Artist, poet, and award-winning author Douglas Florian successfully captures the comedy of kids’ everyday lives with this jam-packed volume of 170 nonsense poems. Meander through the different aisles—such as “Jests & Jives” or “Tons of Puns”—to find everything from laugh-out-loud limericks to frenetic free verse. With Florian’s eccentric wit and off-the-wall drawings, this one-stop funny poetry shop is perfect for fans of Where the Sidewalk Ends.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
February 20, 2014 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781101620502
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781101620502
- File size: 14213 KB
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Languages
- English
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Levels
- ATOS Level: 4.1
- Lexile® Measure: 0
- Interest Level: 4-8(MG)
- Text Difficulty: 2-3
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
November 11, 2013
Ludicrous dilemmas, oddball situations, and quirky twists of fate feature heavily in Florian’s poems, which are accompanied by his thickly scrawled b&w drawings (not all seen by PW). Instead of chapters, Florian groups his verse into the “aisles” of the eponymous store, and as the first entry explains, this collection is all about silliness and fun: “There’s laughs galore/ Inside this store/ And fun that runs for miles.” The categories are somewhat arbitrary (the poems in “Tons of Puns” use few of them, for instance), but there are still plenty of laughs to be had as Florian puts a clever spin on some traditional nursery rhymes (“Old Mother Hubbard/ Went to the cupboard/ To fetch her poor dog a bone./ But when she got there/ The cupboard was bare./ She ordered Chinese on the phone”), deploys an array of limericks and jokes-in-verse, and introduces a bevy of strange creatures: “What does a/ Baga Baga/ Dinga Donga do?/ I’m not sure, but/ There’s one behind you!” Ages 9–11. -
Kirkus
December 15, 2013
Gifted poet and illustrator Florian (Poem Runs: Baseball Poems, 2012, etc.) here presents a chunky collection of drawings and brief poems on a host of silly subjects. Posited as a superstore of verse on assorted topics children care about--school, family, animals, food and the like--one also can't help thinking this "depot" represents a midway point for a number of poems that haven't quite reached their creative destinations. To be truly effective, light or nonsensical verse should be as tight in its poetic construction as it is loosely suggestive in metaphorical associations, and a number of the works assembled here simply read as not fully cooked. The volume's more successful poems tend to employ wordplay to elicit a chuckle or illustrate delightfully nonsensical truisms about language, as in "Insect Asides": "A dragonfly is not a fly. / It's not a dragon either. / No butter on a butterfly, / And bees cannot spell neither." Likewise, when paired well, Florian's free-form pen-and-ink drawings enhance the whimsical nature of the fanciful scenes depicted. In "Pets," a creepy drawing of a girl with hairy spiders crawling all over her face offers a convincing explanation for the accompanying poem's punch line: "Bruce has ten pet roosters. / Ben has ten pet hens. / Fran has ten tarantulas, / But not too many friends." Overall, a thick collection of humorous verse that might have been funnier with thinner ambitions. (Poetry. 9-11)COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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School Library Journal
February 1, 2014
Gr 2-5-Echoes of Shel Silverstein's brand of wit and whimsy reverberate in Florian's 170 poems. The kid-friendly selections creatively capture the quotidian comings and goings of youngsters in humorous, forward-thinking verse. Thick ink illustrations add to the look and feel of a coloring book while a simple font enhances the readability of literary comestibles sure to delight and please while augmenting developing language skills. Chapter headings include "Chortles & Chuckles," "Funny Bones & Belly Laughs," "Jests & Jives," and "Tons of Puns." The poems are brief in length and long on fun. The first selection, "Welcome," says it all: "Welcome to the Poem Depot-/Relax and stay a while./When you walk in/You'll surely grin, /And leave wearing a smile."-Magdaline Henderson-Diman, formerly at Bass Harbor Memorial Library, Bernard, ME
Copyright 2014 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
March 15, 2014
Grades 3-6 Florian's latest is a generous compendium of light, clever verse on a variety of topics. A long selection here is two dozen lines; a short one is just three or four. Rhythm and rhyme keep the whole volume rolling along, while the expressive artwork gives readers reasons to pause along the way. With similarly titled chapters ( Wit and Whimsy, Rib-Ticklers and Sidesplitters ), the arrangement of selections often seems random, though poems based on nursery rhymes or familiar sayings, for instance, are often grouped together. Although not every book of poems is enhanced by illustrations, Florian's bold, black line drawings ramp up the verbal humor and complete the pages visually without overwhelming the words. The occasional verse suggests an adult perspective, but most selections arise clearly from a child's point of view. With a strong thread of wordplay, the poems will amuse children while also challenging them to think, making this an appealing source of short verse to memorize and an enjoyable collection of poetry to read just for fun.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.) -
The Horn Book
July 1, 2014
Readers browse through "Poem Depot's" eleven "aisles" (chapters) with names like "Chortles & Chuckles" and "Tons of Puns." Many of the pieces are four to ten lines long, easily memorized by the audience, who will enjoy the funny punch lines. Florian uses thick, sketchlike lines for a loose, humorous effect in his Shel Silversteinesque illustrations. Ind.(Copyright 2014 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
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The Horn Book
July 1, 2014
Florian's verse collections often include a sprinkling of funny poems, but this volume, with its broad and silly humor, is entirely devoted to them. Readers browse through "Poem Depot's" eleven "aisles" (chapters) with names like "Chortles & Chuckles" and "Tons of Puns." The humor is calibrated to tickle the same kids who enjoy Silverstein's classic Where the Sidewalk Ends (rev. 4/75), and the look of this book resembles Silverstein's work, too, with short poems interspersed with black outlined illustrations. Florian uses thick, sketch-like lines for a loose, humorous effect, showing things like two heads on the same body looking angrily at each other. The poems riff on everything from classic nursery rhymes (Old Mother Hubbard, realizing that the cupboard was bare, "ordered Chinese on the phone") to the mundane moments in life ("I've waited here patiently / Some ten years or more, / But I can't remember / What this line is for"). Many of the pieces are four to ten lines long, easily memorized by the audience, who will enjoy the funny punch lines. With a variety of forms (limericks, the occasional concrete poem) and silly wordplay (super-dupiter rhymes with Jupiter), it's a book made for dipping into for a quick laugh when needed. susan dove lempke(Copyright 2014 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
Languages
- English
Levels
- ATOS Level:4.1
- Lexile® Measure:0
- Interest Level:4-8(MG)
- Text Difficulty:2-3
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