Showing posts with label ME poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ME poem. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

DMC: "As if I could knock out the Ocean" by Ed DeCaria




As if I could knock out the Ocean

I punched wave after wave —
Punched them! As if
I could knock out
the Ocean
with one

slow

wet

swing

© 2015 Ed DeCaria. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. Click HERE for more details.

Last call to join in! Send your poem to TodaysLittleDitty (at) gmail (dot) com, or use the contact form in the sidebar to the right. Visit our wrap-up celebration to read all of this month's contributions. One lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Thursday, September 24, 2015

DMC: "Fortress" by Buffy Silverman



FORTRESS

Whenever Amy came to play,
we hid in my bedroom
and spent the afternoon in our forts.

My closet was the perfect stronghold–
safe behind a mirrored door
you pulled a long chain
and a solitary bulb shone,
casting a dim light
on saddle shoes and PF Flyers
and the cool wooden floor.

I imagined sharing the cramped closet–
one of us curled on the floor,
the other perched on a painted shelf,
inventing stories of shadowy foes,
conquering an invisible enemy,
together.

But Amy said we needed separate forts–
each of us in our own private sanctuary
equipped with stacks of books,

and Amy was the guest.
She rifled through my bookshelf,
grabbed my pillow
and retreated to my closet–
her fort.

I slipped into the narrow space
between bed and wall,
my cheek pressed against rough carpet,
enough room for me and a book,
and disappeared into stories
where Pippi rode the high seas
and Tommy and Annika were always welcome.

© 2015 Buffy Silverman. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 TOMORROW, Friday, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Wednesday, September 23, 2015

DMC: "...I write her name in my notebook." by Matt Forrest Esenwine



…I write her name in my notebook.

I’m not sure why.
What is it about her eyes,
her lips,
that makes me think
she’s smiling at me
even when she’s turned away?
I write her name in my notebook.
I’m not sure why.
What is it about violets and – is that vanilla? –
that make a girl smell so nice?
I don’t even like vanilla, but still…
I write her name in my notebook.
I’m not sure why.
Why do I crane my neck to watch
as she walks away, yet hide
my face
when she sees me
watching?
What would she say,
what would she do,
if only she knew…
 

© 2015 Matt Forrest Esenwine. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Tuesday, September 22, 2015

DMC: "The Automat" by Diane Mayr



THE AUTOMAT

One day, Grandma took
me to Manhattan.
Just the two of us.
Lunch at Horn & Hardart.

Up and down the rows
of windows we'd go.
Macaroni and cheese
in small bowls oozing
cheesy goodness.

Sandwiches cut into two
triangles, their fillings
invitingly exposed.

A hundred slices of pie
on a hundred china plates
behind a hundred
sparkling glass portals.

Feed nickels into a slot
and any one of those
was mine for the taking.

It was enough to take
my breath away.

© 2015 Diane Mayr. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Monday, September 21, 2015

DMC: "A Passing Remark" by Donna JT Smith


A PASSING REMARK

I was a child
of field and truck
with fingernails
a’la dirt and mud

the neighbors had
a girlie girl
with skin so soft
and hair a’curl

pale of face
with body narrow
a shape that barely
made a shadow

rosy cheeks and
toned farm arms
should not have been
cause for alarm

but our neighbor’s visitor
said to me
as I passed by
“Hello, chubby!”

from that time on
I realized
it mattered if
you weren’t pint-sized

and that is when
my fight began
with body image
and who I am.

© 2015 Donna JT Smith. All rights reserved.


Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Thursday, September 17, 2015

Dear Dog + the Poetry Friday Roundup



Welcome to Poetry Friday!

If you're new to Poetry Friday, have a look HERE to find out what it's all about. I'm looking forward to making the rounds of this week's offerings! 

At Today's Little Ditty, I've been sharing "ME poems" inspired by Lee Bennett Hopkins' Ditty of the Month Club challenge.  According to Lee, a ME poem is based on "one simple moment in your childhood – a thrilling moment, a sad moment, a moment that changed you in some way." Like the little girl in the picture above, I imagine all the children in these poems sitting down to write about the special moments that helped shape their future selves.

