Crescent Moon.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.This work is in the "public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.
Inquiry of PB
The Inquiry of PB is about my life so far and all the expressions that go along with it, watch me struggle and grow throughout my poems. I don't expect my poems to be seen as true works of art but at least as my own writing and style.
Reality of a Midnight Thinker
The 10th book by Kizer the Poet. Covering topics including, death, family, child abuse and healing. Not recommend for individuals under 13.
Misunderstood Soul
Years have been complicated as a young adult with many tears from the constant heart wrenching truth of life. I created a collection of poems that described just how hard and painful those years were in explicit detail. It is now time to share this collection of poems. For this collection I continue the journey into adulthood. A lot of lessons were learned, and some events were repeated. All in all these poems are the next step of my life while finishing up my perspective toward things happening in my twenties.
Catching the Light
Catching the Light is for all of you would be, could be, already are poets. Whether in the classroom, community center, or home school community, this little book will guide you through some of poetry's basic forms. This fun volume not only provides poetry prompts, but a helpful resource area in the back that will guide the leader through many unanswered questions that they might have. Come on, catch the light!
Chattering at School
Chattering at School is a series of animal poems that invites the reader to learn and marvel at all the wonders of the natural world. The poems include fun narratives on the surface, while containing learning and teaching moments as the poems unfold. The book has lovely illustrations and is full of moral lessons.The introduction to Chattering at School: Nature poems for children explains that these poems were written by a schoolboy aged 11 to 18 (1951-58) during his annual summer holiday visits to his grandmother on her small farm in Ireland. She had been his carer and guardian from the time of the German Blitz of London where he was born, and lived with her until the war ended in 1945. He then returned to his unknown parents, who had been unable to visit him in Ireland from the UK during the war.Over 60 years later, the author of these poems - Edward Forde Hickey - discovered them (his own schoolboy attempts at writing poetry) lying in the attic and felt they were worth recording publicly.
Some Cats Hide in Boxes
This book is full of playful rhymesOf feline friends, ones most sublimeYoung readers, have a lovely timeWith Some Cats Hide in Boxes!
Sacred in the Mundane
A collection of original poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction submitted by First Baptist Academy students for the 2022 Sacred in the Mundane writing contest.
Stone Soup
The January 2023 issue of Stone Soup, the literary magazine 100% written and illustrated by kids age 13 and younger. Stone Soup has been inspiring young readers and celebrating the brilliance of its young creators since 1973; we currently publish eleven issues a year, each filled with short stories, memoir, poetry, and artwork.
Grandpa's Pillow and other Poems
This is a collection of funny and endearing poems, one of which is about a Grandpa, who just can't go to bed without his favourite pillow. Others are about a platypus who hosts a party for her community, a penny that turns into a bicycle, and forest animals, who stick up for their 'Animal Laws'.
No Title Yet and Other Poems
No Title Yet and Other Poems is a compendium of children's poetry and illustrations (that may just really be for adults) or perhaps a deep philosophical text, satire, and social commentary (that is really written for children). Extremely entertaining and relatable to readers of all ages. This fun collection of poems is nearly bursting at the seams with satisfying brain ticklers, clever ideas, silly stories, amusing sales pitches, sweet sarcasm, sage-like advice and over a hundred and fifty delightful drawings. A comical and thought-provoking read that will make you smile...
Oblivion
Oblivion explores the intersection between cultural identity, and personal healing. Lamia Firasta draws inspiration from her background in psychology as well as her personal life, as a woman, artist, researcher and mental health advocate, aspiring to write poetry that captures the shared human experience. Oblivion is her debut poetry collection. As part of Lamia's advocacy work, 25% of all book sale proceeds will be donated to a local mental health organization. Connect with her here: linktr.ee/lamiart__
Through Thick and Thin
Have you ever felt the magic of love? Get deep into the feeling of love with the book 'Through Thick and Thin'. Romantic, emotional and sincere, this heart-touching poem will reach a million hearts. The bestselling poetry book for someone who believes in the magic of love. It will strengthen your belief in the fact that love stories are eternal.
