Thursday, April 08, 2010

Of Reversos and More....

Ever written a reverso? It's a new form by Marilyn Singer (who gave us a triolet as part of 30 Poets/30 Days last year!) that reads as a poem going down the page... then as a different one going up. Her book, Mirror Mirror (illustrated by Josee Masse) is full of reversible verse, and it is simply brilliant.

And let me tell you, reversos are HARD. Over at The Miss Rumphius Effect, she used the reverso as her prompt this Monday. You can see what folks came up with (I finally got a three line one in the comments).

Staying poetic... Elaine Magliaro typed up a wonderful "week-in-review" about some of what's been going on in the Kidlitosphere to celebrate the Month. So much poetry fun... and more coming here soon. But for now, I gotta book.

Ralph Fletcher - Weeds

Weeds
by
Ralph Fletcher

Weeds in the sunlight,
swaying in the breeze.

Weeds pollinated by
hordes of hungry bees.

Weeds softly whispering,
spilling secret seeds.

Weeds multiplying:
weeds, weeds, weeds.

Dandelion, ragweed,
Queen Anne’s lace.

Weeds in my dreams,
weeds in outer space.

Weeds on vacation
but more staying home.

Sneaky little weedlings
sprouting in this poem!

© 2010 Ralph Fletcher. All rights reserved.

Ralph Fletcher writes poetry, picture books, and novels as well as penning fantastic books about the craft of writing for teachers and students both. In fact, I'd argue that any one who writes can learn from his books (and get ideas from the tips section of his website, for that matter). But it is his poetry I want to focus on today, because I've found time and again that it can make me laugh... can make me see things in a whole new light... can make me feel.

His book Moving Day (illustrated by Jennifer Emery), holds a special place for me, since I moved a few times as a child. While my experiences and memories were different than Fletch, the main character in Moving Day, the emotions these poems capture still connected spot on with me... and with everyone I've read them to who's gone through a similar experience (and most who haven't, too!). You can read a poem from Moving Day in last year's Poetry Makers profile to see if it doesn't impact you, too. He's a wonderful poet, author and teacher, indeed, and I'm thrilled to have Ralph Fletcher here today as part of 30 Poets/30 Days.

Yesterday, we had Wonders from Susan Marie Swanson. Tomorrow... Ch-ch-ch-check, Please from Alan Katz! For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Susan Marie Swanson - Wonders

Wonders
(after the traditional rhyme “I Saw a Peacock with a Fiery Tail”)
by
Susan Marie Swanson

I saw a tiger
burning bright

I saw the sun
in the middle of the night

I saw a star
torn from a tree

I saw a leaf
holding a key

I saw a pocket
full of art

I saw a book
shaped like a heart

I saw a stone
coming untied

I saw a shoelace
wiggle and hide

I saw some tadpoles
buzzing round a cake

I saw a bumblebee
high above the lake

I saw a cloud
pacing at the zoo

You can see
these wonders too!

© 2010 Susan Marie Swanson. All rights reserved.

Susan Marie Swanson writes poetry and picture books that pick perfect details and have juuuuust the right words to tell their stories. For a reader, they're a treat, and for a writer, they're a master class if you study them. Perhaps this comes from spending 25 years writing poetry WITH kids not just for them or perhaps it's natural talent (or both!) - check out this interview or her site to see if you can decide - but whatever it is, it is an inherently good thing.

Susan's The House in the Night (2008) received the Caldecott Medal for illustrator Beth Krommes (the second such poet-to-Caldecott mentioned here this week - editors/illustrators take note!) and a slew of other awards and stars and the like. No wonder - it's gorgeous and an amazing read-aloud. You really should share it with children (and parents and grandparents) today so you can understand why I'm such a fan and so happy to have Susan Marie Swanson here as part of 30 Poets/30 Days.

