When I saw the title of today's poetry title I just had to smile. After all, can you imagine how it would be possible to lose a pet hippo? The title sets the tone for the whole book, which is full of poems that children will find irresistible.
I’ve lost my hippopotamus
I’ve lost my hippopotamus
Illustrated by Jackie Urbanovic
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 7 to 10
HarperCollins, 2012, 978-0-06-201457-3
You only have to look online to see that many people find
animal stories, pictures, and videos entertaining. People share these things
using social media, and in just days everyone knows about the panda who got her
head stuck in a box or the cat who stole the dog’s bed and refused to give it
up. Animals doing funny things appeals to people, which is why this book will
delight children and adults alike. It is full of funny animals, and funny
people interacting with animals. Oh, and then there are the poems that are just
about funny people who somehow manage to be funny even though there are no
animals around.
The first poem
is about a girl who has lost her hippopotamus. It is hard to imagine how one
could lose such an enormous animal, but this girl has managed it. The situation
is so bizarre that she thinks that something is “fishy” and that some “unsavory
subterfuge” is at play. What we know, thanks to the accompanying illustration,
is that the girl’s hippo is not very far away at all.
If you thought
having a pet hippo was odd, then you should read the next poem. In this one you
will meet someone who is wishing that the day would get more interesting. It
has been a rather humdrum day so far, what with “fish in the treetops,” “owls
underwater” and cows and elephants who are flying around. If this is a normal,
boring sort of day, what would an interesting day in this world look like?
Obviously, Jack
Prelutsky has the gift for coming up with the most extraordinary ideas. Pet
hippos and fish in trees are just a few of them. He has many more. For example,
have you ever wondered what it would be like if pigeons weighed as much as
pigs? No, neither have I, but Jack Prelutsky has. What should a person do if pigeons weighed as much as pigs and
“dragonflies were dragons,” and if caterpillars were as big as wagons and alley
cats were as big as lions.
Pig-sized
pigeons are interesting, but going to a store to buy a dragon is surely even
more so. In “Shopping at a dragon store,” the poet tells us all about a visit
to a dragon store and how he tries to find a “very special kind of dragon,” the
kind that he can take home.
Some people have
a gift for being amusing, for taking just a few lines of words and creating
something that tickles people’s giggle spots. Jack Prelutsky is just such a
person, and in this collection of more than one hundred poems, he gives readers
more than one hundred reasons to smile. His poems are accompanied by line
drawings that perfectly capture the essence of the poems, and that often
contain a little joke of their own.