When Poems Fall from the Sky
Nominated for the 2023 Yoto Carnegie Medal for Writing and the Yoto Carnegie Medal for Illustration.Original, inspiring and intimate, When Poems Fall From the Sky marries science and poetry to create a tender and thoughtful love-letter to Earth promising children a riot of imagination, humour and joy - the perfect book to celebrate National Poetry Day on 6th October. The collection of poems, raps, rhymes, haiku and little plays is written by Zaro Weil, winner of the 2020 CLiPPA children's poetry prize and is illustrated in full colour throughout by artist Junli Song. When Poems Fall From the Sky is the first title to publish since the pair won the coveted CLiPPA prize with their stunning poetry anthology, Cherry Moon. In exquisitely illustrated full color pages, trees, birds, animals, rivers, flowers, mountains and insects each share their own magical stories. And the stories they tell, the 'poems' that fall from the sky, subtly and powerfully illuminate our hope and collective role as guardians of our earth.
my mind and other things you would call a mess
it's okay to not be okay; this is the message of the entire book, filled with poems about heartbreak, anxiety, and other struggles a teen faces in daily life.
Stone Soup
The December 2022 issue of Stone Soup, the literary magazine 100% written and illustrated by kids age 13 and younger. Stone Soup has been inspiring young readers and celebrating the brilliance of its young creators since 1973; we currently publish eleven issues a year, each filled with short stories, memoir, poetry, and artwork.
Ghoulish Tales for the Brave
Embark on a journey with monsters and ghoulish beasts that will creep into your imagination and frighten your soul-spooky Poems to read in the dark. What makes you scared?
Ghoulish Tales for the Brave
Embark on a journey with monsters and ghoulish beasts that will creep into your imagination and frighten your soul-spooky Poems to read in the dark. What makes you scared?
Dear No One
Emerging from the author's college notebooks, Dear No One is a collection of poetry and prose for no one in particular. Inspired by real and fictional love and heartbreak, the collection is an ode to the famous "you". Dedicated to no one and everyone.
The Red Ear Blows Its Nose
The Red Ear Blows Its Nose is "a dazzling tour de force" (Kenn Nesbitt). Often hilarious, always thoughtful, this debut collection from award-winning poet Robert Schechter proves that he is "clearly one of the most accomplished poets writing for children today" (Valerie Bloom MBE). Complemented by S. Federico's charming illustrations, The Red Ear Blows Its Nose will delight both children and adults alike, and is destined to become a classic, standing alongside A Child's Garden of Verses, Now We Are Six, and Where the Sidewalk Ends on children's and library bookshelves for years to come.PRAISE FOR THE RED EAR BLOWS ITS NOSE: Short, punchy, and clever poems, as if Shel Silverstein and Ogden Nash had a baby. Some are only two lines long. My favorite: "When livestock salesmen cannot sleep, / do they lie in bed discounting sheep?" Wow!-Jane Yolen, author of the How Do Dinosaurs booksWhat a splendid collection of poetry. Here are poems that fizz with imagination, wisdom, and an infectious exuberance at the sheer wonder of words. Beautifully crafted and terrifically funny, this is a book for children (and grown-ups) to return to again and again.-Kate Wakeling, winner, 2017 CLiPPA (UK)You'll feel like a "cool in-the-know one" when you read Robert Schechter's clever collection of poems. This book will open your mind up to a world where foxes cartwheel through trombones, a horse might choose to moo, and you can dive into a lake filled with yellow puffs of popcorn. Children who are reading (and thinking) beyond their age level will love it; you will, too. If you're a fan of John Ciardi and Richard Wilbur and X. J. Kennedy, or Jack Prelutsky and J. Patrick Lewis and Kenn Nesbitt, you'll want to add Robert Schechter to your list of favorite poets!-Janet Wong, winner of the 2021 NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for ChildrenThe Red Ear Blows Its Nose is a dazzling tour de force of ingenious poems that sparkle with Schechter's witty, wonderful wordplay. Read this book. Your brain will thank you. Mine did.-Kenn Nesbitt, former Children's Poet Laureate (2013-15)Robert Schechter's poems sing with irrepressible joy. His humor, wit, and verbal dexterity make The Red Ear Blows Its Nose a book that both children and adults will want to read over and over and over again. He is clearly one of the most accomplished poets writing for children today.