P
– Poetry
I
didn’t show any specific book because I have many, many books of poetry.
Instead I will comment on three of my favorites. I’ve written a lot about Mrs.
Malloy, my 4th grade teacher and the way she opened my mind with her
selection of classic lit and poetry that she read to the class. In no special
order:
#1
The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes (1880-1958) The class loved this one and
requested it often from Mrs. Malloy.
#2
Little Orphant Annie by James Whitcomb Riley (1849-1916) Another oft-requested
poem.
#3
The Rubáiyát
by Omar Khayyám (1048-1131) The class didn’t care one way or the other
about these poems, but I LOVED them. I asked for a book of them for one of my
birthdays and my mom got me a really lovely illustrated book of a few select
poems. I’ve since collected 3 more editions of the many, many poems he wrote.
Q
– Question in the title Where’s
My Cow? (2005) by Terry Pratchett
This
is part of the Discworld universe brought to life by Pratchett. If you’re not
familiar with it, you’ve done yourselves a huge disfavor. Where’s My Cow is the
favorite picture book of little Sam, son of Commander Samuel Vimes of the City
Watch. Daddy Vimes does all the animal sounds to the delight of young Sam.
You’ll laugh! You’ll cry! You’ll say “Where’s My Cow??”
R
– Rare book Voynich
Manuscript by unknown (1404?-1438?)
OK.
I know. NO ONE READS THE VOYNICH MANUSCRIPT!! It was written in an unknown
language that has stumped academics for years and years. No clue as to what it
say. There have been some reasonable guesses, but that’s about it. I first
heard of it when watching an episode of Elementary, where Sherlock Holmes is
trying to distract himself by going through some of the copied pages to see if
he could make any sense of them. As good as Sherlock is, even he was baffled. I
Googled it and saw all the illustrations that were listed and read the
Wikipedia article and did some more research. I was fascinated. Even though
it’s unreadable, the text is visually appealing. The illustrations are amazing.
The original now belongs to Yale. So I took a deep breath, used a $10 coupon
for Amazon, and bought the Yale approved facsimile. It’s the same size as the
original with the same fold-out displays. I love it. I love looking through it.
It inspires me in my artwork. It was worth every penny.
S
– Sci-fi Interstellar
Pig (1984) and Parasite Pig (2002) by William Sleator
Great
books!! I’d read Interstellar Pig several years ago and when the sequel came
out I got that one, too. A kind of mix of the games Dungeons & Dragons and
Clue. In the first book, Barney is on vacation with his parents by a beach in
New England. He notices the next door renters playing some kind of board game
with obsessive passion. He likes games, and gets himself invited and “absorbed”
by the new people. Who don’t seem quite human… The sequel continues the story
with the same aliens and Barney is off on another adventure.