This week I featured poems by Linda Mitchell, Michele Krueger, Ellen Leventhal, and Kristi Dee Veitenheimer. Today it's my turn.

DEAR DOG

Was it the snow that set you on edge?
     The swish of my pants?
     The crunch underfoot?
The day I took the shortcut.

Or was it the race–your hunger, my fear?
     The thrill of the chase?
     The moment I slipped?
The day I took the shortcut.

Things might have been different.
We could have been friends
     if you weren’t so mean
     and I wasn’t so tasty.
The day I took the shortcut.


© 2015 Michelle Heidenrich Barnes. All rights reserved.

Believe it or not, next Friday I will be posting the end-of-month wrap-up. If you'd like to participate, please send your poem to TodaysLittleDitty (at) gmail (dot) com, or use the contact form in the sidebar to the right.  I look forward to reading them!



THE POETRY FRIDAY ROUNDUP


Photo: Rick Cameron
Ellie (who is not the dog in my poem) invites you to leave a direct link to your post in the comments along with a short description. I will list them below.

                                       * * * * *

1. Laura Shovan shares her fascination with an uncovered skeleton, a childhood memory of a hurricane, and a storm-inspired poem by Sid Gold at AUTHOR AMOK.

2. Jama Rattigan has sweets for the sweet this week at ALPHABET SOUP: a Marie Antoinette poem by Christie Grimes and a little gallery of wedding cakes.

3. Laura Purdie Salas is in with a nature-inspired riddle-ku at WRITING THE WORLD FOR KIDS.


4. Irene Latham shares a "poetry potpourri" at LIVE YOUR POEM...: a Gwendolyn Brooks poem, a little Einstein, what she's been reading... and more.

5. At RANDOM NOODLING, Diane Mayr has an original a poem inspired by living alone with an active imagination and a cat.  And at KURIOUS KITTY'S KURIO KABINET, a poem by Lisa Williams about grackles, called–what else?–"Grackles."

6. In celebration of Grandparents Day last weekend, CBHANEK shares a touching story about a little girl, a grandma, and a poem you'll recognize about a tree. Also, don't miss her ME poem in response to Lee Bennett Hopkins' challenge HERE.

7. Matt Forrest Esenwine has a bit of everything, including a new poem, a new anthology, and a new CYBILS category he'll be judging, over at RADIO, RHYTHM & RHYME.

8. Linda Baie has a lovely original poem infused with ocean memories at TEACHERDANCE.

9. At A TEACHING LIFE, Tara Smith shares a sigh-worthy poem about the end of summer: "Solitudes" by Margaret Gibson.

10. At A READING YEAR, Mary Lee Hahn's inspirational poem, "To My Students," uses the form Tabatha Yeatts introduced to us a couple weeks ago with the video of Lennon and Maisy.

11. Donna Smith is also sharing an original poem today at MAINELY WRITE. "Aquasphere" is a poem she didn't end up using for SPARK, but here, she illustrates it herself with her new passion for watercolors.

12. Iphigene's heartwrenching original poem at GATHERING BOOKS references three Emily Dickinson poems as it explores a child's coma and a mother's choice.

13. Delighted to see Carol Varsalona is sharing a ME poem at BEYOND LITERACY LINK.  She contrasts her childhood seaside memories with a another original poem titled "Summer Splashings." If you haven't yet checked out Carol's extensive Summer Splashings Gallery (unveiled last weekend), you can do so HERE.

14. At HATBOOKS, Holly Thompson writes about a life-changing moment from her late teen years that pointed her toward Japan–thanks to a pair of geta.

15. Amy Ludwig VanDerwater shares an original poem about change and memories at THE POEM FARM, along with the book and life happenings that inspired it.

