Copyright Date:
1986
Edition Date:
1990
Release Date:
04/25/90
Illustrator:
Truesdell, Sue,
Pages:
88 pages
ISBN:
Publisher: 0-06-440384-X Perma-Bound: 0-605-00684-9
ISBN 13:
Publisher: 978-0-06-440384-9 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-00684-3
Dewey:
808
LCCN:
88010987
Dimensions:
20 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
School Library Journal
Gr 5-9-- A funny and poignant collection of poems, observations, and vignettes about life, friendship, family, identity, and love, as if from the journal of Kate, a young teenager who also springs to life in two other books by Little. It's a difficult task to evoke an adolescent's voice without writing painfully (for readers) like one. Fortunately, whenever the style is in danger of becoming too polished, an ingenuous phrase saves it; and whenever it leans too much to the adult perspective, a poem straight from eighth grade brings readers right back to the perceptions and feelings of a teenager, complete with old-hat ideas and platitudes written with the gusto of first-time discovery. Sometimes a deft touch of adult perspective adds needed insight to the anecdotes which, if left too authentic, would be muddied by emotional proximity. The situations ring true: Kate's confusion on becoming her mother's confidante, of not wanting to fight with her best friend but knowing it is too late to turn back, or the compassion felt for a dead woman, never lovable in life, who showed one secret moment of gentleness. Kate's observations make the people around her come alive. Young readers will be surprised that they are not on their own emotional desert island, and aspiring writers will be encouraged by Kate's example of journal keeping. The whimsical cartoon illustrations convey expressions and emotions cleverly in scratchy ink lines and washes. The format and illustrations might make the book appear to be for a slightly younger audience than intended, but booktalking should solve that problem. Young writers, looking for inspiration, will find Kate more immediately accessible than Julia Redfern, and fans of Constance Greene and Lois Lowry will gobble this up. --Annette Curtis Klause, Montgomery County Department of Public Libraries, Md.
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Poetry-writing Kate Bloomfield, star of Kate and Look Through My Window , returns to share--in both poetry and prose--her views on love, life and other adolescent experiences. Ages 9-up. (Apr.)
An ALA Notable Children’s Book * Multiple starred reviews
“Engaging” — ALA Booklist (starred review)
“A compelling portrait.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Funny and poignant.” — School Library Journal (starred review)
Honest and engaging, award-winning author Jean Little’s beloved Hey World, Here I Am! is told in a series of poems, observations, and vignettes.
Kate Bloomfield has got a lot to say—about school and friends and parents, about cartwheels (she can't do them), about parsnips (she won't eat them), about being alone and being herself, about life and love...even about Dave Nelson, who doesn't know she's alive. Outspoken, funny, sometimes confused but always observant, Kate is writing it all down—"Hey World, Here I Am!"
Hey world, here I am!
About loving
Today
Parsnips
Growing pains
Wars
Maybe a fight
Not enough Emilys
So I'm proud
About notebooks
Louisa, Louisa
Cartwheels
Mr. Entwhistle
After English class
Surprise
Alone
He was so little
Oranges
Every so often
When someone I love is hurt
Five dollars
About poems, sort of
Mrs. Buell
I told you so
Susannah and the daisies
Clothes
Mother has a talk with me
About feeling Jewish
Mosquitoes
Writers
Louisa's liberation
About old poeple
Working parents
Pearls
About a Greek god
About angels and age
Smart remark
Engaged
My journals
Afternoon in March
About God
My own day
Condensed version.