Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Oregon Coast, Netarts Bay



Earlier this month, I spent a writing week along the Oregon coast. It was nearly thirty degrees cooler there than most of the rest of the continental U.S. Although the photo does not do justice to its rocky beauty, I found it a magical place.

Space and time breathe, compressing and expanding. Fog alters reality. Stones reflect weather. Tides change visibility. Shells create memories.

Want to write a title for this photo? Please share it.

Monday, July 25, 2011

ODE TO THE LIZARD (Monday Poem)

by Pablo Neruda


On the sand
a
lizard
with a sandy tail.
Beneath
a leaf,
a leaflike
head.

From what planet,
from what
cold green ember
did you fall?
From the moon?
From frozen space?
Or from
the emerald
did your color
climb the vine?

On a rotting
tree trunk
you are
a living
shoot,
arrow
of its foliage.
On a stone
you are a stone
with two small, ancient
eyes--
eyes of the stone.
By the
water
you are
silent, slippery
slime.
To
a fly
you are the dart
of an annihilating dragon.



from The Dreamer by Pam Munoz Ryan, 2010, Scholastic

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Preparing for Hurricane Season (FAMILY magazine reviews)



With the close of school for the summer comes the arrival of the storm season in South Florida. This selection of books for young people includes a variety of stories to appeal across a range of ages for the time that spans vacation. Whatever you need, choose from these books to make use of easily accessible information or to get lost in the grasp of a sweeping story.



Hurricane Dancers: The First Caribbean Pirate Shipwreck
by Margarita Engle
Henry Holt, $16.99, Ages 10+

Cuban-American author Engle seamlessly blends her talents as journalist, poet and novelist to bring historic figures and settings to life. With her distinctive writing style, she again treats her readers to poetry in each characters’ voice, allowing them to tell their own story, while simultaneously showing how the Spanish-Indian slave boy who, used by his pirate captain master as a translator, escapes during a hurricane shipwreck to safety. And further, learning to live again on land, helping a pair of young lovers, and ultimately deciding the fate of his former pirate/owner Talavera, and Talavera’s conquistador hostage, Ojeda, this former slave creates a new life and a new name for himself.
A fictionalized account divided into six parts, it is by turns suspenseful, captivating, ill fated, and stirring as readers are led into the age of Spanish exploration and conquest, which also includes islands in the Caribbean, and the Cuban/Taíno love story of Caucubú and Naridó. Award-winning writer Engle has woven family ancestry, hurricanes, slavery, pirates, shipwrecks, forbidden love, caves, and island spirits into a poetic feast of historic fiction. An Author’s Note, Historic Note, and References are added at the end.


Ready, Set . . . Wait! What Animals Do Before a Hurricane
by Patti R. Zelch
illustrations by Connie McLennan
Sylvan Dell, $8.95, Ages 4-9

Humans are not the only ones who prepare for a hurricane – animals, in South Florida author Zelch’s first picture book, sense and prepare for oncoming storms too. Zelch’s use of poetic language and simple repetitive phrases, brings her readers into the moments before a howling storm arrives: “Sharks explode from the shallows” of a bay, birds “huddle among the twisted roots” of mangrove islands, “rabbits race across the land,” instinctively (“They know!”) moving into their own safety range.
Award-winning illustrator McLennan’s paintings spread across double pages, ushering readers from human land preparations, into shallow ocean reef waters, then to the open sea and safety in deeper water. She uses her varied color palette to show animals on their island homes, in inland rivers and grasslands, and both offshore and along sea shorelines.
Informative back matter includes answers to questions, What is a Hurricane?, maps, the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale, Preparations for the Storm, and Animal Behavior. Perfect for a home or classroom setting, this nonfiction book is an excellent choice both for before a storm or following a hurricane to assist families as they respond to these powerful tempests.


