Poems Books


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Poems Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Poems
Lunch Box Mail and Other Poems
Published in Hardcover by Henry Holt and Co. (BYR) (2001-07-01)
Author: Jenny Whitehead
List price: $16.95
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Average review score:

Makes me feel like a kid again!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-06
Yes, I am thirty something and I admit that this IS one of my favorite books! I keep this in the 'frequently viewed' section of my bookshelf! But then, I happen to consider it a sad shame to ever put away a good childrens' book!

There are funny poems throughout the book, and the pictures are really colorful, hand-drawn and fun to look at. My kids enjoy the book, but I don't think they appreciate it in just the same way I do! Some example of my favorite parts:

There's a two page comparison of the 1st and the 179th days of school.

"Other foods that my tickle your tastebuds" -which features foods with funny names.

I love the poem of the "Bad Hair Day" and the next page has adorable drawings and "Ways to Hide a Bad Haircut."

...and so much more! This is a great book! I recently gave a copy of it to one of my dearest friends who is 60-something and she lOVED it, and keeps hers out too!:)

I think I AM a KID again when I read this book!

If you want a book that you'll enjoy reading as well as the kids then this is a perfect choice!

I got to meet her!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-06
She came to the school my kids go to and I was subbing at the school that day. She is WONDERFUL! She is down to earth and has the kids attention when she talks. The book is fantastic!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

'Lunch Box Mail'--Wonderful read for kids and ex-kids!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-28
I read this book to my nephew as often as he asks, which is just about every night, which I don't mind at all. It's amazing how we're both still completely tickled by the fun and ingenious wordplay and the colorful artwork that this book brings together perfectly over and over again. And somehow the author makes it look easy to do.

My nephew knows most of these clever and sweet poems by heart, and I have to admit, so do I. If you're a cynical ex-kid like me, this briliant book will take you back to a time when puddles and bugs and sticky stuff were fun things to be played with, not avoided. Thanks for reminding me of how I used to look at the world when I was young and innocent like my nephew, Ms. Whitehead, and also for giving he and I a whole lot of great laughs together!

We can't wait for your next book of poems to come out, 'Holiday Stew'...I'm sure we'll be memorizing all of those poems, too...and we'll be loving it!

terrific kids book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-24
This book is a treasure- I've given copies to all my friends who are moms. The kids just love it, and ask me to read it again and again. Of course, they know their favorites by heart.... how can you resist a poem about Rutabaga?
The variety of the poems and the delightful (and funny) childhood adventures/experiences each relates are just as enjoyable for parents to read as they are for children to hear. The illustrations are charming and full of thoughtful details for little eyes to find. This is our favorite family book- I can't wait for her next one!

Lunch Box Mail
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-17
Lunch Box Mail is a wonderful children's book of poetry. It's nonsensical,fun, light, entertaining and definitely a way for children to get a great start in reading on their own. The illustrations are creative and childlike.

Poems
Odysseus: The Epic Myth of the Hero
Published in Paperback by Infinity Publishing (2007-12-20)
Author: Marc Ladewig
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Average review score:

Fantastic Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
This book is worth the read. If you like Homer. You will love this book. It is like an add on to Homer. I tell everyone I meet to pick this book up.
Easy to read. A wonderful story and written with such grace.

Lesa Trapp

The Gods Live!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
By all the gods on Mount Olympus, I have never seen mythology presented so clearly! A poet is dictionary-defined as: a person of imaginative power and sense of beauty; one who presents a subject in a unique way. Marc Ladewig truly has the soul of a poet. My favorite lines, (and there are many) are:
"The strands of god run deep in mortal man
and in the stars and every blade of grass."
Marc has a way of making the gods and their times come alive in a fascinating and memorable way. This epic tale itself is a work of art, the pictures make it even easier to envision the story and the afterword is a wonderful reference tool as well. With the map, the family tree and the glossary of names and places, further study is certainly made much easier. After reading this book, even those who are not poetically inclined will want to read more. I cannot recommend this book highly enough!

Odysseus Bids Farewell to Calypso
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-06
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R9ILUHVJXE75V Odysseus Bids Farewell to Calypso is a video with original musical introduction by the author.

The Odyssey for a New Generation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
I have loved the tales of Homer since a child; reading everything I could get my hands on in my school's library about the Trojan war and the wanderings of Odysseus. My life choices were influenced by my internalization of the warrior ethos found in Homer's immortal poems.

