Showing posts with label J. Patrick Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label J. Patrick Lewis. Show all posts

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Welcome to the Fun Factory!


Luna Park, Sydney, Australia, photo: Sascha Grant

Calling all punsters, all witty-quippers, all wordspinners— 
the fun factory is open for business! 

Last week, Kate O'Neil challenged us to write a poem with words at play. (Read her TLD reader spotlight HERE.)

Someone very wise once said—

duncan c

(Attributed to Benjamin Franklin, George Bernard Shaw, Thomas Jefferson, Babe Ruth, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and any number of others, including Anonymous.)

Kudos to whoever it was. I wholeheartedly agree! 

So in an effort to counter the process of aging (beauty sleep be damned), I've been thinking a lot about this challenge over the past several days. On Tuesday, I shared a playful couplet from Ogden Nash that fits the bill. I could have just as easily shared these two clever lines from Douglas Florian. The humorous and imaginative verse of Jack Prelutsky comes to mind for this challenge, Calef Brown's mash-ups, and several zany poems by J. Patrick Lewis, including this one. In a comment to last week's interview, Tabatha Yeatts mentioned Brian Bilston and Greg Pincus. While Kate suggested malapropisms, ambiguities, unintended meanings, puns, and cliches as sources of inspiration, it occurred to me that wordplay can also be expressed visually—by playing with word sequence or layout, like these examples from Bob Racska's Wet Cement. I like that some of you on the padlet are going in that direction.

The early onset of Black Friday sales this month reminded me of a wordplay poem I wrote back in 2013. It's about the relentless Internet ads that pop up during this season of retail holiday cheer.  Indulge me as I repost it six years later—a brief little affair I call "Cyber Seduction."

Cyber
Seduction

It all began
with cookies. Now
and then, you popped up
unexpectedly.   It was cute,
you were sweet, and before long
you fell into step with my digital footprint.
Just a fling, I told myself, but you wanted more:
my time, attention, undying devotion, a credit card number
and personal security code.  And then it happened.  Black Friday.
It was late. There on my lap in the bedroom, aura glowing, you
told me I was glamorous, well-to-do, elite, and that XL or XS
didn’t matter. “2-for-1,” you said, “a limited-time offer.”
So I gave you my IP address, my credit card, the
works.  Who could resist those promises,
now as empty as my bank account? 
For a time I thought we clicked,
but now I realize I did all
the clicking. And what
once was 2-for-1,
is now just me,
50% off.

© 2013 Michelle Heidenrich Barnes. All rights reserved.


...storrao...


Our fun factory is waiting for your wordplay poem! While there, enjoy the ditties already posted by Michelle Kogan, Linda Trott Dickman, Janie Lazo, Dianne Moritz, Linda Baie, Diane Mayr, and Cindy Breedlove.





Thanks to Irene Latham, our "still and steady" host of this week's Poetry Friday roundup. You'll find her and this week's offerings at Live Your Poem. Join me here for next week's roundup and a big announcement!

Thursday, February 1, 2018

The NewlyRead Game with J. Patrick Lewis and Jane Yolen + DMC Challenge


"Cupid" by Cole Henley

Ah, February . . .
     the month of cold snow and warm hearts!


The TLD cupid (bet you didn't even know we had one on staff) has loaded up his quiver and is taking aim at book lovers everywhere.

To that end, I'm excited to introduce a new series on Today's Little Ditty inspired by our book-loving cherub. It's called The NewlyRead Game.





The Newlywed Game, originally hosted by Bob Eubanks,
aired, on and off, from 1966 to 2013.
The NewlyRead Game is a takeoff of the TV game show “The Newlywed Game,” but instead of focusing on how well recently married couples know their spouses, the Today's Little Ditty version focuses on the collaborative writing partnership. My intent is not to start rumors about romantic relationships between co-authors, of course. I'm much more interested in exploring how writing a book together, like marriage, is a commitment—to one another and to the book project.


Find out all you ever wanted to know about
The Newlywed Game at the U.S. Game Shows Wiki.

As a bonus, maybe we can have a bit of fun finding out how well our co-authors know each other after the experience of writing a book together!

So let's get started, shall we?



MEET TODAY'S CONTESTANTS . . .

J. Patrick Lewis  and  Jane Yolen

J. Patrick Lewis is the author of more than one hundred picture/poetry books for children, including two forthcoming books in 2018—Phrases of the Moon (Creative Editions) and The Poetry of US (National Geographic). He received the NCTE Excellence in Children's Poetry Award and served as the Poetry Foundation's third Children's Poet Laureate. Read his October 2014 Spotlight on Today's Little Ditty HERE and visit him at his website: JPatrickLewis.com.

