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Where I live : poems about my home, my street, and my town /

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Somerville, Massachusetts : Candlewick Press, 2023Description: 40 pages : color illustrations ; 28 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781536200942
  • 1536200948
Other title:
  • Poems about my home, my street, and my town
Uniform titles:
  • Poems. Selections
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 811 23/eng/20230306
Summary: "This diverse selection of 34 poems, paired with bright illustrations that capture daily life, celebrates the places where we live: our homes, our streets, our towns"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan Coeur d'Alene Library Easy Nonfiction Coeur d'Alene Library Book E 808 JANECZK (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610023341410
Standard Loan (Child Access) Hayden Library Juvenile Nonfiction Hayden Library Book 811/WHERE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610024269206
Standard Loan (Child Access) Rathdrum Library Juvenile Nonfiction Rathdrum Library Book 811/WHERE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610024269081
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

What is home? Revel in the ineffable sense of belonging in anthologist Paul B. Janeczko's diverse selection of poems with sure appeal for children.

Home is shoes tucked under the bed while you sleep, or fancy-dancying at the neighborhood block party. It's buttermilk biscuits and gospel music at the church picnic. It's traffic lights and parked cars; rooftop views as far as you can see; ice cream trucks and yellow boots; sharing breakfast cereal and boiled eggs with your brothers; or running through sprinklers with water on your lips, dripping from eyelashes like fat raindrops. Whether we hang our hats in a walk-up apartment in the city, a farmhouse in the country, or any place in between, the poems in this collection celebrate the places where we live: our homes, our streets, our towns. Gathered by eminent poet and anthologist Paul B. Janeczko, these thirty-four inviting verses are paired with light-filled illustrations by Hyewon Yum evoking the warm details of daily life.

Contributors include:
Francisco X. Alarcón * Dave Crawley * Walter de la Mare * Rebecca Kai Dotlich * Eleanor Farjeon * Aileen Fisher * Betsy Franco * Charles Ghigna * Nikki Giovanni * Nikki Grimes * Avis Harley * Patricia Hubbell * Langston Hughes * Reuben Jackson * Paul B. Janeczko * X. J. Kennedy * Irene Latham * Lois Lenski * Myra Cohn Livingston * Wes Magee * Lilian Moore * Naomi Shihab Nye * Lin Oliver * Linda Sue Park * Iain Crichton Smith * Gary Soto * Amy Ludwig VanDerwater * Hope Vestergaard * Nicholas Virgilio * Charles Waters * Janet Wong * Valerie Worth * Charlotte Zolotow

Target Age Group: 07 to 10

"This diverse selection of 34 poems, paired with bright illustrations that capture daily life, celebrates the places where we live: our homes, our streets, our towns"--

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Sorted into three parts and featuring lines by poets and children's book creators alike, 34 short, winning poems selected by the late Janeczko contemplate the meaning of home and belonging via a strong sense of place. In the book's first section, "Home," Reuben Jackson's "Sunday Brunch" and Gary Soto's "Ode to a Sprinkler" each revel in summers spent locally--on a porch and on neighbors' lawns, respectively. Section two, "Street," features Naomi Shihab Nye's "Spruce Street, Berkeley"; Patricia Hubbell's "Sidewalk Cracks"; and Nikki Grimes's "Block Party," which all consider pavement-related locales. And in the final section, "Town," Lois Lenski's "People" and Nikki Giovanni's "Knoxville, Tennessee" sensorially convey neighborhood encounters. Throughout, Yum's colored pencil and watercolor art portrays racially diverse figures in metropolitan, rural, and suburban landscapes both bustling and quiet. It's a sights-and-sounds anthology that invites readers to observe the appreciable beauty of, as phrased by X.J. Kennedy, "wherever you sit down." Ages 7--10. (Mar.)

School Library Journal Review

Gr 1--3--This posthumous compilation selected by distinguished anthologist Janeczko beautifully captures the essence of home; Yum's art enhances this, centering each poem firmly into diverse communities. Thirty-four poems are divided into three sections: Home, Street, and Town. The section titles seem arbitrary at first, although the delightful variance in styles and rhythms is exciting. For example, "Crickets," a concrete poem by Myra Cohn Livingston, appears in Home, as the crickets' hypnotic chirps through the night interrupt or sing one to sleep. "Ode to My Shoes" by Francisco X. Alarcón has shoes "fall asleep/ and dream/ of walking," in Street, relaxing so they're fresh for the new day. Langston Hughes, Nikki Giovanni, Linda Sue Park, Gary Soto, and Naomi Shihab Nye are a few of the authors included, each of their poems dazzling with literary devices, figurative language, and exquisite word choices. Yum's trademark colored pencil and watercolor illustrations are full spread. Graphic placement is well done, allowing Yum's art to cradle each piece. People and places are diverse in artistic expression, allowing readers to recognize themselves in different poems and increasing understanding for different situations. Janeczko selected poems about nature, safe spaces, siblings, shopping, pets, ice cream, transportation, and being the new kid: all the mundane, yet essential, things that remind people of what home is. VERDICT A first purchase for all libraries serving young children, this is an outstanding poetry compilation about the meaning of home.--Rachel Zuffa

