is the character in limbo throughout the story by trying to have as normal a teen life as possible while also holding the reins of responsibility of taking care of a teenage boy whose autism is creating an unsafe situation he isn't even aware of. Kehoe writes about this emotional stage of life from all perspectives while being able to fluidly create a centrifugal force that isn't Steven, but is Daisy's life, before, during and after. This is a novel unlike any other and one that should be on YA shelves. Recommended.
Below is my review from the August, 2014, edition of School Library Journal.
GRIMES, Nikki. Words with Wings. 1 CD. 41 min. Recorded
Books. 2014. $15.75. ISBN 9781490609676. Playaway, digital
download.
Gr 3–5— Gabriella is a dreamer, more like the father she visits than the mother she lives with every day. Since her parents separated, Gabby and her mother have moved, and she has enrolled in a new school. Always the class daydreamer, she's prepared for the teasing that she knows will come. Mention the word "butterfly," and her thoughts may soar out the classroom window on the imagined wings of a beautiful creature. Other words create thoughts that are more pensive. Sometimes it's easier to retreat into her imagination than to face her circumstances. Gabby's expectations for her new school are low, but her teacher and a quiet boy in the back of the room offer some hope in her new surroundings. With encouragement, perhaps a pen and paper can anchor the "words with wings" that set Gabby's mind adrift. Mutiyat Ade-Salu is perfectly cast for this story in verse, told in the first person in the present tense story. Her voice is youthful and likable, and as Gabriella's thoughts soar, plummet, and wander, so too does the voice of Ade-Salu. A perfect book for poets, dreamers, and reluctant readers.
Copyright © 2014 Library Journals, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. Reprinted with permission.
By: JOANNA MARPLE,
on 9/9/2013
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Maceration of the Cabernet Sauvignon grapes – source – Wikimedia Commons
Mondays on this blog will be given over to musings on being: a writer (for children), a voracious reader, an MFA student, an expat in New York, a nature advocate, part of the LGBTQ community, a lifelong wanderer, an obsessive observer of human nature, and one who jives to the java bean and the fermentation-flirtation of the Cabernet Sauvignon grape!
While I shall most definitely be writing a post on, ‘Why One Should Read Outside One’s Genre,’ today I espouse the importance as writers of reading the themes, content, forms and genre in which we have rooted our own manuscript. You need to know how your book compares with the competition, and how it is different. Reading your genre is about staying current as an author, just as a teacher or doctor might. Agents and publishers will expect this of you, and you should certainly know on which shelf in a (Indie) bookstore a reader should be able to find your book!
I like to not only read in my genre, but also books that have focused on some of the big themes and subject matter in my story; maybe betrayal, or teenage pregnancy, maybe set in other cultures, or in slang…. You might read to be inspired by form and style. Maybe you are seeking to write in a more literary style, then you could perhaps read Laurie Halse Anderson’s WINTER GIRLS. Since meeting and reading most of the works of author, Ellen Hopkins, I have been fascinated by the form of novels written in verse, and have been reading broadly in this form. I am thrilled that we have on the faculty of the Stony Brook MFA program, Patty McCormick, whose novel in verse, SOLD, has so much of what I want to explore in my own writing.
In which genre are you writing? And/or what theme(s) are you exploring, and what recommendation do you, therefore, have for us? Let me kick off, and let me say that while my novel is at present in prose, I am drawn to a more poetic vehicle for the story.
Genre: Contemporary YA fiction (edgy) Form: narrative prose Themes: Estrangement, abusive parental relationships and/or LGBTQ characters and bullying
My recommendations:
SMOKE by NYT best selling author, Ellen Hopkins and published by Simon and Schuster. I was lucky to read an ARC of this novel in verse, which is released tomorrow, September, 10th 2013. I loved BURN and was not disappointed with this sequel. SMOKE addresses big themes – courage and survival, abuse, hypocrisy and silence in religious communities (LDS), gay bullying, neglect, love… the writing is quick and sparse and visually meaningful. All the characters are 3+ dimensional. If you have never read a novel in verse, I highly recommend any of Hopkin’s novels. SMOKE is also included in this recent list of Top Ten YA Releases in Sept 2013.
Okay, I have not yet read FREAKBOY, a YA novel in verse by Kristin Elizabeth Clark, which is going to be published on October 22nd, 2013, by Farrar, Strauss and Geroux, but I have discussed the book with the author and am a huge fan of her writing and very happy to see a book embracing these themes. I am convinced this will be a book with significant ripples in the YA book community. Just this week it received a starred review -“*”This gutsy, tripartite poem explores a wider variety of identities—cis-, trans-, genderqueer—than a simple transgender storyline, making it stand out.“ — Kirkus Review, starred review.
You can buy it now, here.
OCTOBER MOURNING by Lesléa Newman, published by Candlewick, September 25th, 2012. “A masterful poetic exploration of the impact of Matthew Shepard’s murder on the world.”
On the night of October 6, 1998, a gay twenty-one-year-old college student named Matthew Shepard was lured from a Wyoming gay bar by two young men pretending to be gay. Matthew was savagely beaten, tied to a fence, and left to die. October Mourning, is the author’s deep personal response to the events of that tragic day. It is a novel in verse, but quite different from the previous two as Newman creates fictitious monologues from various points of view, including the fence Matthew was tied to and the girlfriends of the murderers. This is a heartbreaking series of sixty-eight poems in several different poetic forms offering the reader an enduring tribute to Matthew Shepard’s life.