Jane Yolen is the award-winning author of over 365 books. They include poetry collections, story anthologies, picture books, board books, novels for middle grade and young adults, graphic novels, nonfiction, cookbooks, music books, adult books, and pedagogical books. Six colleges and universities have given her honorary doctorates for her body of work. Read her September 2016 Spotlight on Today's Little Ditty HERE and visit her at her website: JaneYolen.com.


MEET THEIR BOOK . . .

LAST LAUGHS: Prehistoric Epitaphs
J. Patrick Lewis, Jane Yolen, and Jeffrey Stewart Timmins
Charlesbridge (October 2017)
ISBN: 978-1580897068
Find at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, or via Indiebound.org.

Poems framed as epitaphs for extinct prehistoric animals hit the proverbial (coffin) nail on the head in this darkly humorous collection from expert poets Jane Yolen and J. Patrick Lewis.

A companion to the team's Last Laughs: Animal Epitaphs (Charlesbridge, 2012), the macabre, ironic, and witty epitaphs included in Last Laughs: Prehistoric Epitaphs share how prehistoric creatures like the terror bird, the woolly mammoth, and the T-Rex met their demise.  The ever-entertaining J. Patrick Lewis and the inimitable Jane Yolen offer a collection organized by era, with posthumous poems paired with short secondary text providing additional, factual information about each creature.

Jeffrey Stewart Timmins's macabre illustrations are satisfyingly spine-tingling and wickedly humorous.

For easier reading/viewing, click on the following images to enlarge.

Text © J. Patrick Lewis, Illustration © Jeffrey Stewart Timmins
from LAST LAUGHS:PREHISTORIC EPITAPHS (Charlesbridge, 2017)

Text © Jane Yolen, Illustration © Jeffrey Stewart Timmins
from LAST LAUGHS:PREHISTORIC EPITAPHS (Charlesbridge, 2017)


ROUND 1: 
The story of your collaboration . . .

Our guests answered this first round of questions together.


"COURTSHIP" 
      ... getting to know your collaborative partner

When and how did you first meet, and how long was it before you decided to write a book together?

JPL: No idea when Jane and I first met but it was many years ago. Since then we have collaborated on five, or is it six, books?

JY: We met after we’d done several books together, at some conference or other, rode on a bus acting  like silly best friends, giggling and plotting two more books, neither of which ever sold! But we knew about one another through the poems long before we met, admired one another’s ouvre (a show-off word meaning body of work). I loved Pat’s stuff long before he became Poet Laureate of all children, or whatever it’s called!


"ENGAGEMENT"
      ... say, you want to write a book together?

Who proposed collaboration and how?

JPL: Nor can I recall which one of us asked the other to the dance, though if I did the asking, I was honored when Jane said yes.

JY: Ditto. I know we aren’t being any help here, but I’m older than dirt and he’s dirt.  Our memories work better forward than backwards. Besides, all writers are liars, especially poets. You’d better believe that!


"WEDDING"
     ... the big day—your book's publication!

How have you celebrated the occasion?

JPL: Speaking for myself, I celebrate in my own quiet way . . . with a glass of Chardonnay (or two).

JY: I do a happy dance when the package arrives, hug the book, smell it (nothing like new book smell) but don’t read it for fear of finding fault until at least six weeks later. By then I am on to a new book or a new publication date.


"MARRIAGE"
     ... your commitment to the collaborative process.

What was one of the most enjoyable aspects of your collaboration?
What about the most challenging?


JPL: The back and forth of it. Choosing the dinosaurs, deciding on the forms to use, accepting Jane’s advice on a line/word, and vice-versa.

JY: Trying to keep up with Pat’s pace was trying. Everything else a delight. The man is a monster.


What advice can you give to those with pre-collaboration jitters?

JPL: Get over yourself. Trust the process. And remember that if it isn’t fun, you should go bowling or prune your pachysandra.

JY: Or pack your prunes for a long trip to a spa. Really, if it’s brutal, the loneliness of a long-distance runner is preferable. I believe writing should be a joy. Though I do know some authors who swear they bleed on the page which to my mind is a very messy process. And to do it with someone else????? Euuuuuuew. A red tsunami. Pat and I actually laughed a lot during the writing of these books. Who laughed last—is anybody’s guess.


"THE FUTURE"
     ... what comes next?

Are there future writing collaborations in the works?

JPL: Shame on me. I was the one who turned down Jane’s offer to collaborate once again. Perhaps it was the particular project, but more likely the dread feeling of the gloaming coming on.

