Advisory Lists · Poetry

Native American Poetry

Here is a  list of works of poetry consisting of  children’s , young adult  and adult Native American poetry. Descriptions are from the NYPL catalogue. Please check these titles and others at your local library.

Children

thirteen Moons

Thirteen moons on Turtle’s back: a Native American year of moons by Joseph Bruchac

Celebrates the seasons of the year through poems from the legends of such Native American tribes as the Cherokee, Cree, and Sioux.

Navajo visions

Navajo: Visions and Voices Across the Mesa by  Shonto Begay

A Navajo artist and writer combines his paintings and poetry to provide insight into the lives of his people, exploring creation stories, childhood memories, and tribal rituals.

walking on earth

Walking on earth and touching the sky : poetry and prose by Lakota youth at Red Cloud Indian School

Collects poetry written by Lakota students at Red Cloud Indian School in South Dakota on such topics as the history of oral tradition, the struggles of everyday life, and their personal connections to the natural world.

spirit walker

Spirit Walker : poems by Nancy Wood

The author’s poems reflect the deep spirituality and values of the Taos Indians and their interconnectedness to the earth.

Dancing Teepees

Dancing teepees : poems of American Indian youth

An illustrated collection of poems from the oral tradition of Native Americans.

Hiawatha

Hiawatha by Henry  Wadsworth  Longfellow 

Verses from Longfellow’s epic poem depict the boyhood of Hiawatha.

When the moon is full

When The Moon is Full  by Penny Pollock

Portrays the twelve full moons of the year, calling a traditional native American name to each month and following the monthly path in all its wonder. Includes a question-and-answer section providing moongazers with scientific information about the moon.

When The Rain Sings

When The Rain Sings  poems by young Native Americans

A collection of poems written by young Native Americans, inspired by or matched with photographs of artifacts and people from the National Museum of the American Indian.

Touching the distance

Touching the distance : Native American riddle-poems  by  Swann Brian 

A collection of brief poems, most only a single line, adapted from the riddles of various Native American tribes. The illustrations reveal the answers to the riddles.

Teen

Earth Always Endures

Earth always endures: Native American poems  by Edward S. Curtis

Sixty poems–chants, prayers, and songs– from Native American tribes across the continent, accompanied by forty photographs by Edward S. Curtis.

night is gone

Night is gone, day is still coming: stories and poems by American Indian teenagers and young adults 

Collects poetry, prose, and memoirs from fifty-seven young American Indians expressing their thoughts and views on such topics as life, love, heritage, family, and identity.

 

Serpent's Tongue

The serpent’s tongue: prose, poetry, and art of the New Mexico Pueblos  by edited by Nancy Wood.

A colorful anthology captures the Pueblo culture through an array of stories, poems, and paintings depicting the Pueblo way of life as well as their celebrations, beliefs, symbols, and more.

Draming In Indians

Dreaming in Indian: contemporary Native American voices  edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale

In a graphics-intensive, magazine-style format, 50 Native/Indian contributors from Canada and the United States present visual art (photography, drawings, paintings), poems, interviews and remembrances to show what it means to be Native/Indian today. Topics range from stereotypes and discrimination to discussions of the contributors’ careers in activism, modeling, music, visual arts and more.

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New Poets of Native Nations

New poets of Native nations by edited by Heid E. Erdrich

“New Poets of Native Nations gathers poets of diverse ages, styles, languages, and tribal affiliations to present the extraordinary range and power of new Native poetry. Heid E. Erdrich has selected twenty-one poets whose first books were published after the year 2000 to highlight the exciting works coming up after Joy Harjo and Sherman Alexie. Collected here are poems of great breadth–long narratives, political outcries, experimental works, and traditional lyrics–and the result is an essential anthology of some of the best poets writing now.”–Back cover.

An American Sunrise

An American sunrise : poems by  Harjo, Joy Harjo places swatches of history between her entrancing lyrics like specimens of poisonous plants in a naturalist’s log, beginning with President Andrew Jackson’s forced removal of Native Americans, including Harjo’s ancestors; she then follows the subsequent Trail of Tears back to the White House where the current occupant has hung a portrait of Jackson in the Oval Office.–booklist  

    

How To Dress A Fish

How to dress a fish by Chabitnoy, Abigail.In How to Dress a Fish, poet Abigail Chabitnoy, of Germanic and Aleut descent, addresses the lives disrupted by US Indian boarding school policy. She pays particular attention to the life story of her great grandfather, Michael, who was taken from the Baptist Orphanage, Wood Island, Alaska, and sent to Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania.

Advisory Lists · Non-Fiction · Poetry

Poetry Selection of The Week

Hello Everyone!

This is the last selection for National Poetry Month. Hope you all enjoyed the selections featured. Please check out this title and others at your local library,.

Happy Reading!!!

 

 

I Found An Endless Land

 Its promise flowering in lush fields

Jacket (2)

Purple mountains etching their majesty in pure air

 

Flat plains that absorbed the warm summer rains

Canyons that swallowed the imagination

And freedom

Freedom like water on the tongues of thirsting men

Freedom as sweet as young love

From We Are America: A Tribute From The Heart by Walter Dean Myers and Illustrated by Christopher Myers

Advisory Lists · Non-Fiction · Poetry

Poetry Selection of The Week

Hello Everyone!

