Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Module 14 - Comets, Stars, the Moon, and Mars: Space Poems and Paintings by Douglas Florian

Florian, D. (2007). Comets, Stars, the Moon, and Mars: Space Poems and Paintings. Orlando: Harcourt.

Genre Category: Poetry
Age Range: Ages 4 to 12
Assessment of the book’s quality: Simple, humorous, short and lyrical poems accompanied by vibrant illustrations of paintings and collage. Contains a glossary and a bibliography
Assessment of the book’s potential use with children: In a library setting, the book can be used as a display to showcase poetry week. It can also be used for storytime.
Assessment of the book’s child appeal: Appealing for children interested in space and discovery, and poetry.

Summary:
This book contains twenty amusing poems about space and the universe. There are short poems from the moon to the stars, about the planets, celestial objects, and celestial surroundings.

Reaction and Impressions:
Easy to remember, memorize and recite. Addictive, fun and amusing poems, each one touching on the subject of the planets, comets or the universe in a very easy flow that will appeal to younger children.  What really stands out in this book of poems is the outstanding illustrations and cut outs with vibrant colors and shapes that show glimpses of the next page.  Each poem touches My overall favorite is “A Galaxy” which twirls into a spiral. Included with the book is a “Galactic Glossary” and “Bibliography and Links to Further Reading"


"Nothing gladdens the heart of believers in good poetry for children more than a new collection by Florian, whose verses and paintings consistently capture the essence of his featured themes. This one literally sings the music of the spheres. Twenty playfully lyrical poems treat topics such as the universe, the individual planets, constellations, and black holes. Each selection is presented on its own spread and adorned with a magical painting done in gouache, collage, and rubber stamps on brown paper. Circles abound in the artwork, and many pages have round cut-outs that lead into the next picture. For example, "the earth" ("Two-thirds water./One-third land./Valleys deep./Mountains grand") is illustrated with a colorful globe decorated with circled collage prints of animals and plants. A smaller orb appears nearby, made from a cut-out circle that reveals part of the illustration for the next selection, "the moon." Some of the paintings incorporate mythological names and images. The pleasing blend of faded shades and brilliant colors, of old-fashioned prints and fanciful sketches, makes the illustrations seem both antique and high-tech. An appended "Galactic Glossary" provides additional information. In both language and artwork, Florian strikes the perfect balance between grandeur and whimsy. Like Myra Cohn Livingston and Leonard Everett Fisher's Space Songs (Holiday House, 1988; o.p.), this book is a work of art worthy of the vastness of its subject." _ School Library Journal

"Stunning mixed-media illustrations accompany a series of poems that celebrate the wonder and mystery of space. From the universe, the sequence narrows its focus to the galaxy, the solar system and then each body in turn, from the sun to poor demoted Pluto, and beyond. The verse is characteristically playful, wrapping itself around astronomical facts with ease. Readers will learn about the temperature and size of the sun, our moon's phases and Voyager 2's discovery of Neptune's rings. Delightful as the poems are, however, it's this volume's illustrations that surpass. Bright gouache on brown paper bags lend texture to each spread; stamped words allow the illustrations to incorporate such details as names of moons and "sun" in several different languages; collage elements add further whimsy to the whole. To top off this feast for the eyes, occasional die-cuts provide telescopic windows onto adjoining spreads, firmly establishing for the reader the truth that space is a vast continuum, with new surprises in every corner of the sky. Each poem receives a thumbnail gloss at the end, offering additional facts or extending the information presented earlier. Glorious." _ Kirkus Reviews

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