Thanks to Facebook I have learned that there is a World Penguin Day and a World Pig Day. It is fun to find ways to 'celebrate' these mostly unknown holidays, and I like reviewing books that are suitable for such days. In today's poetry title you will find poems that look at some very unusual holidays.
World Rat Day: Poems About Real Holidays You’ve Never Heard Of
World Rat Day: Poems About Real Holidays You’ve Never Heard Of
J. Patrick Lewis
Illustrated by Anna Raff
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 6 to 8
Candlewick Press, 2013, 978-0-7636-5402-3
Many people have heard of Christmas, Easter, Mother’s
Day, and Halloween, even if they do not celebrate these holidays, but what
about World Rat Day or Dragon Appreciation Day? These holidays, though they are
not well known, really do exist and wouldn’t it be fun to add them to our
calendar of holidays.
In this title J.
Patrick Lewis give us a collection of poems that celebrate twenty-two lesser
known holidays. He takes us through a year, beginning with Cats Day, which is
on January second. This is the one day in the year when a cat should be able to
be the boss who does whatever he or she wishes. A cat should be able to “Spin a
yarn,’ and dine on “Mice Crispies” while sipping eggnog. This of all days
should be the day with a cat should be allowed to “hog the bed before the dog.”
January also
offers us Dragon Appreciation Day, a day when dragons should be honored and
given their due. For this day J. Patrick Lewis offers dragons a little reminder
of how they should behave at mealtimes with his poem Eight Table Manners for Dragons. He tells them not to blow on their
soup as this “only makes it hotter,” and they should always “Play with your
food, but don’t let it run around screaming.” After all, to do so would be
rather uncouth.
Young readers
are going to love the often funny poems that J. Patrick Lewis has created for
this collection. They come in many forms and will titillate reader’s ears when
they are read out loud and shared with others. Wonderfully expressive paintings
accompany the poems, and children will soon notice that a quartet of rats
appear on many of pages. One never quite knows what these four rascals will be
doing next.
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