But the old stories grew stale, and I have been unable to get back into them in decades.... Till Marc Ladewig's amazing retelling of the Oddyssey!

This is indeed Homer for a new generation of modern readers. Marc writes in clear and understandable poetic-prose. He serves-up the epic myth in the style of Homer, trimmed of the "fat" that weighs pure translations down for modern readers.

I recommend this book to any reader of any age who thrills to the ancient tales or who enjoyed the film "Troy". But especially I hope this book is picked-up by educators, who will find this a fine piece of literature and a great tool for introducing young minds to the world of Homer. To the "fierce-bred" heroes of ancient Greece; to lovely nymphs and cleaver wives; and to mega-hearted Odysseus, doomed to wander the wine-dark seas before at last returning to hearth and home.

Odysseus for the New Millennium
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
With "Odysseus, the Epic Myth of the Hero," the California poet Marc Ladewig has undertaken a noble task: a contemporary retelling of the adventures of Odysseus (aka "Ulysses"). The ancient king of Ithaca's deeds were originally described by the Greek poet Homer in the 8th century B.C. in the epic poems "The Iliad" and "The Odyssey," which respectively depict the Trojan War and Odysseus's magical and harrowing journey home. The two works are still the most famous epic dramas of Western Civilization, their mythology permanently etched into our collective culture. We know the stories from the original Homer and from adaptations (such as Wolfgang Petersen's 2004 movie "Troy"), elaborate re-workings (James Joyce's "Ulysses" and Joel and Ethan Coen's "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" are examples), references in story and song (including Cream's "Tales of Brave Ulysses"), and innumerable renderings in painting and sculpture. Who has not heard of the Cyclops, Achilles' heel, the Lotus Eaters, the Sirens, or the Trojan horse?

So, it is with a chill up the spine and a rush of nostalgia that one reads Ladewig's opening words: "Sing about that long lost man for me, dear Muse of epic song...." And we plunge into the Homeric reality of legendary warriors and fierce battles, helpful and wrathful gods, oracular and vengeful wives and mothers, seductive goddesses and terrifying creatures, and the homesick Odysseus and his ever faithful wife Penelope. In Ladewig's book, "some parts are translation, some parts are adventures upon which Homer is silent, some parts are pure invention." He is true to the spirit of the original, yet strives to fill in gaps and to interpret. Ladewig, of course, is not the only author to augment Homer's accounts: Euripides and Aeschylus wrote plays more than two thousand years ago that dealt with characters from the Trojan War. For the 21st century, it helps to have a new telling that bridges the gap between the ancient and modern worlds, and their manners of storytelling. Ladewig succeeds admirably in this. His language is fresh and modern, his poetry is vivid and sweeping, and he retains an epic tone, transporting us to faraway, mythic events that have informed our dreams and our strivings for three millennia.

Poems
On the Blue Shore of Silence: Poems of the Sea
Published in Hardcover by Rayo (2004-02)
Author: Pablo Neruda
List price: $26.95
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Average review score:

Beautiful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-26
This is a beautiful translation of Neruda with gorgeous artwork. I gave it as a gift to a friend.

very romantic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-17
Neruda, a gifted poet, nobel prize recipiant times two, shares his thoughts and feelings by the sea in this peaceful and sensual collection. What a captivating, romantic collection of poems. Usually I dislike "greatist hit" style books, but this collection of poems easily provides a well rounded, description of Neruda's talents. The artistry illustrated is beautiful and more than adequetly translates the feel of the book. The book is printed in spanish and english translation provided by Alastair Reid, his favorite and preferred translator. I encourage all, whether poetic novice or expert to pick this book up, especially if you are a romantic at heart.

Beautiful Poetry, Beautiful Art!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-19
I love Pablo's poetry. I didn't think it was possible for the art to be as beautiful as the poetry. But it is.

Simply so beautiful
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-21
The coast of California, where Mary Heebner lives, is so parallel in its geography, blueness, and diverse forms of the shores from rocks to cliffs to wide sand to Neruda's mar at Isla Negra where he'd look out at that same Pacific ocean to form his poems. Mary is able to capture that intrinsic beauty of his sea and his poetry in this wonderful book of art. And you could ask for no better translator than Alastair Reid. Neruda loved how he'd walk barefoot all around his house and the beach at Isla Negra barefoot. And he loved his translations, as do I. Neruda said that "to me, the ocean is an element like air." This book of his poems about his sea, combined with the sublime blues of Mary Heebner's art, makes for such a great book for your coffee table, or as a gift, as I have given it now to six different people.

