Millions of American kids live in big cities. Certainly, there are picture books and fiction books aplenty that are set in urban areas. There are, however, few poetry books for children that celebrate city life. I thought it would be a good idea to review two such poetry books. The first is
City I Love, a new collection by prolific anthologist and poet
Lee Bennett Hopkins. The second is
Sky Scrape/City Scape: Poems of City Life, an anthology compiled by
Jane Yolen that was first published more than a decade ago. These are two fine poetry books that would be wonderful additions to classroom libraries—especially in schools situated in urban districts.
City I Love
Poems by Lee Bennett Hopkins
Illustrated by Marcellus Hall
Abrams Books, 2009
This collection fittingly opens with a poem called
Sing a Song of Cities in which Hopkins explains that cities will sing back to us
—“in subway roars and rumbles/people-laughs, machine-loud rumbles.” The anthology contains other poems about city sounds, including one in which a mother pigeon requests that the city silence its sirens and quiet its rumbling traffic so her newborn babies can sleep. Another is about a man selling hot dogs and cold drinks who shouts out to people to
“Get ‘em here!”There are also poems about someone trying to hail a cab in the rain, subways filled with many different kinds of people, a sturdy bridge, a hydrant, a sultry city in summer, snow falling in a city in winter, a seal in the city zoo—and one about men and women building a skyscraper. This last poem ends by describing how the ongoing construction appears to onlookers:
Why,
it’s like watching
a razzle-dazzle
razzmatazz
three-ring
steel circus
performance
appearing
in
the
sky.Hopkins includes a poem about a kite in the city that
“flitters/twirls/tumbles/twitters/like/a/young bird."
And there’s a poem about city lights that begins with lots of great verbs:
Blazing lights
flicker
flash
glitter
gleam
twinkle
sparkle
bedazzle
beam
City I Love is a book of poems that truly conveys the sights, sounds, and awesomeness of the city as observed by someone who loves living in one.
The illustrations done by Marcellus Hall in watercolor and ink transport readers to cities in continents around the world—in North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, South America. Hall includes pictures of gondolas, buildings with onion domes, signs lettered in foreign languages, people of diverse cultures wearing a variety of clothing. He uses changing perspectives to capture the energy of city life. His illustrations complement and extend the poems in Hopkins's urban-themed collection.
NOTE: Children will have fun looking for the dog with a backpack in all of the book’s illustrations—beginning with the endpapers. The dog is on a world tour of cities by way of poetry and art in this excellent new book by Hopkins.
Sky Scrape/City Scape: Poems of City Life
Selected by Jane Yolen
Illustrated by Ken Condon
Wordsong, 1996
Jane
Yolen did a superb job in selecting the twenty-five poems she included in
Sky Scrape/City Scape. A good number of the poems are exceptional pieces originally published in collections that have been long out of print. In this anthology, you’ll find Judith Thurman’s
Zebra and
Oil Slick from
Flashlight and Other Poems (1976); Lilian Moore’s
Pigeons from
I Thought I Heard the City (1969); Patricia
Hubbell’s
The Street Cleaner’s Lament from
8 A. M. Shadows (1969); Felice Holman’s
The City Dump from
At the Top of My Voice (1970); Myra
Cohn Livingston’s
74th Street from
The Malibu and Other Poems (1972); Leland B. Jacobs’s
The Subway Train from
Is Somewhere Always Far Away? (1967). These are poems that have stood the test of time—they are definitely not outdated.
Yolen opens her anthology with
City, a poem by Langston Hughes. She selected four poems about skyscrapers—including Carl Sandburg’s
Payers of Steel and Rachel Field’s
Skyscrapers. The book also contains poems about commuters on subways, grownups rushing to work, graffiti, children playing, rumbling traffic, city parks, a fire escape, and a street cleaner.
Holman's
The City Dump has been a favorite of mine for many years. Holman conjured up a lyrical poem about garbage in lilting language. Not the easiest thing to do! In it, she talks about the refuse that has been left at a dump—and about the gulls and mice that steal in and reap the remains of what people have discarded.
Here’s how Holman ends her poem:
The white eggshells
And the green-blue smells
And the gray gull’s cry
And the red dawn sky…
City asleep
City asleep
a carnival
on the garbage heap.
In
Pigeons, Lilian Moore laments how these birds spend their lives on concrete and cement. She writes:
A pigeon never sings
of hill
and flowering hedge,
but busily commutes
from sidewalk
to his ledge
Oh pigeon, what a waste of wings!In Eve Merriam’s
A Lazy Thought, a poem about adults rushing about the city, the writer ponders why adults don’t “ grow up” any more:
No wonder
Grownups
Don’t grow up
Any more.
It takes a lot
Of slow
To grow.Yolen closes the collection with Norma
Farber’s
Manhattan Lullaby:
From
Manhattan LullabyLulled by rumble, babble, beep,
let these little children sleep;
let these city girls and boys
dream a music in the noise,
hear a tune the city plucks
up from buses, up from trucks…
Ken
Condon’s colorful illustrations done in chalk and oil pastel have an impressionistic look that softens the hard edges and grittiness of some of the city scenes. Like Marcellus Hall, he also employs changing perspectives to capture the action and energy of urban life.
There are so many fine poems included in
Sky Scrape/City Scape. They are gems that one is unlikely to find in most poetry anthologies for children that are still in print. They provide readers with a true “flavor” of the city. This book is definitely “a keeper.”
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At
Political Verses, I have
Ramblin’ Prose, a song parody about Sarah
Palin’s resignation speech.
At
Blue Rose Girls, I have
Otherwise, a poem by
Jane Kenyon.
The
Poetry Friday Roundup is at
A Year of Reading.