The Swamps of Sleethe
Poems From Beyond the Solar System
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2011
Reading Level
5
ATOS
6.6
Interest Level
K-3(LG)
نویسنده
Jimmy Pickeringشابک
9780375986314
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
January 19, 2009
The nation's first children's poet laureate fills a galaxy with weird, scary planets: his 19 poems describe places and creatures you wouldn't want to visit. On planet “Lonithor,” for example, “demon birds... eviscerate their prey./ And when they've disemboweled you,/ They'll pick apart your face”; on “Ogdofod” the monopods “will snare you in their nets,/ Then process you and package you/ To feed their hungry pets.” Pickering's (Skelly the Skeleton Girl
) amusing illustrations suggest images for a Tim Burton movie. A tourist on “Drifig Prime” resembles a frozen Corpse Bride and someone who stumbles on Planet Grob looks a lot like Edward Scissorhands. Less broad in its appeal than most of Prelutsky's previous titles, this over-the-top intergalactic odyssey will mostly please kids capable of relishing horror and its send-ups (“You laugh till you wish / You'd expire of laughter, / And in that same second, / you mercifully do”). For added fun, about half of the planet names are anagrams; a key is listed at the end. Ages 8–up.
March 1, 2009
Gr 3-6-Nineteen poems with jaunty rhythms lure readers to some very menacing planets. Almost all tell of the horrors to be found in worlds beyond our solar system: "The cooks of Gazook/Will reduce you to powder, /And use you to flavor/Their savory chowder." The bugs of Gum simply eat visitors alive. Planet Swole envelopes guests in despair, while Skreber kills them with laughter. The last poem shows alien explorers visiting an unfortunate planet where the inhabitants cause each other harm and suffer terribly. The final page turn reveals this planet to be one that readers know all too welland call home. Dark colors with sharp contrasts help define these worlds in mixed-media illustrations. Some of the unusual planet names are anagrams to solve with answers in the back of the book. Science-fiction and poetry lovers should unite over this slim and entertaining volume.Julie Roach, Cambridge Public Library, MA
Copyright 2009 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
March 1, 2009
Grades 3-5 Right off its apparent that Prelutsky had a grand old time concocting a brew of made-up words, critters, and locales for this collection of intergalactic poems. And with the titles offering such gristly mouthfulsas The Globulings of Wolvar Sprod, that fun is highly contagious. The poems follow a fairly basic formula, beginning with the introduction of a bizarre planet or slavering creature and ending with dire warnings of what would happen to any children unfortunate enough to find themselves trapped on such a planet or in the clutches of such a creature. He takes particular pleasure in batting around the rhythms of these horrendous fates (Your bones are icy splinters, / And your blood solidifies. / Your flesh becomes so frigid / It begins to crystallize) that would be really quite gross if they werent so wickedly clever and well constructed. Pickerings fiendish artwork matches him note for note and, in some cases, even outshines (or is it outdarks?) the rhymes. Its all very ghastly and icky, which is precisely why its so irresistible.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)
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