--Mark Eisner, editor of The Essential Neruda: Selected Poems

Pablo Neruda
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-21
The poetry in this book is exquisite. The presentation is excellant. I own a copy of it, myself, and bought three more to give as gifts.

Poems
The Pleasures of the Damned: Poems, 1951-1993
Published in Hardcover by Ecco (2007-11-01)
Author: Charles Bukowski
List price: $29.95
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Collectible price: $90.00

Average review score:

Henry Chinaski's Greatest Writings Ever Conceived.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
These poems have to be the most entertaining and creative poems Bukowski wrote. Drab and dullness are never portrayed in these writings. His outlook towards women, writing, drinking, politics, people and the city of LA and all his experiences are summed up well in this book.

Bukowski Collection
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
I've long been a fan of Bukowski and it's nice to have such a large collection at my fingertips. It's nice to read some of the old poems, one more time. He was a classic.

Great for those new to Bukowski
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
this book is great for what it is intended for. A look at Bukowski in a sort of encyclopedic form. Bukowski is very real and heartfelt but in the most simplest blunt fashion and I mean that to be very appreciative.

"I Have Been Alone But Seldom Lonely"
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-20
THE PLEASURES OF THE DAMNED is a collection of Charles Bukowski's poems, 548 pages of them, many of them from earlier volumes of poetry, some of them never before published. For anyone familiar with Bukowski, there are few if any surprises here, rather a healthy sampling of this iconoclast's poetry. So very autobiographical, many of these poems are about the things Bukowski loved: the races, cats (you can learn from them), booze, poetry (he calls himself a poetry junkie), Wagner, sex (like Mahler, you do not rush it), some women. He can write a paean to a lover in "The Shower" but then say in another poem that American women, as opposed to Japanese women, "will kill you like they tear a lampshade." He is not reticent in writing about people and things he hates as well: some writers, especially Hemingway, whom he describes as "just a drunk"-- the irony is that in "a clean, well-lighted place," his description of Hemingway's use of his literary reputation to reel women in "one at a time" sounds like Bukowski himself-- critics, mindless work. (He pictures workers trapped in jobs that go nowhere as having "goldfish security.)

Nothing was immune from Bukowski's pen. Apparently he could write about any subject. There are poems here on the killing of elephants in Vietnam, a grammar school bully remembered, the ignorance of youth, a trip to the doctor, picturing himself in a nursing home, a conversation with death, an old car ("a poor man's miracle"), the abuse that both he and his mother suffered at the hands of his father (his mother had "the saddest smile I ever knew"), the homeless, the old, poor, sick and dying, throwing a radio out a window, etc., etc.

No one would say that Bukowski wrote "pretty" poems. On the other hand, we cannot deny that many of them go straight to the bone. In "eating my senior citizen's dinner at the Sizzler" (what a horrendous image) markers in modern cemeteries are "flat on the ground, it's much more pleasant for passing traffic." His world is inhabited by a sixty-five-year-old man with cancer who kills his sixty-six-year-old wife who has Alzheimer's and then kills himself and a house that is sad because it is inhabited with people who have mindless, dead-end jobs. For many of the people Bukowski writes about, "it's a lonely world/of frightened people,/just as it has always/been." On the other hand, in the poem entitled "mind and heart" (p. 523), he acknowledges that we are all alone, "forever alone" but goes on to say that "I have been alone but seldom lonely."

Reading Bukowski reminds you of Walt Whitman and Allen Ginsberg--although he certainly is not derivative of any other writer-- but a case can be made that he is a lot closer in his mood and world view to some of the darker poems of both Robert Frost and Emily Dickinson than he probably would have acknowledged. There is a place in the parade of poets for anyone who speaks the truth: the Robert Frosts, the Emily Dickinsons, the Donald Halls, the Edwin Arlington Robinsons along with the Charles Bukowskis.

