Poetry Books
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VERY STRONG BOOKReview Date: 2000-07-20
TRUE, BUT VERY RAWReview Date: 2000-07-18
Filled With Truth and PowerReview Date: 1999-10-25
THE REAL DEALReview Date: 1999-10-05
Short and Sweet ProseReview Date: 1999-09-15

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Absolutely enchantingReview Date: 2008-02-17
The difference in the first two is:
The deluxe book has a history of the author, her sketches and inspirations, timeline, her prosesses, lots of botanical notes. very collectiors edition, silver leaf and all.
The complete book has fairy's has a 1 page intro of the author then goes straight into images and poems. each has the seasons collections, but the complete has; in addition, the fairies of the garden, trees, wayside and a flower fairy alphabet.
gift of Flower FairiesReview Date: 2008-01-07
The Joy of FairiesReview Date: 2008-02-02
Her inspiration for the flower fairies came from the lush English countryside and observing young children at her local village kindergarten where her sister worked as a teacher. Her fairies are delicately and truthfully observed depictions of these young children in naturalistic poses and postures, standing on or clinging to botanically correct and beautifully rendered flowers. Being no bigger than 20cm tall they live and sleep in their birth flower taking care of their respective tree or plant, as the tree or plant grows so they grow in wisdom and power too. Fairies were most popular in the late Victorian and the Edwardian ages but they continued to hold sway over the imaginations of countless children (primarily girls) up into the early modern era... and beyond.
This enchanting and wondrous volume is a collection of all eight flower fairies books including: flower fairies of the spring, summer, autumn and winter and the flower fairies of the alphabet, trees, garden and wayside. As some of the most timeless depictions of the world of faery Cicely Mary Barker captured the innocence and naivety of childhood in exquisitely rendered illustrations and simple verse. While some may see these fairies as "safe" and "tame" depictions of the primal and elemental forces of nature, in my mind they capture the spirit of a bygone era when peoples mores and values were just plain different to ours, if not in some ways better. As such her little fairies lack the cynicism, artificiality and worldliness of the modern age and will continue to hold sway over the minds of generations of fairy lovers to come and will bring out the child within in anyone willing to let themselves go.
A little girl long agoReview Date: 2007-09-22
Same faires in the all the small booksReview Date: 2007-09-08

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Childrens' Poetry-Caroline KennedyReview Date: 2008-07-18
Less than perfect conditionReview Date: 2007-12-27
I ended up giving my own copy, which truly was in new condition, and keeping the inscripted version for myself.
Beautiful book for younger children as wellReview Date: 2008-05-28
aristocratic in a good wayReview Date: 2008-01-07
masterful paintings, beautiful poemsReview Date: 2008-01-23

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Doc's Most Imaginative TaleReview Date: 2008-09-30
When I was a child, this book took my breath away. I felt like I was living the incredible adventures in the story, from riding the Birthday Bird to choosing the tallest pet to eating the giant cake. I think this story inspired the adventures I try to create in my own writing.
Now that I'm a mom, I still love this book. It is a little long to hold the attention of toddlers or preschoolers, though, so I recommend it for Kindergarten & up.
1st Birthday Memories...Review Date: 2008-09-21
Of course this book is way too advanced for them but I brought it to their 1st birthdays and had everyone who was in attendance sign it. I love looking at all the adorable things people have said and can't wait to show it to them as they get older.
Rips easilyReview Date: 2008-09-01
"Happy Birthday To You!"Review Date: 2008-08-02
wonderful book to have for my sons first birthdayReview Date: 2008-07-20
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I Never Tire of Reading This BookReview Date: 2008-04-04
Nice illustrations but the rhymes fall a little shortReview Date: 2008-03-25
A family favorite!Review Date: 2007-07-21
Not quite what I'd imaginedReview Date: 2008-02-05
My very favorite Mother Goose bookReview Date: 2007-01-25
Nursery rhymes help build phonological awareness, an important pre-reading skill. Research has actually shown that children who memorize nursery rhymes go on to become better readers than those who do not.
This book makes a great baby gift, and a terrific birthday or holiday gift for a toddler or preschooler. It's the one I grab first when I recommend nursery rhymes to library visitors.

