Imperfect II: poems about perspective: an anthology for middle schoolers

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Product Details
Price
$14.38
Publisher
History House Publishers
Publish Date
Pages
124
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.5 X 0.31 inches | 0.64 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780967915852

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About the Author
Laura Mucha is an ex-lawyer turned author and poet. Her work has won multiple awards and been featured on TV, radio and public transport, as well as in hospitals, hospices, prisons, books, magazines and newspapers around the world. Her debut book Love Factually/We Need to Talk About Love was described by Richard Curtis as 'much better and more useful than my film'. Laura also writes for children, and her writing has been described as 'a must for every school' by The School Librarian and 'stunningly original' by BookTrust. When not writing, Laura spends her time working with organisations such as UNICEF to try to improve the lives of children. @lauramucha
Buffy Silverman is the author of more than 90 nonfiction books for children, featuring topics from alligators to video games. Look for her nature-inspired poetry in anthologies and children's magazines, and visit her at www.buffysilverman.com.
Reviews

Publishers Weekly's BookLife, Editor's Pick

The second installment of the Imperfect poetry anthologies edited by author and poet Tabatha Yeatts is a thought-provoking, accessible collection for middle-schoolers that features poems from around 50 different authors, including Paul Laurence Dunbar, François Villon, and Carl Sandburg. What unites these disparate selections is the concept of perspective, which Yeatts represents with an image of Da Vinci's perspectograph. Da Vinci created this singular tool to help artists more accurately represent reality in paintings. The anthology itself acts as a perspectograph for its young readers, offering a window into reality and its complexities through poetry, offering inviting verse connected to relatable quandaries: "When what you want/ leaves you high and dry/ what you DO have/ will just have to satisfy," writes Mary Lee Hahn in the striking, direct "What You Want."

Imperfect II, though, offers readers satisfaction and surprise that they may not yet know they want. Most of the featured poems are simple and lyrical, focusing primarily on the perception of self and the self's perception of the outside world, with a particular emphasis on identity, as in Linda Kulp Trout's "Questions," where the speaker struggles with adults asking them what they want to be when they grow up: "How can I know/ what/ I want to be-/ I'm still trying/ to figure out/ ME!", and Rochelle Burgess and Laura Mucha's "Dropping the Ball," which delves into issues related to racism and empathy among two students on a basketball team.

No two readers are alike, and Yeatts has the diversity of her readership in mind, offering selections with traditional structures, like Robert Schechter's "Compared to What?", but also some uncommon forms, like Alana Devito's concrete poem "The Art Teacher Said," which features her words in the shape of a lizard. Middle-schoolers looking for an introduction to the possibilities of poetry and adults seeking an inclusive, empowering collection for young ones will find this an inspired addition to their libraries.

Takeaway: Poems for young readers delving into perception, identity, and confidence.

Comparable Titles: Naomi Shihab Nye's Honeybee, John Grandits's Technically, It's Not My Fault: Concrete Poems.