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Laugh-Eteria

AUTHOR: Douglas Florian
ISBN: 0613337085

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Limericks Poetry
         Editorial Review

Laugh-Eteria
- Book Review,
by Douglas Florian


Amazon.com
Kids will find plenty to chuckle over in Douglas Florian's punchline-rich Laugh-eteria, his seventh poetry offering after walloping successes like Bing Bang Boing and Insectlopedia. Well loved for his shameless punnery, Florian never hesitates to manipulate the language to suit his whim: "Graffiti, graffiti, / On sidewalk and streeti, / On glass and concreeti, / And on subway seati," begins one poem. Some of his verse rhymes quite neatly, such as this stanza from "Don't Drag a Dragon": "Don't drag a dragon by its tooth. / To drag it such is most uncouth, / Discourteous, and impolite, / And it will eat you in one bite." "What I'd Like to Share" bounces jauntily as well: "I'd like to share a nasty cold / And all my clothing that's too old. / I'd like to share a rotten chore. / Perhaps you'd like to the sweep the floor?" Other poems seem more unfinished, as if Florian got so excited about a certain goofy upside-down idea that it simply spilled out onto the page. In any case, Laugh-eteria is third-grader paradise, bursting with poem-riddles, flipped perspectives, and references to stinky feet, slimy food, monsters, noses, bugs, and dinosaurs that invariably reduce 8-year-olds to giggling heaps. Much like in Shel Silverstein's collections, each double-page spread comes to life with the poet's own freestyle ink drawings. Florian fans will enjoy the punster's groan-worthy wordplay, and kids will no doubt relish the rampant silliness that's strangely akin to their own. (Click to see a sample spread. Text and illustrations from Laugh-eteria, copyright ©1999 by Douglas Florian. Reproduced by permission of Harcourt Brace & Company. (Ages 4 to 9) --Karin Snelson


From Publishers Weekly
"The poems in this book/ Are meant to be humorous./ If they are not,/ Please laugh just to humor us." Kids won't have to force their laughter while reading Florian's (Insectlopedia) pithy verses. They poke fun at the everyday ("Our school lunch is from outer space,/ Endangering the human race") and the imaginary ("Hello, my name is Dracula./ My clothing is all blackula./... /At dawn I hit the sackula./ Tomorrow I'll be backula!"). Florian repeatedly shows that he knows what makes kids giggle. Some entries are mildly risqu?, as in "Brush Rush" ("Brush your teeth./ Brush your hair./ Brush your brother's underwear./ Your teeth are green./ Your hair is blue./ Your brother's underwearAP.U.!"). Others favor clever, euphonious wordplay, as in "Batty": "The pitcher pitched a pitcher./ The batter batted a bat./ The shortstop stopped up short to see/ The catcher catch a cat." The line drawings, however, aren't as pleasing as Florian's paintings elsewhere. Rendered with a brush, they have a rough, doodle-like quality, and only rarely expand on the imagery so punchily served up in the text. Ages 6-up. Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From School Library Journal
Grade 2-6This clever collection of light verse, illustrated with childlike brush-and-ink drawings, is sure to draw fans of Shel Silverstein, Jack Prelutsky, and other purveyors of nonsense. Favorite topics of humorous poetrymonsters, dinosaurs, disgusting foods and overeating, animals, school, and strange peopleall inhabit this volume. Most of the brief poems contain a wry twist, a terrible pun, an interesting bit of wordplay, or a small allusion that enriches their meanings. Beginning with Test Poem, Florian sprinkles the collection with selections about reading and writing poetry, including one titled Bad Poem that offers suggestions about what should happen to verse of this sort. As in On the Wing (1996) and Insectlopedia (1998, both Harcourt), a number of the selections contain lists of characteristics that may provide young writers with ideas for their own descriptive poems. While there is an occasional contrived rhyme or missed beat, most of these pieces provoke laughter while playfully manipulating language to capture the comical essence of things and events in a childs world.Barbara Chatton, College of Education, University of Wyoming, Laramie Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Parents' Choice®
The book, LAUGH-ETERIA - Is a poem cafeteria, Just read it right through, Or sample a few. You'll laugh, and you'll smile, At Florian's style. While this may sound a bit forced, It's a winner, of course. A 1999 Silver Award Winner. Ages 8 to 12. (Kemie Nix, Parents' Choice®).


