After months of media coverage and a great deal of discord, the lead up to Election Day is finally almost over. The end is almost in sight. I thought that I would offer my readers a little light relief on this poetry Friday. Today's poetry book looks at the lives of all the men who have been the president of the United States, from George Washington to Barack Obama.Using short and always amusing poems, the author makes fun of the Commanders in Chief in a creative way that readers of all ages will appreciate.
Presidential Misadventures: Poems that make fun of the man in charge
Presidential Misadventures: Poems that make fun of the man in charge
Bob Raczka
Illustrated by Dan E. Burr
Poetry
For ages 8 to 12
Roaring Brook Press, 2015, 978-1-59643-980-1
In 1890 a bored school boy called Edmund Clerihew Bentley
was in science class listening to his teacher talk about Sir Humphry Davy, who
was a famous English scientist. While the teacher talked, Edmund wrote a four
lined poem about Sir Humphry, one that made fun of him. The form that Edmund
used ended up becoming popular and today these poems that poke fun at famous
people are known as clerihew poems.
The rules for writing such poems are simple. They
have to be four lines long and the first two lines have to rhyme, as do the
last two lines. The first line should contain the name of the person who is
being made fun of, and the meter in the poem should be irregular.
Delighting in
this poetry form Bob Raczka decided to write a whole book of clerihew poems which
feature the presidents of the United States. Many of the poems that appear in
this collection contain true facts about the presidents who have served the
American people over the centuries. For example, the poem about William H. Taft
tells us that the president, because of his rather large size, got stuck in the
tub. This, is fact, really did happen. Similarly Richard Nixon did indeed tell
“a lie he couldn’t fix,” and Ronald Reagan did have a fondness for jelly-beans.
The author gives
us poems for every single president, from George Washington to Barak Obama, and
in each one clever touches of humor and word use offer future potential clerihew
poets much to think about.