Hopkins, Lee Bennett. 2009. City I Love. Ill by Marcellus Hall. New York: Abrams Books for
Young Readers. ISBN 9780810983274.
Lee Bennett Hopkins of NCTE Poetry Award fame celebrates the
city in City I Love. Being a city
girl myself, I identified with many of the poems in this collection of 100%
Hopkins. Eighteen famous cities are illustrated with the poems, but the poetry
is universal to any city. Hopkins capitalizes
particularly on the sounds and rhythms in the city and compares it to a song in
his opening line “Sing a song of cities.”
Words like roar, rumbles, laugh, loud, whoosh, beep, shouts, to name a few,
make the urban cacophony sound musical.
But the collection engages other senses as well. Visual words like “flicker, flash, glitter,
gleam,” tasting words like “Hot dogs with sauerkraut” and “Cold drinks here!” make
one see and taste the city. You can feel
the city heat as well in the poem called City
Summer when even “the sun wears a sweatband,” and in City where “A hydrant is my swimming pool where friends and I find
some cool.”
Hopkins uses a variety of poetic formats and styles in his eighteen
poems. Some rhyme, some free verse, and
even one Haiku, but all carry you along briskly. His poems are like a subway-- short bursts of movement packed with rich and
colorful images. Much of the urban imagery
of the skyscrapers, subways, bright lights, and street sweepers, would be lost
on young children from the suburbs, in my opinion, but urban children would definitely
“get it.” The mood is upbeat, (after all
it is City I LOVE), but you can also hear aggravation with winter snow “mush”
and taxis that don’t stop on rainy days.
Marcellus Hall complemented the text with his whimsical
illustrations of brush and ink, and watercolor that to me are reminiscent of
Ludwig Bemelmans’ Madeline. The opening cover shows a map of the world
with 17 major cities marked. I took a
picture walk through the book to see if I could recognize the cities from the
subtle tells that the artist reveals. I
could not find the “answers” to this made up game to see if I had identified all
17 cities with the correct illustration, but it was fun playing the game. I almost missed the little maple leaf on the
cap of our little dog tourist that gave the clue of Toronto, Canada. The dog tourist is the endearing traveler
throughout the book who backpacks through the world along with his side kick, a
young pigeon.
The sounds and rhythms of the city are celebrated in all the
poems except for Mother’s Plea. Rather than celebrating the city's sounds, a mother pigeon is
anxious about her newborn pigeon’s sleep amid the sirens, horns and roar of city
traffic. When sharing this poem with my kindergartners, I would precede it with
Robert McCloskey’s Make Way for Ducklings. In that story, a mother duck is anxious to
find a safe place to raise her ducklings, but in spite of her pains-taking
search, she still has to contend with the dangers in the city. Similarly, Mother’s
Plea communicates the mother’s frustration and anxiety for her babies’
sleep in a noisy city. The discussion
could easily segue into share and sketch about a time when the students couldn’t
sleep because of too much noise, a bad dream, or some other anxiety. Owl Babies
by Martin Waddell would be another good story about childhood anxiety that
could precede or succeed the poem.
MOTHER'S PLEA
by Lee Bennett Hopkins
Silence sirens.
Hush all horns.
Quiet rumbling
traffic roars.
Please
city
have
some
pity.
Promise me
not
one
more
beep?
My newborn
pigeons
need
their
sleep.
MOTHER'S PLEA
by Lee Bennett Hopkins
Silence sirens.
Hush all horns.
Quiet rumbling
traffic roars.
Please
city
have
some
pity.
Promise me
not
one
more
beep?
My newborn
pigeons
need
their
sleep.
I have only visited five of the 17 illustrated cities, but City I Love has certainly whetted my
travel appetite, and has put Lee Bennett Hopkins on my poetry map!

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