16. Tabatha Yeatts has got mindfulness on her mind. She shares "Admit Something" by Hafiz at THE OPPOSITE OF INDIFFERENCE

17. Heidi Mordhorst has some happy news to share, including a momentous event in Room 203. She commemorates the occasion with an original poem at MY JUICY LITTLE UNIVERSE.

18. SALLY MURPHY is in this week with a poem she wrote about bird watching and walking.

19. Do you know the difference between a box turtle and a snapping turtle? You will after reading Ruth's original poetry offering today at THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A GOD-FORSAKEN TOWN.

20. Doraine Bennett shares a poem about talking with light by Thomas Aquinas and her own beauty of a ME poem at DORI READS.

21. Catherine at READING TO THE CORE, has been searching for just the right form for her campfire poem. She found it, thanks to Eve Merriam.

22. Penny Parker Klostermann has a yummy collaboration from guests, Sandy Lowe and her granddaughter, Mary, on A GREAT NEPHEW AND A GREAT AUNT.

23. Poets and Doctor Who fans will appreciate this lyrical quotation shared by Little Willow at BILDUNGSROMAN.

24. VIOLET NESDOLY offers a poetic tribute to the founder of her local poetry club: "This is the house that Donna built."

25. Anastasia Suen shares the rhyming picture book, Goodnight Football, on her new WRITING LESSONS blog.

26. Sylvia Vardell is "reverse engineering" The Poetry Friday Anthology for Celebrations. At POETRY FOR CHILDREN, she shows how you can ignore the holidays component and use the book to find poems to match with 156 favorite contemporary picture books for story times and lessons.

27. Janet Squires has a review of Fold Me A Poem by Kristine O'Connell George at ALL ABOUT THE BOOKS.

28. Tricia Stohr-Hunt shares some great consignment shop finds at THE MISS RUMPHIUS EFFECT: books by Elizabeth Spires and Myra Cohn Livingston.

29. In honor of Constitution Day, Jone MacCulloch has Georgia Heard's "A Dream Come True" from The Poetry Friday Anthology for Celebrations at CHECK IT OUT She also reveals the roster of 2015 CYBILS poetry judges. (Hooray!)

30. KAREN EDMISTEN is giving us a taste of autumn this week with Arthur Sze's beautiful and poignant "The Shapes of Leaves."

31. Last, but never least, Margaret Simon has been spending the day completing a Dot Day project with her students. Enjoy their collaborative poem on video at REFLECTIONS ON THE TECHE.


Thank you for all of your kind comments today, and especially to those of you who shared your own harrowing dog encounters. Just to set the record straight, while I have moved on from the incident and hold no grudges, sweet Ellie is not mine. (I borrowed her from Flickr Creative Commons.) I'm more of a cat person.

See you next week for the DMC Wrap-Up Celebration!

DMC: "Summer Tradition" by Kristi Dee Veitenheimer



SUMMER TRADITION 

Six flags-
summer.

Waiting-
snaking lines.

Log flume-
straddle the seat.

Squealing-
splashing every turn.

Uh Oh-
chains pulling up incline.

Grabbing-
frightened knowing what comes next.

Tensing-
anticipating the freefall.

Screaming-
losing my stomach racing downhill.

Soaking-
running, getting back in line one more time!


© 2015 Kristi Dee Veitenheimer. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 on Friday, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:





Wednesday, September 16, 2015

DMC: "Red Keds and Fireflies" by Ellen Leventhal



RED KEDS AND FIREFLIES

First one to see the streetlights come on!
Knock on wood,
Our luck will be good!
I bounce about in my new red Keds,
the ones that make me strong.

The sun fades to darkness.
And then we see.
Flittering, glittering,
Twirling and flipping.

“I caught some!” he says.
“I put them in a jar.”

A knot in my gut,
and a tear stained face.
But, still
I find the words.
Loud, strong, formidable.
 “Let them go!”

And he does.
Up, up, up to the sky,
winking and blinking
and looping figure eights
all the way home.

“Goodbye fireflies,” I call.
Standing tall
in my new red Keds,
the ones that make me strong.