Pain Up Close And PersonalReview Date: 2008-01-04
There is no better way to describe Grady Harp's short but powerful poetry collection, enhanced by Stephen Freedman's evocative clay sculptures, than to quote the author himself. He states that `these poems represents one physician's survival kit in Vietnam.'
While death and destruction soared all around him, Dr. Harp, a dedicated healer of men, dealt with the antithesis of his calling with the sort of grieving that demanded from the mourner's heart the profound beauty of poetry to make some sense of it, or if not make sense of it, place the carnage he witnessed as a physician, in some sort of perspective.
Because of my lottery number back in 1969/1970 (352 I believe) I was not called to arms for the Vietnam War, but from then to now I have been touched by its senseless waste of braver men than me.
My often-arrogant attitude when I was young, rebellious, revolutionary, reactionary, and maybe too artsy-fartsy for my own good (not one of these things in and of itself was wrong or ignoble, well maybe the arrogance, which could have been as certifiably screwed up as our then war policy), presented me with an artificial viewpoint of that war.
I experienced the Vietnam War peripherally in real time and later re-imagined through Francis Ford Coppola's grand opera cinematique "Apocalypse Now," Michael Cimino's near cinema-verite "The Deer Hunter," and Oliver Stone's heart-wrenching melodrama "Platoon."
Still, as moving as those experiences were, nothing has quite moved me as much as Grady Harp's up-close-and-personal experience with pain so complex, yet so simple and unadorned and, ultimately, pure.
"War Songs" deserves, no, is obligated to be a perennial. What its poems say about war is as constant in our consciousness as thirteen-year-old Anne Frank's diary entries and Alex Haley's simple examination of his family's roots from African royalty to American slavery.
No, it's not easy to make sense of the evil some visit upon others. But may we ever be reminded. May the poet's voice ring through with simple, anguish-filled, agenda-free observations, so that we may learn from our pasts in an effort to better our future.
Hopefully, Doctor Harp will re-release "War Songs" so that we may all have a copy in our library for the ever-resonant poetry, and for the constant reminder that we are human beings.
Looker: A Novel
"the indescribable horror of war"Review Date: 2007-07-12
Accessible and short, the poems often start with a harmless enough image, soldiers having a beer, a comrade talking, a "happy laugh," and end with devastation and death. I have read these poems again and again. Two of them are seared in my brain: Number 16, about a favorite Vietnamese nurse who "wasted all her patients with a stolen M16" and Number 12 that shows so much compassion. Like all good poetry, it speaks for itself and is much better read than paraphrased.
War makes you do such things
as keeping an IV running on a dead body all night
so his neighboring wounded buddy
won't give up until he can be MedEvaced
to a field hospital
the next lonely morning.
I heard a lot of one-way conversations
at night
in Vietnam.
While these poems may have been written to keep one army physician sane, they speak to the universal: the awfulness of war, the suffering and dying of men just about to live and of course are as relevant in 2007, almost 40 years later, as the day they were written. They rise to the level of fine literature and deserve to be compared to the writing of Walt Whitman and Rupert Brooke, both of whose works I thought of when I read Mr. Harp's poems.
GENIUS!Review Date: 2008-04-23
A SYMPHONY OF LOVE FOR ONE'S COMRADES ...Review Date: 2006-01-16
I'm not as affluent with words as Dr. Harp's other reviewers, but I know what I like, and I like this book. Reading the book after first learning about the author's personal experience in Vietnam added a pathos to the experience that may not have occurred if it weren't for the conditions under which he wrote this divine book, and later helped his friend sculpt the clay into which they poured all their heartache and painful memories.
The war, the dead, the wounded, the return home, the meeting of hearts and souls between Dr. Harp and artist Freedman, and the poetry written on dark, frightening, pain-filled nights in Vietnam--poetry that came from the depths of Harp's tortured soul--all blended together like a symphony of love, love of two men for their fallen brothers.
That miraculous blend of powerful, yet tragic, circumstances and heroic men created this masterpiece of a book ... a book that not only healed the surgeon and the artist, but helped heal the minds of many of the walking wounded who returned from that horrible war, and also helped their families understand more of what they had gone through.
God bless you, Dr. Harp and Mr. Freedman, for your selfless collaboration, for having such a deep capacity to love, and for truly caring. Your own personal healing was an unexpected blessing ... a reward for your selflessness, I like to think.
I wish there were a book that would open the hearts of people who are cruel to animals in the way this book opened the hearts of people who previously were "cruel" to our vets ... mostly because they didn't understand what happened "over there" ... any more than some people don't understand the importance of pets and what happens to them "out there." - Dora Dalrymple
This book helped me heal and understand my father better.Review Date: 2006-04-29
I'm too emotional now to write a good review. I cried like a baby when I read it, but they were healing tears. My father passed away recently without my ever understanding the horror he had suffered in Viet Nam.
I wish I had had this book to share with him; then perhaps we could have talked. It might have helped him too.
I've tried to get a copy of this book for myself, but it's out of print and everyone who owns one must treasure it for himself.
Thanks Mr. Harp for your sensitive, healing book that helped me and so many others, I'm sure. Please try to bring this book out again.

