Showing posts with label Reverso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reverso. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Welcome to Author Marilyn Singer

Marilyn in her Office
Photo by Steve Aronson

Today I am very happy to welcome award-winning author Marilyn Singer, who has written over 100 books for children and young adults. Marilyn joins us to celebrate her latest book, WILD IN THE STREETS: 20 POEMS OF CITY ANIMALS, illustrated by Gordy Wright and published by Words Pictures/Quarto

An author in many genres (she says variety keeps her from getting bored), Marilyn lives in Brooklyn, NY with her husband Steve, a poodle, a cat, and two collared doves. She is no stranger to animals, and no stranger to wordplay! It is an absolute pleasure to host Marilyn here and to learn the story behind her latest poetry collection. Many thank yous to Marilyn for her time and also to Words Pictures/Quarto for offering a giveaway to a commenter on today's post.

Enjoy Marilyn's generous sharing of this backstory, and after you read, consider taking on her challenge to try a form of poetry she invented...the reverso!


In Brooklyn, New York, where I live, there are more inhabitants than just people, dogs, and cats. On any given day, I might see pigeons, sparrows, squirrels, a variety of insects and spiders, and also the occasional rat.  Those are the animals people often hear about in the city. But in Brooklyn alone, there are also red tailed hawks, peregrine falcons, monk parakeets, a variety of other birds, raccoons, opossums, bats, and many other creatures. In fact, in cities all over the world, you can find a wide variety of animals—and some of these critters are quite surprising, from rhesus monkeys in New Delhi and wild boars in Berlin to reticulated pythons swimming through sewers in Singapore and river crabs living under ancient ruins in Rome.

Years ago, I got interested in city animals and I wanted to write a prose book about ones found in America.  An editor suggested that I go global.  I’ve always liked research, but, at that time, people did not own home computers—if you can imagine that—so it was difficult to find articles and to contact people in different countries.  And I certainly couldn’t afford to travel around the world to see the animals in person.  

Fast forward several decades:  the internet became available and research became a lot easier.  I decided to revisit my idea.  Only this time, instead of a prose nonfiction book, I chose to write a book of poems, which would include some prose to explain more about both the critters and the cities in which they lived.  This time, the research was really enjoyable and it revealed a number of surprises, such as those crabs in Rome and the wave of huntsman spiders that enter homes to escape the rainy season in Cape Town, South Africa.   Furthermore, I thought it would be a fun challenge to write the poems in a variety of forms, including one I created:  the reverso.  

A reverso is one poem with two halves.  The second half reverses the lines of the first half, with changes only in punctuation and capitalization, and it has to say something different from that first half.   I didn’t choose which animal went with which form in advance.  I just went with the flow.  Monarch butterflies seemed to want a reverso, perhaps because they travel long distances to overwinter and so do tourists, so a reverso is what they got.  ;-)

©2019 Quarto Publishing, Used with Permission
(Click to Enlarge)


Monarch Butterflies: Pacific Grove, California

After such a long and perilous journey
across wild mountains, tame gardens, familiar parks and distant plains,
they leave behind
the trail of sweet-nectared flowers,
grateful for
their needed winter's rest in Butterfly Town,
hanging from the eucalyptus, still as dead leaves.
We tourists pause to marvel at these precious pollinators
at last taking time off from work.

At last taking time off from work,
we tourists pause to marvel at these precious pollinators,
hanging from the eucalyptus, still as dead leaves
(their needed winter's rest in Butterfly Town),
grateful for
the trail of sweet-nectared flowers
they leave behind
across wild mountains, tame gardens, familiar parks, and distant plains
after such a long and perilous journey.

The final result of this research and writing was WILD IN THE STREETS: 20 POEMS ABOUT CITY ANIMALS, published by Words Pictures/Quarto and illustrated by the wonderful Gordy Wright.  

Oh — and I did get to visit those monarchs in Pacific Grove, as well as the bats in Austin, Texas and, of course, the peregrines in New York.  I hope I get to see some of these other creatures in their urban habitats someday.  I hope you get to see some of them, too!

Some Questions and Ideas for You:
  • Walk around your city or town.  What animals do you see? 
  • What cities would you like to visit and what critters would you like to see there?
  • Try writing a poem about a city critter you have seen or would like to see.  Now try writing a prose piece.  How do the pieces differ?  Or do that in a team—one poet and one prose writer.
  • What poetry forms do you like?  Can you write a haiku about your critter?  Can you write about it in another form?
  • Try a reverso!  It’s not easy, but it is fun!

 Thank you, Marilyn, for joining us here today! It is an honor to feature a writer I so admire.

To learn more about WILD IN THE STREETS, visit these blog tour stops:

Mile High Reading

Thank you again to Words Pictures/Quarto for offering a copy of this book. If you would like to be entered into the giveaway, please just leave a comment by 11:59pm on Thursday, October 17, 2019.


Please share a comment below if you wish.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Reverso, Poetry Peek, Tarantula - Oh My!



This is a reverso, Poem #22 in my series of poems about poems.
It is also #213 in my year-long quest to write a poem each day!


