Poetry Books
Related Subjects: Reviews Magazines and E-zines Genres Interactive Electronic Text Archives Forms In Translation Performance and Presentation Contemporary Organizations Criticism and Theory Directories Poets
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Very cute!Review Date: 2008-09-16
One of the best kids' books I've foundReview Date: 2008-07-08
One of my son's favorites.Review Date: 2007-11-23
Great fun to readReview Date: 2008-05-21
Had to have our ownReview Date: 2007-08-01
It's full of clever rhymes and ideas about dinosaurs and lots of dinosaur identification in a fun way. The pictures are great and the words are even better. Boys and girls alike would enjoy this. My daughter knows all the words to it now, but I still enjoy reading it to her frequently.

Used price: $11.98

The ultimate Guide to the Perfect Word: Quotes-Titles-Poetry-Tips-WordsReview Date: 2008-09-11
very helpfulReview Date: 2008-05-04
A Must Have for ScrapbookersReview Date: 2008-03-04
The Ultimate Guide To the Perfect WordReview Date: 2008-02-18
My copy is worn!Review Date: 2008-06-30

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $11.95

Still relevant. Still funny.Review Date: 2007-12-28
much is still relevent today comma especially the references to the scopes monkey trial period
and mehitabel comma why comma the song of mehitabel is simply one of the funniest poems ever written period garrison keiller lists it in his book good poems period
Archy and Mehitabel a voice from the pastReview Date: 2007-01-11
It's a bit of a stretch for todays kids, but I think they can imagine a mechanical typewriter and once they get a hold of this the fantasy should grab them.
Archy and MehitabelReview Date: 2007-09-14
The Unique Humor Of Don MarquisReview Date: 2006-01-16
classic comedyReview Date: 2007-04-14

Collectible price: $10.00

Poetry and love in the age of the Internet.Review Date: 2000-02-04
Real Poetry - Real PeopleReview Date: 2000-01-14
A Treasure Trove of HonestyReview Date: 1999-12-07
A Heartwarming ExperienceReview Date: 1999-12-05
Bytes of PoetryReview Date: 1999-12-08

Used price: $2.49
Collectible price: $17.95

Must have book for kids of all ages - whether you like baseball or not.Review Date: 2007-06-08
But I have shared this book with children and adults of all ages -- many that care less about baseball, sports or history -- and all have been captivated by the illustrations and unbelievable level of detail Christopher Bing brought to this book.
Indeed, it is "copiously and faithfully illustrated" by the author. Every time you pick up this book you will be rewarded for your attention: it is filled with interesting little images of ads, money and baseball-related items from the period.
This book will surprise and delight you, again and again. Nice job, Mr. Bing. Very nice job.
Home run!Review Date: 2006-12-11
Best book everReview Date: 2006-05-18
Mudville Strikes Again: A Version for Older Kids Who Love Baseball Review Date: 2006-04-25
The strength of the poem is unquestioned; "Casey" is so firmly engrained in the national psyche that the Library of Congress lists him as a real person, complete with birthdate. Dozens of authors mimicked or enhanced the piece, and the ballad's illustrators include Leroi Neiman, Barry Moser, and Patricia Polacco. Bing's choice of (mostly) drab colors will probably lose a younger audience; Patricia Polacco corners that demographic with her warm and wonderfully loopy style. Nor does Bing add any overt story features; Polacco changes the setting to a contemporary Little League game, and frames the story with some family dynamics between Casey, his sister, and the game's umpire-his dad!
Where Bing excels is context. Obviously, he displays the style and format of printed materials in his pseudo-engravature, and his fictionalized but historically accurate newspaper clippings. More importantly, however, he shows how the tight interweaving of baseball and society. Baseball, like the Constitution (Scalia and Thomas dissenting) and the performing arts in general, changes with the times. Back in 1888, baseball had one umpire, used one ball throughout the game, and lacked fences (one amusing clipping tells of a fan absconding with a ball so that the opposing team couldn't field it). In 1888, African-American players played alongside Whites, but the writing is on the wall, one telling clip hints at the eventual banning of all but Caucasian players.
Bing makes a few errors (one of his newspaper accounts praises Casey's hitting in another game, but the box score shows that he went 0 for 5), and he normalizes Casey--his face shows reasonable emotion, not the overwrought feelings that Thayer describes in his grand, faux-epic style.
However, the book casts an impressively broad net over an entire era, and look ahead towards the inevitable change. It's a great model for similar classroom projects, and Bing's research and color illuminate the reciprocity between society and game like no other. Still, this is not a book for young kids (except for those who are really, really into baseball, and who have the attention span to pour over the ephemera). The overall look is a grayish/yellow drab, with specks of color, and Bing packs in a lot of information. I believe Bing would agree that it's not the definitive or even the best "Casey" version for all ages-what could be?--even with its Caldecott honor and a legion of fans.
Bing's "copious and faithfully illustrated" achievement (and ultimately, much of the book's following stems from its achievement in research and illustration, as opposed to its entertainment value for kids) is impressive, educational, and maps neatly onto Thayer's poem. It's easy to imagine kids from older elementary school through middle school, as well as adult fans, pouring over every background detail as Casey's sneers one more time.
WHAT A WONDEFUL, WELL DONE WORK!Review Date: 2006-10-29