JY: Jewish motto: Good things don’t last. Enjoy them while you can. OK—Jewish because I am, not because it’s anyone else’s motto. Honestly, Pat and I are both so busy individually with projects that consume us, it’s amazing we managed to write two Last Laugh books, a book of twin poems, a book about Chagall’s life in rhymes, and we have been in many, many, many anthologies together. Whether we try another anthology depends on if we can find a subject matter we both want to work on. And of course there are two or three unsold ones we have hanging around (hint! hint!). Remember—we are both dynamite rewriters. No word so important it cannot be changed—another motto.


What is your definition of “happily ever after”?

JPL: Land office sales (in my dream state).


JY: The Big N in one year: Newbery, Nebula, National Book Award. I already have two Nebs (for short stories) and was a National Book Award nominee, not in the same year at all. The Newbery is still running away from me with great speed. 


ROUND 2: 
How well do you know your co-author?

Our guests also responded privately to questions about each other. This is the first time they are reading each other's answers—let's see how well they did!


What is Jane's favorite time of day to write?

JPL: Around the clock
JY: As long as there is light

What is Pat's favorite time of day to write?

JY: All day long
JPL: 12:27

What is Jane's favorite activity to take a break from writing?

JPL: Winning awards
JY: Watching a cooking show



What is Pat's favorite activity to take a break from writing?

JY: Phoning editors
JPL: Reading





Which of you is more organized?

JY: Pat
JPL: Jane, indubitably

Which of you is more likely to take risks?

JPL: Indubitably, Jane
JY: Me

Which of you is more likely to get their way?

JPL: Jane
JY: Me
 
If Jane was a dinosaur (one from your book, please), what would she be?

JPL: Saber-toothed cat
JY: One with feathers. Minimi?

If Pat was a dinosaur, what would he be?

JY: T-Rex
JPL: T-Rex, of course

Hello...? Editor?                           (via GIPHY)

If Jane could time travel for a day, would she visit the past or the future?

JPL: The future
JY: The past

If Pat could time travel for a day, would he visit the past or the future?

JY: The future
JPL: The dinosaur past (with an invisibility cloak)


ROUND 3 (THE BONUS ROUND): 
A few more secret questions, just for fun . . .

What trait do you most admire in Jane?

JPL: Indefatigability 


What trait do you most admire in Pat?

JY: His ability to find a perfect idea for a book of poems and then go ahead and write it. Damn the man!

What adjective would Jane use to describe you?

JPL: Irresistibly handsome, or maybe, bald.


via GIPHY


What adjective would Pat use to describe you?

JY: Persistent. Or perhaps feral. Or perhaps anarchic in the small.

What book title best describes your relationship with Pat?

JY: The Bobbsey Twins, The House of Mirth, or Where Angles Fear to Tread.



What book title best describes your relationship with Jane?

JPL: Last Laughs




Finally, what have you chosen as this month's ditty challenge?

Write an epitaph poem, of course! — a short poem to appear on your chosen subject's tombstone. You can round out our collection of prehistoric poems or write about something entirely different, just try to make it clever or funny in some way. Here are two more examples of epitaph poems to spur your imagination.


EPITAPH FOR A SCHOOL TEACHER

Knives can harm you, heaven forbid!
Axes may disarm you, kid.
Guillotines are painful, but. . .
There’s nothing like a paper cut.

                    © J. Patrick Lewis, all rights reserved.


WHEN PLANETS GO NOVA

They were in a great big hurry.
Now there’s no one left to bury.

                    © Jane Yolen, all rights reserved.



Oh boy! This is going to be fun! 

By the way, if you would like more guidance on how to write a funny epitaph poem, have a look at Kenn Nesbitt's instructions


Now I know you're all dying to get started . . .  
(oh come on, you knew that was coming!)

but before you go, please help me thank J. Patrick Lewis and Jane Yolen for being such good sports today! I couldn't ask for two more fun-loving contestants and collaborators to introduce our NewlyRead series.

Thanks, also, to Charlesbridge for providing me with a copy of Last Laughs: Prehistoric Epitaphs, which I will send to one lucky DMC participant! (Winner to be selected randomly at the end of the month.)


HOW TO PARTICIPATE:

Post your epitaph poem on our February 2018 padlet. Stop by any time during the month to add your work or to check out what others are contributing.

By posting on the padlet, you are granting me permission to share your poem on Today's Little Ditty.  Some poems will be featured as daily ditties, though authors may not be given advanced notice. Subscribe to the blog if you'd like to keep tabs. You can do that in the sidebar to the right where it says "Follow TLD by Email." As always, all of the poems will be included in a wrap-up celebration on the last Friday of the month—February 23rd for our current challenge.

