PICTURE BOOKS
Yolen, Jane

Emily Writes: Emily Dickinson and Her Poetic Beginnings

(2) K-3 Illustrated by Christine Davenier. Since not much is known about Dickinson as a child, Yolen constructs a fictional experience of what might have inspired her poetic observations later in life. Readers follow a very young Emily as she shows her three-word rhyming poem ("Frog and bog!") to her distracted father, who doesn't pay attention; her mother, abed, who doesn't open her eyes; and the more encouraging Mrs. Mack, their landlady. After communing outdoors with nature--the source of inspiration for her poem--Emily returns inside to search for new ideas (what rhymes with envelope?), with help from Mrs. Mack ("Hope, my dear girl. That's the best rhyme"). From Emily's youthful vantage point, Yolen indirectly explains a good deal about her life and interests, allowing readers to think--just as Emily does--"about the real and the unreal" and what lies in-between (it's poetry, according to Emily). An appended author's note and samples of Dickinson's poetry help put all these snippets of story into context. The pastel-hued watercolor and ink illustrations reflect Emily's precociousness and curiosity. Nineteenth-century period details set the scene throughout the book's balanced mix of spot art, full-page images, and double-page spreads. (For a more traditional picture-book biography of Dickinson, see Jennifer Berne's On Wings of Words, reviewed on page 137.)

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