Your turn! Please add your recommendations in the comments below.
By:
Carmela Martino and 5 other authors,
on 8/23/2013
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Howdy, Campers! Betsy H. is hosting Poetry Friday today at I Think in Poems. Thank you, Betsy!
At the end of this post are:
1) the details of today's Book Giveaway of an autographed book by verse novelist Sonya Sones;
2) one of Sonya's deliciously enigmatic poems.
However, if you came here to meet Sonya and learn all about her newest YA novel, I'm sorry to say you'll be disappointed. Sonya just called--she had a dental appointment and couldn't be here today.
Exclusive photo of Sonya Sones and her dentist.
I lied. Sonya doesn't need to see the dentist--her teeth are gleaming! Say hello to my long-time friend, critique buddy, fab author and poet, Sonya Sones:
photo by Ava Tramer
Her novels-in-verse include:
Stop Pretending,
One of Those Hideous Books Where the Mother Dies, (great title!
), What My Mother Doesn’t Know (one of the top
100 most challenged books of the decade) and its companion,
What My Girlfriend Doesn’t Know.
Sonya has graciously agreed to reveal the
very first
poem in her
book that
isn't even out yet and
YOU, Campers, will be among the very first readers of this poem! Her newest book,
To Be Perfectly Honest (A Novel Based on an Untrue Story) (Simon and Schuster Books for Young Readers)
, comes out on August 27 and is
full of lies.
Sonya is an original in the best sense of the word. She and I met in poet
Myra Cohn Livingston's Master Class. When Myra died, her students hosted classes at our homes, teaching each other the fine points of poetry.
When it was Sonya's turn to host, she surprised us by hiring a drummer who gave each of us a drum and taught us different rhythms for an hour! An unforgettable way to instruct and inspire.
She continues to inspire me, always thinking of new ways of telling a story. I'll never forget the day Sonya said she'd decided to write a novel in verse with an
unreliable narrator. I was lucky to witness the unfolding of what became
To Be Perfectly Honest (A Novel Based on an Untrue Story).
Here's a bit of what
School Library Journal says about this book:
"Sones captures the ache of first love. Readers may find themselves laughing, crying, and wanting to believe the unreliable, well-developed narrator. Excerpts may make for a stepping stone to William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Like Shakespeare’s play, this title lends itself to discussion about healthy relationships, setting limits, defining oneself, and evaluating what is real. Fast paced and great for reluctant readers.”
Sonya! Welcome to TeachingAuthors' humble abode! How did you officially become a TeachingAuthor?
I officially became a teaching author the day I volunteered to teach a poetry writing workshop to my son’s fourth grade class. I gave each student a donut and told them they couldn’t eat it until they gave me a simile to describe it. The rest is history.
Besides bringing donuts, what's one piece of advice you have for teachers?
Make poetry fun! Don’t only expose your students to classic poetry. I teach workshops to middle-schoolers and high-schoolers, and I find that they respond with more enthusiasm to current poetry. There’s a very funny poem by Billy Collins called “
Introduction to Poetry,” about tying a poem to a chair and trying to beat a confession out of it, that might be a good place to start. There’s another one called “
Pearl” by
Dorianne Laux, which is a fabulous portrait of Janice Joplin. Try reading that poem to them and challenging them to write a poem about their own favorite musician. And there’s a great very short love poem by
Eve Merriam called “
New Love.”
Don’t force students to memorize and analyze. If you choose the right poems, your students will feel the words washing over them like a cool ocean breeze on a broiling hot day. Your goal should be to teach them how to love poetry, not how to “understand” it.
Whoops. Was that more than one piece of advice?
Sonya crossing her eyes with the Book Café Club
at La Salle Academy in Providence, RI
Who's counting? Please tell us the Cinderella story of how you sold your first book.
I didn’t sell my first book. Or my second book. Or my third. That was when I decided to enroll in a poetry class at UCLA extension taught by the brilliant
Myra Cohn Livingston. She set me on the path to writing
Stop Pretending. I finished it just before the annual
SCBWI conference in Century City and brought my manuscript with me. There, I attended a presentation by a very young agent (he was only 24 years old!) named
Steven Malk who gave a speech about why you should have an agent if you wrote or illustrated for kids. Then halfway through the speech, he switched over to talking about why that agent should be him. He was so persuasive that after his talk 75 authors ran up to him to ask for his business card. But I hung back, not wanting to crowd him.
Later that day, however, I found myself in the lobby, and there he was, standing all by himself. Even so, a friend had to convince me to go up and talk to him. But I finally did and I said, “I wrote a book about what happened when my big sister was sent to a mental hospital, it’s written in verse, it’s sort of edgy, and I was wondering if I could send it to you.” He said, “Okay.” And that was it. A twenty second conversation. I mailed it to him on Wednesday. He called me on Friday to tell me how much he liked it. And by the following Wednesday he had a bidding war going. That week remains one of the most astonishing and exhilarating times of my entire life.
