J. Patrick Lewis and Jane Yolen
Illustrated by Jeffrey Stewart Timmins
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 7 to 9
Charlesbridge, 2012, 978-1-58089-260-5
Here we are at Amen Creature Corners, a cemetery where
animals, not humans, are buried. It is true that “beasties” come here to cry
over the graves of their friends and loved ones, but they are also here to have
“one last laugh” courtesy of the dearly department. In this cemetery “it’s not
/ all gloom and doom / that’s written / once upon a tomb.”
Actually, many
of the words on the gravestones are funny, in a rather irreverent way. We read about
how Rowdy Rooster made the mistake of being so “cocky” that he dared to
head-butt a car. He is one of many animals who seemed to have lacked a sense of
self preservation. There is the moth who “lived by the fire / and died by the
flame,” and the woodpecker who pecked a tree limb one to many times with
disastrous results.
Then were those
who were just too sure of themselves. There was a swordfish who fought a shark,
and lost the battle, and a piranha who found out too late that it had the “second-sharpest
/ teeth in the river.”
Full of clever
word play and often decidedly macabre humor, these poetical animal epitaphs
will tickle the fancy of readers who like their poetry served up dark.
1 comment:
love it!
Post a Comment