This week's host is Catherine at Reading to the Core. |
Here at Author Amok, I'm sitting down to chat with picture book author Laura Gehl. Laura is based right here in Maryland. I was intrigued when Laura G. proposed a discussion of this question: Are rhyming picture books poetry?
Before our interview, I did some field testing. I took Laura's just-out book, And Then Another Sheep Showed Up, to Durham, North Carolina, and read it to my three-year-old nephew. And read it. And read it. By his request. Needless to say, I did not come home with the book.
Laura's new release is about a family of sheep whose small Passover Seder turns into a meal crammed with family and tradition. Find it at Kar-Ben. |
Laura G: I
talked about this question with Corey Rosen Schwartz, author of several great
rhyming books including The Three Ninja
Pigs. I don’t consider my own
rhyming picture books to be poetry, nor does Corey consider her own books to be
poetry. However, both of us agree that
there are rhyming picture books that
we consider poetry. For me, two examples
would be Good Night Moon by Margaret
Wise Brown and All the World by Liz
Garton Scanlon. It’s hard to put into
words just what makes these books seem like poetry, but tone, mood, rhythm, and
overall feel are definitely part of the package. Also, different readers may experience books
differently. If a reader believes one of
my books is poetry, that’s great! I’m
honored. But for me, they don’t read as
poetry.
Laura S: Does that mean, for you, the definition of poetry
extends beyond rhyme and meter? Is it tone or subject matter that makes a text
feel poetic?
Laura G: For
me, tone yes and subject matter no.
Any subject can be turned into poetry by a skilled poet. Take Shel Silverstein. He could turn a peanut butter sandwich or a
boa constrictor into a poem. Or a
pancake. Or monsters. Even Captain Hook.
Laura S: In your latest picture book, And Then Another
Sheep Turned Up, the illustrations and page turns emphasize rhythm and
rhyme. How do you think these poetic techniques support emerging reading
skills?
We all love
taking breaks. For beginning readers,
who are working hard to decode each word, breaks are especially helpful. In And
Then Another Sheep Turned Up, having a refrain helps beginning
readers. So does the repeated tagline “And
then another sheep turned up!” When
emerging readers come to those repeated lines, they can take a break and not
work so hard, because they have already decoded all of those words. Even outside of the repeated lines, rhythm
and rhyme can help beginning readers.
Take this verse:
Sharon Sheep came in at nine,
halfway through the seder meal.
“I’m sure ready to recline.
Getting here was an ordeal.”
Readers might
not recognize the words “recline” and “ordeal.”
But they do know the ending sounds these words need to have in
order to complete the verse, which makes decoding those two words much easier.
Laura S: The illustrations also help readers figure out
those unfamiliar words. And they give adults an opportunity to talk about new
words with the children they are reading to.
I brought And Then
Another Sheep Turned Up with me when I visited my three-year-old nephew. It
was a big hit with him. Once my nephew had some of the repeated lines down, we
could play a game where I said a line incorrectly (“And then another
hippopotamus turned up!”) and he corrected me. I like the way that structured
texts help build pre-reading skills and confidence. Why do you think poetic
techniques such as rhyme and repetition are easy to memorize, even for young
ones?
Laura G: Think
about how kids learn to talk—just by listening, with no formal teaching. Kids learn to talk by hearing jumbles of
words and gradually making sense of the jumbles, and early on they grab on to
the words they hear the most often. That
same skill, that they’ve honed since birth, comes into play when kids grab on
to a repeated line and remember it.
As far as
rhyme goes, kids do gravitate toward rhyme really early on. You can ask a three-year-old
to come up with rhymes for cat, and he or she will give you a whole list…but
the child is just as likely to say “lat” as to say “bat.” For young children, the sound is what matters, not whether the rhyming word is actually a real word. And feeling that joy in how words sound, not just what they mean, is a huge part of poetry,
right?
Laura S: I loved the wordplay in One Big Pair of
Underwear. Let’s talk about the joy of rhyming words, which are so much fun
to hear and to say. How does sharing
wordplay with children lay a groundwork for them to enjoy poetry?
Children can send Laura G. their drawings of animals wearing underwear. Laura posts the pictures at her website and they are hysterical. |
Laura G: Rhyming
picture books can be a bridge for kids between the familiar (books) and the
unfamiliar (poems).
Kids enjoy rhyming,
tongue twisters, alliteration, and consonance.
It’s all fun for them! If
wordplay is first introduced in the context of a picture book to children who
already associate books with family, love, and fun…then poetry using those
same devices may seem more accessible and less foreign to those kids.
Laura S: I agree. One of our favorite books when my children
were little was Dr. Seuss’s Fox in Socks.
They loved watching Mom mess up tongue twisters. The grander my mistakes, the
more they laughed. We howled over the wordplay in Charlotte Pomerantz’ The Piggy in the Puddle. What are some
of your other favorite rhyming picture books to share with family?
Laura G: Julia
Donaldson’s books are wonderful. Jane
Yolen’s for sure. Corey Rosen Schwartz’s
fractured fairy tales. Karma Wilson’s
Bear books. Also, some of Jan Thomas’s
books play with rhyme in a really fun way: The
Rhyming Dust Bunnies is a great one for younger kids.
Thanks for a great conversation, Laura!
Laura
Gehl is the author of ONE BIG PAIR OF UNDERWEAR, a Charlotte Zolotow Highly
Commended Title and Booklist Books for Youth Editors’ Choice for 2014; HARE AND
TORTOISE RACE ACROSS ISRAEL; AND THEN ANOTHER SHEEP TURNED UP; and the PEEP AND
EGG series (hatching spring 2016 from FSG/Macmillan). A former science
and reading teacher, she also writes about science for children and
adults. Laura lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland with her husband and four
children. Visit her online at www.lauragehl.com
and www.facebook.com/AuthorLauraGehl.
Enjoyed this discussion, Laura and Laura! Am anxious to see One Big Pair of Underwear. :)
ReplyDeleteYou will especially love the cookbook wielding hippos, Jama.
DeleteGreat post! I, too, agree that not all rhyming picture books are poetry, but some can be - and some, like 'Owl Moon,' are poetry that doesn't rhyme.
ReplyDeleteThat's a great example, Matt.
ReplyDeleteInteresting conversation. Perhaps when the books include "poetry" is when the poem itself can stand alone as a poem, can have or not have illustrations.
ReplyDeleteMy students and I love One Big Pair of Underwear!
ReplyDeleteGood to hear from a rhyming book author on the topic of "...but is it poetry?"
I suspected this would be a interesting discussion, and indeed it was. Thank you, Lauras, for such an insightful interview! I particularly liked learning about the ways in which rhyme and other poetic techniques support emerging readers. Congrats and best of luck to Laura G. on the release of AND THEN ANOTHER SHEEP TURNED UP!
ReplyDeleteWhat an insightful conversation. I think that rhyming picture books are all in the neighborhood of poetry but some books are certainly more poetic, some intentionally more playful, some intentionally more dramatic, etc. Thats what makes picture books the perfect neighborhood for kids to play and grow up in. Nice interview.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting discussion, Laura and Laura! So many great suggestions for mentor texts throughout this post. Thank you! =)
ReplyDelete