TEACHERS, it's great when students get involved! Ditty of the Month Club challenges are wonderful opportunities to learn about working poets and authors while having fun with poetry prompts. Thank you for spreading the word! For children under 13, please read my COPPA compliance statement in the sidebar to the right.

FIRST-TIMERS (those who have never contributed to a ditty challenge before), in addition to posting your work on the padlet, please send your name and email address to TodaysLittleDitty (at) gmail (dot) com. That way I'll be able to contact you for possible inclusion in future Best of Today's Little Ditty anthologies.

BLOGGERS, thank you for publishing your poems on your own blogs– I love that!  Please let me know about it, so I can share your post! Also remember to include your poem (or a direct link to your post) on the padlet in order to be included in the wrap-up celebration and end-of-month giveaway.


Donna JT Smith is hosting this week's Poetry Friday roundup at Mainely Write.

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Carrie Clickard: Making Good Use of Made-Up Words



Hear that siren? 

That's because Carrie Clickard just pulled up for another visit to Today's Little Ditty.

Today's Rhyme Crime Investigation comes in response to a reader's request for rhyming poetry mentor texts that use made-up words or words with unusual spelling.

While Carrie's posts always leave me with a smile on my face, this one includes so much fun verse, I suggest you get ready for a full-scale smile muscle workout!


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


Runcible spoons and slithy toves –  
Making good use of made-up words

During our last Rhyme Crime Investigation, Scanning the Seuss Man, I touched on the subject of invented words. Seuss uses them widely to great effect. Not just Seuss—many of our beloved children's poets, past and present, have played with creating their own words with delightful results. So the question arises, how do poets know when made up words are the smart choice for a poem and when they’re only a crutch?

Now for those of you who have followed previous Rhyme Crime Investigations, you might already have a handle on some of the wrong reasons to use an invented word.  If the only reason you’re creating a word is because no other rhyme works for a particular couplet, you’re on thin ice. The word you create could be brilliant, but it’s more likely to be a noticeable “fake word” that will stand out to both editors and readers—and not in a good way.


Likewise, if you’re altering a word’s shape or pronunciation to fix your meter or to correct a problem with syllable stress, you’ll finish your poem faster but you won’t be fooling anybody.  It can be painfully obvious to see when writers have taken the easy route. You’re better off putting in the hard work of rewriting to eliminate those “weasel” words.

So, you might be wondering, is it best to avoid  using nonsense words altogether? Not at all. The world of poetry would be poorer without them. Some of my own best reading moments were stumbling over gems like the “runcible” spoon in Lear’s "The Owl and the Pussycat" and the marvelous made-up vocabulary of Lewis Carroll’s "Jabberwocky."  But what makes the difference between these poems and the quick fix failures, is that the poets used invented language intentionally, with thought and logic, to make their work stronger or funnier.

So how exactly do they do that?



ONE: The Grand Conceit

Let’s start with what I’m calling The Grand Conceit, the big idea, where an author creates words as part of the core concept of a poem or book. In this case new words are not simply whimsical vocabulary tacked on for a laugh. The invented words form the backbone of the entire work. Take Jack Prelutsky's Scranimals (Greenwillow Books, 2002). The title itself is a clue to where Jack’s going: Scrambled + Animals = Scranimals. The book is a romp through a world filled with chimerical plant-animal hybrids. Prelutsky scrambles not just their names, but the creatures themselves. From Porcupineapples to Toucanemones, you'll be hard pressed to pick a favorite. There’s the elegant Rhinocerose: 
Oh, beautiful RHINOCEROSE,
So captivating, head to toes,
So aromatic, toes to head,
Enchantress of the flower bed …
– Excerpt from "Oh beautiful RHINOCEROSE" © 2002 by Jack Prelutsky
and the lowly but adorable Potatoad: "On a bump beside a road/Sits a lowly POTATOAD..."  or maybe the Pandaffodil or … maybe you should pick up a copy and see for yourself.

In On Beyond Zebra, again we find that the author’s invented words are the stars of the story. Dr. Seuss creates not just new words but new letters: “My alphabet starts where your alphabet ends.”  This idea, the grand conceit of a whole new alphabet brings us "FLOOB" the first letter of  Floob-Boober-Bab-Boober-Bubs, and the letter "YUZZ" is used for Yuzz-a-ma-Tuzz.

Both cases show us invented vocabulary as a uniquely surprising and effective way of stimulating young readers’ imaginations and tickling their funny bones.  But is a big concept the only good way to include made-up words? Definitely not. Let’s look at a few smaller but still savvy ways to use invented vocabulary.


