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A Pocketful of Poems por Nikki Grimes
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A Pocketful of Poems (2001 original; edición 2001)

por Nikki Grimes, Javaka Steptoe (Ilustrador)

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Poems and haiku verses provides glimpses of life in the city.
Miembro:nwallace77
Título:A Pocketful of Poems
Autores:Nikki Grimes
Otros autores:Javaka Steptoe (Ilustrador)
Información:Clarion Books (2001), Hardcover, 32 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
Valoración:***
Etiquetas:POETRY

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A Pocketful of Poems por Nikki Grimes (2001)

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This poetry book is a playful and thoroughly successful pairing of words and pictures. Most double-page spreads offer two poems, one in free verse, one in haiku, set on bright collages of cut paper and found objects. Graceful, rhythmic, and accessible, the poems depict sensory impressions and precisely observed moments. For example, in the haiku poem: "Hot days send me to/the water fountain where my/face goes for a swim.” The illustrations are original and distinctive and sometimes a bit busy, but give the book an urban, upbeat, and contemporary look. ( )
  Sluper1 | May 3, 2015 |
Summary:This book is a book about different haiku poems but made into a story. The little girl Tiara makes haiku poems about things she sees throughout the day.

Personal Reaction: This is a good book because it easily explains how haikus work and how all poems aren't just about rhyming and that there is different kinds. It helps realize that you can make a poem about almost anything.

Classroom Extension Ideas:
1) Have the students create their own Haiku's
2) Have the students create words that rhyme together and match them. ( )
  lizzydelg | Apr 15, 2015 |
This is a really cool book! It took me at least 2 reads to like it, though-- so it give it another chance if you don't care for it at first.

I wasn't raised in the city, so until I was 29 and finally experienced my first city spring, I wouldn't have known how much beauty can be found in pockets of street corners, window boxes, and even cracks in the sidewalk. Grimes and her illustrator capture the whole experience of seasons in the city, though.

The illustrations are all collages that have been photographed-- so they aren't that realistic, they aren't really even that beautiful. But, like the experience of seeing the beauty of nature in the crevices of cities, the viewer has to pay close attention to the illustrations in order to actually see how beautiful they are.

The writing is really what does it, though. In Grimes fashion, her poetry has a jazz feel-- it's quick and it's brief, but it's alive. Each page has a short section of unrhymed but alliterative verse followed by a haiku.

If you're an art teacher, a high school teacher teaching poetry, or an elementary teacher (city or country), this is a definite book to have around. ( )
  jamdwhitt | Apr 5, 2015 |
This book is full of fun words to describe the seasons and things that each season shares. It would be a great way to get ideas flowing about what students enjoy about each season and to use the same type of illustration, collage, to share their thoughts. ( )
  mhilary | Mar 14, 2015 |
I enjoyed this book of poems for a few reasons. One reason is because the illustrator uses mixed media like straws, felt, wire, and other found materials. I believe the illustrator does this to represent the unique culture of Harlem. I also enjoy that the author tells the story in chronological order of events throughout a year. For example, it starts off from spring and ends with the winter holidays. The poems are relevant to young children’s experiences. For example, there is a poem about snow and a poem about being hot in the summer. Another reason I liked the book was because of the flow and placement of parts of the poems. For example, there is a poem about showers. The illustrations are clouds and rain, therefore the author places some of the lines of the poems as the rain drops. The phrases of the raindrops say, “April showers scrub the air. No wonder I can run now. I can breathe!” The reader places parts of the poem in a way that relates to the content of the poems. This helps keep the reader stay interested because the book has to be turned a certain way for the words to be read. The big idea of this book is to be proud of where you are from because that is part of your identity. ( )
  ktran4 | Feb 9, 2015 |
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