The long-awaited companion to the bestselling The New Kid on the Block. "A wealth of funny new verse from a favorite poet. Prelutsky's comic muse is at its best here. Another winner."—Kirkus Reviews. "Prelutsky has done it again."—School Library Journal
Something big is right here!
It is this book of wonderful, funny poems by beloved children's poet Jack Prelutsky. If you've read The New Kid on the Block, you have some idea of the treat ahead. And if you haven't, all you have to do is start reading!
Here are four vain and ancient tortoises, a rat of culture, Super Samson Simpson, a meat loaf that defies an ax, five flying hotdogs—and many, many more people, animals, and things that are destined to become part of the lives of everyone who loves to laugh.
Say them, chant them, learn them by heart, or just read them—Jack Prelutsky's poems are incomparable.
Jack Prelutsky is an American poet. He attended New York public schools, and later the High School of Music and Art and Hunter College. Prelutsky, who has also worked as a busboy, furniture mover, folk singer, and cab driver, claims that he hated poetry in grade school because of the way it was taught. He is the author of more than 30 poetry collections including Nightmares: Poems to Trouble Your Sleep< and A Pizza the Size of the Sun. He has also compiled countless children's anthologies comprised of poems of others'. Jack Prelutsky was married to Von Tre Venefue, a woman he had met in France. They divorced in 1995, but Jack remarried. He currently lives in Washington state with his wife, Carolyn. He befriended a gay poet named Espiritu Salamanca in 1997 and both now work together in writing poems and stories for children and adults alike.
I bought this on Audible so I could listen to it on car trips with my children, and I am very happy I did. But I got an unexpected bonus! I figured I'd hear somebody reading the poems out loud, hopefully with some considered intonation here and there to accentuate the wit. What I got was a musical cavalcade of poems! Some of these poems are sung, some spoken with music behind them, but all fun to listen to. This will need to be on repeat in my car - I may just burn it to a CD and leave it on. It's great!
Something Big Has Been Here is a anthology of poems in verse by Jack Prelutsky. In the beginning of the book, is poem with the same title as the name of the entire anthology, Something Big Has Been Here. It is about something BIG that left a footprint. The book continues with poems about animals, people, siblings, and poems with silly titles. Each poem from beginning, middle, and end are clever, thought-provoking and relatable.
The age range of this book is nursery through advanced. It even states on the back cover page that the book is for "All Ages." I agree that it can be for all ages because young children and adults can appreciate the word play. There are some vocabulary words that are advanced, like unblemished. Some poems are about siblings, and if you have siblings, you can relate to issues you've had with sisters and/or brothers if you are younger or older.
There are several poetic elements in the poems throughout the anthology. The poems include rhyming, "They tell me I'm peculiar, they seem to think I'm odd, they look at me and grimace, I smile at them and nod." Alliteration- "I am Wunk, a wacky wizard, and I wield a willow wand." Repetition- "I'm sorry I squashed a banana in bed, I'm sorry I bandaged a whole loaf of bread, I'm sorry I pasted prunes to your pants, I'm sorry"... etc. Simile- "The salad tastes like soap." Assonance-"Unflappable Five, we're mustered in formation to climb, to dip, to dive."
I would definitely recommend people to read the book of poems. They are good for reading aloud, for all ages, and easy to understand. Readers or listeners can relate to the topic discussed in the poems, but there is some challenging vocabulary. Pick up this book if you want to laugh!
You know how everyone reads those Shel Silverstein books? Well, I decided not to. Poetry is a hard thing to write a review on, but I will try my best....
This is a great poetry book! My absolute favorite poem in this book is, "I Am Digging a Hole in the Ceiling". I love how the boy is trying to dig a hole in the ceiling, which you might think would take a short amount of time (maybe 2-3 days), but he says it will take him until summer.... But at the end you find out why it is taking him so long- he is using a very small spoon.
This poetry book is very amusing. I loved it, and plan on reading more books by Jack Prelutsky in the near future.
I’d say this is comparable to Shel Silverstein for a new generation. I think if I had grown up reading Prelutsky’s work I would’ve loved it more than 3 stars. Here’s my favorite poem: Don’t yell at me! Don’t yell at me! I hate it when you do, It makes me feel so miserable, I want to run from you. I simply cannot stand it When you scream into my ear, If I knew how to do it, I’d completely disappear.
Don’t yell at me! Don’t yell at me! I’ll crawl away and hide, I’ll detonate to smithereens Or shrivel up inside. Feel free to thumb your nose at me, Or wiggle all your toes at me, Or even ring a bell at me, But please, please please DONT YELL AT ME!
I recently had dinner with a very nice family, including their 2 boys, ages 6 and 10. There was much talk about reading, favorite books,and words. Because my daughter has infected us all with her love of wombos (word combinations) we were also throwing around some of our favorite wombos. The father of the 2 boys is an architect and my husband created a wombo using the word architect along with the father's first name - thus, he became a "Markitect". It only took a minute for the 6-year-old to add, "He practices 'Sharpitecture'." (combo of the words Sharp and architecture)
All this talk of wombos inspired the boys to talk about their favorite books and soon the younger boy ran to his room and grabbed Something BIG Has Been Here. He just had to read "I Wave Good-bye When Butter Flies"...
