Anyone who has watched a young child listening to someone reading a nursery rhyme to them knows that young children have a natural appreciation for rhymes and verse. Their minds are open to the wonderful possibilities that are inherent in poetry. Today's poetry title was written especially for young children, and it offers them the gift of humor and wonderful language.
Everybody was a baby once and other poems
Everybody was a baby once and other poems
Allan Ahlberg
Illustrated by Bruce Ingman
Poetry Book
For ages 2 to 4
Candlewick Press, 2010, 978-0-7636-4682-0
Poetry can enrich the lives of readers of all ages, but
all too often older children and adults are reluctant to explore the world of
poetry because they think that poetry is not for them. Thankfully, young
children are more open to receiving the gift of poetry. Indeed, they often
embrace the world of poems and have a natural affinity for them.
In this splendid
book young children will encounter a collection of poems that will beautifully
resonate with their interests, their sense of humor, and their love of stories.
For example, in When I was a Little Child
they will ‘meet’ a child who tells them what life was like when he was young.
When you are small the world you interact with is very different because of
your size and because so much of what you see and experience is new and
exciting. A bath is “like the sea” and a high chair is a “mighty tower.” Stairs
seem to go to “mountaintops” and a father is “like a tree.”
As they explore
this book children will encounter some poems that provide them with
information. They learn what to do if they meet a witch, and what monsters like
to eat. For example at breakfast time monsters munch on “Tadpole toasties” and
“Dreaded wheat,” and for dinner they have “moldy greens” and “Human beans.”
Knowing such important facts about monsters is vital for one’s education after
all.
There are also
story poems of all kinds that will surely amuse little children and their
grownups. Who can resist a story about how snowmen used to be “In the good old
days / When snow was snow,” and the one about a soccer match that took place
between two teams of animals, with elephants on one side and insects on the
other. One can only imagine how such a game would turn out.
This is a
wonderful book to share with young children. It not only introduces children to
the magic of poetry, but it gives adults the opportunity to share some
precious, bookish, time with the child or children in their lives.