Today Sherry at Semi-Colon is hosting Poetry Friday.
Be sure to visit and check out the other Poetry Friday posts!
Thank you, Sherry!
Title: Forgive Me, I Meant To Do It
Author: Gail Carson Levine
Illustrator: Matthew Cordell
Publisher: Harper Collins
Publication Date: March, 2012
Genre/Format: Fiction/Poetry/Picture Book
GoodReads Summary:
This Is Just to Say
If you’re looking
for a nice happy book
put this one down
and run away
quickly
Forgive me
sweetness
and good cheer
are boring
What I Think: After nErDcamp, someone (I *think* it was Franki?) suggested we could have taken a whole session to talk about Jon Klassen's book I Want My Hat Back. I haven't gotten tired of talking about that book yet and actually shared both I Want My Hat Back and This Is Not My Hat with some of my new co-workers this week. I love hearing someone giggle as they read through it and debating whether they are Team Rabbit or Team Bear...or neither, afterwards. It was so perfect that I discovered this book, Forgive Me, I Meant To Do It by Gail Carson Levine. I laughed out loud throughout this book because of the great poems Gail puts together. Lots of the poems have connections to fairy tales which make them perfect to pair with traditional fairy tales like Little Red Riding Hood, Jack and the Beanstalk or Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.
Gail also does a few great things in this book that make is to unique. Gail puts the introduction to the book a few poems into the collection. I loved that she did this. I was completely pulled in by the poems but then all of a sudden, she takes time to explain where the form for the poems originated. She explains that William Carlos Williams wrote the original poem that prompted her poems. She talks about how to imitate the form and how it's okay to play with it a little bit or to simply fit your poem into the structure that is set up. I love that she makes it sounds so easy to write the poem. Sometimes we need to hear that something has been done for us and that we can easily add our own creativity. What a great way to get kids into poetry. I have a feeling kids would also be able to come up with lots of instances when they or someone else did something they may not have been truly sorry for doing...and Gail makes sure to tell readers that if they are going to try writing their own "This Is Just to Say" poems that they truly should have some mean-ness to them. This book is a perfect mentor text for getting kids into poetry!
Read Together: Grades 3 - 12
Read Alone: Grades 3 - 12
Read With: I Want My Hat Back and This Is Not My Hat by Jon Klassen, Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak, Interrupting Chicken by David Ezra Stein, traditional versions of Little Red Riding Hood, Snow White and the Seven Dwarves or others
Snatch of Text:
This Is Just to Say
I swiped
your lucky
baseball
cap
which
made you tragically
lose
the state playoff
Forgive me
the cap
keeps the sun
out of my eyes
Writing Strategies to Practice: Poetry, Personal Narrative
Writing Prompts: Choose a character from a book who you don't believe was sincere about something he or she did and write your own "This Is Just to Say" poem. Use the form Gail Caron Levine uses to construct you poem. Write your own "This Is Just to Say" poem about a time in your life when you did something you didn't feel bad about.
Topics Covered: Honesty, Family, Humor, Sincerity
I *heart* It:
Here's my own "This Is Just To Say" poem from the rabbit's perspective from I Want My Hat Back!
This Is Just to Say
By Jen Vincent
I have stolen
your hat
red
and pointy
which you
have searched and searched for
cannot live without
love
Forgive me
but
it looks better
on me
Feel free to write your own if these give you some inspiration. And please share!
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