Greetings, Poetry Friday folk, and if you are Emeka Barclay, you are especially welcome! Emeka's one of the many new and interesting poetry people that I met online at the #NCTE21 National Convention last weekend, and I do hope some of them will join us here on Poetry Fridays to bring us new, diverse voices in the children's poetry community.
I attended the virtual NCTE this year largely because of my participation on the NCTE Committee for Excellence in Poetry for Children. I don't think I would have done another virtual convention again otherwise. I found it REALLY hard to commit and be present in the way you can do intensely where you're there in person, with the group energy carrying you along. Still, I'm glad for what sessions I did attend, and the one our committee did was presenting our list of Notable Poetry Books for Children. Please do check it out by clicking the link below!During the same event, NCTE unveiled its 2022 list of Notable Poetry Books and Verse Novels, selected by the NCTE Award for Excellence in Children’s Poetry Committee. The list can be downloaded here.
“We are the only committee in the country that focuses on selecting notable books of poetry and verse novels for children, ages three to thirteen. We are proud of the wide range of themes in this year’s notable poetry books, including new anthologies, advocacy, social and emotional well-being, history, nature, social justice, and science. Our verse novel selections include themes of fitting in, dystopian adventure, refugees, coming of age, and language extinction,” said Ted Kesler, chair of the NCTE Children’s Poetry Awards Committee.
And of course we celebrated the 2021 Awardee for Excellence in Poetry for Children, JANET WONG! Read more here and here.
I had also promised to do my monthly Climate Friday post on the results of COP26 last week, but I don't know what I was thinking...especially since now my school district schedules parent conferences on the Monday and Tuesday of Thanksgiving Week! For the moment I'll just link to this explainer of the main takeways. I hope it gives both hope and a reality check.
Now for the poetry! This month the Seven Poetry Sisters invited us all to play along with their "Ode to Autumn" challenge. Two weeks ago I was kind of mad at autumn and I posted this no/de. This one, however, I bashed out yesterday morning once the stuffing was made and the turkey in the oven (and about a hundred other things done, in concert with the rest of the family).
thanks & gratitude
too many mornings we wake to
and
knowing that the day will be
strained, slippery, sloppy
& we
get up anyway. who are we to
resist the riot of minor miracles (this pecan)
and
tiny blessings (this parsley) orbiting us like
iridescent insects, mithering us with
their background buzz? if they bite
us, if they sting, it’s just to
demand our attention, to denounce our
ennui. get up. get up & bare your skin.
draft ©HM 2021
Did you notice it's an acrostic? I definitely used to think that falling back on an acrostic was a cheater-pants 2nd-grader move, but no more: it really does always lead to something real for me. Well, it feels real to me, and I hope to you too! I also can't help but link to a lot of songs that bubbled up as I was writing.
Our host today is our dear Ruth at There Is No Such Thing As a Godforsaken Town. We are sending all our love, compassion and hope to Haiti and Ruth is sending us back months and years worth of gratitude, which is a feat on her part. I am #grateful for her and all of you here in the Poetry Friday community!