-Valerie Bloom MBE, winner, 2022 CLiPPA (UK)Schechter's The Red Ear Blows Its Nose is a masterful collection from a masterful poet. Not only does every poem take you somewhere new, spinning ideas and jokes and thoughts and dreams and facts and observations on the tip of its finger like a Harlem Globetrotter at a showing-off convention, but it does so with such surefootedness, such deft rhythm and rhyme, that the poems are joys to read aloud. They sing themselves out of your mouth and will stick in the minds of kids and grown-ups everywhere they get heard. Schechter, it seems to me, is way up there with the great American kids' poets, a real Shel Silverstein for today's generation.-A. F. HarroldIt's entertaining-sometimes hilarious, sometimes beautiful, always thought-provoking-and nothing short of brilliant.-Diana Murray, author of City Shapes, Summer Color! and the Unicorn Day series
The Red Ear Blows Its Nose
The Red Ear Blows Its Nose is "a dazzling tour de force" (Kenn Nesbitt). Often hilarious, always thoughtful, this debut collection from award-winning poet Robert Schechter proves that he is "clearly one of the most accomplished poets writing for children today" (Valerie Bloom MBE). Complemented by S. Federico's charming illustrations, The Red Ear Blows Its Nose will delight both children and adults alike, and is destined to become a classic, standing alongside A Child's Garden of Verses, Now We Are Six, and Where the Sidewalk Ends on children's and library bookshelves for years to come.PRAISE FOR THE RED EAR BLOWS ITS NOSE: Short, punchy, and clever poems, as if Shel Silverstein and Ogden Nash had a baby. Some are only two lines long. My favorite: "When livestock salesmen cannot sleep, / do they lie in bed discounting sheep?" Wow!-Jane Yolen, author of the How Do Dinosaurs booksWhat a splendid collection of poetry. Here are poems that fizz with imagination, wisdom, and an infectious exuberance at the sheer wonder of words. Beautifully crafted and terrifically funny, this is a book for children (and grown-ups) to return to again and again.-Kate Wakeling, winner, 2017 CLiPPA (UK)You'll feel like a "cool in-the-know one" when you read Robert Schechter's clever collection of poems. This book will open your mind up to a world where foxes cartwheel through trombones, a horse might choose to moo, and you can dive into a lake filled with yellow puffs of popcorn. Children who are reading (and thinking) beyond their age level will love it; you will, too. If you're a fan of John Ciardi and Richard Wilbur and X. J. Kennedy, or Jack Prelutsky and J. Patrick Lewis and Kenn Nesbitt, you'll want to add Robert Schechter to your list of favorite poets!-Janet Wong, winner of the 2021 NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for ChildrenThe Red Ear Blows Its Nose is a dazzling tour de force of ingenious poems that sparkle with Schechter's witty, wonderful wordplay. Read this book. Your brain will thank you. Mine did.-Kenn Nesbitt, former Children's Poet Laureate (2013-15)Robert Schechter's poems sing with irrepressible joy. His humor, wit, and verbal dexterity make The Red Ear Blows Its Nose a book that both children and adults will want to read over and over and over again. He is clearly one of the most accomplished poets writing for children today.-Valerie Bloom MBE, winner, 2022 CLiPPA (UK)Schechter's The Red Ear Blows Its Nose is a masterful collection from a masterful poet. Not only does every poem take you somewhere new, spinning ideas and jokes and thoughts and dreams and facts and observations on the tip of its finger like a Harlem Globetrotter at a showing-off convention, but it does so with such surefootedness, such deft rhythm and rhyme, that the poems are joys to read aloud. They sing themselves out of your mouth and will stick in the minds of kids and grown-ups everywhere they get heard. Schechter, it seems to me, is way up there with the great American kids' poets, a real Shel Silverstein for today's generation.-A. F. HarroldIt's entertaining-sometimes hilarious, sometimes beautiful, always thought-provoking-and nothing short of brilliant.-Diana Murray, author of City Shapes, Summer Color! and the Unicorn Day series
Listen Up
In this poetry chapbook, seventeen-year-old poet, author, and journalist Vivian Rong learns that the world is a work in progress and documents her desires, feelings, hardships, and hopes through poems geared toward Generation Z. This chapbook showcases heartfelt poems addressing today's issues important to the author such as racism, climate change, and others. Listen Up is a piece of work for those who believe in change.