Used price: $9.72

a book you can be proud to ownReview Date: 2007-09-26
a piece of historyReview Date: 2007-03-29
This book is mind-blowing and raw with emotion...just amazingReview Date: 2006-10-27
Charles Bukowski takes you a trip that you soon won't forget. You will travel through a timeline that will have you anticipating what's next. The raw expression of life as depicted in his book made me want to become a writer.
Not only does he write a mean story he also has section filled with his poems, also amazing. You will not be dissapointed.
A ragged edge through the consciousnessReview Date: 2006-11-03
Just what I expected ... only better!Review Date: 2005-09-25
There's two CD's, poems interspersed with conversations with the people doing the recording. The only drawback could be that all of the recordings were done in a room with only a few people there, so there's an odd lack of feeling, the buzz you normally get in a live recording. Bukowski was also almost reluctant at times to read, but at the same time, the stillness in the background frames his voice and the work perfectly somehow. He warms up as it goes on, and as they have a few more drinks, and even reads a short story, which is brilliant.
There's some great photos of him in the booklet; no printed poems, but the sound quality is excellent, so you can hear every word.
If you're a fan, get it! If you want an introduction to Bukowski, get it!

Collectible price: $19.25

A lullaby of chaosReview Date: 2008-09-22
Good bedtime storyReview Date: 2008-08-23
There is onomatopoeia as each animal makes its own unique sound. The rhymes flow soothingly, and the repetitive phrases let the kids participate in the "reading" of the book.
My only criticism is that some of the animal noises are not very soothing if the book is being used as a bedtime story. As the book progresses (and the children get sleepier), the animals become progressively louder. The book does end on a calming note, but sometimes my kids get worked up by the animal sounds, and the bedtime story has the opposite affect.
my 22 month old is mesmerized by this lovely bookReview Date: 2007-12-04
Love it!Review Date: 2007-09-04
Lyrical MagicReview Date: 2007-06-11

Used price: $21.59

His Poetry...Review Date: 2006-08-07
This book brings poetry to a new level Review Date: 2006-08-02
All I Can Say Is...WOW!Review Date: 2006-07-14
Words Of Pure Romantic Genius!Review Date: 2006-07-12
It would't be an untruth to say that wright is a master of the mother tongue and is nearing greatness. And can equally stand tall in the circle of the classic authors of the romantic pen.
Wright Must Be Possessed By The Spirit Of Lord ByronReview Date: 2006-06-17