Several months ago, I walked into our local bookstore, B is for Books, and owner Jane Bell handed me Marilyn Singer's book MIRROR MIRROR.  "Here," she said.  "I got a review copy of this, and I want to give it to you.  You'll love it."  She was right.  I loved it, and I was intrigued.

A reverso, a form invented by Marilyn Singer, may be read from the top down or the bottom up. It's a tricky form, playful and mysterious, and I never wanted to try it.  "Too hard."  

Not long after, however,  Tricia of The Miss Rumphius Effect offered the reverso form up as a Monday Poetry Stretch in April.  I didn't play.  Two weeks ago, my daughter Georgia came to me with MIRROR MIRROR, proclaiming, "I LOVE this book!  It's amazing!"  Then, this past Monday, an incredibly smart teacher came up to me holding the Marilyn's book.  "Have you seen this before?" she asked.  So here we are.  Finally I tried.  It was not easy, but it was fun.  I'll try it again.


Poem #22 in my series of poems about poems...upside down!


Greetings to all of you, teachers, students, homeschooling families, old friends, family, and new friends from Kidlit Con!  (I hope there are many of you here on this Poetry Friday!)

Today I am thrilled to offer you our seventh Classroom Poetry Peek into Mrs. Sallye Norris's first grade classroom at Puster Elementary School in Fairview, Texas.  Sallye is an old friend of mine.  We were best-friends-ever as American Rotary exchange students living in Denmark from 1987-1988, and today, we are still great pals.  I truly admire her intellectual curiosity and bright spirit.  Sallye's students celebrate Poetry Friday...listen in.

 Teacher Sallye Norris

There was a Sumo
He was so...fat I used Sumo
as a basketball.

by Drew Turner

Cat

I'm a cat
the best thing ever
made.  I'm better than
a dog.  You don't have
to give me a bath.
All I want is for you
to pat me on my back.

by Claire Easley

Flower

Please don't take me home with you.
I might die and I'll never see you.
Leave me outside for sunshine and
rain.  You might see me some
other day.

by Gina Peoples

When you stretch
me out I look
ridiculous!  And sometimes
I get loose!  You
also wear me
a lot!  I am stuck
in a box! full
of silly bands!

by Delaney McDuffie

Each Friday, the first graders at Puster Elementary visit each first grade teacher in a round-robin type of rotation.  Each teacher teaches a lesson in a subject that is of great interest to her.  I love poetry and language, so my lessons revolve around these things.  My goal for the learners is to help them view themselves as authors and poets and to foster a love of language.

Our first several weeks of poetry rotation were spent discovering poetry.  We spent time talking about words that sounded good to our ears: words that were interesting or funny or felt good on our tongues.  We read poems aloud, listening to see if the poem rhymed or not.  We read the poems Amy posted on her site.  We sang poems with gentle rhythms.  We drew pictures of what the poem meant to us in our hearts.  Together, we wrote poems about the huge tarantula I found in my house and kept as a pet!  Every week, each child was given a copy of the poem we read to put in a poetry notebook, take home, and cherish time and again.

After several weeks of exposure to the world of poetry, we began writing poetry of our own, using Amy's "Pumpkin" poem as a catalyst.  The learners picked objects and listed, in speech bubbles, what each object might think or say.  Then I encouraged them to turn those thoughts into poems.   You could have hard a pin drop (except for all of the verbal sounding out!) as they began imagining their objects talking.  They wrote and shared with each other, and their excitement grew.  One little boy turned to his table mates and exclaimed, "We're poets.  Did you know that?"  

That afternoon, a mom e-mailed me asking, "What did y'all do today?  My child has been writing poems and taping them all over the house."  We're nine weeks into school, but the kids are already viewing themselves as poets!  I can't wait to see what they're doing by the end of first grade!"

Thank you many times over to Sallye and her students for sharing a peek into their own Poetry Friday with us today.  Teachers and homeschooling parents:  I invite you to share on a future Poetry Friday.  Please just drop me a note if you are interested.

Tomorrow is October 30, the last day of SPARK 10.  I plan to post my response to Amy Souza's beautiful photograph, "Dahlia Soft Focus", in this space and look forward to seeing her response to my poem, "Everynight Everywhere".

In addition to being Poetry Friday, today is also National Cat Day.  You can see our family's four cats - Pickles, Firepaw, Sarah, and Mini - over at Jama Rattigan's wonderful cat celebration today.  Check out Jama's blog to see many beautiful cat pictures and stories of authors, illustrators, and their beloved kitties - just slink on over to Jama Rattigan's Alphabet Soup!  Jama always sets a delightful table, and today is purrfect.

Toby Speed, my wise and witty roommate from Kidlit Con, is hosting today's Poetry Friday at her blog, The Writer's Armchair.  As a person who spent last weekend with Toby, I can promise that her company is thoughtful and full of whimsy and charm.  Enjoy all of your poetry travels today...and Happy Halloween!

Tomorrow I'll be teaching a class at the NFRC Fall Conference all about finding writing ideas through poetry!

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