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Amazing book period.Review Date: 2008-03-02
The illustrations are wonderfully simple, and I really like how there are few words per page. This book makes for a great read aloud book for pre-schoolers. I read this book recently in front of my class of 4 and 5-year-olds and they clapped at the triumphant ending of the book...they were so happy for the missing piece!
Shel Silverstein's representation of human relationships and the many "holes" that people often have is very astute. I think the subtleties of the different personalities might be over the head of children, but most adults will see just how spot on he is.
I really really can't celebrate this book enough.
A children's book that speaks to adults, too!Review Date: 2008-02-17
The drawings are simple but effective, and the story is one that we all can relate to. The Missing Piece starts out alone and is looking for someone or something to complete it. By the end of the story, The Missing Piece realizes he doesn't need anyone to complete him. He is already complete.
This is a very quick read that can help build the confidence of a young child, and can help adults regain the confidence they may have lost somewhere along the way!
profoundReview Date: 2007-04-01
SpecialReview Date: 2007-03-18
Don't forget 'The Missing Piece'!
Darling and meaningful!Review Date: 2007-02-05

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I love it, my wife loves it, my kids love it!Review Date: 2008-07-29
95 Winning Poems for Kids AND AdultsReview Date: 2008-05-23
Now my daughter has been listening to it every night before bed and often I play it early in the morning to gentle wake her before kindergarten.
There are some classic recorded poems here such as "The Raven" by Poe, "Jabberwocky" by Lewis Carroll, "The Tyger" by William Blake and "Casey at the Bat" by Earnst L. Thayer.
There are also some very nice multicultural poems recorded such as "Eagle Poem" by Joy Harjo, "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" by Langston Hughes, and perhaps my favorite poem in the collection "Okay, Brown Girl, Okay" by James Berry which is reassuring, touching, and can speak to everyone about what it's like to be different among other people.
Not all of the poems are included on the CD--some are just included in the book. Familiar poems and poets in the book only are "from Macbeth" by Shakespeare, "The Tale of Custard the Dragon" by Ogden Nash, "Frodo's Song in Bree" by J.R.R. Tolkien, "The Land of Counterpane" by Robert Louis Stevenson, from "The Bed Book" by Sylvia Plath, "Wynken, Blynken, and Nod" by Eugene Field, and "Letter to a Bee" by Emily Dickinson among many others.
In all there are 95 poems. Some of them recorded and/or published for the first time. The illustration are delightful and done by three different artist with different styles. They are Judy Love, Wendy Rasmussen, and Paula Zinngrabe Wendland.
This book/CD combo is a winner. It's very educational, fun, and will be enjoyed by the whole family.
Great Intro. to PoetryReview Date: 2008-04-15
Poetry speaks to children... and adults, too.Review Date: 2008-08-19
A collection of poems written to, or about, children with an accompanying fifty-track CD (most tracks are of the poems themselves, though a few are the poets talking about the inspiration for one piece or another). While a number of these fall into bona fide chestnut status, kids who are being exposed to poetry for the first time won't be aware of that, and that old black magic should work just fine on them. For older readers, it's fun to have a whole bunch of this sort of thing compiled into one volume (with its whimsical illustrations, sometimes almost as fun as the poems themselves). Recommended. ****
Endlessly valuable!Review Date: 2008-01-21
We use many of these poems as writing prompts for our own poetry in the classroom. The resulting poems are exiting, high-quality pieces the children and parents treasure. I would also recommend the Kenneth Koch-edited books "Rose, Where did you Get That Red? Teaching Great Poetry to Young Children" and "Talking to the Sun". The former gives lesson ideas, while the latter is a beautiful anthology of poetry paired with great works of art from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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ME's The Night Before ChristmasReview Date: 2008-08-25
The Night Before ChristmasReview Date: 2008-01-21
Make sure you get a copy for each of your childrenReview Date: 2008-05-02
'Night Before ChristmasReview Date: 2008-02-08
The classic story you love with vibrant illustrations!Review Date: 2008-01-22
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Classic!Review Date: 2008-07-12
CharmingReview Date: 2008-06-04
It occurred to me one day that I had never actually read the original, and thought maybe I should give that a chance, and am glad that I did. It's a simple and direct story, and proved to be a joy to read.
Winnie the Pooh - an adults perspectiveReview Date: 2008-03-14
So pristine, so perfect - would I have appreciated it as a child? Who knows (I was too busy feeding my literary hunger with comics). Anyway I have my copy of 'Winnie the Pooh' on the top shelf of my book case, next to the others I consider great (Ulysses, 1984, Great Expectations ...) for all to see.
And who can contest that for "I am a bear of very little brain, and big things bother me".
Wonderful!Review Date: 2008-02-15
wonderful!Review Date: 2007-01-11
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