there are really people like this
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-06
I used to work for a newspaper here in chicago that exclusively devoted itself to bars, every bar, in the city of chicago. Most of these establishments were pretty decent but there were a few that probably should have gone out of business some time ago but still somehow subsisted on older patrons who went and drank there. These were older drinkers who would sit at the bar alone or hollar accross at someone else sitting at the other end. My first reaction was, first of all I cant believe theres people like this, and secondly, after reading The pleasures of the damned, I visualized this mans character in one of these bars.
Bokowski's writing style teeters between poetry and plain old conversation that make him enjoyable to read. dont be fooled by the scruff, hes a more articulate character than your average dead beat drunk. I was happy to have come accross his work a little older as I am now fully able to understand much of his work as I would not have before. Ranging from the pornographic to the delicate still life of other people in their life, his style of writing reads as if someone is actually verbalizing the words, telling you a story, in slang, in short conversational style, that make his bite size confucious style poems worth a read.
I was exposed to Charles Bukowski from a DVD documentary about the author, and came to his books later, which is how i suggest others become acquainted with his work.
A true american diamond, Bukowski is one of the rarest of success stories, which make his work more rewarding to read. A true plain spoken style of the fringe.

Poems
Poem Portraits
Published in Hardcover by Buccaneer Books (1992-06)
Author: J. J. Metcalfe
List price: $18.95
Used price: $18.23
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

A poem for every occasion
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-11
I grew up with this book in our family library. There was always a poem for me to copy for every occasion that I would write to someone, need a speech for school, or to enclose in a birthday or special occasion card. The style of each poem was universal. I NEED THIS BOOK! And now I can't find it anywhere. I'd be happy to get a second hand copy if nothing else. Still searching in Oregon but worth the effort!

This is the best collection of short poems I have ever read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-31
I just read James J. Melcalfe's book titled, "More Poem Portraits." I loved it! I would really like to purchase a copy of it for myself. In fact, I would purchase copies to be used as gifts for friends. (The book I read is very old and belongs to a friend.)

I have loved Metcalfe's poetry since I was a child!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-06
I've loved his poems since reading them as a daily feature in the Charleston News & Courier in the 1950's. I have searched for this author's works in every library I've visited. No one has ever heard of him. Where can I find the source of "Garden in My Heart" and "Poem Portraits" -- surely it isn't hopeless! His poetry has a quiet and gentle charm that reaches right into one's heart and stays there for years.

James J. Metcalfe's Poem Portraits
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-28
I have loved these poems since the 50s and cut one out of the newspaper in 1956 and still have it. Since then I have started a collection of his books. I now have 5 of them and still looking for "Garden in My Heart". I have a website of James J. Metcalfe Poems. Let me know if you know where I can find "Garden in My Heart".

Books by J.J. Metcalfe
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-06
I have three books by J.J.Metcalfe that I founded at a second hand store, Poem Portraits,Poem Portraits of Inspiration, and Love Portraits I loved them all and I can not get enough of his work now I'm looking for his other six books Garden in my Heart, More Poem Portraits, Daily Poem Portraits, Poem Portraits of the Saints, Poems for Children, and My Rosary of Rhymes does any one know where I my find any of the books I named?

Poems
Prayers for Healing: 365 Blessings, Poems, & Meditations from Around the World
Published in Hardcover by Candela Pr (1997-10)
Author:
List price: $14.95
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Average review score:

Perhaps the most powerful spiritual book I have ever read
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-25
I don't usually write reviews but this book of prayers taken from around the world and throughout history is so beautiful and powerfully moving that I had to write to recommend it. Well worth the money - I plan to buy more to give as presents.

Prayers for Healing: 365 Blessings, Poems and Meditations fr
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-14
I read this book every day. It has enriched my spiritual life tremendously. Now I give it to friends and family. We all have places in our lives and selves that need to be healed-- this book speaks to many of those different dimensions.

Prayers for Healing - a rich little treasure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
Not only will the beautiful cover of this collection edited by Maggie Oman inspire you but the contents, a selection for each day of the year, will offer comfort, peace, and hope no matter what might be taking place in your life. There are entries written by an African-Ameican Abolitionists in 1863, one by Mary Baker Eddy in that same century, another by the Dalai Lama in our own day and yet another by Marianne Williamson. The entries are so good I find myself using the book each morning and then turning back to it throughout the day. I highly recommend it!

An excellent resource
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-23
I have used this volume for several years in my personal prayer/meditation practice. I order so many copies because I give it to friends anytime there is a crisis, a health concern or a loss. There are meditation for every religious or philosophical style. ost are beautifully-written and touching. I recommended it highly.
Jane

When times are tough
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-26
I've loved this book for years. I didn't do it the daily devotional way the book is set up. I read through it and marked the ones that I found especially helpful and comforting. I turned to those when times are tough

I have given a dozen or so of these books to friends and to pastors. I wrote the dates of my favorites in the fly and encouraged them to add their own to the list.

