Category Archives: Reading

“The miracle of incantation” (or: Why I’m making the kids memorize poems)

The meaning of poetry is to give courage. A poem is not a puzzle that you the dutiful reader are obliged to solve. It is meant to poke you, get you to buck up, pay attention, rise and shine, look alive, get a grip, get the picture, pull up your socks, wake up and die right. … But what really matters about poetry and what distinguishes poets from say, fashion models or ad salesmen, is the miracle of incantation in rendering the gravity and grace and beauty of the ordinary world and thereby lending courage to strangers. This is a necessary thing.

(from Garrison Keillor’s introduction to “Good Poems for Hard Times,” which is an entirely wonderful collection of poems that you should own.)

I thought that perhaps April was National Poetry Month because it’s the cruelest month and thereby the month in which our souls need the most bolstering. But I was wrong about that. According to Poets.org, the poetry powers that be chose April because it was the month when “poetry could be celebrated with the highest level of participation. … April seemed the best time within the year to turn attention toward the art of poetry — in an ultimate effort to encourage poetry readership year-round.”

I took a class in poetry writing in college, and every single poem I wrote was awful. Unreservedly awful. You’d think I’d have learned my lesson then, but I woke up in the wee hours last night and a poem was trying to write itself in my head. I didn’t wake up enough to write it down, but I can say with absolute certainty that it would also have been awful. (It was a conversation, and the last line was “And I said.” Best that I didn’t try to record it, I think.) Anyway, I’m glad that the world has people in it who are good and even great at writing poetry.

This funny thing is from toothpastefordinner.com
This funny thing is from toothpastefordinner.com

It is entirely possible that I was supposed to memorize a poem at some point in my academic history. I don’t remember such an event, though. I’m not sure if that’s because we weren’t required to do it or maybe I just didn’t comply. But I think memorization is good exercise for the brain, and I wanted the children to have a collection of great poetry on hand at a moment’s notice. So memorization and recitation have been and will be a big part of their educations.

We go over the poem Poppy is currently working to learn every day, and we review a few of the previously memorized poems each day, too. I use the Charlotte Mason memory system for keeping the poems organized. All you need is an index card box, some labels and a bunch of index cards (and also a pen). It takes a little time to set it up initially, but it’s very easy to use after that. So long as no small boys upend the box, thus requiring you to put it all back in order again. Simply Charlotte Mason has a very nice tutorial on setting the system up. The Poetry Foundation is my favorite online source for poetry. They have a wonderful search feature that allows you to narrow your search by subject, occasions or region, among other things. You can also filter any search by “poems that are good for children,” which is ridiculously helpful.

So what sort of poems is a 5-year-old capable of memorizing? Just about any of them, I think. Poppy’s memorized a few this year that I wasn’t sure she’d be able to do because of length or lack of regular rhythm or rhyme, but she surprised me every time. Some of them have taken a few weeks, but she’s memorized every poem that I’ve given her. She has 7 weeks of kindergarten left, and I’ll probably have her memorize at least 4 or 5 more poems by the end of the year. But here’s what she’s memorized thus far: Continue reading “The miracle of incantation” (or: Why I’m making the kids memorize poems)

The things I’m reading: A few good books about war

One of my two favorite classes in college was listed in the course catalog as “Vietnam literature.” I thought it sounded interesting, so I signed up for it. Only to find out that it was actually “Literature of the Vietnam War,” which was at first disappointing. Then the class actually started. It was a small class, and we were able to have some great discussions. We even went on what I believe was the one and only field trip of my college career. We’d read Tim O’Brien’s “The Things They Carried” — which is, it should be noted, so horrific and awful and The Things a Brother Knowsheartbreaking and true (or not) and also sometimes even funny — and he was doing a reading in a city about 6 hours away. So we decided we’d borrow a school van and trek down there, and it was a wacky and lovely time.

I’ve read a lot more “war fiction” since that class. I don’t care for the very detailed, this-battle-happened-like-this sort of thing but rather the emotional and aftermath stuff. Dana Reinhardt’s “The Things a Brother Knows” is the first book about the war in Iraq that I’ve read. Although it might be about Afghanistan; I don’t think the location is every specifically mentioned. Wherever the war is, “The Things a Brother Knows” is the story of a boy whose 18-year-old brother joins the Marines right out of high school, goes to said war and then comes home. He’s wounded, but not physically, and the whole family is struggling to deal with that. It isn’t a terribly long book, but it’s effective. I read it in its entirety last night, and it made me cry a few times. It also made me go to bed far too late and thus be overly sleepy today. (OK, fine. Books don’t make people stay up too late. People make people stay up too late.)

So! If you like books about families and sadness and dealing with things, you should read “The Things a Brother Knows.” And also “The Things They Carried.” Both of which can the found in the “Things” section of your favorite local book emporium.

(Thus ends the Lamest Book Review Ever.)

And here’s what I’ve been reading

NaBloPoMo 2010Was “The Magnificent Ambersons” really the last book I wrote about? I guess I must’ve disliked it more than I thought. Here’s what I’ve read since:

The Postman Always Rings Twice” by James Cain

Remember when I was trying to read the Modern Library 100? This was the end of that mission. This was published in 1934, and it was far more, um, passionate than I was expecting. It’s a pretty twisted crime story.

A Visit from the Good Squad” by Jennifer Egan

I don’t remember what this was about at all, but here’s what I wrote in my reading journal: “This may have been an overly ambitious project. Also: It’s a pretty distressing image of the future — even more so since it’s easy to envision it actually happening.”

Born Round” by Frank Bruni

This is the memoir of a formerly obese restaurant reviewer. It’s great, and it made me laugh and cry. Really.

The Help” by Kathryn Sockett

I kept reading about how wonderful this book was, so I finally reserved it at the library. I was on the wait list forever, then once I got the book? I couldn’t put it down. I may have teared up a little at the end.

Right Ho, Jeeves” by PG Wodehouse

The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood

I enjoy a good dystopian-future story. This is a really good and very distressing one.

Animal Dreams” by Barbara Kingsolver

The Lacuna” by Barbara Kingsolver

Beloved” by Toni Morrison

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake” by Aimee Bender

Homicide in Hardcover” by Kate Carlisle

This Must Be the Place” by Kate Racculia

The Wonder Spot” by Melissa Bank

From the reading journal: “This made me crabby.” I don’t know why. Maybe I should be more specific in that thing.

Oryx & Crake” by Margaret Atwood

More bleak futures from Atwood! This one’s pretty weird.

The Year of the Flood” by Margaret Atwood

This is sort of a companion novel to “Oryx & Crake.” It’s also on the weird side.

Crooked Letter Crooked Letter” by Tom Franklin

The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins

This series was impossible to stop reading.

Catching Fire” by Suzanne Collins

Mockingjay” by Suzanne Collins

Backseat Saints” by Joshilyn Jackson

The current count in the 2010 booklist is 41. I haven’t been actively going after a 52 books in a year sort of thing, but maybe I ought to give it a shot.