TWO: The Pithy Punchline

The best humorous poems often end with a pitch-perfect, witty last line. There’s something about the timing and rhythm of those last few words that catches us off guard and anchors the poem in our memory. Those endings can be a great place to use an invented word, where the word is an afterthought but the key to the laughter. Take this short poem by J. Patrick Lewis:
CLIPPER SHIP 

Cries a sheep to a ship on the Amazon
(A clipper sheep ship that her lamb is on)
"Remember, dear Willy,
the nights will be chilly,
so keep your white woolly pajamazon!"
 
            © 1999 by J. Patrick Lewis, from The Bookworm’s Feast
            Used by permission of the author, who controls all rights.

Lewis could have used the standard English words "pajamas on" and still had a perfectly acceptable ending line. So he clearly didn’t make up a word to solve a rhyme problem. Instead, by playing off the opening line’s “Amazon” with a created portmanteau word, Lewis elevates the poem from cute to brilliant.

In another witty word tweak, Lewis gives us a whirlwind of fun with his “Her-i-cane.”
There was a curly her-i-cane,
Her name was Lorelei,
And all she ever wanted was
       To fly, fly, fly.

She wasn't like the other girls,
For Lori never grew
Into a proper her-i-cane
       That flew, flew, flew.
– Excerpt from "Her-i-cane" © 1999 by J. Patrick Lewis, The Bookworm’s Feast
The magic of this made-up word has nothing to do with rhyming at all. It's personification done in a charming, memorable way.  Again, Lewis could have used the ordinary word hurricane and the poem would have “worked.” But by tweaking the vocabulary just a little left of normal, Lewis gave the poem a whole new level of whimsy and fun.


THREE: Who are you calling funny looking?  
Playing with the way words look.

Sometimes the funny isn’t about how a word sounds, but how it looks.  Doubling up on the A’s makes Douglas Florian’s "The Aardvarks" a giggle-producing kid favorite:
THE AARDVARKS

Aardvarks aare odd.
Aardvarks aare staark.
Aardvarks look better
By faar in the daark.
            © 2000 by Douglas Florian, from mammalabilia  
            Used by permission of the author, who controls all rights.

In "The Lynx," another charming poem in his mammalabilia collection (Harcourt, 2000), Florian gets the laughs by spelling “stynx” to match lynx. Again, Florian had no need to make up a word so the poem would rhyme, instead he added to each poem’s surprise and wit by respelling words that worked in the first place – the same way Lewis played with Amazon and pajamazon.


FOUR: Do do do it again! 
Words that get funnier every time you say them.

Many of the examples above deal with invented words used just once for a pithy, syncopated “ba-doom-ching” laugh.  But funny can come in bigger doses too. Consider J. Patrick Lewis’s "A Hippopotamusn’t" that gets sillier and sillier as the poem goes on:

A hippopotamusn't sit
  On lawn chairs, stools, and rockers.
A hippopotamusn't yawn
  Directly under tightrope walkers.
A hippopotamusn't roll
  In gutters used by bowlers.
A hippopotamusn't fail
  To floss his hippopotamolars.
– Excerpt from the title poem of A Hippopotamusn't © 1990 by J. Patrick Lewis
Every time the hippopotamusn’t is mentioned, something new and outrageous delights the young readers.  The same way each new line of "The Bear" by Douglas Florian brings another chuckle:
THE BEAR

Come Septem-bear
I sleep, I slum-bear,
Till winter lum-bears
Into spring.
More than that's
Em-bear-rassing.
 © 2000 by Douglas Florian, from mammalabilia  
 Used by permission of the author, who controls all rights.
Both of these authors get their timing and the laughs, just right.  In each case the tweaked or invented words are intentionally planned, wisely used and never just to “make the rhyme work.”


FIVE: Ticklish tongue twisters
The delight of getting words wrong.

Sometimes an author purposefully misuses or misspells a word, and delight of readers of all ages.  We can all relate to the bungled words in Laura Richard’s tongue twisting "Eletelphony."
Once there was an elephant,
Who tried to use the telephant—
No! No! I mean an elephone
Who tried to use the telephone—
(Dear me! I am not certain quite
That even now I’ve got it right.)
– Excerpt from "Eletelephony" by Laura E. Richards, read the rest HERE.

There are so many more excellent examples, I could keep adding from now till November. (Though I think Michelle might protest.)  What’s clear in each and every example is that the poet used invented words to elevate, entertain and strengthen their work, never in an attempt to fix a tricky couplet. They weren’t just throwing in the word “tweeple” to rhyme with people or matching purple with “burple.” Which, now that I come to think of it, could work if your poem was about drinking grape juice or swallowing grape bubble gum.  Maybe I need to write that poem. Or maybe you do. (grin)

Either way, on that note I will leave you with this bit of wit and inspiration about made up words from Kenn Nesbitt. See you next time on Rhyme Crime Investigations.