"I wave good-bye when butter flies and cheer a boxing match, I've often watched my pillow fight I've sewn a cabbage patch"
...and then he looks up at us and says, "Get it?" Oh yes, we nod, smiling as he continues reading the poem to the end.
This book of poetry also contains "The Turkey Shot Out of the Oven", a poem my daughter loved and memorized when she was in the 2nd grade, about 2 decades ago. When we met her for dinner the next day and mentioned this poem, she quickly recited it about halfway through before faltering. And we still laughed, even though we well knew that the turkey was stuffed with popcorn! That's the power of a Prelutsky poem!
Jack Prelutsky's works are classic! This local author should be required reading for all young readers!
Retroactive Review: I'm always going to remember this book fondly--not only is this the same copy I've had since 3rd grade (helpfully labeled by me at that age), it's also the first book I ever read to my son, before and after his birth. Prelutsky and Silverstein have always felt somewhat interchangeable to me, though I'm sure that's heresy to diehard fans of both, but they occupy that same mental and poetic space in my brain. In any case, my son was 2 weeks old when I finished, so his response to my reading was mostly: 😴 or 👀. I'm sure he'll understand it better when he's old enough to read.
Poetry No awards given Book that Dr. Konrad brought to class Grades K-6: There are a few poems in this collection that I would not particularly share with my classroom but I would have no control if they get it from the library on their own accord. • All of the poems are mainly free verse with potentially one (My Snake) could be classified as an Invented Form. • There are multiple literary devices used in the book of poems but the most prominent was alliteration (Rhododendra Rosenbloom, Try Never to Tickle the Twickles, etc.) as well as a good amount of personification (My Fish Can Ride a Bicycle, We’re Fearless Flying Hotdogs, I Wave Good-Bye When Butter Flies). I Wave Good-Bye When Butter Flies is also a poem that is a play on the words consistently with lines like, “ I wonder if the kitchen sinks”.
"Something Big Has Been Here" by Jack Prelutsky with drawings by James Stevenson is a children's poem book intended for elementary school aged students. This book is full of humorous poems of all different kinds. The actual poem named "Something Big Has Been Here" is about a boy finding a large footprint. He states that he does not know what has been there, but by the size of its footprint, he hopes he never finds out. The author of this book, Jack Prelutsky, uses language that is easy to read for younger readers in elementary school. These are short and funny poems that might get the students who don't particularly enjoy reading to read. This book of poems can be enjoyed by readers of all ages and sexes.
Tjhis book was kinda funny but it is not my favorite poem book I have read yet but there was a funny poem in the beginning.I would recommend this book to anyone who likes poem books. If you like poem books by Jack Prelutsky you. might want to read this book. There was a poem called I am sitting here fishing its where a boy thinks of all the fishes he would like to catch but it turns out he is sitting in a desert.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This is a very fun collection of silly poems great for any elementary age student. Goofy characters including all kinds of animals and people and tons of dialogue mixed in.
In my classroom I could use this to launch a poetry unit. There are lots of great examples of rhyming in several different formats (ABCB, AABB etc). I also shows students that poetry can be about ANYTHING! The abundance of dialogue within the poems lends itself to modeling and practicing good expression.
I bought this for my 6 year old that loves poetry for Christmas. It took us two days of read aloud to get through this fun book. I loved Shel Silverstein as a kid, and this book is very reminiscent of his work. I love the vocabulary used and my child loved the giggles it brought.
My four-year-old really wanted to see all the pictures, so this kept his attention better than a lot of other books I read aloud while my kids finish dinner. Over and over, though, he asked why things mentioned in the poems were not in the pictures. This is a fun book with lots of clever word play.
I like Jack Prelutsky well enough in small doses. My daughter, on the other hand, is in love with his poems. This volume reads like the others: kind of repetitive, but with some clever ideas sprinkled throughout. Not a bad pick for bedtime readalouds.
Humorous poems for children. Topics include pets, siblings and robots. A few nonsense poems. And a couple of attempts at Dr. Seuss-like fanciful creatures.
Sweet little book for young readers (I mean, for the most part...there were words I had to look up!) but few enough and far between enough that they were not a deterrent.
I loved reading a few poems with my kiddos before bed and chuckling over where our imaginations took us.
An improvement on the already great “The New Kid on the Block.” “Something BIG Has Been Here” is a book full of adorable children’s poems with perfectly simplistic illustrations for each. The highlights of the book are the poems “An Early Worm Got Out of Bed”, “My Mother Made a Meat Loaf”, “My Brother Built a Robot”, and “Katy Ate a Baked Potato.” The truth is I could name at least ten more that are at least as good.