Please leave your link to poetic goodness below!
Of course I want to share just a little about The Mistakes That Made Us: Confessions from Twenty Poets, selected by Irene Latham and Charles Waters, illus. by Mercè López (Carolrhoda/Lerner Publishing), as it releases next Tuesday, October 1! So many thanks to those who have shared about it already. :)
This poetry anthology is the first to hit the market, but it's actually the second one Charles and I have curated. It just got its second ★ STARRED REVIEW... this time from Booklist. Thank you, Booklist!
Charming and insightful...A gentle reminder of the stepping stones making up the path to growth, discovery, and creativity."
We're super-excited about sharing it with all of you! I mean, what brave poets...I could go on and on about all of the poets and poems and how special I think this book is. Today I shall contain myself and share just two things:
1. Mercè López is pretty amazing. You may remember her gorgeous work on Lion of the Sky by Laura Purdie Salas.
For this book, since the poems are autobiographical, she asked for reference photos of the poets as children. And then she included ALL of us on the cover!
See below for a labeled (by first name) version of the cover. I've listed the full names of all the contributors below the photo so that you can match them up!
Contributors (clockwise, starting with wee me - just right of center, blondie with a chickadee on her shoulder) : Irene Latham, Linda Sue Park, Allan Wolf, David Elliott, Vikram Madan, Tabatha Yeatts, Naomi Shihab Nye, Lacresha Berry, Jaime Adoff, Jorge Argueta, Matt Esenwine (upside down!), Darren Sardelli, George Ella Lyon, Jane Yolen, Douglas Florian, Margarita Engle, Kim Rogers, JaNay Brown-Wood, Charles Waters, April Halprin Wayland (with whom I am enjoying a lovely conversation -- friends, this is true in real life, and Mercè had no way of knowing it...kismet)!
2. The only poem cut from the collection was mine.
Charles and I divided the book into four categories of mistakes:
STOLEN
And now I'm excited to share my latest ArtSpeak: FOLK ART poem. It's a tricube inspired by a piece by Georgia artist Cornbread. I've left a few process notes below the poem. Thanks so much for reading.
Poem Found in a Ditch at Dusk
Little fawn
made of twigs
and moonspots
you haven't
yet learned to
twitch or flee—
nearby, masked
by trees, your
mother waits.
-Irene Latham
Some process notes: I was short on time writing this poem, so I chose my stress-response form: tricube! I mean three stanzas of three lines with three syllables per line...how hard can it be? HA!
I was cruising along through the first two stanzas, but then I really struggled with the final stanza.
Because the second stanza brings up the issue of innocence and safety -- and we all know a fawn alone isn't safe at all! -- but how could I leave children with that potentially ominous conclusion? I couldn't.
So I tried all sorts of moves in the final stanza. I played with wonder, awe, and play. I brought the poem back to me, the human. But none of it worked.
At which point my son Eric who's visiting walked into the room. I read him the first two stanzas, and he said, "well, the fawn is not really alone, is it?"
Indeed! With those words I was off and running, feeling tremendous relief for this little fawn, and I knew I needed to give child-readers the fawn's moment of freedom/innocence/curiosity but with a watchful mother, too. xo