Each season of every year, I will need to forget you ...Review Date: 2008-10-12
I was introduced to this particular book of poetry back in 1996 when I first moved to Los Angeles. How fitting considering both Benton and Prysock were Los Angelino's of the highest caliber.
My roommate at the time, Pepi, worked as a chef over at the Veteran's Administration and loved to read this on the weekends whenever he had some downtime. I can still see him now reclining in the wicker chair near the window that opened up to the balcony above the street. A large eucalyptus blew like a waving hand outside the window. Pepi smoked cigarillos and had a voice that sounded like gravel across an iron skillet and was easy going. He would sit at the window for the best part of the morning drinking coffee and flipping the pages on the book. The good things of having a roommate are often too few against the many cons.
One Sunday morning when we were both doing our thing, he switched off the am radio that typically wofted out R&B, and put in the Arthur Prysock version of the book, on disc. I had read the book a few times myself over the many months that we were roommates, but he had never mentioned anything about the Prysock recording. When you hear something like that for the first time, it's unlikely that it will be a moment that you would soon forget.
Everything I had thought about Benton's poetry was instantly magnified in my mind from hearing the first few lines uttered by the smooth and immortal voice of Arthur Prysock:
Because hate is legislated
Written into the primer and testament
Shot into our blood
Like vaccine or vitamins
and I didn't snap from that reverie until I heard the next set of words which effected me like no other words of poetry because I knew it had more to do with me than any other thing that was ever directed at me trying to define me, tell me who I was, where I was at, or what I was going to be, or never become.
Each season of each year
I will be forgetting you all over
Each season, every year
I will need to forget you
Most people put a connection with either this book or Prysock's recording with a late spouse or a long lost love. Some even have stated that Benton must have been a 'real lover' and 'smooth' to have written this or 'known about the true beauty of love' and so on and so forth. But let me tell the reader, plainly: Benton was probably none of those things in real life. Walter Benton probably suffered a great deal in his relationships, squandered and wasted the love he was given and watched the love he gave discarded. This is often the case for any man that seeks to understand love, loss and his relationships through verse, song or novel. A happy man in love will tend to that love and not spend the months and years brooding and lost in distracted loneliness, wasting his years on paper over what once was. It's a burden and a punishment to truly love which is why most men often don't.
I read this book from time to time and still listen to Prysock's album regularly.
Got a Love "Jones"?Review Date: 2008-06-14
This exquisite work can be humorous and elegant, although laden with syrup.
Regardless of your age, if you're "young and in love" or have an insatiable "love jones" this book is for you and your loved one.
Beyond WordsReview Date: 2008-05-27
A book of poetry...a journey of loveReview Date: 2008-05-15
This is one of my two favorite books on Romantic [& Very Erotic] Love! Review Date: 2008-05-04
One thing you come away knowing for sure (after reading these books) is that he truly loved his lady, and that she was probably the 'luckiest woman' around in those days! What a lover he must have been, and I feel sure that she was very 'grateful' to have known such love, and to be involved with such an aficionado on the subject! He makes the reader "feel" his deep, sensual love and need for her ~ so, if we [the readers] feel these 'feelings,' we can only imagine how she was able to receive his love and adoration for her!
What beautiful words and descriptions in these pages! So much better than anything around these days! O, that it were 1943 and if I had read these books, I would go searching the world over for Walter Benton myself! I want to 'know' a man like this! Every woman wants to! If you haven't read these aforementioned books, make sure that you include them in your library -- especially if you're a 'romanticist"! They are not to be missed, and you will never forget them!
One more romantic favor you might do for yourself, purchase Herbie Mann's CD called "The Family Of Mann: First Light" it contains the complete words from "This Is My Beloved" read by the late English actor, Laurence Harvey. He puts a beautifully poetic/erotic touch to this masterpiece, and I love reading the words along, as he speaks them!
We have nothing that even compares to these books today, and if you don't own them, you should buy them and place them on a permanent spot on your nightstand, to read and reread many many times over!

