Papa Is a Poet: A Story About Robert Frost

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Book Information

Category
  • Picture Book
Reader Personality Type
Illustrator
Publisher
  • Christy Ottaviano/Holt October 2013
Curriculum
  • Social Emotional Learning
  • Language Arts Curriculum

"For  me the initial delight is in the surprise of remembering something I
didn't know  I knew."
--  Robert Frost, from the Quotations section of the back matter

"Papa  did things his way.  He decided to milk his cow at midnight so he
could stay awake and read Shakespeare and write poems in the hush of a
sleeping  household.  I remember hearing the neighbors talk about the warm glow of
 the kerosene lamp in the kitchen window.

"And  I remember one day when I was walking with Papa and we came upon our
French-Canadian farmer neighbor, Napoleon Guay.  Papa loved to talk, and he
 also loved to listen.  When Mr. Guay told Papa, 'Good fences make good
neighbors,' Papa pointed to the stone wall separating the two farms and
replied,
My  apple trees will never get across
And  eat the cones under his pines, I tell him.

When  Papa listened carefully to the speech of all his farmer neighbors, he
heard  words that had the ring of pure poetry.  'The sentence sound often
says more than the words,' he told me.  He wanted to make music out of
words.  Papa could hear the melody in a sentence."

Okay.   If I give you this great snippet of text, part of a narrative about
growing up  as Robert Frost's eldest daughter, WITHOUT any illustrations,
and suggest that  you read an entire story of it to a circle of preschoolers,
how many  of you are going to be takers?  References to Shakespeare?
Kerosene?  Sentence structure?

In  fact, the structure of this piece of narrative nonfiction, PAPA IS A
POET,  is reasonably sophisticated, being a story within a story:  The
(inner) story of growing up Robert Frost's daughter on a farm in Derry, New
Hampshire is told from a specific, subsequent point in time, this being  (the
outer story) when early in 1915, having just returned with her family  from two
years of living in Europe, Lesley Frost is waiting at New York  City's
Grand Central Terminal with her mother and her younger siblings for  their
father who rushes to his publisher upon discovering that two of his books  of
poetry have been released in the States.

My  point is that marrying such a text to illustrations, no matter how
great (and  they are great), does not make it a book for little kids.  And so I
have to take issue with those trade journals who are recommending this  one
for ages 4-8; and give kudos to School Library Journal who, in my  opinion,
more accurately recommends this one for grades 3-5

I  am frequently telling parents, teachers, and students about this exact
sort  of book: forty pages -- a fascinating read and a quick read,  given the
illustrations -- and you're suddenly a budding expert on a topic  that is
new to you.  Now, I've been hearing or reading Robert Frost's poems  since I
was in grade school but, more than fifty years after  he became the
second-most notable part of JFK's inauguration in 1961  (right behind the famous
"Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you  can do for your
country" line), this is the first that I've really had a  grasp on who Robert
Frost was.  This book is so brilliant in  its turning a Poet into an unusual
parent.

The  author, Natalie Bober, is a long-time expert on Robert Frost, having
written A  RESTLESS SPIRIT: THE STORY OF ROBERT FROST way back in 1981.
The  back matter included here is both incredibly valuable and, again,
perfect  for third, fourth, and fifth graders.  Included are the full texts  of
a dozen of Frost's poems, including "The Road Not Taken," "Stopping  by
Woods on a Snowy Evening," "Nothing Gold Can Stay," "Birches," and "Mending
Wall."  There is also an Author's Note, a selection of quotations, a
bibliography, and some archival photos.

The  illustrator, Rebecca Gibbon utilizes acrylic, ink, pencil, and
watercolor with  great results.  The many outdoor scenes at the farm are
captivating in a  Barbara Cooney sort of way, and the illustrations of Frost and his
family  members, again, transform a Poet into a parent.
As  I've been telling booksellers and school librarians, these great
nonfiction  picture books for older readers -- whether science, history, sports,
or  arts-related -- need to be shelved away from the little kid story time
picture  books so that middle grade teachers can have a go-to shelf when they
are  searching for engaging, high-quality nonfiction in the sciences and the
 arts to share with their students.  PAPA IS A POET is an engaging  and
first-rate example of this genre.

40 pages   978-0-8050-9407-7   Ages  7-10

Recommended by:  Richie  Partington, MLIS, Librarian, California USA

See more of Richie's Picks _https://richiespicks.com_ (https://richiespicks.com/)

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