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Book of the Week--A Kick in the Head: An Everyday Guide to Poetic Forms by Paul B. Janeczko, sel., illus. by Chris Raschka

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From SLJ March 2005 (Starred Review)

Wendy Lukehart, Washington DC Public Library -- School Library Journal, 03/07/2005

A Kick in the Head: An Everyday Guide to Poetic Forms by Paul B. Janeczko, sel., illus. by Chris RaschkaJANECZKO, Paul B., sel. A Kick in the Head: An Everyday Guide to Poetic Forms. illus. by Chris Raschka. 61p. Candlewick. Apr. 2005. RTE $17.99. ISBN 0-7636-0662-6. LC 2004048508.

Gr 3-9–Following on the heels of their delightful introduction to concrete poetry, A Poke in the I (Candlewick, 2001), Janeczko and Raschka now join forces to explore poetic forms. An introduction presents an easy-to-swallow rationale for the many rules to follow, likening the restrictions to those found in sports: in both cases, rules challenge the players to excel in spite of limits. The repertoire then unfolds to showcase 29 forms, one to two poems per spread, building from a couplet, tercet, and quatrain to the less familiar and more complex persona poem, ballad, and pantoum. The selections are accessible without being simplistic; they span an emotional range from the tongue-in-cheek humor of J. Patrick Lewis’s “Epitaph for Pinocchio” to Rebecca Kai Dotlich’s moving “Whispers to the [Vietnam] Wall.” Each page is a tour de force of design, the pace and placement of art and text perfectly synchronized. Raschka’s characters and abstractions emerge from torn layers of fuzzy rice paper, intricately patterned Japanese designs, and solids, decorated and defined by quirky ink-and-watercolor lines. The expansive white background provides continuity and contrast to the colorful parade. The name of each form resides in the upper corner of the page, accompanied by a wry visual. A definition (in an unobtrusive smaller font) borders the bottom; more detail on each form is provided in endnotes. Readers will have the good fortune to experience poetry as art, game, joke, list, song, story, statement, question, memory. A primer like no other.

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