Catalogue of Ripening
No one is safe in the world of Sabrina Guo's electrifying debut, Catalogue of Ripening. The village fish are poisoned with mercury. Children rehearse their endings with lockdown drills. A seawall becomes the sea. Balancing narrative impulse and lyric flair, Guo takes us on a journey from childhood to adolescence, from innocence to knowledge-the world no longer a site of wonder but corruption, contamination, cancer. Through poems that realize the world's capacity for violence first in language, then in action, Guo captures the unique anxieties-and joys-of growing up in Generation Z.
Thoughts of a teenager
There are a lot of difficulties that teenagers go through. It is necessary to talk about everything that a teenager goes through. This book is a collection of poems that shows a few out of many difficulties in a teenager's life. Thoughts of a teenager include many topics related to what a teenager goes through. This book shows the process of healing. It starts with poems related to problems that a teenager faces, for example: fitting in, friendship issues, growing up, many more and ends with motivational poems. I hope whoever reads this book understands that they are not alone. There are many like them out there going through the same things.
INSECTilicious
Ever wondered how would schools look for Cockroaches? Or ever thought how would insects shop in a mall? Re-open the doors of imagination and enter the mesmerizing world of insects! Welcome to the hilarious poetic stories of insects covering cockroaches, lizards, ants and even mice!
Poems from the heart
""What would life be if we had no courage to attempt anything?"" I'm very happy to introduce my poetic lines and my own thoughts, from this, one can definitely understand the love I have towards it. Just thought of publishing my knowledge. My writings will be mainly based on girls' feelings (bliss). Every single word form this publication has a lot of deep meanings, which can be naturally felt while reading. You can even dedicate some of these to your loved ones, as a present wherever it fits. And this is just the first part of POEMS FROM THE HEART, more to come, stay tuned!
Everything Comes Next
Kirkus Reviews Best Books of the 21st Century (So Far)"Emotionally resonant and stirring." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)"Lucky the reader who would have this collection lying around for visiting and revisiting." --Horn Book magazineThis celebratory book collects in one volume award-winning and beloved poet Naomi Shihab Nye's most popular and accessible poems. Featuring new, never-before-published poems; an introduction by bestselling poet and author Edward Hirsch, as well as a foreword and writing tips by the poet; and stunning artwork by bestselling artist Rafael L籀pez, Everything Comes Next is essential for poetry readers, classroom teachers, and library collections.Everything Comes Next is a treasure chest of Naomi Shihab Nye's most beloved poems and features favorites such as "Famous" and "A Valentine for Ernest Mann" as well as widely shared pieces such as "Kindness" and "Gate A-4." The book is an introduction to the poet's work for new readers as well as a comprehensive edition for classroom and family sharing. Writing prompts and tips by the award-winning poet make this an outstanding choice for aspiring poets of all ages.
Golden Cogitation
This book is a collection of poetry. It does not focus on one theme but deals with various topics. It talks about life, love, light, universe and more. I hope you find a good friend in "Golden Cogitation".
Stone Soup Magazine
The November 2022 issue of Stone Soup, the literary magazine 100% written and illustrated by kids age 13 and younger. Stone Soup has been inspiring young readers and celebrating the brilliance of its young creators since 1973; we currently publish eleven issues a year, each filled with short stories, memoir, poetry, and artwork.
