The road not taken A selection of Robert Frost's poems

Robert Frost, 1874-1963

Book - 1985

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811.52/Frost
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2nd Floor 811.52/Frost Checked In
Published
New York : Holt, Rinehart, and Winston [1985]
Language
English
Main Author
Robert Frost, 1874-1963 (-)
Item Description
Enl. ed. of: Come in.
"An Owl book"--Cover.
Physical Description
xxxvii, 282 p. : ill
Bibliography
Includes indexes.
ISBN
9780805005288
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

Some of the best picture books are not stories. They're poems that let kids reflect, imagine and think. COUNTLESS PICTURE books follow the same narrative structure, in which a character faces a challenge and then - at the end of approximately 500 words - overcomes that challenge, or doesn't. We call this story. "Read me a story," a child might beg, and so we do. But not all picture books are stories in the traditional sense, and often poetry is the tool that frees an author from the expectations of conflict and resolution. By trusting language, form, rhythm or sound to hold the reader's focus, a poet is able to slow down or speed up, to observe or reflect. Picture books in verse can meditate or meander, imagine or reminisce, examine one small aspect of the world carefully, or elicit deep emotion. one thing that sets picture books apart from titles for older readers is that we often share them with another person. In boom, BELLOW, BLEAT: Animal Poems for Two or More Voices (WordSong, 32 pp., $19.95; ages 3 to 6), Georgia Heard's text leans into this interactive experience, creating the space for distinct speakers in each poem. Each is intended as a sort of duet, with the text set in different colors to differentiate the alternating parts. The book relies heavily on the humor and child-friendly simplicity of animal noises, but the noises animals make are not always what you'd expect. In "We Don't Say Ribbit," a frog and toad offer the less expected noises they might actually make in the wild, from "quonk" to "errrgh," almost certain to entice laughter from young readers. In several of these poems, the language is more mature, as in "Flight of the Honeybees," where "Pale celery parasols" or "yellow petaled broccoli" may be a challenge to younger readers. But the beauty of poetry for small children is that the sounds of words can be appealing long before their meanings are fully understood. Many of these poems also incorporate refrains, allowing a young listener to repeat after another reader, as in "Song Thief," where the second reader, as mockingbird, repeats everything the first reader has just said. "Why is it / why is it / what I sing / what I sing / you sing too?" Heard's engaging poems, paired with Aaron DeWitt's bright digital images of the natural world, are designed to bring readers together, and with an informative author's note on various elements of the natural world, they may also find a welcome role in the classroom. "EACH TREE OFFERS / A STORY ..." begins Verlie Hutchens and Jing Jing Tsong's TREES (Beach Lane, 40 pp., $17.99; ages 4 to 8) and what unfolds is exactly that, a series of brief character studies, as page after page, readers are introduced to a surprisingly varied cast of arboreal personalities. Gracefully, each spread offers a distinct new friend for young readers. Pussy willow is shy, waiting for the one week in spring when "kitten velvet buds / adorn her modest twigs." By contrast, White Pine is an "unruly uncle," with his "buttons akilter" and "shaggy hair unkempt." Each tree is memorable, and Hutchens's vivid descriptions are full of movement and rentable moments. Tsong's colorful illustrations invite readers to peer from a range of vantage points and angles, as if looking down through the foliage. Young readers on walks may well experience the canopy above them a little differently after encountering the trees through Hutchens's and Tsong's eyes. Yet the book may do little to help them see people differently, since "Trees" also reinforces traditional gender roles. Female-identified trees are described as "silly" as they dance on "tippy toes" and sport "baubles." Meanwhile, the masculine trees are "strong" and "mighty" as well as "wise." An unfortunate choice for a book that might easily have resisted such bias. in reading poetry, we are sometimes so lulled by rhythm and sound that we forget to pay attention to meaning. This can be especially true with familiar poems, as they become ingrained in our consciousness. A picture book version of Robert Frost's the ROAD NOT TAKEN (Familius, 40 pp., $17.99; ages 4 to 8), with illustrations by Vivian Mineker, does a wonderful job of reintroducing a well-known poem without altering a single word. The choice to redivide stanzas and to rebreak lines, as well as to set the poem in the contemporary-feeling world of Mineker's soft palette, invites a fresh reading. In the beginning of the book, a young boy with a backpack stands near his dog, at a fork in the road. "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood." As the text reflects on this moment, we view him from a distance, and then from far above. We witness the boy's indecision, and finally