From Kirkus Reviews
Florian's seventh collection of verse is also his most uneven; though the flair for clever rhyme that consistently lights up his other books, beginning with Monster Motel (1993), occasionally shows itself``Hello, my name is Dracula/My clothing is all blackula./I drive a Cadillacula./I am a maniacula''too many of the entries are routine limericks, putdowns, character portraits, rhymed lists that fall flat on the ear, or quick quips: ``It's hard to be anonymous/When you're a hippopotamus.'' Florian's language and simple, thick-lined cartoons illustrations are equally ingenuous, and he sticks to tried-and-true subjects, from dinosaurs to school lunch, but the well of inspiration seems dry; revisit his hilarious Bing Bang Boing (1994) instead. (index) (Poetry. 8-10) -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


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         Book Review

Laugh-Eteria
- Book Reviews,
by Douglas Florian

Laugh-Eteria

ANNOTATION

A collection of more than 100 humorous poems on such topics as ogres, pizza, fear, school, dragons, trees, and hair.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Douglas Florian has a way with poems-bite-sized, offbeat, laugh-aloud poems. Fans of Jack Prelutsky and Shel Silverstein will delight in this new collection bursting with poem-riddles, flipped perspectives, and references to stinky feet, slimy food, monsters, noses, bugs, dinosaurs, and other perennial favorites. Get ready for the laugh of your life!

"[These poems] provoke laughter while playfully manipulating language to capture the comical essence of things and events in a child's world."-School Library Journal

"Fans of Shel Silverstein will be delighted to discover Florian's work." -Children's Literature

FROM THE CRITICS

Kathleen Burke - Smithsonian's (Notable Books for Children, 1999)

Zany, exuberant verse from the poet-artist whose creations will entice even a reluctant reader across the threshold to poetry.

Children's Literature - Sharon Salluzzo

Who can resist a good laugh? Florian is on target here with topics that have strong child appeal and a bouncy rhythm and rhyme scheme. Readers will be drawn in by the unimposing layout of one poem per page illustrated with a humorous pen and ink drawing. The light verse and limericks cover such subjects as food, missing homework, the dreaded school cafeteria lunch, substitute teachers, dinosaurs, giants, witches, ogres and couch potatoes. There are also monsters lurking in dark places, under the sofa and down the street. "The Ooze" is just right to read on a foggy day. Teachers can use "Good Beds" and "Bad Beds" to lead their students to compose their own poetry. With this title, children will discover the fun of language and double meanings. Florian even looks for some sympathy just in case the reader doesn't find the humor quite so droll: The poems in this book/ Are meant to be humorous. / If they are not, / Please laugh just to humor us." Fans of Shel Siverstein will be delighted to find Florian's work.

School Library Journal

Gr 2-6This clever collection of light verse, illustrated with childlike brush-and-ink drawings, is sure to draw fans of Shel Silverstein, Jack Prelutsky, and other purveyors of nonsense. Favorite topics of humorous poetrymonsters, dinosaurs, disgusting foods and overeating, animals, school, and strange peopleall inhabit this volume. Most of the brief poems contain a wry twist, a terrible pun, an interesting bit of wordplay, or a small allusion that enriches their meanings. Beginning with Test Poem, Florian sprinkles the collection with selections about reading and writing poetry, including one titled Bad Poem that offers suggestions about what should happen to verse of this sort. As in On the Wing (1996) and Insectlopedia (1998, both Harcourt), a number of the selections contain lists of characteristics that may provide young writers with ideas for their own descriptive poems. While there is an occasional contrived rhyme or missed beat, most of these pieces provoke laughter while playfully manipulating language to capture the comical essence of things and events in a childs world.Barbara Chatton, College of Education, University of Wyoming, Laramie Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Florian's seventh collection of verse is also his most uneven; though the flair for clever rhyme that consistently lights up his other books, beginning with Monster Motel (1993), occasionally shows itself-"Hello, my name is Dracula/My clothing is all blackula./I drive a Cadillacula./I am a maniacula"-too many of the entries are routine limericks, putdowns, character portraits, rhymed lists that fall flat on the ear, or quick quips: "It's hard to be anonymous/When you're a hippopotamus." Florian's language and simple, thick-lined cartoons illustrations are equally ingenuous, and he sticks to tried-and-true subjects, from dinosaurs to school lunch, but the well of inspiration seems dry; revisit his hilarious Bing Bang Boing (1994) instead. (index) (Poetry. 8-10) .




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