© 2015 Ellen Leventhal. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 on Friday, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Tuesday, September 15, 2015

DMC: "One Bronx Library" by Michele Krueger



One Bronx Library

I used to sit
in one Bronx library,
on one small chair

I hardly even noticed
the other people there

I'd sit for hours dreaming,
where miracles happened
if only you dared or cared
to come and find them

I ran there
returning books,
to look for more
to take me to a world,

not the one I knew

it was long ago
but I still remember it
so sweetly

that one Bronx library,
that one small chair

with a happy child

reading there

© 2015 Michele Krueger. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 on Friday, September 25th.

Don't miss Michele's poem "At the Library" in Lee's gorgeous new anthology, JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES. One lucky participant in this month's DMC challenge will receive an autographed copy.




Monday, September 14, 2015

DMC: "Sisters" by Linda Mitchell



SISTERS

Down in the creek
no guppy was safe
from our plastic pails or,
fingers reading a braille
of moss, rocks and clay.

Side by side on our bellies
we were single-minded
about guppies
like never again, on
politics
religion
climate change
food allergens.

Those fish in pails
sloshed home in
bike baskets,
our sisterhood
peddled harder
uphill toward
home.

You proudly showing
mom our catch
her smile wan
at my promises to tend
this batch better so they
won’t die and stink
up our room
like the last.


© 2015 Linda Mitchell. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 on Friday, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Thursday, September 10, 2015

DMC: "Toady" by Michelle Kogan



TOADY

Toady,
sure wish
I left you
where you
belong...

But you fit
perfectly
in my small,
cupped,
hand

you felt squishy,
and warm,
and wet,
all at
once

and your breath
poked
around
inside my
pocket

but,
my heart broke
when your
breath drifted
away...

Our
ceremony
in your
memory
helped,

but the
lump in my
throat
felt like
forever...


© 2015 Michelle Kogan. All rights reserved.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 on Friday, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Wednesday, September 9, 2015

DMC: "Tumbling with Daddy" by B.J. Lee




Tumbling With Daddy

Daddy taught me
tumbling
every Sunday morn.
    Perfect handstands
    straight and tall
    Tiger bends—
    watch out! Don’t fall!
Daddy taught me
tumbling—
every Sunday morn
When Daddy taught me
tumbling,
confidence
was born


© 2015 B. J. Lee. All rights reserved.


Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 on Friday, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Tuesday, September 8, 2015

DMC: "Summer Love" by Lana Wayne Koehler



Summer Love

It was aqua and not blue
But for all I knew it was the finest,
Most beautiful,
Two wheels in the world.

Daily I would streak through town
Boldly going up and down the streets until
The lights came on.
Silent happiness.


© 2015 Lana Wayne Koehler. All rights reserved.


Lee Bennett Hopkins has challenged us to write a "ME poem" this month, based on one simple moment in your childhood that changed you in some way. 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 on Friday, September 25th, and one lucky participant will win an autographed copy of Lee's gorgeous new anthology:




Thursday, September 3, 2015

Spotlight on Lee Bennett Hopkins + DMC Challenge


LEE BENNETT HOPKINS

It's not easy shining a spotlight on someone like Lee Bennett Hopkins. It's like pointing a flashlight at the sun.   
Many of you who are reading this know exactly what I'm talking about. For those who don't, let me introduce you to this talented and generous soul.

