Linda Sue Park
Illustrated by Istvan Banyai
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 7 to 9
Clarion Books, 2007, 978-0-618-23483-7
Poetry comes in
many forms, and these days, people are not only writing poetry in English using
western poetry forms, but they are also experimenting with forms that are Asian
in origin. Many of us have read or even written haiku, a form of poetry that
originated in Japan, but not many people know about sijo, which is a Korean
form of poetry. Like haiku, sijo poems are written “using a syllabic structure.”
In English these Korean poems have three lines with fourteen to sixteen
syllables. Sometimes the lines become so long that they have to broken up, and
the poem ends up with six lines instead of three.
In each of the
poems in this book, writer Linda Sue Park follows the traditional sijo pattern
so that the first line of the poem “introduces the topic.” The second explores
the topic a bit more, and the third wraps things up with “some kind of twist.”
The collection
begins with a poem about breakfast, that first meal of the day that varies
greatly, depending on the personality of the person consuming it. For some
people breakfast is “Bagel and juice,” while for others it is simpler, and
toast and coffee are the norm. Of course, there are some who would forgo an
eaten breakfast all together in favor of “a few extra minutes in bed.”
In the poem titled “October,”
the author paints a delightful autumnal picture of the wind playing with
leaves. The gusts rearrange the leaves according to its whim. Then there is a
clever shift, and the wind “plays tag with a plastic bag” and tugs at the
narrator’s hair.
The topics explored
in these poems are ones readers of all ages can respond to. Many of them are
familiar situations and things that we encounter in our everyday lives. The
author looks at pockets, echoes, frogs, a summer storm, tennis, laundry,
bedtime snacks, brushing teeth and more. In each case, she takes a commonplace
topic, and she turns it into something special. Sometimes the overall feel of
the poem is contemplative and thoughtful, and sometimes it is amusing and
surprising.
At the back of the
book, the author provides her readers with further information about sijo
peoms, the history of this poetry form, and “Some tips for writing your own
sijo.”
1 comment:
i think this is pretty cool poetry book..i love also reading some books
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