Nearly everyone has told me how helpful the book has been. It's use of prayers from all religions and over hundreds/thousands of yrs helps us to know that our troubles and feelings are not ours alone but have been experienced by others engaged in this experience we call life.

It is really a wonderful treasure when the times are really tough.
Clarice Bates

Poems
The Raven and Other Poems
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (1999-10)
Author: Edgar Allan Poe
List price: $12.10

Average review score:

Absolutly the best poem I've read!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-18
This book of poems is really the best book of poems I have ever read!!! The introduction to this book is very touching but the poem "The Raven" took my breath away! I couldn't believe that such a poem can make me feel this way!!!

Poe the way he should be served, with excellent illustrations that project the same ambience
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-06
With the emphasis so much on his horror writing, the poetry of Edgar Allen Poe is often overlooked. Which is unfortunate, his poetry has many classic lines, and there is no segment better than the opening line of "The Raven."

"One upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,"

The following poems appear in this collection, The Raven, Annabel Lee, Lines on Ale, The City in the Sea, The Sleeper, Eldorado, Alone, The Haunted Place and The Conquerer Worm.
While some traditionalists may decry the "Classics Illustrated" approach to poetry, I have little time for those arguments. Poe is best when served up illustrated, and the illustrations in this book are excellent. My favorites are the caricatures of Poe in his study that accompany `The Raven." The big eyes and oversized cranium give him the appearance of dark despair. In my opinion, anything that presents the classics in a format that will appeal to young people is to be encouraged, which is why I recommend this book.

"Once upon a midnight dreary...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-27
...while I pondered weak and weary over many a quant and curious volume of forgotten lore..."
Who can't pass up the mystique and somber terror of one Poe's poems? Don't deny yourself this chance at book full of great literature. Poe might have had a troubled life but his life's work was, and still is, incredible.

More Incoherant Rantings From A Cocaine Addict!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-03
Many reknown Literary Critics who live in "Intellectual Ivory Towers" consider this collection of poems to be a so called "Classic". I however tend to disagree with them and unless I woke up in Russia or Communist China this morning I believe I have every right to exercise my Freedom Of Speech. My least favourite poem in this book would have to be "The Raven". Perhaps one can understand the erratic meter of this poem when one learns that it was written in one hour in a cocaine induced frenzy. Sadly Writing and Substance Abuse are not a good combination. I give this book 5 stars because so many people are under the impression that Edgar Allen Poe was a genius instead of a drug addled illicit substance abuser.

Raven is on Its Way
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-13
This is one of the many poems by Edgar Allan Poe. It is a very good poem but at first I didn't really understand it. It took awhile before I fully understood it even after I had been told the main idea. In this poem raven represents death. What I believe that that the man in this poem is going to die and death is tapping at his door. This poem uses lots of figurative speech and it makes it sound very pretty. Such as "Prophet!,' said I, 'Thing of evil! Prophet still if bird or devil! Whether Tempter sent or tossed thee here ashore, Desolate ye tall undaunted, On this home by horror haunted-tell me truly, I implore- Is there balm in Gilead?- tell me- tell me I implore!' Quoth the Raven, 'Nevermore." It would be a good idea to read The Raven.

From the editor of the Hoppin Readin Review on Blogspot

Poems
Selected Poems
Published in Paperback by Faber and Faber (2002-04-08)
Author: W.H. Auden
List price: $25.80
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Average review score:

Poetry to "disenchant and disintoxicate"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-08
W.H. Auden is truly, as noted by editor Edward Mendelson, a twentieth century poet. Auden had a firm grasp on the essence of contemporary politics and culture and possessed a knack for bringing a reader into his world. This selection spans the entire body of Auden's work, and contains several early poems which are hard to find, as Auden refused to have them republished in later collections of his work. It is a good introduction to Auden, but I recommend reading it along with Collected Shorter Poems 1927-1957, as that contains the revisions that Auden made to his poems over time, in his fervor for complete honesty in his work.