his seemingly arbitrary choice. From there, the book continues, and we journey along with the poem and the boy, as he grows, goes to school, chooses a career and builds a family. Finally, at the poem's poignant end, we face the old man who has been reciting the poem and reminiscing all along, surrounded by his grandchildren. "And that has made all the difference." This is a book that begs rereading. Visually, it's unclear what beckons the boy along his initial path, and there's a sort of randomness, a meandering mazelike quality to the artwork, if an emotional inevitability to the poem's conclusion. Robert Frost might well have approved that ambiguity. "THIS IS FOR THE UNFORGETTABLE / the swift and sweet ones / who hurdled history / and opened a world / of possible." The beginning of Kwame Alexander and Kadir Nelson's THE UNDEFEATED (Versify/ Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 40 pp., $17.99; ages 4 and up) feels anthemic. Listen up, the book seems to say, I'm going to share something important. What follows is a powerful tribute to the African-American experience, replete with joy and pride in the accomplishments of individual artists and athletes, leaders and thinkers. But the book also communicates a strong sense of the suffering without which this history would be incomplete. Alexander's resonant twisting language, and Nelson's rich painterly style, serve to capture not just individuals but the community as a whole. "The ones who survived / America / by any means necessary." The book continues. "And the ones who didn't." This second line of text is set starkly against blank white pages, demanding that the reader consider the lives lost and the voices silenced by our history. We see this same kind of restraint a little further along, in the startling repetition of "This is for the unspeakable." Three spreads repeat this simple line, allowing the reader to sit with images of unforgivable acts from both past and present, inviting us to silently bear witness when words fail. Elsewhere, the text swells again, as words and art offer a litany of historical figures and important moments, filling the ears with rhythms that demand attention, calling on poetry of the past. "This is for the unbelievable / The We Real Cool ones. / This is for the unbending. / The black as the night is beautiful ones." These lines sing, and the accompanying paintings feel like a walk through a portrait gallery. Poetry knows when to lean forward and when to pull back, and in "The Undefeated," Alexander has walked that line perfectly. This book will fill readers with a sense of the wealth and the cost of history. LAUREL SNYDER is the author of many books for young readers. Her chapter book "Charlie and Mouse: Even Better" will be published next month.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [April 7, 2019]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Golden, autumnal shades by Mineker mark Frost's archetypal "wood," as a red-haired child with a canine companion walks toward two roads that diverge. Seen from high above, the child resembles an abstract shape faced with the choice between two distinct paths. The boy's choice leads to pivotal life moments: in one series of images, he grows older as he plays with tinker toys, then holds a book of architecture, then graduates from school. On another spread, chasing his still-spry dog leads him to meet his life partner, which lead to children, grandchildren, and old age. Mineker captures the poignancy and weight of Frost's most well-known poem while delivering an accessible story of choices and personal journeys to young readers. Ages 5-8. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Robert Frost's familiar 1915 poem presents enigmatic choices for an elementary-age boy.A red-haired elementary-age boy trekking through golden woods with a beagle comes to a place where "two roads diverged." Wishing he could "travel both," the boy studies one road and then chooses the less-worn path, opting to keep the other road for "another day," knowing he's unlikely to "ever come back" and taking the road "less traveled by" could "make all the difference." Richly hued illustrations in a palette of yellows and blues rely on simple rounded shapes, flat patterns, varying perspectives, and single- and double-page spreads to provide a possible context for Frost's spare verse. Dwarfed by stylized trees resembling giant yellow toadstools, the boy begins his journey wearing a striped hoodie, blue backpack, jeans, and red boots. An impressive treetop view shows boy and beagle confronting the diverging path, emphasizing the magnitude of choice. The boy picks up fallen leaves, ponders two unknown roads, selects a leaf for his backpack, and proceeds along his chosen path. As he journeys, scenes from his ensuing life unfold, carrying him from childhood to becoming a young man with a family and eventually an elderly man, still musing about the choice he made in the woods that indeed changed everything. Inexplicably, his hair darkens from red to brown with a single page turn, which is likely to befuddle more than one reader.A favorite Frost poem reveals how serendipitous choice affects a lifetime. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.