Today I Decided to Make Up a Word  

Today I decided to make up a word,
like flonk, or scrandana, or hankly, or smurred.
My word will be useful and sound really cool;
a word like chindango, or fraskle, or spewl.

My friends and my teachers will all be impressed
to learn that I’ve made up a word like extrest,
or crondic, or crambly, or squantion, or squank.
Whenever they use it, it’s me that they’ll thank.

They’ll call me a genius and give me a prize,
repeating my word, be it shimble, or glize,
or frustice, or frongry, or frastamazoo,
or pandaverandamalandamaloo.

You’ll see it on TV shows one of these days.
They’ll use it in movies. They’ll put it in plays.
They’ll shout it from rooftops! The headlines will read,
“This Kid Has Invented the Word that We Need!”

I’ll make up my word, and I’ll share it with you,
and you can tell people from here to Peru;
the old ones, the young ones, and those in between…
as soon as I figure out what it should mean.
             © 2009 by Kenn Nesbitt,  from My Hippo Has the Hiccups 
             Used by permission of the author, who controls all rights.
              
             Listen to the poem read aloud at Poetry4Kids.com.


Thanks, Carrie! 

Make sure to check out Carrie's previous Rhyme Crime posts on Today's Little Ditty:


Carrie L. Clickard is an internationally published author and poet.  Her first picture book, VICTRICIA MALICIA, debuted in 2012 from Flashlight Press. Forthcoming books include MAGIC FOR SALE (Holiday House, 2017), DUMPLING DREAMS (Simon and Schuster 2017) and THOMAS JEFFERSON & THE MAMMOTH HUNT (Simon and Schuster, 2018). Her poetry and short stories have appeared in numerous anthologies and periodicals including Spider, Muse, Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, Havok, Myriad Lands, Clubhouse, Spellbound, Penumbra, Haiku of the Dead, Underneath the Juniper Tree, Inchoate Echoes, and The Brisling Tide.  


Kenn Nesbitt has challenged us to write poems for our mothers this month. Click HERE for more information, then post your poem on our October 2016 padlet. While I haven't featured any reader contributions yet, I did post two lines from author John Irving this week. Stay tuned for more.






Irene Latham is welcoming poets and poetry lovers to Poetry Friday roundup with a fun assortment of scarecrows! If you were a scarecrow, what would you wish for? Find out what Irene's scarecrow has to say at Live Your Poem.





Tuesday, February 23, 2016

DMC: "Jenny Dump'd Me," a paroditty by J. Patrick Lewis




JENNY DUMP'D ME 
     [A paroditty of Leigh Hunt's "Jenny Kiss'd Me"]

Jenny dump’d me when we met,
Bolting from the store she walked in;
Time, that burglar, stole my pet
Seconds after I had clocked in.
Say I’m happy nonetheless.
Say that life has not speed-bump’d me.
Say whatever. I confess,
Jenny dump’d me.

© J. Patrick Lewis. All rights reserved.



David L. Harrison has challenged us to write poems inspired by the word "ditty" this month. Click HERE for more details.

Send your poem to TodaysLittleDitty (at) gmail (dot) com, or use the contact form in the sidebar to the right. All contributions will be included in a wrap-up celebration this Friday, February 26th, and one lucky participant will win a copy of his newest collection for children:


For an additional chance to win, write a poem inspired by "leaves" for David's Word of the Month (W.O.M.) challenge HERE. 



Thursday, October 2, 2014

Spotlight on J. Patrick Lewis + DMC Challenge


J. PATRICK LEWIS


Who is the man behind the chocolate mustachio?
After a wild and rugged youth as a bronco rider, lobster fisherman, opera singer, extreme skateboarder, and spy (I have been to Russia thirteen times—shhh!), I now live undercover in XXXXX, Ohio with my wife Sue and our two K-9 guard Chihuahuas. Please do not ask about my secret tattoos.
Really? 
(One must be circumspect in dealing with those sporting chocolate facial hair.)

Pat, with a convenient chin rest.
Let's try this again:
An Indiana Hoosier by birth, I discovered poetry late in life, but have been running fast to catch up. I have published 90 children’s picture/poetry books to date with Creative Editions, National Geographic, Knopf, Atheneum, Chronicle Books, Candlewick, Schwartz & Wade, Wordsong/Boyds Mills Press, Dial, Sleeping Bear Press, Holiday House, and others. I was recently given the 2010-2011 NCTE Excellence in Children’s Poetry Award, and I was the Poetry Foundation’s third U.S. Children’s Poet Laureate (2011-2013).
Oh, yes... that J. Patrick Lewis.  

