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Type of bind: Paperback
EAN num: 9781554533398
ISBN number: 1554533392
Label: Kids Can Press, Ltd.
Manufacturer: Kids Can Press, Ltd.
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 48
Printing Date: October 01, 2008
Publishing house: Kids Can Press, Ltd.
Age index: Ages 9-12
Sale Popularity Level: 141559
Studio: Kids Can Press, Ltd.
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Product Description:
Visions in Poetry is an innovative and award-winning series of classic poems reinterpreted for today's readers by outstanding contemporary artists in distinctively beautiful editions. This is My Letter to the World and Other Poems by Emily Dickinson is brilliantly illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault. The artist's interpretation displays a rich understanding of Dickinson's poetry, which is known for its economy, unexpected imagery and hauntingly personal point of view.Arsenault has created a subtle meditation on Dickinson's life and its intersection with her verse. In the dream-like illustrations, the poet - sometimes serene, often sad and always enigmatic - is an omnipresent figure in her ghostly white dress. Dickinson's 'letters,' the words she left to the world, have found their ideal visual complement.
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The great children's collections of Emily Dickinson's poems... I'm sure they exist. They'd have to. We're talking about one of the greatest (THE greatest?) American poets to put pen to paper. It would be patently ridiculous if there weren't a couple collections for kids out there. A quick search of my library's catalog and I see things like Poems for Youth which collected seventy-eight of her poems alongside illustrations, published in 1996. Or there was A Brighter Garden with illustrations by Tasha Tudor, which came out in 1990 with Philomel. Still, when all is said and done the Dickinson poetry section of my children's room looks a bit spare. And maybe it takes something a little shorter like My Letter to the World and Other Poems, produced by Kids Can Press's Visions in Poetry series to capture children's attention. A slim volume of a mere seven poems, this introduction to Emily Dickinson will lure in new fans with the woman's innate sense of mystery. Accompanied by illustrator Isabelle Arsenault's signature style, this book that will offer children an Emily finally worth getting to know.
The seven poems in this book include Dickinson's best-known work. "I'm Nobody! Who are you?" snuggles up alongside "Because I could not stop for Death - He kindly stopped for me-" And from the very first gessoed page that sports the titular opening poem to the well-known " `Hope' is a thing with feathers" found at the end, the book invokes Dickinson's life. Arsenault's mixed media works in watercolors, paints, inks, newsprint, photographs, you name it. But rather than give the book a crazed slapdash appearance, the images are cool and collected. They work seamlessly with the poetry, offering sparing jolts of colour whenever you least expect it. This is not your standard Dickinson fare, a fact which gives you all the more reason to purchase it for a kid you know pronto.
Recently I saw the actor Simon Callow perform Shakespeare's sonnets in a newly established order that told a kind of story. If a person had half a mind to, they could certainly do the same kind of performance with Dickinson's poetry as well. In fact, as I was reading My Letter to the World I tried to ascertain if the editors and illustrator were consciously attempting that kind of storyline. The transition between "I cannot live with you" to " `Hope' is a thing with feathers," suggests at a kind of continuity, but that may just lie within the brain of the reader. I guess that one of the things I appreciated about this book was that if you were looking for some kind of a tale (and I'd say a large percentage of your child readers will be) then you could probably find one here. If, however, you found such a notion unpleasant then you could simply say that these poems were placed together due to a pleasing continuity and not some grossly forced narrative. However you chose to look at it, I'm just grateful that they ended with the "hope" poem. Maybe you think that was a given, but considering the subject matter of the previous poems, it makes sense to end on a mildly lighter note.
Americans love outsider art. I think it appeals to our sense of art as something spontaneous and wild, growing up in unconventional areas. To call Dickinson "outsider" because she wrote primarily (though not exclusively) for herself may sound like a bit of a stretch but it's not wholly inaccurate. In fact, the real problem may come in considering her not outsider enough. There is a danger inherent in any Dickinson collection for kids; the possibility that the editors will present her as twee. This is not a cutesy writer. Sure, she wrote little poems that begin with sentences like, "I'm Nobody! Who are you?" with their misleadingly sweet overtones. A little delving, though, and you begin to see how dark even Dickinson's lightest work was. That's where Isabelle Arsenault comes in.
Now this Visions in Poetry series produced by Kids Can Press has been pairing hip, alternative, and generally magnificent artists alongside classic poems for a couple years now. It's hard to forget Joe Morse's inner city Casey at the Bat or the stunning take on Owl and the Pussycat, The attempted by Stephane Jorisch. That the producers of this series selected Ms. Arsenault, an artist of the adult persuasion, is notable. Arsenault's style is by turns bleak and thoughtful, stunning and contemplative. Her previous children's book, Mr. Gauguin's Heart was released in the United States just last year as her children's debut. So what I found I admired most about her work on this book was her rejection of the sentimental. I am not saying that her style precludes emotion, but rather that she clearly "gets" Dickinson. Somehow this artist and this author belong together. See if you don't agree.
At the end of each Visions in Poetry title there is a lengthy biography of both the poet and the illustrator. Sometimes when it comes to the latter you can find yourself ... Read More
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