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Go to the new Kid's Catalog A new way to search! Una versión española del catálogo de la biblioteca. A spanish version of the library catalog.
 

Joyful Noise: Poems for Two Voices

by Paul Fleischman


Publishers Weekly :

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Fleischman and Beddows (I Am Phoenix) are paired again for another remarkable collection of poems written to be read, by two people, out loud. Mayflies, moths, crickets and other insects join voices in clever musical duets. Fireflies are ``insect calligraphers' who use their light as ink on the parchment of the night, cicadas ``chant from the treetops' their ``booming joyful noise,' and two honeybeesa queen and a droneexplain contrapuntally why they have the best and worst of lives. In one of the wittiest poems in the volume, two book lice discuss how they met on some dusty shelves, ``honeymooned in an old guide book on Greece' and adore each other in spite of opposite tasteshe prefers Shakespeare and she Spillane. Beddows's black-and-white drawings blend biology-text accuracy with charming cartoon fancies and keep pace with the imaginative verse. All ages.

Copyright 1988 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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School Library Journal :

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Gr 3 Up In this collection of 14 ``Poems for Two Voices' about insects, Fleisch man surpasses its companion volume, I Am Phoenix (Harper, 1985). He has com bined the elements of sound and meaning to create clear, lively images of a variety of insects. Elements of repetition, ono matopoeia, and alliteration are effectively used to create a character for each of these creatures, with fireflies ``Flickering, flitting, flashing' and mayflies ``lying, dy ing,' which make these poems a joy for reading aloud. In addition, elements of personality, both fictional and real, are presented with charming effect. The love lorn moth who yearns for the lightbulb and the book lice who overcome their differing ``tastes' represent the lighter side, while the digger wasp's reflection on the home it digs for children it will never see and ``Re quiem,' written for the victims of ``Fall's first killing frost,' represent real beha viors. Beddows uses personified black- and-white drawings to capture the feeling of the poems, including a sultry queen honeybee reclining on her couch. This book can join Bugs (Viking, 1976) by Mary Ann Hoberman and Never Say Ugh! to a Bug (Greenwillow, 1979) by Norma Farber as proof that insects are indeed the stuff of poetry. Barbara Chatton, Col lege of Education, University of Wyo ming, Laramie

Copyright 1988 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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