While Mendelson's selection is well put together and a good representation of Auden's early craft, the revised poems are generally much stronger (though often bleaker in tone). Many changes, such as the famous revision of September 1, 1939 to read "we must love one another and die" rather than "we must love one or die" were made to reflect the author's shifting attitudes. However, other poems improve significantly with Auden's editing, and if this book is the only Auden you read, you'll miss out on the full depth of his power as a poet.

About suffering they were never wrong : The old masters
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-17
Auden wrote much poetry in many different forms. He was a very learned poet with strong connection to English poetic tradition. Among his most known poems are those which are also my favorites,"Musee des Beaux Arts", "In Memory of W. B. Yeats" and "September 1,1939". The concluding stanza of this last poem gives a good idea of the special colloquial power of Auden's rhyme and rhythm.

"Defenceless under the night
Our world in stupor lies;
Yet, dotted everywhere,
Ironic points of light
Flash out wherever the Just
Exchange their messages:
May I, composed like them
Of Eros and of dust,
Beleaguered by the same
Negation and despair,
Show an affirming flame.

In that poem also contains the great stanza, " Lest we should see we are/ Lost in a dark haunted wood/ Children afraid of the night/ Who have never been happy or good."
Auden was too a considerable critic of Literature, an outstanding Anthologist, a man-of- letters in a true sense.
I do not know the range of his poetry well, but the anthology pieces are filled with memorable lines.
Edward Mendelson, a well- known Auden scholar, in this work presents a number of original poems which Auden as he was wont to do improved for the worse.

The Quintessential Collection
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-09
For many of us,the poems that we read in childhood and adolescence are those that stick with us the most. When I was fifteen, I bought this volume and promptly fell in love with Auden's poetry. His work showed a restlessness with the social and political state of his world, and I found that I could connect with it both intellectually and emotionally. To this day, I can revisit this book's pages feeling like I am visiting a childhood friend. Auden expressed some feelings I shared with him, and I was moved by his ability to express them better than I ever could: with frankness, wit, and grace. A must for any literary enthusiast (or any curious fifteen-year-old, for that matter).

Worth singing about
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-30
The poetry is splendid -- Auden is a brilliant, sensitive, musical and entertaining writer -- and the selection is fairly representative. Mendelson prefers Auden's later poems to his earlier ones, so the twee middle-aged sequences "Bucolics" and "Horae Canonicae" are included complete, while most of "Twelve Songs" (which has some terrific love poems like "Fish in the unruffled lakes", "Funeral Blues" and "Tell me the truth about love") is not. Still, there is enough in here, esp. in the first two-thirds of the book, to give you a fair enough taste of Auden's verse to entice you to buy his Collected Poems.

(You'll still need the Selected; it has a couple of good poems that Auden decided not to republish, and superior versions of some early poems.)

A marvelous introduction
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-26
I can do little more than echo the other reviewers here. This is all a 'selected poems' shoud be: introductory and selective. Yes, "Funeral Blues" is missing. But no one can complain about what is here, which includes "In Time of War", the great sonnet sequence; "The Quest", another long sequence; and the entirety of THE SEA AND THE MIRROR, which is based on Shakespeare's THE TEMPEST. If you are, however, only interested in his love poems, I'd have to steer you toward TELL ME THE TRUTH ABOUT LOVE, a nice little chapbook containing only those.

My own personal experience with this book may be relevant. It has served to introduce me to one of the finest poets of the last century and sparked a desire to read THE COLLECTED POEMS, also edited by Mendelson, to see how Auden re-wrote thirty of the brilliant poems here included. I'm continuing on my voyage; hope you are starting on yours.

Poems
The Sleep Accusations: Poems
Published in Paperback by Eastern Washington University Press (2005-06-30)
Author: Randall Watson
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.17
Used price: $7.77

Average review score:

Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-03
Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry, The Sleep Accusations is an eclectic, intimate, and highly recommended collection of the greatest poetry from the intriguing and intuitive works by Randall Watson. A Dog's Life: I love the morning rain./I am like a dog in the street/with my ears up./It's as if I've been out all night/and I am hungry./I can hear the one who feeds me/calling me home.

Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-03
Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry, The Sleep Accusations is an eclectic, intimate, and highly recommended collection of the greatest poetry from the intriguing and intuitive works by Randall Watson. A Dog's Life: I love the morning rain./I am like a dog in the street/with my ears up./It's as if I've been out all night/and I am hungry./I can hear the one who feeds me/calling me home.

Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-03
Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry, The Sleep Accusations is an eclectic, intimate, and highly recommended collection of the greatest poetry from the intriguing and intuitive works by Randall Watson. A Dog's Life: I love the morning rain./I am like a dog in the street/with my ears up./It's as if I've been out all night/and I am hungry./I can hear the one who feeds me/calling me home.

Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-03
Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry, The Sleep Accusations is an eclectic, intimate, and highly recommended collection of the greatest poetry from the intriguing and intuitive works by Randall Watson. A Dog's Life: I love the morning rain./I am like a dog in the street/with my ears up./It's as if I've been out all night/and I am hungry./I can hear the one who feeds me/calling me home.

Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-03
Winner of the 2004 Blue Lynx Prize for Poetry, The Sleep Accusations is an eclectic, intimate, and highly recommended collection of the greatest poetry from the intriguing and intuitive works by Randall Watson. A Dog's Life: I love the morning rain./I am like a dog in the street/with my ears up./It's as if I've been out all night/and I am hungry./I can hear the one who feeds me/calling me home.

Poems
Song of the Water Boatman and Other Pond Poems (Caldecott Honor Book, BCCB Blue Ribbon Nonfiction Book Award)
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin (2005-04-04)
Author: Joyce Sidman
List price: $16.00
New price: $3.88
Used price: $4.15

Average review score:

beautiful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-10
what a fun book of poetry! all ages will enjoy the poems as well as the illustrations.

This is a beautiful book in word and illustration
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-06
I waited for this to arrive and now it has. It is one of the most totally beautiful books I've bought. The illustrations are wood cut and water color. I love them. The poems just pull you into the pictures. The subject matter is new to me and now I realize what I have been missing.
Can't wait to read this a million times to my grandchildren.

Superlative book should stave off "nature-deficit disorder". . .
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-20
This book is an absolute delight, and the 'pairing' of poet and artist is inspired. Beckie Prange's woodcuts are reminiscent of the genius of work by Gustave Baumann (1881-1971: Chicago, Brown County INDIANA, & New Mexico).

"Song of the Water Boatman" is given its wider readership just as psychologists are announcing concerns about "nature-deprived" children." Blessed be all educators who use this book to plan units & field trips that open eyes and hearts to the natural world so greatly in need of future protectors.

Joyce Sidman packs as much information per square inch as there are microorganisms in the drop of water showing off the "water bear," or "tardigrada." There are favorite segments on every page. In southern Indiana we already are being 'lullabied' by Spring Peepers, grateful for our woods and pond setting. Children are responding with glee to the repetitious "In the Depths of the Summer Pond" - - a musical chant in a four-page spread with 'lessons' about survival and the food chain. Not as beautiful as the dragon fly, the remarkable metamorphosis of the caddis fly, described as a "fashion story" of transformation, will nonetheless fascinate all. Other revelations include the water boatman, and its not-quite-mirror-image, the back swimmer which always swims on its back; both carrying their own bubbles of air with them.

This reviewer will never venture out-of-doors again without more finely tuning my senses to these wonders. We will definitely be exploring our creek with increased enthusiasm. Reviewer mcHAIKU urges that we not allow "nature-deficit" to creep into our souls, and allow our minds to limit periods of hibernation! LET'S THRIVE ON LIVING & LEARNING !

My baby loves to hear these poems
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-04
Since I had a baby this past summer, I have been looking for great books to read to her that are educational and just plain fun to read. She is now 5 months and I read her "The Song of the Water Boatman," and her eyes light up and she laughs and smiles. This is not only a whimsical little collection of poems about pond life, it is beautifully illustrated and informational on a pond's wild inhabitants.

Listen for me on a spring night...and I'll sing you to sleep
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-07
Take it from one who grew up -- and still lives -- across the street from a pond, Joyce Sidman knows pond life! With the beautiful, strong first poem "Listen to Me" about the peeper frogs waking in the spring, SONG OF THE WATER BOATMAN introduces readers to all aspects of pond life, from cattails to painted turtles to the food chain. In addition to poems written a variety of styles, Sidman also includes a paragraph of interesting facts about the subject. And it's all capped off with the Caldecott-honor-worthy woodcuts created by Beckie Prange. All in all, a wonderful read-aloud for kids grade 1-4 studying ponds, ecosystems, or poetry...or just for fun. "Listen to Me" joins my personal list of all-time favorite poems. 2006 Caldecott Honor Book.


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