I love that story. And now I've learned that To Be Perfectly Honest (A Novel Based on an Untrue Story) is also available as an audiobook in CDs and MP3, narrated by Kate Rudd, who also narrated John Greene's The Fault in Our Stars.
I want your life!
What's on the horizon for you?
A lot of traveling! Simon and Schuster is sending me on a book tour:
Chicago, D.C., Miami, San Francisco, Menlo Park, Pasadena, Ontario, Raleigh and Phoenix. Then, in October, I’ll be going to Hong Kong where I’ve been invited by Hong Kong Baptist University to participate in an
International Writer’s Workshop for a month. I’ve never been to that part of the world, and I’m very much looking forward to this grand adventure. And wherever I go, I will be scanning the horizon for stories…
Oh my gosh! I'm exhausted just reading your itinerary! I know you'll meet interesting folks on the way!
Sonya, meeting a fan.
photo by Ava Tramer
And finally, since it's Poetry Friday in the Kidlitosphere, please share a poem!
This is the first poem from
To Be Perfectly Honest (A Novel Based on an Untrue Story):
They Tell Me There Was an Accident
by Sonya Sones
Though I can’t
remember it happening.
Here’s what I do remember:
I remember climbing into a limo
with my little brother Will to visit our mom
on the set of her latest film.
It smelled
like someone had been
smoking pot in there.
Or maybe drinking champagne.
Or throwing up.
Or all three.
Sort of like
our living room
after one of Mom’s all-night parties.
I remember
rolling down the window
for some breathable air
while Will bounced around,
like he always does
when we’re in a limo,
telling me
one goofy knock-knock joke
after another.
I remember turning onto Sunset Boulevard,
and seeing a massive billboard
of a guy wearing nothing but jeans—
his fly unzipped
just low enough
to make me look twice.
Will saw it too.
He grinned at me and lisped through the gap
where his baby teeth used to be, “Thex thells!”
Sex sells?
How does a seven-year-old even know that?
I was just about to ask him—
but I never got the chance.
poem © 2013 Sonya Sones. All rights reserved
Newsflash: Sonya's own three-book box set of trade paperbacks,
The Sonya Sones Collection, will be released the same day
To Be Perfectly Honest (A Novel Based on an Untrue Story) comes out. Sonya's comment: "Wow...a new boxed set...now Calvin Klein and I
both have collections."
Visit her at SonyaSones.com, follow her on Twitter, and for goodness sake friend her on FaceBook!
Thank you for offering our readers a chance to win a copy of your new book (details below) and thanks for stopping by, Sonya!
And now, for the Book Giveaway details:
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first option--subscribing to the TeachingAuthors blog.
If you're already a TeachingAuthors subscriber, you still need to click on that button and tell us how you follow our blog, which will give you THREE entries in the giveaway! (If you received this post via email, you can click on the Rafflecopter link at the end of this message to enter.)
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merrily posted by April Halprin Wayland and her dog, Eli...who wish you a Happy New Year and shyly remind you about April's award-winning book, New Year at the Pier--a Rosh Hashanah Story
By:
Carmela Martino and 5 other authors,
on 7/19/2013
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We've returned from our blog-cation tanned and rested. Esther kicks off this round's topic about
contests with her
post on Lee and Low's New Voices Contest, including several juicy tidbits (did you know that an early version of Christopher Paul Curtis's
The Watsons Go to Birmingham lost a contest before it went on to win the Newbery?)
Jeanne Marie
continues the discussion, touching on Las Vegas, mowing lawns, selling one's first born, her years as a Hollywood scriptwriter, and winning Houghton Mifflin Harcourt's scholarship.
On today's TeachingAuthors menu:
- links to contests for young writers;
- a poem about the delicious feeling when you learn you're going to be published;
- the secret about entering contests.
Links to contests for young writers:
Here's the page on my personal website which lists a
few select contests (including a peace poetry contest), and here, on the
TeachingAuthors website, Carmela has compiled
a ton more.
My poem for Poetry Friday:
I vividly remember learning I'd won a writing contest when I was in second grade. Winning came with a
fancy bookmark(!) and a certificate to Martindale's Bookstore in Santa Monica for
any book in the entire store! I was intoxicated.
Any book!
I chose Dr. Seuss'
Green Eggs and Ham, much to my father's disappointment.
(He had his heart set on The Big Book of Japanese Fairy Tales.)
Winning a contest, getting something published...the
POW! of this is experience is indescribable. And no matter how many books you have published, or how many of your poems are in
magazines and anthologies, most writers will tell you that an acceptance is an acceptance--the
ZING! is as powerful each time.
And so, Campers: get out of your comfort zone and enter a contest or try to get something published (which is the same thing, if you think about it).
Which brings us to today's poem. It's in my verse novel,
Girl Coming in for a Landing--a novel in poems, illustrated by
Elaine Clayton (Knopf, 2002). It can be performed by one, two, or three people.
PUBLISHED!
by April Halprin Wayland
A letter in the mail!
They're going to PUBLISH my poem.
In their magazine.
In June.
My brain is exploding! I can’t sleep!
I woke up early,
my body buzzy
like a playground ball boing-ing down a long hallway.