This week I will be featuring two poems from two different collections that focus on science. One title is about the Earth and the  other  about the different creatures in a specific habitat, a meadow. Please check out these titles and others at  your local library.

Happy Reading!!!

 

 

Jacket

third one from the sun,

Earth’s blue and white majesty

dwarfs her lunar child

From Earth Verse: Haiku From The Ground Up by Sally M. Walker and Illustrated by William Grill

 

 

 


 

He

trots

through

meadow-gold grass

in dawn sunJacket (1)

furred

mysterious

a word

hunting

its own

meaning

Who is he?

From Butterfly Eyes and Other Secrets Of The Meadow by Joyce Sidman and Illustrated by Beth Krommes

 

 

 

 

 

 

Advisory Lists · Poetry · Series

Poetry Selection of The Week

“A Bird Came Down The Walk”

A bird came down the walk

He did not know I saw;

He bit an angleworm in halvesJacket (2)

And ate the fellow, raw.

 

And then he drank a dew

From a convenient grass,

And then hopped sidewise to the wall

To let a beetle pass.

 

He glanced with rapid eyes

That hurried all abroad,

They looked like frightened beads, I thought;

He stirred his velvet head

 

Like one in danger; cautious,

I offered him a crumb,

And he unrolled his feathers

And rowed him softer home

 

Than oars divide the ocean,

Too silver for a seam,

Or butterflies, off banks of noon,

Leap, plashless, as they swim.

edited by Susan Snivley, Ph D and Illustrated  by Christine Davenier

from, Poetry For Kids Emily Dickinson

 

check out this title and others at your local library. Happy Reading!!!

Advisory Lists · Poetry · Series

Poetry Selection of the Week

“April Rain Song”

Let the rain kiss you.

Let the rain beat upon your head with silver liquid drops.Jacket (1)

Let the rain sing you a lullaby.

 

The rain makes still pools on the side walk.

The rain makes running pools in the gutter.

The rain plays a little sleep-song on our roof at night—

 

And I love the rain.

 

Written by Langston Hughes  and illustrated by Brian Pinkney from The Dream Keeper and Other Poems

 

check out this title and others at your local library. Happy reading!!!

Advisory Lists · Poetry

Stories In Verse

Hello Everyone!

Here are  children’s fiction  written in verse. Please out these titles and others at your local library. Happy Reading!!!

 

 

Emma’s  life changes when she has to move in with her japanese grandmother  in a summer before 9/11. Grades 4-7

Diana writes about her life and the changes that occur through poetry.

Grades 1- 4

Keet through the telling of stories finds her voice and aides her sick grandfather.

Grades 4-7

A biographical tale in verse. Grades 4-8

The ups and downs of a family trip told through different types of poetic forms.

Grades 1-4

Twelve-year-old Nick loves soccer and hates books, but soon learns the power of words as he wrestles with problems at home, stands up to a bully, and tries to impress the girl of his dreams.

Grades 6-10

Advisory Lists · Poetry · Series

Poetry Selection of the Week

Hello Everyone!!!

For the month of April  I will be posting  poems from  Children’s Poetry Collections that  I have at my library that I love. If you have ones that you love please share.

Jacket “Baby Birds”

Are there baby birds inside the nest yet?

Creep close and listen.

Can  you hear tiny little voices calling out?

It’s the chicks, with their beaks wide open,

saying, “Feed me, feed me,

feed me.”

written by Nicola Davies and Illustrated by Mark Herald from,

Outside Your Window: A First Book of Nature

 

Please out and this title and others at your local library. Happy reading!!!

Advisory Lists · Poetry

New Children’s Titles

Poetry 

 

Thunder Underground by Jane Yolen

A collection of poems the looks into the underground and digs deeper.

Feel The Beat: Dance Poems that Zing from Salsa to Swing  by Marilyn Singer

Poems that introduces the reader to different dances that exist in different cultures around the world.


 

Fairy-Tale/Folk Tale/Fable 

 

 

Beauty and the Beast retold by Cynthia Rylant

A tale as old as time retold with an interesting ending.

The Crane Girl  adapted  by Curtis Manley

A young boy saves a crane and his life is never the same.

Three Billy Goats Gruff  by Jerry Pinkney

A new look on an old fable.


Please let me know your thoughts below. Happy reading!

Advisory Lists · Poetry

Poetry About Nature

The earth contains many things. The Collections below are poems about the different nuances of the earth. Happy Reading!!!

 

Poetry

Poetry Wednesday: “I’ve Lost My Hippopotamus” by Jack Prelutsky

I love  Jack Prelutsky. He has a great sense of humor and a master at playing with words. Here is a selection from I’ve Lost My Hippotamus  which is also the title of the poem I am sharing today. Please check out this collection and Jack Prelutsky at your nearest library!

I’ve lost my hippotamus,

The situation’s werid.

JacketOne minute she was next to me,

Then poof! she disappeared.

It’s hard to lose a hippo,

For a hipp’s truly huge–

I’m sensing something fishy,

Some unsavory subterfuge.

I’ve searched and searched with no sucess,

I’ve yet to find a clue

To her status or location,

I’m unsure of what to do.

If you spot a hippopotamus

Where usually there’s none,

Please let me know, the odds are good

You’ve found my missing one.