The one beloved by readers worldwide.  How lucky am I to have Pat hanging out at Today's Little Ditty this month?!  (Heck, I don't think he even knows about my secret tattoos– shhh!)

As for that chocolate mustache? Neither a digital recorder, nor a hidden camera, it was simply a tasty way to promote Pat's 2012 poetry collection If You Were a Chocolate Mustache (Wordsong).  Today, my mission is to introduce you to one of J. Patrick Lewis' more recent collections:  EVERYTHING IS A POEM (Creative Editions, 2014)

EVERYTHING IS A POEM
Creative Editions, August 2014
ISBN: 978-1568462400
Find at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble,
or at your local independent bookstore.
Delicious in its own right, this collection spans nearly 30 years (1982-2010) of Pat's soul-satisfying poetry, beginning with a two-page foreward that gives readers a taste of what drives this man to do what he does so well.

The 59 poems included are divided into eight categories – animals, people, reading, sports, riddles and epitaphs, mother nature, places, and a mix.  A testament to Pat's versatility, the poems are savory and sweet, as unique in their forms as they are in their content, yet they all simmer in the imagination. 

For poetry fans, this is a must-have collection. Complemented by Italian artist Maria Cristine Pritelli's exquisite acrylic and airbrushed illustrations, Pat's poetry is as comforting as an old friend, and as stimulating as a new acquaintance. In our house, we enjoy reading this book aloud after family dinners– a dessert we share together.

So what do you say we find out more about J. Patrick Lewis, starting with some favorites?

      Favorite food: 
Anything my mother used to make, but especially her gnocchi, apple dumplings, date bars, and coffee cake.

      Favorite country you’d like to visit: 
It must be Russia since I have been there so often.

      Favorite subject in school:  
English (girls were a close second).

      Favorite childhood memory: 
Sitting with my brothers in my mother’s or father’s lap and being read to from The Childcraft Series.

      Favorite children’s book: 
Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind in the Willows.

      Favorite children’s poet: 
Did you mean “children’s poets”? I can’t name just one. Edward Lear, Lewis Carroll . . . . Okay, that’s two, and that’s quite enough.


It's surprising that you were a college professor of economics for 30 years prior to pursuing creative writing full-time.  What was it that eventually lured you into the world of poetry? 
At the risk of providing more information than your readers want or need: I was dating an English professor at the time who introduced me to poetry. We read poems to each other—not mine, not hers, but the classics. It didn’t take long before the hook bit, and I was a goner.

For someone who first discovered their passion for poetry at nearly 40 years old, thousands of hours of what Jane Yolen calls "butt in chair" time has resulted in an astounding number of books for children. Do you think there is an advantage to coming to poetry later in life?    
No, it’s a disadvantage arriving at poetry so late because you can’t get away from the fact that you lived for over three decades without poetry.

What is one of the most surprising things you've learned over your extensive publishing career?
What I have learned is that writing poetry is damnably difficult, but then it should be. Why choose something to do with your life that is easy? Where’s the challenge? Where is the fun in that?
Pat, at a typical school visit, one of 530 or so
he’s done around the world.

In a 2012 interview with Renée LaTulippe on No Water River, you assert that the poem is more important than the poet:  
"If the poem is any good, you should be able to erase the poet's name.  Poets biodegrade.  Poems, if they have any chance of living on, might well do so without the poet." 
What do you feel are some of the qualities of a timeless children's poem?
Timeless qualities: a theme that resonates with children (animals, nature, nonsense, the universe); words that motorboat on metaphor; and a rhythm that refuses to vacate the mind.

When I asked Pat if there was a particular poem he'd like to share from EVERYTHING IS A POEM, he suggested perhaps the title poem, or "A Tomcat Is" ...or maybe I'd like to choose one myself?  Since I can send you over to Renée LaTulippe's beautiful write up, where she features both of those poems, as well as another favorite of mine, "Mosquito," I decided to go ahead and choose something else.  It was not easy, let me tell you.  There were several I would have loved to share with you, but I ended up with "Fireflies," because I felt it so aptly fits Pat's definition of timeless children's poetry: 

EVERYTHING IS A POEM, J. Patrick Lewis, illus. Maria Cristina Pritelli


                     FIREFLIES

                     An August night–
                         The wind not quite
                     A wind, the sky
                         Not just a sky–
                     And everywhere
                         The speckled air
                     Of summer stars
                         Alive in jars.

                            © 1986 J. Patrick Lewis. All rights reserved.


You've said that you strive to write "in a hundred voices"– across the curriculum and for all ages. From such a broad spectrum, how did you go about choosing which of your poems would appear in Everything is a Poem?
I sent Creative Editions c. 160 poems, and they chose about 60 to include in the book. I was delighted with their choices, but I would have been just as pleased if they had selected from the other 100 poems.