THEY'RE GOING TO PUBLISH MY POEM!
I won’t tell anyone.
I’ll wait until the magazine comes out.
How can I wait that long?
I won’t tell anyone.
I’ll just casually hand them the magazine
or wait
until someone at school sees it.
What will Carlo think?
What will Frank think?
What will Yen-Mei think?
What will Leslie think?????????
I won’t tell anyone.
I won’t tell anyone
and boy,
will they be surprised.
They’re going to
publish my poem!
My poem! My poem!
Who can I call at 5:30 in the morning?
So, teens, 'tweens, ten-year-olds, scribblers...all: go forth and enter!
Because here's the secret:
whether or not you win,
you've won.
poem and drawing © April Halprin Wayland. All rights reserved
Today's post is by April Halprin Wayland who thanks you from the bottom of her sandy toes for reading this far.
Today’s
Wednesday Writing Workout comes from Holly Thompson, a fellow TeachingAuthor, just in time to
celebrate yesterday’s Delacorte/Random House release of her second young adult
novel in verse, The Languge Inside.
The novel tells
the story of Emma Karas “who was raised in Japan; it’s the country she calls
home. But when her mother is diagnosed
with breast cancer, Emma’s family moves to a town outside Lowell,
Massachusetts, to stay with Emma’s grandmother while
her mom undergoes treatment.
Emma feels out of place in the United States. She begins to have migraines, and
longs to be back in Japan. At her grandmother's urging, she volunteers in a
long-term care center to help Zena, a patient with locked-in syndrome, write
down her poems. There, Emma meets Samnang, another volunteer, who assists
elderly Cambodian refugees. Weekly visits to the care center, Zena's poems,
dance, and noodle soup bring Emma and Samnang closer, until Emma must make a
painful choice: stay in Massachusetts, or return home early to Japan.”
The starred School Library Journal review called the
novel “a sensitive and compelling read that will inspire teens to contemplate
how they can make a difference.”
Kirkus described the novel as “an artistic picture of
devastation, fragility, bonds and choices.”
The Horn Book Magazine remarked that “readers will finish
the book knowing that, like Zena, the Cambodian refugees, and the tsunami
victims, Emma has the strength to ‘a hundred times fall down / a hundred and
one times get up.’”
Many
TeachingAuthors readers met Holly in 2011 when my March 16 Student Success Story
interview celebrated the release of her first
young adult novel in verse, Orchards.
Orchards went on to win the APALA Asian/Pacific
American Award for Literature.
Raised in Massachusetts,
Holly earned a B.A. in biology from Mount Holyoke College and an M.A. in
English (concentration creative writing/fiction) from New York University’s
Creative Writing Program. A longtime resident of Japan, Holly teaches creative
writing at Yokohama City University and also serves as Regional Advisor for the
Japan Chapter of SCBWI. Holly’s fiction
often relates to Japan and Asia.
Congratulations,
Holly, on yet another successful book!
And, thank you
for sharing your expertise with our TeachingAuthors readers – who happen to
have only until Sunday, May 19 to enter our TeachingAuthors Blogiversary
Giveaway!
Click here to
enter – if you haven’t already – the raffle to win one of 4 $25 Anderson’s
Bookshop Gift Certificates.
Esther
Hershenhorn
. . . . . . . .
Holly Thompson’s Wednesday Writing
Workout: Poetry with a Plot
When I do author
school visits, I love to introduce students to narrative poems and narrative
verse and get them started on writing their own. You can write and/or teach
this type of poetry, too – poetry I call “Poetry with a Plot.”
Beforehand:
1. Gather some
narrative poems—poems that tell a story—to share with students. Examples are
Gary Soto’s “Oranges,” Jeffrey Harrison’s “Our Other Sister,”
Naomi Shihab Nye’s “My Father and theFig Tree,” and “Fifteen”
or “Traveling Through The Dark,” by William Stafford, and my poem “Cod” (published in PoetryFriday Anthology Middle School)
2. Also gather
some verse novels. Select one scene to share with students. Choose a scene that
has a fairly clear beginning, middle and end. Chapter 22, Visitors, of my novel Orchards
is an example of a scene in verse with
a clear plot arc.
3. Create a list
of situations to share with students. Here are a few examples of some
situations that I like to use:
a mistake
a decision
a first time
a last time
a betrayal
an encounter
an argument
a mix-up
a lie
With the students:
1. Read the
narrative poems aloud. For each narrative poem, ask students to react. Ask:
What lines or stanzas do you like? Why? What is the mini plot of the poem—what
happens in this poem? Then have them look at the structure and style of the
poem. Ask: Do the structure and style help create the narrative? How?
2. Read aloud a
scene from a verse novel. Ask students to react. Ask: What lines or stanzas do
you like? What lines move you? What lines are powerful? Where did your breath
catch? Where did the pace pick up or slow down? Why? What is the basic plot arc
of the scene? Did any action happen off the page? How did the writer structure
the scene and create tension—with repetition, white space, short lines, long
lines, particular images, or sounds and rhythms?