Yesterday gave us Cancion De Mango/Mango Song by Jorge Argueta. Tomorrow, Weeds by Ralph Fletcher! For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Jorge Argueta - Cancion De Mango/Mango Song

CANCION DE MANGO/MANGO SONG
by
Jorge Argueta


CANCION DE MANGO


Detrás la casita
Pintada de muchos colores
Y techo de lámina
Hay un árbol
Muy
Muy grande de mango

Los mangos
Los verdes
Son ácidos
Y los amarillos
Saben a miel

Por las mañanas
Las ramas del árbol
Se llenan de pájaros
Y se arma
Ayyyy señor
Que gran fieston

El árbol muy
Muy grande de mango
Detrás la casita pintada
De muchos colores
Y techo de lámina
Balila
Esta bailando

El árbol muy
Muy grande de mango
Detrás la casita pintada
De muchos colores
Y techo de lámina
Canta
Esta cantando

El árbol muy
Muy grande de mango
Detrás la casita pintada
De muchos colores
Y techo de lámina
Ya no es árbol
Ahora es canció
MANGO SONG

There is a tall
Tall Mango tree
Behind the tin roof
Colorful houses

The mangos
The green ones
Are sour
And the yellow
So sweet

In the mornings
Bird all colors
Fill the tree
And there is
What a party
In the branches of the tree

The tall
Tall tallllllll
Mango tree
Behind the tin roof
Colorful house
Dances
Is dancing

The tall
Tall tallllllll
Mango tree
Behind the tin roof
Colorful house
Sings
Is singing

The tall
Tall talllllll
Mango tree
Behind the tin roof
Colorful house
Is not a tree any more
Now is a song

© 2010 Jorge Argueta. All rights reserved.

Jorge Argueta has won numerous awards for his books of bilingual poetry, including the Américas Award for Children's and Young Adult Literature. His background - he's a native Salvadoran and Pipil Nahua Indian who grew up surrounded by love in a house with dirt floors before leaving his civil war torn country to come to the U.S. in 1980 - lets him draw on themes and topics that are far afield from what I can draw on... yet his use of language and images and his point of view enable me to connect with his poetry completely.

Whether he's writing about nature or the contrasts between countries or food - he is writing a series of cooking poem books, the first of which Sopa de fijoles/Bean Soup was a Junior Library Guild Selection in 2009 - I can honestly say that his poetry makes me wish I could read Spanish so I could appreciate each poem for the first time twice. I'm truly excited to have Jorge Argueta here at GottaBook as part of 30 Poets/30 Days.

Yesterday gave us Move Out! by Carole Boston Weatherford. Tomorrow... Susan Marie Swanson with Wonders. For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Monday, April 05, 2010

Carole Boston Weatherford - Move Out!

MOVE OUT!
From a work in progress about the Tuskegee Airmen
by
Carole Boston Weatherford

Conflicts cross oceans, continents.
Bombers topple buildings,
Turn villages to rubble.
My love of country blazes
Bright as my love of flight.
We are itching to get into combat.

But how can America win
With one arm tied;
Black troops stuck
as second-class soldiers,
Barred from the skirmishes
Flaring in the skies.

William Hastie resigns his
War Department post, saying
The Air Corps has clipped our wings.
Even First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt
Asks why the Ninety-Ninth
Has not been deployed.

Secretary of War Henry Stimson,
Who never thought blacks should be pilots,
Visits Tuskegee to inspect the troops
And confer with our commander.
Stimson has a change of heart,
Declares us outstanding by any standard.

Then, the order comes,
The words I have waited
A year to hear: Move out!
Four hundred of us
from 99th Fighter Squadron
Boards train for New York
and the S. S. Mariposa—
a luxury liner turned troop ship—
across the Atlantic.
Jim Crow followed us to sea:
on deck, a rope separates
us from the white troops.
But we are flying too high to care.

© 2010 Carole Boston Weatherford. All rights reserved.

Carole Boston Weatherford wrote her first poem in first grade and has kept on writing since. That's a great thing for us, because now she keeps writing amazing book after amazing book. I love the way her books always resonate with me, give me insights into people not just tell me about them, and make me feel so personally involved even if the stories are far from my own experience.

Carole's books have won honors ranging from the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award to the NAACP Image Award to an SCBWI Golden Kite Honor Award to a Caldecott Medal for illustrator Kadir Nelson (for Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom - an extraordinary book on every single level) and beyond. And I'm telling you, when your read her books you immediate know why - the way she uses words is something that, as an author, I aim for and as a reader and listener I lose myself in completely. Yes, I'm a fan... and I'm thrilled to have Carole Boston Weatherford here as part of 30 Poets/30 Days.

