Thursday, May 5, 2011

Walt Whitman Words for America By Barbara Kerley


Walt Whitman: Words for America. by Barbara Kerley illustrated by Brian Selznick. Scholastic Press, 2004. 42 pages.
Review/Personal thoughts:  Tweens can identify immediately with the young Walt Whitman at age 12 working as a printer’s apprentice.  He had a lifelong love of words.  Walt is portrayed as man who loved to travel and observe people, but he was equally enamored with forests, orchards, rivers and the beach. He found his true calling in life when he began to write poems.  In his own words, “the genius of the United States was in the common people.” This book focuses on Whitman’s passion for (or reaction to) the issue of slavery, Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War.  Once the civil war broke out, whitman was drawn to spending time with wounded soldiers. He was equally adept at prose and wort of his visits to hospitals by saying “I have many hours afterwards, in far different scenes, had the pale faces, the look of death, the appealing eyes, come curiously of a sudden, plainly before me.”  He was distraught to find his younger brother’s name listed among the wounded and finally found him in a camp hospital. He stayed among the wounded there for over a week and gave voice to the soldiers through his poetic words. 
“By the bivouac’s fitful flame,
A procession winding around me,
Solemn and sweet and slow...
While wind in procession thoughts,
O tender and wondrous thoughts,
Of life and death, of home and the past
and loved, and of those that are far away...”
Walt was profoundly affected by the death and injury that war unleashed on the young men and returned to work in military hospitals, always taking notes and writing poems.  I was profoundly moved by a letter Whitman wrote to the parents of a soldier who died in the hospital. His tribute to Lincoln (whom he loved) upon his assassination, O Captain! is included in this book.  Sometimes we want tweens to love a book.  That is the case with me and Walt Whitman: Words for America.
Genre: Non-Fiction
Reading Level: 6.6 Interest level: Ages 8 to 14.
Awards: Notable/Best Books (A.L.A.) 2005

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