3. Next, give
students your list of situations. Have students brainstorm examples of the
various types of situations. Students will then choose one type of situation
from which to create a narrative poem or scene in verse. Point out, for
example, that “Oranges” can be considered a first time poem; “Our Other Sister”
a lie poem; “Fifteen” and “Traveling Through the Dark” decision poems; and
“Cod” a betrayal poem. Chapter 22 in Orchards
might be considered an encounter scene. Tell students they can start from a
true situation, or partially fictionalize a situation, or veer away from actual
truth to completely fictionalize a situation.
4. After
students create first drafts of their narrative poems or scenes, have them work
at revising, individually and in peer workshops, checking for the narrative
arc, details, poetic elements, line breaks and spacing.
5. Finally when
students have polished their work, have students read, perform, create
multimedia presentations, publish in zines or submit their narrative poems or
scenes in verse to school magazines.
Be prepared to
be amazed! Good luck and let me know if you try this approach to introducing
narrative poems and and narrative verse.
# # #
Around here we love April– springtime starts to peek around the corner, summer vacations don’t seem quite so far away, conference season kicks into gear, and last but certainly not least, it’s Poetry Month!
There are so many reasons to love poetry– it evokes emotions, feelings and sensations. The rhyme schemes, vocabulary, free verse– it’s all so rich and powerful. And when we think of poetry, novels in verse might not usually jump to the front of our minds. But one of our most acclaimed books last year was a novel in verse: INSIDE OUT AND BACK AGAIN, by Thanhha Lai. While there were many (many!) reasons I loved this Newbery Honor-winning book, one of the things I loved most while reading was the beautiful, poignant, and at times hilariously funny language. And the coming-of-age immigration story that sticks to you like glue after reading doesn’t hurt either…
Enjoy and share this poem from INSIDE OUT AND BACK AGAIN (now available in paperback!) and enjoy Poetry Month!
Farrar, Straus Giroux, 2012
Angel's life took a turn when her mother passed away. Rebellion and anger set in and she would run away, even if it was just the mall. Her father, still grieving, didn't know what to do with her...didn't know what to do with the family. So Angel continued to run.
And she ran into the arms of Call...
He understood her like no one else. He gave her attention and a shoulder to lean on. He fed her, noticed her, played the gentleman for her.
And he gave her candy, the kind that'll hook you, sink you...
And now Angel's life is about survival. What started as just a few favors for Call's friends turned into days on the street, eking out a living only to give all the money to Call. Money for a place to crash, for a meal to eat,
For more candy...
But Angel is creating another turning point in her life. She no longer wants the candy, although she craves it. Her body aches and her mind isn't numb to her life, but she wants out, wants to feel,
Wants her family...
The only family she has now are the other girls and women on the streets in Vancouver - Serena, Nena, Connie. But they are also deserting her, leaving her on the streets alone,
While their bodies are found, one by one....
But Call has other plans. Not only for Angel, but for another girl he has found. Angel knows the blackness in Call and has decided she won't allow him to create another victim.
Another child on the streets...
But can she? Are Call and the candy he gives so readily that easy to turn away? And will her family still want her back after all she's done?
Martine Leavitt has written a gritty novel-in-verse based on real events of missing and murdered women who worked Vancouver's downtown Eastside between 1983 and 1997. The characters are fictional, but the reader will very much feel for Angel and the others. Emotion runs high for both characters and readers as well. While Angel is living the horror, the reader, like me, can't quite fathom how this horror can exist. Not since Scott's Living Dead Girl has provocation crept into my reading like it did with Leavitt's book because of the developed emotional reaction the reader may feel. Leavitt has found a way for beauty and ugliness to exist together. One from the free verse writing she does so well and the other through the life of a young teen girl within the pages. Recommended for mature high school readers.
Rose, Caroline Starr. 2012.
May B. New York: Random House.
(booktalk)
In Kansas' early days as a state, there is no help in the prairie schools for a child with what will later become known as dyslexia. Nor is there help for a farmer whose spring wheat crop has failed.
So it is neither unforseen, nor unusual when the parents of Mavis Elizabeth Betterly, May B., literally "farm her out" as hired help to a prairie neighbor. Hiram, the Betterly's son, will stay at home, he, being of more use to the frontier family.
The closest homestead is 15 miles away, a full day's journey by wagon. Young May Betterly passes the long hours to the Oblinger's simple, sod house that will be her home until Christmas,
I play a game inside my head,
counting plum trees that dot a creek bed,
rabbits that scatter at the sound of wagon wheels,
clouds that skirt the sky.
For hours, that is all,
and grass,
always grass,
in different shades and textures
like the braids in a rag rug.
Miss Sanders told us that lines never end,
and numbers go on foresver.
Here,
in short-grass country,
I understand infinity.
When Mrs, Oblinger takes a horse and deserts her new husband to return east, Mr. Oblinger goes off in pursuit.
"Don't worry about supper," he says. "I could be gone some time."
"Some time" will be longer than May could ever have dreamed. It will take all of her courage, strength and perseverance to survive.
I am afraid
in the dark
all alone
I am afraid
######
In similar style to Karen Hesse's Newbery-winning,
Out of the Dust, and
Witness, Caroline Starr Rose's novel in verse is deeply affecting. May's honesty in assessing her shortcomings is balanced by her inner optimism that she may yet overcome her situation - against all odds.