Re: Me by Calef Brown was yesterday's fun. Tomorrow... Cancion De Mango/Mango Song by Jorge Argueta. For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Today's poem fits nicely, I think, as an entry in Non-Fiction Monday (a kissing kin to Poetry Friday). This week, the roundup is over at the Lerner Publishing Group blog. It's well worth a look-see to see this side of the Kidlitosphere, too.

Sunday, April 04, 2010

Baseball! (And a little poetry)

It's opening day of baseball season, and that, for me at least, is a cause for excitement. But, this isn't a baseball blog... so instead of waxing rhapsodic, I want to celebrate by first sending you off the The Happy Nappy Bookseller to make sure you saw Doret's fantastic series, wherein she asked the authors of nine baseball novels the same series of 12 questions. Here's a second link, cuz you really oughta check this out.

Not kid-lit specific, but I truly enjoyed Rachel Levitin's article Five Baseball Lessons From Thomas & Billy Heywood. Thomas and Billy, you see, are characters from the movie Little Big League, which I wrote! Her advice is for the Nationals, but I think works for any team.

And two poetry notes: for some baseball poetry (and more) check out The Miss Rumphius Effect's Poetry Makers profile of Gene Fehler today. Sweet!

Finally, head over to Poetry For Children and see Avis Harley's new poetic form, the intravista. That's a home run!

Thanks for hanging out here (and going to all those theres). I'll be back soon with more 30 Poets/30 Days, but for now, I gotta book.

Calef Brown - Re: Me

Re: Me
by
Calef Brown

My behavior is, I admit,
a bit strange.
Some examples:
I like to show crayfish crochet samples.
I sometimes sell sandpaper to sandpipers,
and I just invented plant stand diapers
for people who over-water.
My beloved alma mater
is The College at Endover.
There on my own
I was mainly known
for falling head over teakettle.
I would pause, let the debris settle,
then sing a song about the space shuttle
and my days as an astronaut.
Mostly I just gasped a lot.
First, from the incredible view,
then from the taste of that inedible goo –
the tubes full of food, pre-chewed.
I got in a feud
with another astronaut
but at least I got
the best elastic cot
for sleeping.
I’m such a cheapskate
my keepsakes
are barely worth keeping:
My spats.
My slide rule.
My toad-shaped commode stool.
I’m totally old school.
Nouveau riche.
Stuck in the drive-thru.
I can’t find my car quiche.
My new niche,
since my jam band disbanded,
is teaching tennis, two handed
(a racquet in each)
to a guy named Dennis
from Venice Beach
who loves to preach
but never practices.
I was once attacked by cactuses
so I’m careful to a fault.
My fishing pole
is stored in a pole vault.
I never fold felt
or spill salt,
and I don’t often don a caftan
or a shawl.
Very seldom,
if at all.
The same goes for a cape
or a cloak.
Just a regular bloke,
I’m not too macho.
Not much of a honcho.
I will, in a pinch, though,
wear a poncho
with a couple bandoleros.
I load ‘em with breadsticks
to feed the sparrows.
I’m a fly in the kitchen
at home on the range.
My behavior is, I admit,
a bit strange.

© 2010 Calef Brown. All rights reserved. 

Calef Brown writes poems that make me giggle and chortle and revel in their wordplay. And, as if that's not enough, he's an illustrator who consistently makes me giggle and chortle or go "oooooh!!!!!' in a very happy way. Combine those talents, and you get fantabulous books like Polkabats and Octopus Slacks (in which this illustration appears) and Tippintown: A Guided Tour. Here's a challenge for you - say "octopus slacks" and think about an octopus wearing slacks without smiling. I don't think it can be done.

Besides children's books, Calef Brown also does editorial illustration (to my knowledge making him the first poet on this year's 30/30 list to be in Rolling Stone) and much, much more. His website is chock full o' eye candy, and I highly recommend reading more about him at the wonderful 7 Impossible Things Before Breakfast. And his books... yes... did I mention how fun they are or that later this year, we'll get a new Halloween themed one? True! That makes me happy... as does having Calef Brown here as part of 30 Poets/30 Days.

Yesterday gave us Anaconda by Laura Purdie Salas. Tomorrow... Move Out! by Carole Boston Weatherford. For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Saturday, April 03, 2010

Laura Purdie Salas - Anaconda

Anaconda
by
Laura Purdie Salas

I slither through the swamplands--
A sneaky, silent slayer.
Survival is a deadly game
And I’m the longest player.