Used price: $1.00

great readReview Date: 2008-09-11
awesome!!Review Date: 2008-06-22
Versus that hurt-an exciting read.Review Date: 2005-12-15
Great poetryReview Date: 2005-10-11
Verses That Hurt (ed. Jordan and Amy Trachtenberg)Review Date: 2002-05-20
The book came out in 1997. The phone number they have listed in the introduction is either wrong or changed, I called it twice and kept getting the voice mail to someone named "Kika." The poets in this book are: Penny Arcade, Tish Benson, Nicole Blackman, David Cameron, Xavier Cavazos, Todd Colby, Matthew Courtney, M. Doughty, Kathy Ebel, Anne Elliot, Janice Erlbaum, Allen Ginsberg, John Giorno, John S. Hall, Bob Holman, Christian X. Hunter, Shannon Ketch, Bobby Miller, Wanda Phipps, Lee Renaldo, Shut-Up Shelley, Hal Sirowitz, Sparrow, Spiro, Edwin Torres, and Emily XYZ. All the poets get at least three poems, and very good portraits by photographer Christian Lantry. The poems are short enough that you can probably get through this in one sitting, or read a poet a day.
Penny Arcade starts the book off with a bang, using some really incredible verse. Tish Benson is next with poems that read like lazy blues songs, but filled with so much detail and activity, you can almost hear Billie Holliday gruffly whispering this in your ear. Nicole Blackman and her section is also incredible as she seems to speak for so many women who cannot find their own voice except hers. David Cameron's writing, while readable, is a little bland, like a freshman creative writing class. Despite his obvious emotion, I felt he was holding back on his own writing. Xavier Cavazos's section is slightly better, except for an entire poem that slams Rush Limbaugh. It may have been very clever when written and read, but it just give conservatives like Limbaugh more ammunition to go after art that they do not believe in. Why not a poem about Parkay hawking corporate monkey Al Franken, who had so much success slamming Limbaugh? Or Dennis Miller, whose rants against everybody was quickly dashed by asinine long distance ads. Nothing worse than a sell out. Todd Colby does better work with paragraph poems than traditional verse poetry. Matthew Courtney reads like poorly written Allen Ginsberg, full of "shocking" imagery and without a point. M. Doughty's work is scary and involving, and not your traditional stuff. Kathy Ebel left me with no response. I read it, I was done, and I was not terribly moved. Anne Elliot reads like poorly written Matthew Courtney. Janice Erlbaum is wonderful, filling a sonnet and sestina with modern situations, turning antiquity on its ear. Ginsberg is Ginsberg. Being a little familiar with his work, I expected to see poems about gay sex, followed by verses about a frog. Ginsberg is so Ginsberg. John Giorno's two poems are shocking, about more gay sex, and taking drugs. He seems to be shocking without TRYING to be shocking. I guess you could say his shock is natural.
John S. Hall also seems to be writing without getting to the heart of his point. His verse is so much posturing. Bob Holman is a bit of a bore, with quite a few poems here. Again, none stuck with me. Christian X. Hunter takes me into his world and it was hard to get out. He is probably my favorite poet here. Shannon Ketch reads like John S. Hall. Bobby Miller's very personal poems made me nostalgic for a time I could never experience. He writes about his first homosexual experience, and protesting Vietnam, so vividly, you swear you are there. Wanda Phipps opens with an angry poem, and never lets up. She is not threatening, but she has a lot to say. Lee Ranaldo also did not do it for me, his listed words seemed glossy and packaged. Shut-Up Shelley is fun because she is so different. Her changing font size on the page just screams at you, yet her photograph by Lantry shows her so whimsically. She is my second favorite poet here. Hal Sirowitz is my third favorite poet here, writing deeply personal poems about everyday things that had an obvious effect on his life. He is a blast to read aloud. Sparrow is weird. His first poem, involving possible sex with a cow, is a hoot, and his possible middle names for Bill Gates is a riot. Spiro is also very funny, especially his opening poem about heroin addiction. Edwin Torres also had me scratching my head for a while after I read him. His poetry is not hard, just inaccessible, and I was not interested enough in what he was saying to dig deeper. Emily XYZ reads like good Edwin Torres.
The 26 poets here are quite a variety, and I recommend this tome to any poetry lovers. I also repeat my mantra to read more poetry and keep buying those little chapbooks you might see in used bookstores or at flea markets. There is always time in your day to smarten up.
This does contain a lot of profanity, drug references, and sexual content, so giving it to your five year old to practice reading may not be a good idea.
Related Subjects: Reviews Magazines and E-zines Genres Interactive Electronic Text Archives Forms In Translation Performance and Presentation Contemporary Organizations Criticism and Theory Directories Poets
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