We all share that struggle. May B. gives voice and hope to us all.
Teacher's Study Guide for May B.Note: The librarians of the NJLA's Children's Services Section will likely be discussing this book in the upcoming months on our new mock award blog, Newbery Blueberry Mockery Pie. Please join us.
By: Laura,
on 2/24/2011
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The school and library world is a-buzzing with accolades for Thanhha Lai’s debut novel INSIDE OUT AND BACK AGAIN! Check out these reviews…and the shiny stars that accompany them:
“In her not-too-be-missed debut, Lai evokes a distinct time and place and presents a complex, realistic heroine whom readers will recognize, even if they haven’t found themselves in a strange new country.” ~ Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“An incisive portrait of human resilience.” ~ Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Based on Lai’s personal experience, this first novel captures a child-refugee’s struggle with rare honesty.” ~ Booklist (starred review)
“[...] the immediacy of the narrative will appeal to those who do not usually enjoy historical fiction.” ~ School Library Journal (starred review)
“Lai’s spare language captures the sensory disorientation of changing cultures as well as a refugee’s complex emotions and kaleidoscopic loyalties.” ~ The Horn Book
And here is what our teacher and librarian friends are saying:
INSIDE OUT AND BACK AGAIN (ISBN 9780061962783) is on-sale now.
Last year I surprised myself by reading a novel in verse and liking it. I read my second novel in verse earlier this year. Now that might not sound like a lot, but I've never been a person who really liked poetry. Yet both of these books, Because I am Furniture by Thalia Chaltas and Home of the Brave by Katherine Applegate, pulled me in quickly and impressed me with their sparse, beautiful use of language.
So I was fascinated when I saw this challenge from Caroline Starr Rose. The rules are simple:
1. Read five novels-in-verse by December 31
2. Create a post about the contest (and link to the original post)
3. Report back in December on your books (nothing fancy...just share your titles and any thoughts you might like to add)
4. One participant will win an ARC of MAY B., Caroline's debut historical novel-in-verse
I'm not familiar with a lot of novels in verse, but I'm looking forward to discovering more. I bought I Heart You, You Haunt Me by Lisa Schroeder a few weeks ago. It's a book I've thought about reading for a while so that will be my first book for the challenge.
If you'd like to join in the challenge, follow the link to Caroline's blog. And if you've got suggestions for some other novels in verse, tell me in the comments. Because my TBR pile isn't big enough already :D
Have a fabulous weekend!
Candlewick Press, 2007
This book is for upper middle grade readers and young adult readers. But the layout of the book is like a picture book. It’s obviously not a picture book because of the length and the content. It is intended for older readers.
This is a biography written in verse. The book is divided into twelve chapters, or rounds. I was truly amazed at what a rhyming wizard Smith is. He has the poems rhyme, but they don’t appear sing-songy or cutesy. We learn much about Muhammad Ali through Smith’s verse. The dust jacket says that it was inspired by rap. It’s also written in second person almost like the author is talking directly to Ali about himself.
Bryan Collier has such a distinct style of illustrating. I enjoyed seeing the poems illustrated in full color. Many of the biographies in verse that I have read in the past weren’t illustrated in full color, so Collier’s illustrations added another dimension.
Smith writes about Ali’s fight with Joe Frazier:
“
You have ascended the mountaintop
and must now reach its peak;
your body is tired
but your spirit is not weak.
Your rubbery legs
carry you to meet Joe,
but your weighted-down fists
manage to strike blow
after blow
after blow
after blow
to your opponent…”
This book won the Coretta Scott King Honor Award in 2008.
Hear Smith read some of his poems here.
On Friday, June 13, at Harding University I had the great privilege to listen to readings and teachings of poet and author, Nikki Grimes.
Ms. Grimes stated that as our world grows more complicated nothing can prepare a child for it like poetry.
She said poetry can be a message or a massage, depending on the words used in the poem. She takes a natural, organic approach to poetry and has been a lifelong student of it. Ms. Grimes said, “I’m a poet down to my soul.” She explained that a poem tells a story or paints a picture with as few words as possible. She directed us to tune into our senses and draw on the environment—to play with the words.
She told us to begin with a simple description of a subject and then play around with a couple of the phrases we had written. We were to use word tools, like a dictionary and thesaurus. And she cautioned us about using rhyme—it should only be included when used well and with intention. But she does like internal rhyme and uses it often.
She shared with us the galley of her picture book biography of Barack Obama, which is to be released in September of this year. Her poetic voice shaped the story of the senator’s life from childhood to his current Presidential election campaign.
Ms. Grimes read excerpts from her latest novel in verse, THE DARK SONS. The story parallels the lives of two boys, one modern (Sam) and one ancient (biblical Ishmael) She also read selections from two of her narrative poetry picture books, WHEN GORILLA GOES WALKING, and MEET DANITRA BROWN. Ms. Grimes explained that every poem in a narrative poetry book must be a complete poem in itself, but it must also add to the development of the story. And a novel in verse is more complicated than narrative poetry because it must have a more detailed plot, setting and time period.
Ms. Grimes wove the words of her poems with the skill of a master. She truly was an inspiration--a revelation, a celebration, pure jubilation! (And I hope she will forgive me for using these rhyming words to describe it all.)