I’ll wrap myself around you,
I’ll squeeze in nice and snug,
Then share your final moments in
My anaconda hug.

Submerge, surprise, and swallow:
My favorite active words.
Jacanas, herons, screamers:
My favorite lunchtime birds!

© 2010 Laura Purdie Salas. All rights reserved.

Laura Purdie Salas has written over 80 books for children, but I actually came to know her and her poetry from her blog. In fact, it was from reading so many wonderful poems of hers from villanelles to free verse to short and funny gems that I knew I had to buy her book Stampede (illustrated by Steven Salerno) when it came out last year. Good call! If you don't have it, let me urge you to get it and a bunch of kids together. Mix well. Laughter and conversation will ensue.

Besides being a fabulous poet and writer, Laura is also generous with information and support for her fellow writers. Her website is full of resources, her blog is full of insight and honesty, and her weekly 15 Words or Less Poetry feature is a great, no-pressure source of inspiration. You can learn more about her and her work at her site and blog and at Tricia Stohr Hunt's Poetry Makers profile of Laura from last year. And from me, well, Laura exemplifies what I love about children's poets and poetry, and I'm really thrilled to have her here today as part of 30 Poets/30 Days.

Yesterday's poem was Bear Path by Joseph Bruchac. Tomorrow... Re: Me by Calef Brown! For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Friday, April 02, 2010

Joseph Bruchac - Bear Path

   BEAR PATH
        by
Joseph Bruchac

All of our people
tell stories about you--
how you move
through the woods,
how you know
all the trails.

You walk quiet, move slow
but when your young ones
are threatened, your roar
is as strong as a storm wind.

We all have tales
of how you took pity
on human children
when they were lost--
how you took them in,
how you helped them survive.

Older relative,
we humans do well
when we learn to walk
the same path you walk.

© 2010 Joseph Bruchac. All rights reserved.

Joseph Bruchac writes award-winning poetry, picture books, plays, novels, and songs, makes crafts and instruments, and is a storyteller and performer extraordinaire. He is best known as a Native writer and storyteller, drawing on his Abenaki heritage and much more, but I didn't know any of the above when I first stumbled into his book Thirteen Moons on Turtle's Back. I just knew he was an incredible storyteller who used words brilliantly.

As I read more, I realized I was gaining perspectives and insights into cultures I knew far less about than I would like to admit. This is something I love about poetry and something Joseph Bruchac does masterfully - open that window often with brevity, always with clarity by telling stories and never lecturing. If you don't know his work, you should now, now, now go to his website to hear a few poems. Then read his books and share his poems and stories. You and whoever you share them with will be glad you did.

I'm so honored to have Joseph Bruchac as part of 30 Poets/30 Days, and happy to have his poem up on the first Poetry Friday of National Poetry Month. This week's roundup is hosted by Kate Coombs over at the Book Aunt. There's lots of great stuff going on in the Kidlitosphere, so I hope you'll check it out.

Yesterday gave as Alice Schertle's Triolets That Trouble My Sleep. Tomorrow... Laura Purdie Salas with Anaconda. For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Thursday, April 01, 2010

Alice Schertle - Triolets That Trouble My Sleep

         Triolets
That Trouble My Sleep
             by
    Alice Schertle

Does a tree make a sound
if there’s nobody there
when it falls to the ground?
Does a tree make a sound?
The question’s profound—
but why do I care
if a tree makes a sound
when there’s nobody there?

Was it the chicken
or egg that came first?
I feel my pulse quicken—
was it the chicken?
Now I am stricken
with doubt. I am cursed!
Was it the chicken
or egg that came first?

I ponder each riddle
that troubles my sleep.
Thumbs all a-twiddle
I ponder each riddle
ensnared in the middle
of “timber!” and “peep!”
I ponder each riddle
that troubles my sleep.

© 2010 Alice Schertle. All rights reserved.


Alice Schertle "pens poetry anointed with magic," says Rebecca Kai Dotlich. To which I reply, "Yes! What she said!" For me, a lot of that magic comes from her ability to make me look at things from a different (often quirky) angle. Take the above poem - I laugh at the ideas, relish the phrasing, connect with the emotion of the "I" in the poem, wonder why we ever ask those question... and totally forget that I'm reading a triolet (a form that stymies me time and again). All that in 24 short lines!

