From Kirkus Reviews:
A collection of haiku poems that celebrate city life, illustrated with black-and-white photos. In his valuable introduction, poet and poetry anthologist Janeczko (Very Best (Almost) Friends, 1998) tells the reader that although haiku, 17-syllable poems that originated in Japan, typically examine the natural world, hes selected urban subjects because he wanted young writers to see that poetry and nature abound in the city as well as in the country. And indeed, many of the poems in this volume seek to plumb the soul of everyday metropolitan objects such as playground swings, manholes, or garbage trucks. Screeching and clawing a trash truck drowns out the protests from the alley cat. Others, such as All summer long the sixteen-story crane bows and bows or Scarlet butterfly posing on my handlebars hitching a free ride deliver a fleeting mood or flash of insight. Seeking to explore metropolitan images in a more here-and-now concrete fashion, Silbermans evocative photographs both compliment and add dimension to the text. Brief and comfortably accessible, this volume offers easy entree for the exploration of the art of haiku. (Poetry. 8-10) -- Copyright ©2000, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From School Library Journal:
Grade 4 Up-For decades, 17-syllable, 3-line Japanese haiku has grown in popularity in America. Janeczko expands its traditional subjects and themes beyond nature and the seasons to encompass the city and its own wonderful scenes. As a result, 20 contributors to this well-designed book looked carefully at city streets, people, and activities to produce enormously appealing selections. Stickball, hard hats, screeching trash trucks, swings, and car washes all are celebrated with powerful and sometimes surprising imagery. High-quality, black-and-white photographs capture the cityscapes consisting of cranes, heaped garbage cans, and assorted scenes that reflect the themes of the haiku. For Silberman, starting with the written poems was a new challenge. "Instead of letting my surroundings guide the subjects of my photographs," he writes in a brief note, "I let the haiku guide me." The design of this small book is balanced and uncluttered, generally featuring one haiku with an accompanying photograph on each page. Students and teachers alike will be drawn to this book again and again.
Lee Bock, Glenbrook Elementary School, Pulaski, WI
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