Lee Bennett Hopkins is the most influential and passionate advocate of children's poetry today. No one knows as much about the tradition of children's poetry, nor does as much to promote and preserve the craft through his numerous books, his caring mentorship of new children's poets, his invaluable recollections preserved in the Spotlight on NCTE poets video series, his educational outreach, and the establishment of three prestigious children's poetry awards:
The Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award– presented annually to an American poet or anthologist for the most outstanding new book of children's poetry published in the previous calendar year.
The Lee Bennett Hopkins/IRA Promising Poet Award– presented every three years to a promising new poet of children’s poetry.
The SCBWI Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award– presented every three years to recognize and encourage the publication of an excellent book of poetry or anthology for children and/or young adults.
Lee's drive and dedication to excellence – "Poetry with a capital P" as he calls it – is a force to be reckoned with. In addition to holding the Guinness world record for "most prolific anthologist," Lee is an illustrious poet in his own right. He has earned several notable awards, including the 2016 Regina Medal award. Established in 1959 and sponsored by the Catholic Library Association, "The Regina Medal is awarded annually to a living exemplar of the words of the English poet, Walter de la Mare 'only the rarest kind of best in anything can be good enough for the young,' for continued, distinguished contribution to children’s literature without regard to the nature of the contribution." (www.cathla.org)

From humble and disadvantaged beginnings, Lee's hard work and determination has served him well throughout his life and career, carrying him to his preeminent standing today– a beloved national treasure.

JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES
WordSong (September, 2015)
ISBN-13: 978-1590789247
Find at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble,
or via Indiebound.org
I'm thrilled and honored to be featuring Lee this month, and his newest, wonder-filled anthology, JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES.

September means back to school, of course, but did you know it's also Library Card Sign-up Month? Just think how many girls and boys are beginning life-long love affairs with books thanks to this piece of plastic small enough to fit in your pocket. And what better way to celebrate the significance of libraries than with this gorgeous collection?

The magic begins with these opening lines from "Breakfast Between the shelves" by Rebecca Kai Dotlich:

Morning pours spoons of sun
through tall windows, rests along
a reading chair, a copper rail;
hovers over crumbs, small supper scraps
left by those who opened books 
last night, to live in story.

Not only is this a warm welcome (love those "spoons of sun"), but as a reader, I feel assured of an extraordinary experience.

Everything about this anthology IS extraordinary, from the star-studded poet line-up (including Nikki Grimes, X.J. Kennedy, J. Patrick Lewis, Alice Schertle, and Jane Yolen, among others) to the imagination and soft, dreamy quality of Jane Manning's exquisite gouache and pencil illustrations.

JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES captures the joy of reading. It thrills in the excitement of walking through library doors– "the sweet kingdom of story" as Nikki Grimes describes it, the enchanting lure of stacks upon stacks of books, and the superpowers of owning a library card.  It celebrates the generous spirit of librarians, the "quiet weight of words" per Deborah Ruddell, and helps us to feel warm, snuggly, and peaceful with our favorite books... like this one.

Just one reading was enough for me to give it "one-of-my-all-time-favorites" status. I wouldn't be surprised if you have the same response.

Lee Bennett Hopkins has outdone himself again.

I hope you'll enjoy learning a little more about Lee, starting with five favorites.

Favorite color: Purple
Favorite smell: Fresh air
Favorite sound: Laughter
Favorite vacation spot:   Aboard a cruise ship in a luxurious suite.
Favorite quote:  “Hold fast to dreams…” ~Langston Hughes


As a child growing up in less than ideal circumstances, your focus was on survival rather than reading. And yet, at the age of twelve, you knew you wanted to be a writer. You hadn’t been exposed to children’s poetry at that point, so what kind of writer did you envision yourself becoming?

I truly never envisioned becoming a writer. The only thing I wanted to do was to become a teacher.  And I did.  Writing came by accident; a lovely accident.


How did your childhood shape you as a future poet and teacher?

From the time I was in the 8th grade I wanted to become someone like my 8th-grade teacher, Ethel Kite McLaughlin at South 8th Street School in Newark, NJ, a woman who saw something in me I did not know existed.  She changed my being, teaching me there was more to life than living within a confused, dysfunctional family, to reach out, explore, learn – become independent.  Become myself.  I pay tribute to her in a poem appearing in my book, BEEN TO YESTERDAYS: POEMS OF A LIFE (Wordsong/Boyds Mills Press).

I knew the only way out of a life living in Newark-projects was to somehow get an education.  I worked hard and long to complete college.