If you haven't already had the pleasure, you should find one of Alice's books and read it aloud. If you can gather up some kids to listen to you, that's great, but even if you can't, you should give it a go. I'm particularly fond of Very Hairy Bear (illustrated by Matt Phelan), but you can grab anything she's done and you'll have a blast. Is it magic or simply incredible talent? You be the judge, because either way, I'm thrilled to have Alice Schertle leading off the 2010 edition of 30 Poets/30 Days.

Coming up tomorrow, Bear Path by Joseph Bruchac as we continue on into April. For more on 30 Poets/30 Days and ways to follow along, please click here.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

The Month Ahead

Hard for me to believe, but, to misquote the good Dr. Seuss, "tomorrow is April! It's practically here!"

Starting tomorrow, you'll get a new poem/poet combination every day, but that won't be all (I hope!). There will be other poetry news, other posts, and who knows what else popping up as the month goes on. I'm looking forward to it, and I'm so glad to see so many folks coming by already to check out the fun.

I hope you'll all jump into the comments section of the poems and let us know what you're thinking. And if you have any questions or ideas during the month, you can also feel free to e-mail me.

There's also a lot more going on in the Kidlitosphere this month. Such as...

  • Tricia Stohr-Hunt will interview 30 children's poets. The Poetry Makers list is stellar! Tricia and I have some overlap, too, and that should be pretty fun.

  • Lee Wind shares GLBTQ Teen Poetry.


  • Jone MacCulloch shares Thirty Days, Thirty Students, Thirty Poems. Original poems by students. Jone will also again offer the Poetry Postcard Project where original student poems are sent out on decorated postcards. Request yours now.


  • Check out Mary Lee Hahn's daily poems about teaching each day in April. Also at A Year of Reading, Franki will review poetry books & share Poetry Month activities.


  • Jama Rattigan is posting original poems & favorite recipes by some of the Poetry Friday regulars (including me!).


  • Irene Latham will give away a favorite poetry anthology each poetry Friday during April.


  • Laura Salas will post a children's poem per day from a poetry book she loves.

  • Sylvia Vardell will be inviting poets to play Poetry Tag by offering a poem for readers to enjoy, then "tag" a fellow poet who then shares her/his own poem that is connected to the previous poem.


  • ORIGINAL POEM-A-DAY CHALLENGE
    New original poems every day by a lot of wonderful folks:

  • Susan Taylor Brown


  • Mary Lee Hahn


  • Andromeda Jazmon


  • Irene Latham


  • Jone MacCulloch


  • Elizabeth Moore


  • April Halprin Wayland (one of last year's 30 Poets/30 Days poets!)



  • It's gonna be a great month, indeed. There's more come up here real soon, but now I gotta book. See you in April!

    Tuesday, March 30, 2010

    Blockhead!!! (The Life of Fibonacci)

    How excited was I to find out that there was a biography of Fibonacci coming out for kids? VERY. Ever since Fibs went viral, I've gotten lots of questions about Fibonacci here and done research of my own... but nothing like what's gone into Joseph D'Agnese's book (with truly wonderful illustrations by John O'Brien, examples of which dot this post). So it not only filled a need for me but was also was the type of book I knew I'd've loved as a kid.

    When I saw that it was called Blockhead: the Life of Fibonacci and then later read the story of its journey to print, I became kinda swoony fanboy about it. And I knew... just knew... I had to ask the author some questions. So I did, and better still, he answered them! So now you get not only my huge fandom, but also much more. Here then are my questions, and Joe D'Agnese's answers....

    What led you to write the story of Fibonacci for kids rather than adults? I mean, I’d’ve read this as a kid or adult… but what pushed you that way?

    Two things pushed me to do this book for kids. I first learned about the Fibonacci Sequence when I was working as an editor for a 5th- and 6th-grade children's educational math magazine called Scholastic DynaMath. Every couple of years at DynaMath, it's time to do an article on the Fibonacci Sequence. But these articles were always short and they didn't allow me much room to tell everything I was learning about Leonardo the man. I thought a picture book was an obvious choice. After all, the sequence is inherently visual, and the medieval setting is rich and visual too. 
    The second thing that pushed me to write for kids is my own innumeracy. I'm not a mathematician, and one really needs to be a number theorist to write an adult book about Fibonacci's contributions to mathematics. By the way, I think my illustrator, John O'Brien, did an amazing job with making Fibonacci's world come to life. Part of the fun of reading the book is looking for all the little Fibonacci objects that John hid in the artwork. How two guys from New Jersey ended up bringing a medieval Italian mathematician to life is probably the book's biggest mystery!