Your Own, Sylvia: A Verse Portrait of Sylvia PlathBy
Stephanie HemphillKnopf, 2007
I have been dying to read this book ever since it first came out in 2007. I waited and waited and waited for my local library to carry it, but they still haven’t added it to their lists. So I bought it. I’m so glad I did. This is definitely a book I’m glad is now part of my collection.
Stephanie Hemphill has done an amazing job with this book. Not only has she meticulously researched Sylvia Plath’s life and the people that were important to her, but she also has written about her life through the viewpoint of those people through poetry. Each poem is from the point of view of a particular person in Sylvia’s life writing about her. While Hemphill is the one writing, and acknowledges that this is a work of historical fiction, she has researched each event and person carefully. At the bottom of each poem, there are a few sentences or short paragraphs with additional facts or explanations for the reader. She also writes poems about Sylvia Plath in the style of some of Plath’s own poems.
There is an author’s note, source notes, and extensive bibliography at the end.
What I think is most appealing about this book is that is so beautifully written. People might be drawn to the book because they want to learn about Sylvia Plath, or already love her work. But readers will savor this book for the poetic fervor with which it was written.
To celebrate this book, I give you part of one of the poems in the book.
St. Botolph’s Party: Meeting Sylvia Plath
Ted Hughes, poet, Sylvia’s future husband
February 25, 1956
I may be black panther
but she draws my blood,
swirls whiskey-headed
around the dance floor,
dizzy on my poetry.
Her mind traps my lines
with the proficiency
I quote Shakespeare’s.
She adores my words,
whispers that I will be
part of the pantheon.
By:
Kate Messner,
on 1/15/2008
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I love it when I book-talk a new selection for my classroom library and end up with a near-battle over who gets to sign it out first. I know, I know, chaos is generally frowned upon in school, but I love to see kids ravenous about reading. Here's the book that caused the commotion this week...
Dee got there first, so she's enjoying Lisa Schroeder's debut novel in verse tonight, probably up late with a flashlight under the covers even as I type this review.
I read I HEART YOU, YOU HAUNT ME in one weepy sitting over the weekend and savored lisa_schroeder's free verse poems that come together to tell a touching story of love, loss, and healing. The book opens with the funeral of Ava's boyfriend Jackson -- a funeral for which she can't help but feel a sense of responsibility, given what happened. This isn't a traditional tear-jerker, though -- because Jackson comes back. As a ghost. And Ava finds herself pulled in two directions, forced to choose between the love she lost and the life she still has.
Lisa Schroeder's poems are spare and beautiful -- the kind of poems that paint an amazing picture and then hit hard in the last lines. This book will have huge appeal for fans of other verse novels. Kids who love Sonya Sones, especially, are in for a treat. Like Sones, Schroeder takes a realistic look at teenagers. Simon & Schuster recommends this title for grades 9 and up. There are some very mild references to sex, but nothing, in my opinion, that would make the book inappropriate for a 7th or 8th grade reader who has read Sones' work or other books that deal with teen romance.
Ava and Jackson were so real to me during the hour I spent in their world, I couldn't help being swept up in their drama. Part of me was glad I read this one at home, so I didn't end up sobbing through sustained silent reading in front of twenty seventh graders. But part of me thinks that would have been just fine, too. Sometimes, an old-fashioned cry is a perfect reminder of how transporting a great story can be.
One morning, on a Spring day, Bizzy the Dog wished to go play.
He was supposed to wait for his boy to awake, although nothing could
wake him, except an earthquake!
So he leap toward the kitchen, with his tail spinning round, to slurp up some water before he went to town.
But he knocked over his water, it spilled on the floor, so he sashayed on the water, to the flap in the door
He pushed his paws through the flap, to reach the outside, but Bizzy got stuck, since he was too wide.
So he used his front paws to pull himself through, and rolled in the dirt, since it's fun to do.
While he spun in the dirt, watching dust swirl around, Bizzy spied a bug run and hide underground.
He kicked back his paws, like a bull in a fight, and barked at the bug, when it jumped from his sight.
Bizzy looked for the bug, until his eyes crossed, one minute there, the next minute lost!
Well, that was that, the bug would not play. So Bizzy decided to be on his way.
He heard his paws hit the sidewalk, as he pranced along. Plop, plop, de bop, bop, like the beat of
a song.
Then Bizzy saw Mr. Tom Cat! He jumped in the air, and was gone, just like that!
Now, Mr. Tom Cat found it easy to hide. So Bizzy amused swung his tail, side to side.
Then, Mr. Tom Cat reappeared from the air! His green eyes peered at Bizzy against his black
hair.
“ Spizz! , Meow!”, cried the cat, his ears flat on his head. He was ready to fight, much to Bizzy's
dread.
"Grrr ,Ruff!", growled Bizzy, lifting his paw in a curl, then Mr. Tom Cat swung his paw with a
twirl.
Bizzy jumped back, protecting his eyes, and snapped at the cat, much to his surprise
The tom cat jumped high from the ground. Then ran out of sight, without making a sound.
Bizzy followed the cat’s scent to the trunk of a tree. He could smell the tom cat, now, where
could he be?
