Copyright Date:
2020
Edition Date:
2020
Release Date:
03/31/20
Illustrator:
Peters, Julian,
Pages:
158 pages
ISBN:
0-87486-318-X
ISBN 13:
978-0-87486-318-5
Dewey:
808.81
LCCN:
2019058661
Dimensions:
26 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews
Visual adaptations of 24 short poems mostly from the 19th and 20th centuries.Graphic artist Peters (Stairs Appear in a Hole Outside of Town, 2014, etc.) has thematically arranged the content in quartets so that, for instance, Emily Dickinson's "Hope Is a Thing With Feathers" and Maya Angelou's "Caged Bird" (with two others) appear under "Seeing Yourself," and Edgar Allen Poe's wonderfully morbid "Annabel Lee" joins three others about "Seeing Death." Siegfried Sassoon's "Before the Battle" is set in the World War I trenches, but Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias" is just one of several in which different eras flicker past (in this case, a masked gunman brandishes an Islamic State group flag in one late panel), and some, such as "Caged Bird" and Langston Hughes' "Juke Box Love Song," are montages or abstractions. The selections likewise encompass a range of moods and media, from a twinkly black-and-white manga version of W.B. Yeats' "When You Are Old" to poignant watercolor scenes illustrating Robert Hayden's "Those Winter Sundays." The text is easy to follow, even when incorporated into the art, and the poems are reprinted at the end of each piece. The only serious misstep is the inclusion of Carl Sandburg's "Buffalo Dusk," with its hopelessly simplistic line, "Those who saw the buffaloes are gone"—compounded by images of ghostly Native Americans on horseback by a modern highway.Fresh angles aplenty for poetic encounters. (preface, poetry credits) (Graphic poetry collection. 12-16)
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Comic artist Peters adopts a distinct visual style for each poem in this English-language collection, then imagines a complex narrative to accompany it. For William Ernest Henley-s -Invictus- (-I am the master of my fate:/ I am the captain of my soul-), he creates a blocky, black-and-white sequence about a dramatic prison break. For Langston Hughes-s -Juke Box Love Song- (-Dance with you till day-/Dance with you, my sweet brown Harlem girl-), tender watercolor portraits illuminate glowing city lights. Some of the black-and-white action of Wordsworth-s -The World Is Too Much With Us- unfolds on a smartphone screen, while Tess Gallagher-s -Choices- evokes nature-s green in scribbly landscapes. It-s a romantic, backward-looking collection: few creators of color and living poets, nearly twice as many men-s voices as women-s, and, visually, lots of period costumes and Gothic atmospherics. The obvious appeal is for readers who might otherwise chafe at being assigned classic pieces of English literature; Peters-s work may help young readers grasp the sometimes archaic English (Hayden-s -austere and lonely offices,- for example). Final art not seen by PW. Ages 13-up. (Mar.)
A fresh twist on 24 classic poems, these visual interpretations by comic artist Julian Peters will change the way you see the world. This stunning anthology of favorite poems visually interpreted by comic artist Julian Peters breathes new life into some of the greatest English-language poets of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. These are poems that can change the way we see the world, and encountering them in graphic form promises to change the way we read the poems. In an age of increasingly visual communication, this format helps unlock the world of poetry and literature for a new generation of reluctant readers and visual learners. Grouping unexpected pairings of poems around themes such as family, identity, creativity, time, mortality, and nature, Poems to See By will also help young readers see themselves differently. A valuable teaching aid appropriate for middle school, high school, and college use, the collection includes favorites from the Western canon already taught in countless English classes. Includes poems by Emily Dickinson, Langston Hughes, Carl Sandburg, Maya Angelou, Seamus Heaney, e. e. cummings, Robert Frost, Dylan Thomas, Christina Rossetti, William Wordsworth, William Ernest Henley, Robert Hayden, Edgar Allan Poe, W. H. Auden, Thomas Hardy, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Philip Johnson, W. B. Yeats, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Tess Gallagher, Ezra Pound, and Siegfried Sassoon.