    I had always thought of Fibonacci only in terms of the sequence that now bears his name. But he was well known for so much beyond that, wasn’t he?
    Yes! Absolutely! He is recognized as one of the most important mathematicians of the western world during the middle ages. His contribution is a huge one: He helped import Hindu-Arabic numerals from the east to the west. That's the part of the story that fascinated me from the beginning. Here's this young boy growing up in Tuscany, where they use Roman numerals. And then his father, who is a customs official, takes him to Algeria, North Africa, to do accounting work, and lo and behold, the young Fibonacci discovers that the wise men of this land are using not I, II, III but 1, 2, 3. And they are using zero, and have an understanding of something called place value. Fibonacci quickly realizes the significance, the importance and efficacy of these numerals and shares them with the western world. I've read some of his writings and they are clearly the work of a brilliant, serious mind. 
    Some historians argue that were it not for Fibonacci's work, the economic thrust that drove the Renaissance would not have been possible. He showed the west how to do its books.
    Actuaries, stock traders, knitters, and others use the Fibonacci sequence, and there’s even a band named the Fibonaccis. Were there any great places you found Fibonacci or his numbers pop up?

    The wackiest thing I've ever heard is the cosmetic dentist who claimed to use the Fibonacci Sequence to create the perfect smile on his patients' faces. I myself have spent most of my time seeking out Fibonacci numbers in nature because I like to garden and I'm always astonished to see how often the Sequence pops up. 
    I think teachers and parents might have fun planting a Fibonacci Garden, where they plant flowers likely to produce flowers that grow in the sequence. And I would plant the garden in a spiral shape. Sunflowers could go in the center of the spiral because they are the tallest, and then you can work your way down to shorter plants. I haven't spotted Fibonacci in strange places. More like strange minds! In other words, I can't believe how many different types of people know a little about Fibonacci. Artists, illustrators, designers, web designers all seem to know him. But then so do a lot of engineers I've met. As do musicians, architects, photographers, and many others. If your work touches on some aspect of aesthetics, you probably know a little about Fibonacci.

    One of the most frequent questions I get in comments here is “Did Fibonacci have a wife and kids?” So I gotta know… can people find an answer to that in Blockhead (even if the answer is “no one knows”)?

    Well, you see, what happened was, Mr. and Mrs. Fibonacci had twins, and then they had triplets. After that, Mrs. F. refused to have more kids because she could see which way this was going. It was tough to have quints in the 13th century. But seriously, folks, the sad thing about the Fibonacci story is that we know very little about him. He wrote a one-paragraph autobiography in one of his books, and that's how we know about his early life, his father, and his travels. We do have his mathematical writings. And there is evidence that people in his hometown of Pisa regarded him as a learned and worthy man because there are records showing they paid him to perform work for the city. But after that, we know nothing more. We don't know when he was born, when he died, or if he ever had a family. 
    We do know that during his lifetime he never used the name Fibonacci. That name was coined by later mathematicians who experimented with the Sequence. In his day, Leonardo called himself Leonardo Pisano, aka Leonard of Pisa; or Leonardo, son of Bonaccio. He also had an odd nickname that he used in his writings: Bigollus. This probably means wanderer, dreamer, traveler, lazy good-for-nothing, etc. For my book, I interpreted this as "Blockhead." I think his neighbors were doing the typical Italian thing, gently teasing him for being an absent-minded prof. 

    Greg, I want to thank you for you having me visit, and thank you for presenting the world with the wonderful concept of Fibs. I'm sure that if Fibonacci were around, he'd warmly embrace the idea of poetry being used to celebrate the glory of numbers!

    And I want to thank Joe for taking the time to answer my questions (and making me laugh in the process, no less!) and for being tenacious enough to bring Fibonacci's story into print. I am thrilled this book is out in the world, and hope you are, too!

    Monday, March 29, 2010

    Kenn Nesbitt, the Tighty Whitey Spider, and More

    Kenn Nesbitt's poems have always made me laugh. In fact, I've been a fan since I stumbled onto his website, Poetry4Kids.com many moons ago (pre-GottaBook, even!). Also, Kenn was one of the poets in the inaugural 30 Poets/30 Days here last year and a big help in making the first year as successful as it was. So, I'm a fan on many levels.