Booklist Review

Soft-edged artwork in watercolors and colored pencil pull this collection of poetry together. The book, which is divided into three sections ("Home," "Street," and "Town,") features 34 poems from over 30 different poets (a handful appear twice). The first section, "Home," roughly sketches out the course of a single day from many perspectives. Both people and the elements are on display in the second section, which celebrates the fun of a block party (Nikki Grimes), a walk through snow (Charles Waters), and the shoes that carry us (Francisco X. Alarcón). The people who make up a town bring the third section to life as it dips into schools and grocery stores and laments the quiet in the wintertime. Generally, the poems here are previously published pieces that, when read all together, confer a nostalgic, laid-back tone on both the illustrations and text. The arrangement of the poems and Yum's slightly naive art come together nicely for a cohesive, teachable collection about different kinds of communities.

Horn Book Review

This collection of variously contemplative and playful poems offers an intimate picture of daily life from a childâe(tm)s point of view. Thirty-four poems about âeoeHome,âe âeoeStreet,âe and âeoeTownâe explore the ever-widening circle of a childâe(tm)s awareness of community. Various poets capture the rhythm of life inside and out, on the weekend and at bedtime, and through the seasons beginning with X. J. Kennedyâe(tm)s âeoeAny old place / thatâe(tm)s your home base / is where you want to be.âe The collection then heads out into the world with pets, parks, and parties and around town with school, stores, laundromats, and car washes. With its mix of classic works by such poets as Eleanor Farjeon, Myra Cohn Livingston, and Valerie Worth and more contemporary voices including Irene Latham, Janet Wong, and Naomi Shihab Nye, the collection offers a mix of poetic styles -- all very accessible to the reader and listener and all unified by Yumâe(tm)s engaging illustrations in colored pencil and watercolor. Scenes ranging from urban apartment life to small-town backyards and front porches are full of a pleasing diversity of children and adults. Sylvia VardellMarch/April 2023 p.88 (c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

A posthumous gathering of short poems on themes of home and neighborhood. All but four of the 34 poems Janeczko selected before his death in 2019 have appeared elsewhere; most were published after 2000. The roster of contributors will be largely familiar to readers of his many anthologies: X.J. Kennedy leads off with an affirmation that "Home" is "Wherever you sit down / to eat your supper, pet your cat, / do homework, watch TV," Walter de la Mare describes peeking through window blinds to watch passersby, and Gary Soto offers a suburban "Ode to a Sprinkler." In more reflective tones, Linda Sue Park writes evocatively of a wind in "October" playing tag with a plastic bag and Naomi Shihab Nye, of people like "leaves drifting / downhill in morning fog" on "Spruce Street, Berkeley." Nikki Grimes and Nikki Giovanni chime in with summertime celebrations of, respectively, a "Block Party" and "Knoxville, Tennessee," and Langston Hughes rounds things off with metaphorical images of a "City" that "Spreads its wings" in the morning and "In the evening… / Goes to bed / Hanging lights / About its head." Yum echoes the pervasive air of peaceful serenity with colored pencil and watercolor scenes in which city, country, and suburban settings share presence with racially diverse groups and individuals, mostly children. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A luminous sendoff, rich in happy memories and sweet nostalgia. (Picture-book poetry. 6-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Paul Bryan Janeczko was born in Passaic, New Jersey on July 27, 1945. He received a bachelor's degree in English from St. Francis College in 1967 and a master's degree in English from John Carroll University in 1970. While teaching public high school, he created his own poetry anthology to use in his classes. He retired from teaching in 1990 after 22 years.

He became a poet and anthologist best known for his poetry anthologies for children. From the 1980s through the early 2000s, he was the compiler for several anthologies including Pocket Poems: Selected for a Journey, I Feel a Little Jumpy Around You: A Book of Her Poems and His Poems Collected in Pairs, and A Kick in the Head: An Everyday Guide to Poetic Forms. He wrote several poetry collections including The Crystal Image, Requiem, Worlds Afire, and The Proper Way to Meet a Hedgehog and Other How-to Poems. His novel, Bridges to Cross, was published 1986. He died on February 19, 2019 at the age of 73.

(Bowker Author Biography)

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