Read! read! read!

Amy Ludwig VanDerwater

Book - 2017

"Twenty-three poems capture the joys of reading from that thrilling moment when a child first learns to decipher words to the excitement that follows in reading everything from road signs to field guides to internet articles to stories. These poems also explore what reading does, lyrically celebrating how it opens minds, can make you kind, and allows you to explore the whole world. Ryan O'Rourke's rich artwork beautifully captures the imagination and playfulness in these poems."--Amazon.

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Children's Room Show me where

j811/VanDerwater
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room j811/VanDerwater Checked In
Subjects
Published
Honesdale, Pennsylvania : WordSong, an imprint of Highlights [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Amy Ludwig VanDerwater (author)
Other Authors
Ryan O'Rourke (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
32 pages : color illustrations ; 29 cm
ISBN
9781590789759
  • Reading
  • Pretending
  • Cereal box
  • Sports page
  • Reading time
  • I explore
  • Maps
  • Road signs
  • Word collection
  • Field guide
  • An open book
  • Stories
  • Double life
  • Book dog
  • Googling guinea pigs
  • Forever
  • Birthday card
  • Magazine
  • Sunday morning
  • Information
  • Late at night
  • I am a bookmark
  • In love.
Review by Booklist Review

Lifelong readers can relate to similar milestones: that incredible surge of excitement when letters suddenly begin to make sense; the insatiable stage spent reading everything from street signs to sports pages to cereal boxes; collecting cool words; spewing obscure facts; and being transported far away. This collection of poems celebrates these experiences, usually told in first person, generally in present tense. Topics might resonate with school-age audiences bringing the class guinea pig home for the weekend, crying at the end of Charlotte's Web and the satisfying meter and rhyme schemes, along with some fairly sophisticated (but still accessible) vocabulary, make sharing enjoyable for adults. Poems are superimposed over imaginative full-page illustrations that align perfectly with each selection's tone, helping young readers interpret imagery and appreciate nuances. Many of these offerings can stand on their own, but the sequencing and variety also makes this attractive as a read-through. April may be Poetry Month, but this collection is worth sharing at any time.--McBroom, Kathleen Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 3-VanDerwater and O'Rourke have created a compendium of poetry that focuses on the sheer joy of reading. Twenty-three selections of varying rhyme schemes convey a world rich with emotions and experiences. Each verse is connected to relatable reading milestones, such as laughing over the Sunday comics or staying up late to read under the covers. Conversational in style, these poems provide illustrative cues that invite children to explore imagery. In "Maps," a boy holds "a whole city crinkling" in his hands while skyscrapers burst from the top of his map. Fantastical at times, O'Rourke's vivid artwork blends seamlessly with VanDerwater's text, fluctuating between bright and dark colors to suggest tone. Swaths of dark purples and blues highlight the somber nature of "Stories," where a father holds his daughter close to him on her bed. Readers learn how Charlotte's Web prepared the child for her grandma's death the next year, and small details such as a plush pig and a spider in her cobwebbed corner provide context. VanDerwater and O'Rourke also play with gender expectations; for example, in "Sports Page" it's a young girl in a football helmet and jersey who eagerly scans for the sports scores instead of the brother sitting next to her. Like most volumes of poetry for this age group, this is best suited for sharing aloud, but strong readers will enjoy perusing the book on their own. VERDICT A pleasing addition for poetry collections serving young children.-Rachel Zuffa, -Racine Public -Library, WI © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

This collection of twenty-three poems celebrates all kinds of reading, from a new reader understanding "letters make words" to reading for pleasure by flashlight. With a gently varying meter, the poems are read-aloud perfect; the bright digital illustrations are a pleasing accompaniment. Standouts include "Stories," in which a girl learns about grief from Charlotte's Web, and a grandpa's gift of a poem in "Birthday Card. (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Learning to read, wanting to read, daring to readnearly every state of mastering the word is explored in VanDerwater's collection of 23 poems. Bookless? No worries. Cereal boxes, road signs, or even wildly decorated notebook paper can fill the bill for the greedy page gobbler. But if you happen to have a bookahhhh, the sublime delight of reading under the covers way past dark (just like mom did) is unsurpassed. "She taught me how / a story leaps / like magic / from each page. / I'm sure my mom / read past her bedtime / under blankets / at my age." However, in this inconsistent collection, the meter alternately flows, leaps, limps, and stutters. An achingly sweet poem about a child mourning her grandma while holding fast to the lessons learned in Charlotte's Web is two back flips away from a pedestrian ode to hawks. "I am nestled on my couch / field guide perched upon my lap. / I am learning names of hawks / that own the never-ending sky." O'Rourke's illustrations are also uneven in quality. The oddly flat expression in "I Explore" vies with both the poignant father/daughter tableau in "Stories" and the comically imperious countenance of rodent Cleopatra in "Googling Guinea Pigs." Overall, these poems lack the organic integrity and easy lyric harmony found in VanDerwater's earlier books: Forest Has a Song, illustrated by Robbin Gourley (2013), and Every Day Birds, illustrated by Dylan Metrano (2016). Readers willing to pick and choose will find some gems, but there are a few rocks as well. (Picture book/poetry. 5-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.