    That said, his new book, The Tighty Whitey Spider (with illustrations by Ethan Long) would make me a fan even if I wasn't already one. I'm lucky because his publisher, Sourcebooks, got me a book early, so I've already read Whenever Yaks Play Basketball, I Like My Triangular Cat, and Toby the Snowboarding Doberman. Yup. I have. I've heard some of the audio tracks you can hear when you get the book, too, all performed by Kenn. And guess what? The poems, the audio, and the book make me laugh. Nuff said.

    You can judge for yourself, though. I'm gonna leave you with a poem that is in Tighty Whitey but debuted here at GottaBook last year: My Chicken's On the Internet.  Also, Kenn's last book, My Hippo Has the Hiccups is available as a freeeeeeee eBook until the end of National Poetry Month (or you can just enjoy it online at the same link). Go see if it makes you laugh, too. If it does, check out Tighty Whitey Spider if you want some more. I know I'm biased... but I think you'll end up agreeing with me anyway!

    My Chicken's On the Internet
    by
    Kenn Nesbitt

    My chicken's on the Internet.
    She surfs the web all day.
    I've tried to stop her browsing
    but, so far, there's just no way.

    She jumps up on the mouse
    and then she flaps around like mad
    to click on every hyperlink
    and every pop-up ad.

    She plays all sorts of chicken games.
    She messages her folks.
    She watches chicken videos
    and forwards chicken jokes.

    She writes a blog for chickens
    and she uploads chicken pics.
    She visits chicken chat rooms
    where she clucks about her chicks.

    I wouldn't mind so much
    except my keyboard's now a wreck.
    She hasn't learned to type yet;
    she can only hunt and peck.

    © Kenn Nesbitt. All rights reserved.
    (originally posted here)

    Friday, March 26, 2010

    Pants - a poem about pants/a gift giving poem

    Pants
    by
    Gregory K.

    I saw my mother buy me pants
    With stripes in shades of green...
    And on one knee a bright red blob
    Shaped like a kidney bean.
    The pants have pockets 'round the waist
    With zippers in between.
    I think the guy who sewed the seams
    Lost hold of his machine.
    So when my mom gives me this "gift" -
    The ugliest I've seen -
    I'll smile and say, "You shouldn't have."
    And, boy, that's what I'll mean.

    Happy Poetry Friday to you! This week, the roundup is over at Julie Larios' Drift Record. You really oughta go check it out.

    And if you want to get all my poems (and only the poems) emailed to you for freeee as they hit the blog, enter your email address in the box below then click subscribe!

    Thursday, March 25, 2010

    Announcing the 2010 Edition of 30 Poets/30 Days!

    I'm incredibly excited to announce the 2010 edition of 30 Poets/30 Days, a celebration of children's poetry that will take place here at GottaBook throughout National Poetry Month.

    (There is now a 2011 edition of 30 Poets/30 Days!)

    Every day in April, I'll be posting a previously unpublished poem by a different poet. Here's the alphabetical list of who's going to be here this year:

    Francisco X. Alarcón, Kathi Appelt, Jorge Argueta, Brod Bagert, Carmen Bernier-Grand, Calef Brown, Joseph Bruchac, James Carter, Kurt Cyrus, Graham Denton, Ralph Fletcher, David L. Harrison, Georgia Heard, Alan Katz, Bobbi Katz, Arthur A. Levine, George Ella Lyon, Elaine Magliaro, Heidi Mordhorst, Walter Dean Myers, Laura Purdie Salas, Liz Garton Scanlon, Alice Schertle, Charles R. Smith Jr., Eileen Spinelli, Susan Marie Swanson, Charles Waters, Carole Boston Weatherford, Jacqueline Woodson, Tracie Vaughn Zimmer

    Did I mention I'm excited? This group has talent like nobody's business, and I'm thrilled and grateful they're here. They're going to give you a fabulous month of poetry, so I do hope you'll hang out and enjoy it.

    If you can't visit GottaBook every day, there are a number of other ways you can follow along:

    You can subscribe to GottaBook via email or your blog reader.