We Give Support, Not Advice
Jefferson High School's first LGBTQ support group is created after a student dies by suicide. As the new school year begins, six students join the group and sit in a circle every Monday afternoon-sometimes in silence, sometimes in heated dialogue-sharing pieces of their lives. Denice is the leader who wants to protect everyone; Vivian's feeling like an outsider because of her asexual identity; Angel's a rebel who can't bear the thought of coming out to his mom; Finn's an introvert whose parents made them leave after coming out as trans; Johnny's an outgoing performer dealing with his parents' divorce; and Lexie's an ally, just here to support. As the students begin to discover different facets of their identities, they grapple with a lot of questions: How can we best support someone through a difficult time? What does it mean to share affinity when we don't share the same identities? And what does it really mean to be a member of the queer community? "Using gorgeous poetic verse, Matty Bennett brilliantly captures the stories of a group of queer teens reconciling their dreams with reality. It's a book I wish I had access to during my formative years. We Give Support, Not Advice is timely, pertinent and essential for our LGBTQ+ youth." - Emanuel Xavier, author & activist"We Give Support, Not Advice is a quick, engaging, and important read. Matty Bennett's novel-in-verse takes a diverse group of characters, puts them in a room, and lets them tell their own story in a voice that is both accessible and lyrical. "Despite our fragments, we are / whole..." the students tell us. And we believe them. At its core, We Give Support, Not Advice is both a difficult and hopeful read. A necessary book in these times." - Jamie Beth Cohen, author of Wasted Pretty"The characters in Matty Bennett's novel-in-verse encapsulate the nuances of queerness-the awkwardness, the fury, the tenderness. It's a book I wish I had in high school, a time when I desperately needed queer camaraderie, especially in my grief. In We Give Support, Not Advice, ''we are reminded why we exist.'" - Lisa Summe, author of Say It Hurts
Thoughtful Thinking
This poetry book for children is crammed-full of interesting facts about everything from animals to weather conditions. There is also a ten-question comprehension and answer exercise for each poem to help consolidate the children's reading and understanding.A lovely cross-curricular book for Primary school students who enjoy learning about the world we live in.
Apple
NOW IN PAPERBACK! WINNER, AMERICAN INDIAN YOUTH LITERATURE AWARD HONOR, MICHAL L. PRINTZ AWARD LONGLIST, NATIONAL BOOK AWARD TIME 10 Best YA and Children's Books of the Year NPR Best of the Year Shelf Awareness Best of the Year Publishers Weekly Big Indie Books of Fall Amazon Best Book of the Month ​American Indians in Youth Literature Best of the Year​ CSMCL Best Multicultural Children's Books of the Year "Stirring.... Raw and moving."--TIME "Beautiful imagery and with words that soar and scald."--The Buffalo News "Easily one of the best books to be published in 2020. The kind of book bound to save lives."-- LitHub "A powerful narrative about identity and belonging." --Paste Magazine ★ "Timely and important." --Booklist (starred) ★ "Searing yet dryly funny." --The Bulletin (starred) ★ "Exceptional." --Shelf-Awareness (starred) ★​ "Captivating​." --S​chool Library Journal (starred) The term "Apple" is a slur in Native communities across the country. It's for someone supposedly "red on the outside, white on the inside." In Apple (Skin to the Core), Eric Gansworth tells his story, the story of his family--of Onondaga among Tuscaroras--of Native folks everywhere. From the horrible legacy of the government boarding schools, to a boy watching his siblings leave and return and leave again, to a young man fighting to be an artist who balances multiple worlds. Eric shatters that slur and reclaims it in verse and prose and imagery that truly lives up to the word heartbreaking.
Abuela, Don’t Forget Me
In his award-winning memoir Free Lunch, Rex Ogle's abuela features as a source of love and support. In this companion-in-verse, Rex captures and celebrates the powerful presence a woman he could always count on--to give him warm hugs and ear kisses, to teach him precious words in Spanish, to bring him to the library where he could take out as many books as he wanted, and to offer safety when darkness closed in. Throughout a coming of age marked by violence and dysfunction, Abuela's red-brick house in Abilene, Texas, offered Rex the possibility of home, and Abuela herself the possibility for a better life. Abuela, Don't Forget Me is a lyrical portrait of the transformative and towering woman who believed in Rex even when he didn't yet know how to believe in himself.
