Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... R.H. Stafford Library (Woodbury) | J 811.6 SAL | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Stillwater Public Library | E 811.6 SAL | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Wildwood Library (Mahtomedi) | J 811.6 SAL | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
A collection of wacky, whimsical poems about books and all the treasures they contain. Laura Purdie Salas, the acclaimed author of Stampede!, is back with another collection of wild and weird, wacky and winsome poems about all the magic to be found on a single bookshelf. In BookSpeak!, each poem gives voice to a group that seldom gets a voice . . . the books themselves! Characters plead for sequels, book jackets strut their stuff, and we get a sneak peek at the raucous parties in the aisles when all the lights go out at the bookstore!Illustrator Josée Bisaillon's mixture of collage, drawings, and digital montage presents page after page of richly colored spreads filled with action and charm. Together, Salas and Bisaillon deliver a unique collection brimming with ideas as much about spines and dust jackets as they are about adventure and imagination.
Author Notes
Laura Purdie Salas is the author of several poetry and nonfiction books for children. She lives with her family in Minnesota, and you can find out more about her at www.laurasalas.com.
Josée Bisaillon grew up in St-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada. Rather than follow in her father's footsteps as a veterinary surgeon, she chose to cut animals from paper: they were colorful, low maintenance, and always in fine health. Bisaillon has won many Applied Arts Illustration and LUX Illustration Awards in Québec, and was a finalist for the 2008 Governor General's Literary Awards in Canada.
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 3-5-Some of these 21 poems are written in rhyme and meter, while others are free verse. They vary in length from a few to several stanzas, and all are well crafted and clever, covering a variety of aspects of books and reading. Salas includes poems about an index, a cover, cliff-hangers, and falling asleep while reading. The poems are, by turns, philosophical, humorous, and even instructional. Typeset is creative, and the titles appear in a variety of artistic font styles and colors. Whimsical, mixed-media illustrations grace every page. Bisaillon skillfully incorporates the printed poems into the artwork so that the words and images have a single, unified, visual effect. This is an appealing offering that will be especially popular with librarians. For a collection of "book" poems by a variety of authors, Lee Bennett Hopkins's I Am the Book (Holiday House, 2011) is also a good choice.-Donna Cardon, Provo City Library, UT (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
"Put down the controller./ Switch off the TV./ Abandon the mouse and/ just hang out with me." From the outset, this collection of poems makes its message clear: books are where it's at. Salas's polished verse demonstrates a deep love for all aspects of books, from their content to their creators, and she's not above using a touch of guilt to get her audience invested: "If a book remains unopened/ and no reader turns its page,/ does it still embrace a story/ or trap words inside a cage?" She celebrates the physical print book, too (e-readers go unmentioned), with poems dedicated to indexes, cliffhanger endings, and even bookplates ("Write your name upon me/ I'm a paper love tattoo"). Bisaillon's mixed media illustrations are dizzyingly inventive, their bright colors, sampling of typography, and whimsical details underscoring the idea of the potential that awaits between the covers. Ages 4-8. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Bright, mixed-media collage scenes illustrate this picture-book poetry collection that plays with literary allusions. In Cliffhanger, a desperate dog clinging to a cliff above a shark-filled ocean implores, Please, author, write / a sequel fast! In another selection, a character pleads for his life: Don't close the cover and don't walk away / Don't leave me squished in here day after day. On one spread, the index brags: I'm telling you, kid: ignore the rest of the book. / All you really need is me. Plot has a voice in another poem: My characters / hate me. They don't think I'm grand. / But without me / their plots / would be dreary / and bland. And in a poem for three voices, Beginning and Ending try to comfort Middle and show him he matters, and then the three vie for importance. With its mix of poetic forms and wry twists on language-arts terms, this is a natural choice for sharing in classrooms and young writers' workshops.--Rochman, Hazel Copyright 2010 Booklist