© 2015 by Jane Manning
If there was just one piece of advice you could impart to educators about the importance of introducing poetry in the classroom, what would it be?

Just read it.  Find those poets and poems you love.  JUST read it.  READ it and think and dream and learn from it.



Although you no longer teach on a regular basis, you continue to champion children’s poetry at every opportunity. Besides the three poetry awards you’ve founded, you consider it your personal responsibility to mentor newer poets and promote their work in your anthologies. What drives you to do that?

Back to my childhood years:  I had a wondrous maternal grandmother, Lena Thomas, a working-class woman who believed in giving back– giving back to make a difference in lives.  As for mentoring new voices?  Why not?  It is my small way to give back…to discover fresh talent, to help people find a way to share their work.  When I find that rare individual I’ll bend backwards to help them along.  I am known to be a tough critic.  Several I’ve tried to work with give up.  I am very opinionated, not always the best trait, but after a life immersed in poetry and knowing the best of poets writing for children personally, I have a sense of what is great and what is merely mediocre.  I have brought a host of new voices to the poetic world.  People whose work has soared.


The amount of research, time, and effort that goes into compiling and producing one of your anthologies is astounding. In your 2013 interview with Renée LaTulippe, you explained that you might read several thousand poems to determine which ones to use. Add to that the time it takes to commission, edit, obtain permissions, illustrate, and publish these works, and we’re talking YEARS to fruition. What gives you the biggest joy in putting together a new anthology, despite its many challenges?

I love doing anthologies.  I guess I should, having done close to 120 of them for every age level.  Working on a collection is like doing a giant jigsaw puzzle.  Again, I am able to include new voices along with established poets’ works.  A great joy for me is when I can use a verse by Carl Sandburg, Langston Hughes, et. al., followed by a poem by someone never published before.  What joy this brings me.  It is thrilling.

And, yes, it does indeed take years from concept to holding a bound book in your hand.


 
JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES includes a wonderful poem you penned yourself called “Storyteller.” You dedicate it to Augusta Baker, a librarian and storyteller renowned for her contributions to children’s literature. Would you tell us a little more about your connection with her? Was she the one who inspired this anthology as a whole? 

Augusta was a dear friend of mine who I met while working at Bank Street College of Education in Harlem, NY, in the late l960’s.  She was a librarian, storyteller and the first African American woman to hold an administrative position with the New York Public Library.  She did not inspire JUMPING… but while working on the collection I knew I had to pay tribute to her.  Just knew it!  Whenever we were together, whether dining at the famed Algonquin Hotel in New York City or having a bowl of soup in her home in Columbia, SC, I FORCED her – to read Langston Hughes’ “Mother to Son” to me.  No one read it like she did.

I still get goose bumps ‘hearing’ her in my mind, in my heart.  I was privileged to have her write the Introduction to a collection I did in l974, ON OUR WAY: POEMS OF PRIDE AND LOVE (Knopf), a book of poems extolling African American youth. The book was illustrated with photography by David Parks, Gordon Parks, the famed photographer’s son. Beginning in 1987, an A(ugusta) Baker’s Dozen conference is held each year at the Richland County Public Library in Columbia, SC where Augusta lived after retirement.  I had the privilege of being the colloquium speaker at the 7th annual conference with Anita Lobel. Another good friend of hers, Maurice Sendak, did the art for the conference logo.  She knew everyone!  How wondrous it was she was in my life and will be ‘happily ever after’!  The poem “Storyteller” in JUMPING… flowed from me…to her. 

From JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES, text © Lee Bennett Hopkins, illustration © Jane Manning  (click to enlarge)

Storyteller
(For Augusta Baker)
     by Lee Bennett Hopkins

As she speaks
words
leap from pages–

there are 
friends like
frog and toad–

I walk
down a 
yellow brick road.

Worlds of paper
disappear–

only 
Miss Augusta
and I 
are here
in a room
filled with magic
story
rhyme. 

