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Hardcover The Magic Pocket: Selected Poems Book

ISBN: 0689821379

ISBN13: 9780689821370

The Magic Pocket: Selected Poems

Here is a selection of verses by Michio Mado, chosen and translated by the Empress Michiko of Japan. Winner of the 1994 Hans Christian Andersen Author Award, Mado is the much-loved author of poems and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Like New

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Customer Reviews

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Cute poetry for a young child

I work in a library, and I came across this book reshelving children's books. As I am fascinated with anything and everything Japanese, the instant I noticed the kanji symbols on the page I simply had to check it out. Bring poetry into the picture and I was absolutely captured. With its side-by-side translations of the poems, this is a clever introduction to Japanese culture, though the only purpose the kanji serve is for show-there's not a lot a four-year-old can do with a poem written entirely in Japanese, much less fourteen. I'd place the listening level for this book at around ages 2 - 6, and the reading level a couple years higher. The poems are simple and relate well to a child's imagination. A stanza from "Let's Play Together" illustrates this: "Wouldn't it be nice\If a baby elephant\Came to my house,\Saying, 'Let's play together.'\Wouldn't it be nice,\ Mommy?"The illustrations were best described by Publisher's Weekly: "The milk-white paper cuts on beige pages sustain a tone of classic simplicity which is echoed in the poems." While the translations are best described by the School Library Journal: "The translations...refreshingly retain Japanese onomatopoeia instead of substituting more familiar English equivalents."This is a good example of children's poetry-real poetry, not just a book written in rhyme simply because the author thinks of him or herself as a poet. But then again, a parent might consider the book's best asset to be its brevity, as a couple of poems might be good substitute for a bedtime story. Seeing as the last poem in the book is called "Good morning and good night," this may have been the author's intent all along.
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