Bizzy wondered if maybe, Mr.Tom Cat could fly since Bizzy can’t catch a cat in the sky.
He thought of his boy as he smelled by the tree, too bad he could smell what he could not see
Bizzy hoped his boy would not awake, since now he knew he made a mistake.
So, he kicked back his paws and went on his way.
Bizzy, the dog, loved a spring day.
He dashed along his mind on the creek. He liked to go there, he would just have a peek.
When he got to the creek he smelled the fresh grass, then tasted the water, clear as new glass.
As he tasted the water from the creek bed, he saw the reflection of a dogs' head.
He turned his head sideways, not sure what to do.
But when Bizzy's head turned, the dogs' head turned too!
Bizzy barked at the dog, but his body felt weak, then he tried to run backwards, and slipped in
the creek!
Slip, slither, slide, he fell in with a splash! Down, down to the bottom he went until he crashed!
His head under water, he could see mud below, he paddled and pulled, but his paw would not go!
The busy pup's paw was stuck in the mud, his fur matted and covered in crud.
He thought of his boy as he tugged and he tugged. His boy might wake up, and need to be
hugged.
Bizzy saw fish swimming around, he had to go up, but his paw held him down.
He pulled his paw one time, then two times, then three!
He pulled and he pulled, until he pulled his paw free!
Bizzy paddled and paddled his paws did not stop. He paddled and paddled his way to the top.
He popped out of the water, and in spite of a cough, jumped on the ground, and began to run off
Bizzy took off at full speed, he could run mighty fast. He ran with such speed, he was home in a
flash.
So glad to be home, and at his front door, Bizzy flipped through the flap, and spun on the
floor. Tongue hanging out, and still soaking wet, Bizzy climbed upon his boy’s bed for a pet.
"Oh! Boy! You are stinky!” is what is boy said, “Get down stinky dog. You are wet, on my bed!”
Then the busy’s Dogs' boy took him out for a scrub.
He brushed out his hair, and gave him a hug.
Oh! He loved his boy so! The busy dog thought.
Then he thought of the toys, and the food his boy bought.
Bizzy let his boy know when he left home again, however most of the time,
he took his best friend.
He thought he should wait for his boy to awake, although nothing could wake except an
earthquake!
This story has a registered copyright.
All Rights Reserved.
Ann Clemmons
Note from author- Since this manuscript is without illustration, try an have your child draw the
illustration to it as the story moves along. It involves them in the story and will make it easier to
follow, since it was written for illustration.
Thanks for reading-
Ages- 4 to 8
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Dear April - such exuberance! Thank you. And thanks to Sonya. Very excited about her new book. xo
What a FABULOUS post, April! And thank you, Sonya, for this terrific interview and poem. I can hardly wait to read your new book!
Dear Irene and Carmela ~ Thank you! If it's a fabulous post it's because Sonya is great material!
Love the little details about donut similes and drummers teaching rhythms!
Wonderful and informative interview! Loved getting to know more about Sonya!
Oh I read Sonya's Stop Pretending before I went to Highlights Foundation. Loved it. Will need to get her new book. Oh, that you were in that Master Class....I would have loved it.Thanks for a great interview.
Wonderful interview, April and Sonya! Makes me want to be in that living room listening to drums, and to read Sonya's new book.
Awesome interview!! I did an intensive with Sonya last year at the SCBWI LA conference and it was amazing! She's one of a kind - that's for sure!
Love verse novels, and excited to hear about this new one and the older ones. Great interview & so wonderful you both worked with Myra Cohn Livingston. I love her book!
Such a fun post, what great stories you have. Thanks for that and for the giveaway too. I'd like to win the book for myself, I'm intrigued to read a full-length piece from Sonya. Thanks again.
Gang ~ I'm so glad you enjoyed reading about Sonya and those drummers and more!
Hi there April, what a fabulous interview. I love novels in verse, but haven't read any of Sonya's works yet. Will try to find her books here in Singapore. :) I hope she enjoys Hong Kong! :)
I have been working on a verse novel and find this post so encouraging. Can I meet you, Sonya? While I am entering the giveaway and crossing my fingers, I will also put your books on my wish list.
This fantastic interview reminds me of when I heard Sonya speak -- her radiant creativity and generosity shine through. So much to ponder from this one post. I love her books, though they often squeeze my heart a bit harder than the humor would lead me to anticipate! Thanks, April!
Love this interview and love that there is a Sonya Sones book give-away! Thank you!
Really enjoyed reading about Sonya and her upcoming book. Love, love, love the donut activity, too! Thanks!
Thank you for this terrific post with Sonya Sones-- love everything I've ever read of hers, and this poem is certainly no exception! Also really liked her advice to teachers.
Dear April and all the lovely folks who posted comments here,
I didn't see these until just now.
WOW! What lovely and kind remarks...
If April ever asks if she can interview you: say YES!
April, you are an interviewing wizardess. I love all the little touches you added - the links to the poems I mentioned, the funny dentist lie, and the donut pictures.
Thanks sooo much for having me!
xx,
Sonya
P.S.
I'm going on a book tour for TO BE PERFECLTY HONEST. Please stop by and say hello.
Here's where I'll be:
http://www.sonyasones.com/wp/events/