Hurricane Song: A Novel of New Orleans
by Paul Volponi
Viking, $15.99, Ages 11-14

Hurricane Katrina arrives in New Orleans about two months after Miles moves from Chicago, where he’s been living with his remarried mother’s new family, to live with his jazz musician father. Miles believes his father’s first love is his trumpet and playing jazz, and he becomes both angry and disappointed when his father’s birthday gift to him is an African drum, instead of new cleats and a football.
In bumper-to-bumper traffic on the highway out of the city, Miles’ uncle’s car dies, and the three end up hiking to the Superdome in the rain. At this super shelter they, and another jazz musician friend they meet up with later inside, decide not to become involved in other people’s dramas. But along with a woman, her father, and her two young daughters, plus a preacher and his family, they begin to form a small community of safety and comfort, drawing together in the sharing of music as an antidote to loss and grief.
This becomes even more necessary when Miles meets up with a couple of boys from his new high school football team. Initially he’s pleased because they are both seniors, and he thinks he’ll be part of the social chain in school if he hangs out with these guys – until they bully themselves into the food line and later, want protection money from the people in Miles’ section.
Headlined by verses, both known and new, of the jazz spiritual often characteristically used as a funeral march in New Orleans, each of the twelve chapters (plus a prologue and an epilogue) is also captioned by a date and time, and chronicles the painful experiences of three days in the before and after of Hurricane Katrina. In this short but gripping story of nightmarish tragedies and profound hope, Volponi’s passionate writing is a careful crafting of contrasts -- gritty language and sensitive interactions -- in this tale of a desperate time, as a son and his father discover each other in new ways and begin to feel like a family.


Additional titles to consider:

Hurricanes!
by Gail Gibbons
Holiday House, $17.95, Ages 7-9

Discover how hurricanes form, how to prepare when you learn a hurricane is coming, what kinds of damage results, and how information is gathered to forecast and track hurricanes. Brief descriptions of several famous historic hurricanes, including Hurricane Andrew (1992), and Hurricane Katrina (2005) are included. (Nonfiction)


Hurricane Wolf
by Diane Paterson
Albert Whitman, $16.99, Ages 5-8

Noah learns about and helps prepare for approaching Hurricane Anna, which he calls a hurricane wolf, because it’s scary like a big bad wolf trying to blow down houses. The family plots the hurricane’s course on a map, while it batters the house, and Noah asks questions: “Can it see us?” he whispers when it gets suddenly quiet; his mom explains the silence as the eye, the center of the storm. Information about hurricanes is included at the end as a “book” Noah makes with help from his mom: the Saffir-Simpson Scale, a sample Hurricane Plan, Hurricane Kit, and what to do After the Storm. (Fiction)


Ellie Ever
by Nancy Ruth Patterson
illustrations by Patty Weise
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $15.99, Ages 7-10

After a hurricane in which nine-year-old Ellie and her mother lose her father, her beloved Saint Bernard, Pandy, their house and all their possessions, they move to Virginia for her mother to complete a farrier’s apprenticeship at a mansion, which also houses stables for retired horses. Ellie is accepted into Twin Creeks Preparatory School and discovers the other girls in her fourth grade class think she’s a princess because she lives at the mansion. This tender, restrained story shows a family’s steady recovery from the huge losses of a big storm. (Fiction)

Monday, July 18, 2011

BOMBS AWAY (Monday Poem)

by Sara Holbrook


It happens when
the weather warms.
The sky explodes
in thunderstorms.

Cloud puffs change
from white to gray.
The sun retreats,
then
BOMBS AWAY!

Forget those ten umbrellas,
the hat,
or the place to hide.
When storm clouds start to grumble,
I want
a good friend
by my side.


from Weird? (Me, Too!) Let's Be Friends by Sara Holbrook, 2010, Wordsong

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

WHAT'S IN A WORD? (Monday Poem)

by Siv Cedering


Say "bird,"
and a sparrow appears
inside you and ruffles
its feathers.

Say "cardinal,"
and the bird turns red.
Suddenly it is winter.
With a lot of snow. And look!
There are sunflower seeds
in the feeder.



from How to Write Poetry by Paul B. Janeczko,1999, Scholastic

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

THIS BOOK (Monday Poem)

by Avis Harley


This book is the best--
I woke up to read it
Before getting dressed.

This book is so cool--
It's the first thing I grabbed
When I rushed in from school.

This book is a winner--
I forgot I was hungry.
I almost missed dinner.

This book is just right--
I'm reading by flashlight deep into the night
Deliciously thirsty to see how it ends.

Books are such mind-thrilling
Spine-tingling friends.



from I Am the Book selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins, 2011, Holiday House