Love: Selected Poems by E. E. Cummings
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Average customer review:Product Description
E. E. Cummings, one of the most famous poets of all time, is known for his concise, often sassy poems that speak right to the heart. Illuminated through Caldecott Honor Illustrator Christopher Myers's electrifying artwork, E. E. Cummings' Love: Selected Poems is filled with humor, feeling, and romance for young teens and adults. From "the moon is hiding in her hair" to "may i feel, said he," this book fulfills the Cummings collector's ultimate wishes, and is the perfect gift for anyone interested in the magic and romance entrenched in the language of love.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #292108 in Books
- Published on: 2005-12-15
- Released on: 2005-12-06
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 40 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. In this astonishing picture book about sensual love, Myers (Black Cat) combines evocative photographs of people and paintings to create collages that match the startling imagery in cummings's poems. Focusing primarily on the kind of breathless love for which "feeling is first," and a lover can render "death and forever with each breathing," the intense poems are made even more powerful by Myers's brilliant artwork. Each illustration translates the emotions behind cummings's quicksilver metaphors into unforgettable visual imagery. A description of the separation of lovers that "whittles life to eternity/ —after which our separating selves become museums/ filled with skillfully stuffed memories" takes visual form with an arresting image of a person's bare back and shoulders covered with butterflies. Myers unifies the book thematically with repeating images. "Birds who are the secret of living" appear in one poem, escaping a door that covers a young man's heart; and in another, creamy doves circle a nude woman to "cover her briefness in singing/ close her with intricate faint birds." However, despite its formatting as a picture book and its listing as appropriate for "all ages," the book's emphasis upon erotic love makes it more suitable for sophisticated teens and adults than for children—especially the inclusion of a bantering seduction poem—"but it's life said he/ but your wife said she/ .../ (cccome? said he/ ummm said she)." All ages. (Dec.)
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From School Library Journal
Grade 9 Up–Myers has assembled a collection of 19 love poems that reflects cummings at his playful, inventive best. They include since feeling is first, somewhere i have never travelled,gladly beyond, and love our so right/is,all. Difficult and challenging in format, they reward careful readers with metaphysical insight. Myers's artful photographic images on painted backgrounds accompany the selections. The poem we love each other very dearly is illustrated with a photo of a woman's face torn in half and arranged along with the text across two pages. Unfortunately, not all of the visual interpretations match cummings's elusive imagery. For the splendid open your heart:/i'll give you a treasure/of tiniest world/a piece of forever with, the artist crafts an innocuous image of a young man with a bit of sky inserted into his open mouth. The fairly adult connotations of may i feel said he/(i'll squeal said she are disconcertingly paired with two fresh-faced teens. Myers's attempt to make these poems accessible to a new generation is admirable, but these lovely and challenging works defy easy definitions.–Marilyn Taniguchi, Beverly Hills Public Library, CA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Gr. 9-12. With beautiful, clear, full-color images that combine big photos and cut-paper images, Myers presents the love poetry of e. e. cummings to a teen readership. Never literal versions of the words, the pictures express romance, lust, longing, joy, sorrow, and all their combinations. Most memorable is the full-page view of butterflies on a young man's back, accompanied by a poem about remembering the power of love's "intense fragility" (" nobody, not even the rain, has such small hands"). True to the poetry, the magical realism in the art is wild--an airplane flying in a smiling boy's open mouth; a naked woman discreetly covered with cut-paper birds in flight; a young man dressed in a business suit soaring above the words of a poem. Two happy teens, head to head, talk sex (" may I touch said he / how much said she / a lot said he / why not said she"). The young, multiracial cast dreaming of love will bring the poetry close, especially for Valentine's Day. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Customer Reviews
bad visual art
the poems were great but the pictures are rather distracting
and have nothing to do with love what-so-ever