    You can join my poetry list, and get all the poems emailed out the day they hit my blog. Enter your email address below and click subscribe:

    And you can join the fun on Twitter. You can follow me there for links to the poems every day (and much more), or follow @30poets30days for purely poetry tweeting.

    Also, to check out more of the wonderfulness going on throughout the Kidlitosphere during National Poetry Month by checking out the KidLitosphere Central Poetry Month page. Among other highlights, Tricia has a whole new Poetry Makers series for us (including some overlap with the list above).

    A few additional thank yous are in order before I wrap up. First off, to all the poets who participated last year and kicked this event off in style, you have my never-ending gratitude. Thanks, too, to Bonnie Adamson for whipping me up enough logo designs to keep me happy for months and years. And finally, to all my blogging friends and all you blog readers - thanks for the support day after day and year after year. It's truly appreciated.

    Once again, I'm really looking forward to April. I hope you'll all come join the fun!

    Wednesday, March 24, 2010

    Tomorrow! I love ya, tomorrow....

    Why? Because tomorrow is when I'll be officially launching the 2010 edition of 30 Poets/30 Days. Am I excited? Oh, yes. And I hope that tomorrow, any of you who are excited will help me spread the word: it's fun, free, fabulous poetry for kids and their adults all month long!

    I'm also excited because Bonnie Adamson put together some logos for this year's event. I finally narrowed it down to two, figuring that was better than eight! I get to play with those tomorrow, too (Blogger willing, of course).

    See you all then, but I've gotta book - so much to do, so little time :-)

    Monday, March 22, 2010

    Applause! A Wimpy Kid Movie Moment

    Last Friday, I saw the movie of Diary of a Wimpy Kid... and experienced a moment sure to make any author happy. "And what was that moment, Greg?" I hear you ask.

    There was applause for the credit "Based on the book Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney."

    Yes, the crowd applauded for the author and his book - the only applause in the credits, in fact (and they are END credits at that).

    Maybe I'm reading into this, but my takeaway is that kids do bond with books and authors, not just with marketing. In fact, it wasn't commercials that filled the seats on Friday: it was a love of the books.

    The movie is not a cinematic masterpiece, but I don't think that was its goal. Instead, I think the filmmakers understood who was gonna see this movie and not only what they'd want from it but what they'd demand from it (and what they wouldn't tolerate). It didn't attempt to expand for a bigger audience ala The Lightning Thief because, frankly, that wouldn't have made any sense here. I hope it continues to draw an audience beyond opening weekend and prove that there is room for movies like this.

    Yes, Wimpy Kid is unique in that some 70,000,000 people have viewed parts of it over at Funbrain. But at the end of the day (or the end of the movie, really) the applause was for Jeff Kinney and his book.

    So author friends... keep that in mind as you're writing. You do connect with your readers. And some day, perhaps, that applause will be for you and your book.

    What a sweet sound that applause was, in oh so many ways!

    Thursday, March 18, 2010

    A Poetry Re-Issue: Air Guitar

    AIR GUITAR
    by
    Gregory K.

    I bought myself an air guitar.
    You think I overpaid?
    Well, the guy who sold it to me said that it’s the best he’s played.

    It really is a beauty:
    Just one scratch and two small dings.
    I can’t wait for you to hear it... but I gotta buy some strings.

    (originally published here at Gottabook on April 16, 2006)

    The Poetry Friday roundup is at Some Novel Ideas today. You should go just to see the Piku that Stacy has posted there. Yes, I said Piku!

    And if you want to get all my poems (and only the poems) emailed to you for freeee as they hit the blog, enter your email address in the box below then click subscribe!


    Wednesday, March 17, 2010

    Tick, Tick, Tick

    I am really getting excited about 30 Poets/30 Days. It's two weeks away! I'd panic and stress, but the reality is that nothing can really go wrong - the goal is to share wnoderful poetry and that'll be accomplished thanks to the talented folks who are joining in. (Have I mentioned I've seen some of the poetry and that it's fantastic?)

    There's a ton going on throughout the Kidlitosphere in April, too, so I hope you'll all join in and help spread the word.

    Sunday, March 14, 2010

    Blogging a novel in verse....

    That's what poet, storyteller, author, teacher Steven Withrow is doing over at The Feather of Memory. And he's reading it aloud as he goes.

    I'm looking forward to seeing it unfold and love the idea of a novel in verse coming into my reader every now and then....