Reading Fear in Flavian Epic
This book examines the textual representations of emotions, fear in particular, through the lens of Stoic thought and their impact on depictions of power, gender, and agency. It first draws attention to the role and significance of fear, and cognate emotions, in the tyrant's psyche, and then goes on to explore how these emotions, in turn, shape the wider narratives. The focus is on the lengthy epics of Valerius Flaccus' Argonautica, Statius' Thebaid, and Silius Italicus' Punica. All three poems are obsessed with men in power with no power over themselves, a marked concern that carries a strong Senecan fingerprint. Seneca's influence on post-Neronian epic can be felt beyond his plays. His Epistles and other prose works prove particularly illuminating for each of the poet's gendered treatment of the relationship between power and emotion. By adopting a Roman Stoic perspective, both philosophical and cultural, this study brings together a cluster of major ideas to draw meaningful connections and unlock new readings.
Stone Soup Magazine
The February 2018 issue of Stone Soup, the literary magazine 100% written and illustrated by kids age 13 and younger. Stone Soup has been inspiring young readers and celebrating the brilliance of its young creators since 1973; we currently publish eleven issues a year, each filled with short stories, memoir, poetry, and artwork.
Inklings Book 2022
Dive into the Inklings Book and be swept into adventure, time travel, a fantastical forest, and even the quiet of a moonlit night. The stories and poems included in this year's anthology are filled with courage, hope, empathy, and joy.Society of Young Inklings' fourteenth annual Inklings Book anthology features stories and poems by youth authors in grades three through nine. Each piece is paired with a letter from the youth writer's author-mentor, who guided them through a personalized revision, plus an interview about the experience. The result is this extraordinary collection of stories and poems showcasing the power of youth voices and the craft of creative writing and revision. Whether you're looking for an excellent read, inspiration for your own writing, or both, you've found the just-right book.Youth authors featured in this collection: Desiree Arevalo-GilEvelyn BloombergSteven CavrosCaroline CuiAlexa DaleidenCamden DeOliveiraAidan FeltMolly FeltHenley FergusonJordan GroocockIago Macknik-CondeNova Macknik-CondeWilliam MillerMariam OsmanNaomi PondAmelia PozzoNaiara Ray da RochaDanica RicheyNoelle TorgersonLily TuviPhoebe WagnerLydia WedanMentor-authors featured in this collection: Jodi Anderson-WolhaupterJ.J. AustrianPhilomena BlockBetty CulleyGina DeCianiMalar GanapathiappanKesha GrantErin HaldenNaomi KinsmanAvalon Felice LeeJustine ManzanoMelody ReedLisa Frenkel RiddioughBeth SpencewoodElizabeth VerdickAshley WalkerKristi WrightProceeds from sales of this book support the free-to-all annual Inklings Book Contest, in which all youth applicants receive personalized, encouraging feedback on their work. Learn more about Society of Young Inklings at www.younginklings.org.
What's This Preteen Sh*t
WHAT'S THIS PRE-TEEN SH*T.THIS BOOK IS A COLLECTION OF POETRY. I'M 12 YEARS OLD AND I HAVE SEEN A LOT IN MY LIFE. SO, BEFORE YOU BLAME MY ATTITUDE ON BEING A PRETEEN WHY DON'T YOU READ TO UNDERSTAND ME.
Windy Days
An award-winning celebration of windy weather, now in boardbook! The creators of Snow Days and Sunny Days return with a newToddler Tough padded hardcover featuring signature collage art and whimsicalrhyme.
Rhymes From The Heart
Rhymes From The HeartAn Intriguing collection of poetry that touches the very soul. Poems that are meant to help the reader to find peace in their words and joy and hope to those searching for it.