And as her voice
reaches
the highest
rafter–

I believe in 

once-upon-a-time,

I believe in

happily ever after. 

Amy Ludwig VanDerwater also wrote a beautiful poem for JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES called “Book Pillows.”  

From JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES, text © Lee Bennett Hopkins, illustration © Jane Manning  (click to enlarge)

Book Pillows
     by Amy Ludwig VanDerwater

With my head on a book
I dream of a place
where a pig loves a spider.

I dream of a face
high in a tower
with ropes of hair falling.

When books become pillows
stories come calling–

Wild things on a rumpus!
Fat evil kings!
Boy wizards, girl witches!
Horses with wings!

Stars shine on shelves
as I rest my full head
on book
                after book
each a dream
I once read.

What favorite book (or books) might we find under your pillow?

I do not have a book under my pillow but I do have a host of them in my dreams.


Can you give us a hint about what’s coming up next for you?

AMAZING PLACES, a companion book to AMAZING FACES (both Lee and Low) has also recently been launched.  The book contains new poems written by Nikki Grimes, Rebecca Kai Dotlich, Linda Sue Park, and Kristine O’Connell George. The collection highlights famous sites such as Niagara Falls, the Liberty Bell, but also includes little-known wonders such as a longhouse at the Oneida Nation Museum located near Green Bay, WI.


A very different anthology to appear in the future…too soon to discuss…is one I am working on with my brilliant editor and dear friend, Rebecca M. Davis at Wordsong/Boyds Mills Press.  Rebecca and I have done countless books together over the years.  


A wee Lee Bennett Hopkins
If you had all the world’s children in one room, what would you tell them?

Children – be yourselves.  
Child - BE yourself.  
There is only one child like you in this world.  
This child is YOU.  
Make a difference in our world.





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

Write a ME poem.  Sit back, close your eyes, recall one simple moment in your childhood – a thrilling moment, a sad moment, a moment that changed you in some way.  A poem giving forth of yourself as in BEEN TO YESTERDAYS:

from “TO” –
 

"…a Christmas wish
  a butter dish…
 

  a teddy bear
  an empty chair…

  the love I have inside
  to
  share…"

Thank you for listening.  Onto tomorrows!

Thank YOU, Lee...  
for sharing yourself with us today and for the love you've poured into children's poetry each and every day for the last several decades!
Lee has also graciously offered an autographed copy of JUMPING OFF LIBRARY SHELVES to one lucky participant!  A random drawing will be held at the end of the month.
 
I expect a fulsome harvest of poems in response to Lee's challenge, so let's get things underway....


HOW TO PARTICIPATE:

Throughout the month, send your ME poem to TodaysLittleDitty (at) gmail (dot) com or use the contact form in the sidebar to the right.

TEACHERS AND PARENTS: It's a new school year, and I would love students to get involved. Ditty of the Month Club challenges are wonderful opportunities to learn about working children's poets and authors while having fun with poetry prompts, like this month's ME poem.
Please help me spread the word! 

For children under 13 who would like to participate, please read my COPPA compliance statement located below the contact form.

BLOGGER FRIENDS:  Thank you for publishing your poems on your own blogs– I love that!  Please also remember to send me a copy of your poem or a direct link to your post. That way I know I have your permission to post your poem on Today's Little Ditty.

Some poems may be published on the blog as daily ditties, but all of them will appear in a wrap-up celebration on Friday, September 25, 2015.


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


Last month's dragon-inspired couplet challenge, brought to us by Penny Parker Klostermann, was a huge success and resulted in a whopper of a cumulative poem. Many thanks to Penny and to all those who participated and/or cheered us on.

Random.org has determined that the winner of an personalized copy of THE DRAGON WHO SWALLOWED A KNIGHT by Penny Parker Klostermann, with illustrations by Ben Mantle is:

ROSI HOLLINBECK – Congratulations, Rosi!


Linda Baie is always up for a challenge. Today she is gathering all the Poetry Friday goodness at TeacherDance.