I'll be rounding up "old school" this week.
Leave your links in the comments.
I'll add them to the post as the day goes on.
But first, Moo.
Thank you, Kimberley Moran,
for sharing the ARC of this novel in verse,
due to be published August 30, 2016, by HarperCollins.
Somewhere,
there's a reader who will pick up this book
and know that's a Belted Galloway on the cover.
Somewhere,
there's a reader who has shown a heifer at the fair,
using a show stick to adjust the cow's stance.
Somewhere,
there's a reader who knows cow nostrils cow slobber cow plops.
Intimately.
These readers
will live inside the story of city-kids Reena and Luke
learning the small-town farm-kid Mainey life,
learning to get along with old Mrs. Falala,
learning to do things they never imagined they could do
or would do.
The rest of the readers
will watch jealously from the outside,
dreaming of freedom and fog and lobster boats.
All readers
will savor Creech's rich language
poetry
prose poems
words that skip and drip down the page
words that stretch and shout
words that
bellow
and
Moooooooooo.
HERE'S THE ROUNDUP! (moo...)
Robyn at Life on the Deckle Edge is pondering time and change, Amy Lowell and the Lowcountry of SC (plus three hokku).
Sally at Sally Murphy wrote three linked lunes...with a wink and a nod to her post from last week!
Emily Dickinson is helping Tara at A Teaching Life celebrate the recent rains.
Matt at Radio, Rhythm & Rhyme shares Carol Varsalona's Spring Seeds Gallery.
Keri at Keri Recommends has a vacation haiku from a getaway on the Little Red River in Arkansas.
Bridget's word play poem at Wee Words for Wee Ones will make you groan.
Dori at Dori Reads checks in from vacation in Montana with a glacier poem by a Kalispell student.
Laura at Laura Shovan has a mat-mom wrestling poem for us this week.
Diane at Random Noodling has bunny Haibun, Haiku and art this week!
At Kurious Kitty, Diane is celebrating Gustav Klimt's birthday with ekphrastic poetry written by Ferlinghetti.
Belted Galloways come in cinnamon, as well as dark chocolate. Image via Wikimedia. |
At Beyond LiteracyLink, Carol V. shares Jone's Summer Poem Swap poem and encourages us to visit the Spring Seeds Gallery, where you can revisit the Kidlitosphere Progressive poem from last April.
Steven at Crackles of Speech has an original poem for us today about home building.
Linda M. at A Word in Edgewise also has a pair of original poems, inspired by a Teachers Write challenge.
Chelanne at Books4Learning reviews Outside the Box by Karma Wilson.
Myra at Gathering Books highlights Daniel Finds a Poem and tells about her Poetry Workshop for bloggers and families.
At The Opposite of Indifference, Tabatha has chosen a pair of poems with quiet Buddha wisdom.
Brenda at Friendly Fairy Tales is contemplating stillness vs. music in an original poem.
Elaine at Wild Rose Reader has an original mask poem that speaks in the voice of everyone's "favorite" wildflower of summer!
Catherine at Reading to the Core shares an original poem that invites readers to slow down and take a closer look.
Heidi ponders the exact moment the new year arrives in her original poem at My Juicy Little Universe.
Carol W. at Carol's Corner spotlights a birder's journal that includes sketching and poetry.
Belted Galloway nostril close up via Pixaby. |
Molly at Nix the Comfort Zone shares a poem-in-progress about her recent family reunion.
Sylvia at Poetry for Children is celebrating TEN YEARS of blogging! As it turns out, this is her 811th post, and we all know which books to find shelved in the library with that number on their spines! How perfect is that? Well, then...811 cheers (or moos) for Sylvia!!
Julianne at To Read To Write To Be shares the connections that led her from a podcast to a beautiful blessing poem by Jane Hirshfield.
Linda B. at TeacherDance has some "wisdom of the ages" for these troubled times.
Tanita at {fiction, instead of lies} shares Sting lyrics to soothe our souls.
Margaret at Reflections on the Teche celebrates her mother-in-law's 85th birthday in an amazingly spectacular way!
What a treat! S. Evelyn at Notes Toward a Definition stumbled upon Patience Agbabi's revision of the General Prologue of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales: So. Much Fun.
More Emily Dickinson from Ruth at There is no such thing as a God-forsaken town.
At AliceNine, Alice shares a poem that's a "guiding beacon" for her.
Time to lie down in the shade. I think the roundup is almost finished. |
Claudette at 100 Words a Day shares an original haibun to celebrate (?) her recent hip surgery. How about some cheer(s) for Claudette?!?
And Carlie at Twinkling Along slipped in under the wire (West Coast midnight) with a poem about falling in love.