iF Poems (Clickworks Ltd./Chocolate Creative Ltd, $0.99; All Ages), edited by Allie Esiri and Rachel Kelly, is a collection of works authored by 102 poets, many of which are narrated. The app offers a number of access points: categories, age level, author, title, first line, and sometimes, first word. In all, there are 12 categories ranging from “Growing Up” and “Short and Sweet” to “War, History & Death” and “About Poetry.” Under each section the poems are sorted by age (0-6, 7-12, or 13+). While the focus is both classic and British (Percy Bysshe Shelley, The Brontës, Robert Lewis Stevenson, William Wordsworth, William Shakespeare), there are surprises (Tim Burton’s “Stick Boy And Match Girl In Love”), a bit of mischief (Mary Howitt’s “The Spider And The Fly”), and plenty of humor (13th century Saadi’s “Observe This Precept Whenever You Can.”) A paragraph-length biographical note on the author of the poem precedes each selection, and Natasha Low’s image of a tree trunk filled with words and letters frames it.
Luis Zelaya, talks about his poetry in 'City Blossoms' (Arcade Sunshine Media )
City Blossoms (Arcade Sunshine Media; $1.99; Gr 7 Up) is a teen-authored digital anthology of 50 poems. The selections were written by students from four Washington, DC, high schools, who came together to think about and write verse in workshops sponsored by 826DC, a nonprofit group that offers programs for students age 6-18, designed to "explore their creativity and improve their writing skills." The anthology is part of a collaborative book project with the President's Committee on Arts and Humanities, and features entries both personal and political in nature. A video introduction by the educators involved in the project and the poet Kyle Dargan, who wrote the foreward to the book, highlights aspects of the program and some of the students who participated in it. Also featured are four of the anthology’s contributors who read their works and talk about themselves and what writing poetry means to them. As Rashawnda Williams explained, the workshop she participated in allowed her to step out of her element and "try something new...if I'm sad or angry...[or] having a problem with friends, it's easier...[writing] releases that energy into the poem." The video portion of the app is framed in artwork (which disappears when viewing the readings in full screen), but the anthology portion is plain: black print on white screen. A table of contents offers a listing and the poems can be read one by one by swiping through the volume, or accessed quickly using the scrubber bar at the bottom of the screen. This would be a terrific production to share with students about to embark on a poetry unit, or to spark a discussion about poetic expression. The teens involved will convince listeners that writing poetry is both a worthwhile and doable endeavor. The app may also be of interest to high school students interested in documenting some of their own work or a program they are involved in.Eds. Note: A percentage of the cost of iF and The Love Book go to fund the work of Save the Children.
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