A compilation like this one is quite an accomplishment. Yet as a poet, you are continually stretching and transforming yourself– both in the wide variety of subjects that you write about and the assortment of poetic forms that you use.  Describe for us what you see when you look in the mirror?
I make it a habit not to look in a mirror. A mirror has a way of looking back at me and shouting intimations of my mortality. But to your point: I do aim to write about every subject under the sun and in every verse form. I’ve got a long way to go, but I’ve made a respectable start, I think.

Can you give us a hint about what’s coming up next for you?
Here’s a list of my new and forthcoming books:

My 2015 Books:
  • The Wren and the Sparrow, Kar-Ben Publishing, (Yevgenia Nayberg, ill.), March 2015 
  • Just Joking: Animal Riddles, National Geographic, March 2015 
  • Bigfoot Is Missing: Poems from the Cryptozoo (w/Kenn Nesbitt), Chronicle, Spring 2015 
  • M is for Monster: A Fantastic Creatures Alphabet, Sleeping Bear Press, Gerald Kelley (ill.), March 1, 2015 
  • Book of Nature Poetry, National Geographic (photos), Fall 2015 
  • Make the Earth Your Companion, Creative Editions, Fall 2015
          2014 Books:
  • Poemobiles: Crazy Car Poems, (with Douglas Florian). Schwartz & Wade/Random House, Jeremy Holmes (ill.) 
  • Everything Is a Poem: The Best of J. Patrick Lewis. Creative Editions, Maria Cristina Pritelli (ill.) August 2014 
  • Harlem Hellfighters, Creative Editions, Gary Kelley (ill.), Fall 2014 
  • Freedom Like Sunlight: Praisesongs for Black Americans. Creative Editions, John Thompson (ill.)—reissued. Fall 2014 
  • Voices from the March on Washington, 1963 (with George Ella Lyon), Wordsong/BMP, Fall 2014
For a complete list of my books to date, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Patrick_Lewis.

If you had all the world’s children in one room, what would you tell them?
Only one piece of advice: Never trust anyone who writes more than he or she reads. Samuel Johnson said that a couple of centuries ago. Reading always comes first.

Finally, please tell us what you have chosen as this month’s ditty challenge.

I’d like to challenge your readers to write a “zeno,” which is a new verse form I invented. The zeno was inspired by the “hailstone  sequence” in mathematics. I define a zeno as a 10-line poem with 8,4,2,1,4,2,1,4,2,1 syllables that rhyme abcdefdghd. Here is an example:



         A Third Grader Reflects
         On the Good Old Days

         Why isn’t elementary school

         filled with sizzle,
         fizz and
         buzz?
         I wish I knew
         why be-
         cause
         kindergarten
         always
         was. 
  
and another, from EVERYTHING IS A POEM:

EVERYTHING IS A POEM, J. Patrick Lewis, illus. Maria Cristina Pritelli

         Weather,
         by The Old Masters

         The Michelangelo thunder

         of an April
         cloudburst
         hints
         at what follows
         a great
         rinse:
         spring meadows in
         Monet
         prints.


I don't know about the rest of you, but I can't wait to sink my teeth into this challenge! Throughout the month, send your zenos to TodaysLittleDitty (at) gmail (dot) com or use the contact form in the sidebar to the right. For children under 13 who would like to participate, please read my COPPA compliance statement located below the contact form. 

Thanks, Pat, for the conversation 
and for getting our creative juices flowing!

Hey teachers and parents of creative kids! I would love for more students to get involved. Ditty of the Month Club challenges are wonderful opportunities to interact with some fabulous contemporary children's poets and authors while having fun trying out different poetry forms, like this month's zeno. Please help me spread the word!

Some poems may be published on the blog as daily ditties, but all of them will appear in a Halloween wrap-up post on October 31st. To sweeten the deal (it is Halloween after all), Creative Editions has graciously provided me with a treat– a copy of EVERYTHING IS A POEM which I will send to one lucky participant selected randomly at the beginning of next month!

READY... SET... GO!

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No, WAIT!  I almost forgot (nah... not really), it's time to announce the winner of last month's ditty challenge, brought to us by Irene Latham.  Thanks again to Irene and to everyone who sent in such terrific poems of address!

Random.org has determined that the winner of DEAR WANDERING WILDEBEEST, by Irene Latham, illustrated by Anna Wadham, is:

Reading to the Core 
Congratulations, Catherine!


Be sure to get your fill at the Poetry Friday roundup, hosted today by Jama Rattigan at Alphabet Soup