Poems Selected by:
Lee Bennett Hopkins 

Illustrators:
Chris Soentpiet &
Christy Hale

Notable Poets:
Janet S. Wong
Joseph Bruchac
Lee Bennett Hopkins
Alma Flor Ada
Nikki Grimes
Rebecca Kai Dotlich
J. Patrick Lewis
Jane Medina
Linda Sue Park
Kristine O’Connell George
Joan Bransfield Graham
Jaime Adoff
Charles Waters
Prince Redcloud

LEE & LOW BOOKS
leeandlow.com

Gr 3- 5/Ages 8 and up
40 color pages
picture book
9.5″X 12″
ISBN # 978-1-600606-533

Teacher Lesson Plans

Amazing Places

In this collection of original poems, acclaimed anthologist Lee Bennett Hopkins brings together fourteen selections that celebrate through poetic imagery some of the amazingly diverse places in our nation. These include Denali National Park, the Oneida Nation Museum, San Francisco’s Chinatown, the Grand Canyon, the Ringling Circus Museum, Harlem, the Liberty Bell, Fenway Park, and more. The poems as a whole take readers on an exciting multi-ethnic travelogue around the United States and encourage a positive appreciation of our country’s historical, environmental, and cultural heritage.

The inspiring and insightful poems were created by some of the best-known authors writing for children, including Alma Flor Ada, Jaime Adoff, Joseph Bruchac, Rebecca Kai Dotlich, Nikki Grimes, J. Patrick Lewis, Jane Medina, and Linda Sue Park. Captivating illustrations by award-winning illustrators Chris Soentpiet and Christy Hale feature well-researched settings that infuse the poems with vibrant life and atmosphere. Readers of all ages will want to visit each amazing place again and again.

MY THOUGHTS ON ILLUSTRATING “AMAZING PLACES”:

After the success of AMAZING FACES we collaborated on a sequel. My initial thought was how lucky I am to have the incredible opportunity to work with Lee Bennett Hopkins again. I get to illustrate the poetries of some of my favorite poets in business. During the sketch process I envision all these historical and majestic places I’d like to take my kids and imagine what it would be like to see through their eyes. Truly a blessing that we have programs like the US National Historic Landmark which is designed to recognize and honor our nation’s cultural and historical heritage. -Chris Soentpiet

LEE BENNETT HOPKINS

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Children’s writer and educator Lee Bennett Hopkins has been a devoted promoter of poetry for children. He was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and lived with his mother and siblings in a low-income housing project in Newark, New Jersey, after his parents divorced. He attended Newark State Teacher’s College (now Kean University) and earned an MS from Bank Street College of Education. His interest in poetry as an educational tool in the classroom led to his work as a classroom resource coordinator; he also worked as an editor at Scholastic before becoming a full-time writer and editor of anthologies. He has compiled more than 100 anthologies of poetry for children.

Hopkins’s own poetry collections for children include the autobiographical Been to Yesterdays: Poems of a Life (1995), which won the Christopher Medal and a Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Golden Kite Honor Award; Alphathoughts: Alphabet Poems (2003); and City I love (2009). He has received a National Council of Teachers of English Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children, a Florida Libraries’ Lifetime Achievement Award, and the University of Southern Mississippi Medallion for contributions to children’s literature.

Hopkins established the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award and the Lee Bennett Hopkins/International Reading Association Promising Poetry Award to recognize outstanding writing for children.

Book Reviews:

 
PARENTS’ CHOICE BOOK AWARD (BEST POETRY 2015)

“Gathering original poems by diverse poets, including his own tribute to Langston Hughes, Lee Bennett Hopkins has created a fascinating multi-ethnic anthology. Hopkins’s collection celebrates the diversity of people and places across our country – from Fenway Park to Denali National Park and from Linda Sue Park’s poem about the Liberty Bell to Jane Medina’s poem about the desire to run away to a circus: “I’m running away with people who fly/ I’ll dance and/I’ll laugh/and forget how to cry.” With end papers of the United States, that show the locations of these “amazing places,” paragraphs describing these locations at the end of the book, and fine-line, full color, full page illustrations, this is a unique and meaningful anthology.”

– Kemie Nix ©2015 Parents’ Choice
Kemie Nix is Chairman of Children’s Literature for Children (CLC) is a non-profit, tax-exempt, educational organization dedicated to bringing children and books together. Mrs. Nix, a senior book editor for Parents’ Choice, has a remarkable sense in selecting books children love to read.
Parent’s Choice Award

 
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY: (STARRED REVIEW) SEPTEMBER 2015

“In this companion to 2010’s Amazing Faces, 14 poems celebrate landmarks and attractions across the United States, such as the Grand Canyon, Fenway Park, and San Francisco’s Chinatown. In the tender opening poem from Janet S. Wong, a girl treasures a night camping with her mother in Alaska’s Denali National Park: “When the fire is spitting ready,/ she reaches/ in the bag, rustling,/ and hands me/ one big, fat, luscious/ marshmallow.” Joan Bransfield Graham’s concrete poem, “Sandy Hook Lighthouse,” is both written from the lighthouse’s perspective and shaped like one: “Wild/ storms rage,/ lightning crackles,/ nothing/ deters me./ I have/ stood on/ duty in this/ place for/ more than two/ centuries.” The far-ranging locations and multicultural, multigenerational cast help create a broadly appealing testament to the American landscape and people.”

 
KIRKUS REVIEW: (STARRED REVIEW) SEPTEMBER 2015

“This companion to Amazing Faces (2015) is a tribute to United States landmarks and adds illustrator Hale as a collaborator. Eleven states are highlighted, ranging from Alaska to Kansas to Massachusetts. San Francisco’s Chinatown, the Grand Canyon, the State Fair of Texas, and the Oneida Nation Museum are among the American treasures featured alongside poetry penned by an eclectic representation of treasured Americans of many ethnicities. The selections’ wide appeal invites intergenerational sharing, particularly in the classroom or at family gatherings. For example, in addition to the reader-engaging, playful visual formatting of Prince Redcloud’s “Niagara,” this poem also lends itself to multivoice readings: “falls / and / falls / forever-ever / flowing / falling / falling / cascading / crashing / dipping / dropping / plunging / tumbling / stop….” Soentpiet and Hale’s exceptional pencil-and-digital illustrations reinforce the word pictures evoked by the poetry. Light and shadow, skillfully rendered with the look of watercolor paint, play across the scenes. A historical glossary is appended, and the map of the United States indicating each landmark’s location is included on the endpapers. Amazing, indeed: American readers will come away both proud of what the country has to offer and eager to visit the sites in person.”
– Selma G. Lanes ©2001 Parents’ Choice

 
SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL: OCTOBER 2015

“”This offering truly “sings America.” Master anthologist Hopkins brings together original poetry by many big names, from Nikki Grimes to Joseph Bruchac. Featuring evocative illustrations, this multilayered collection celebrates the United States from start to finish. The poems focus on well-known places, such as Denali National Park and Harlem’s 125th Street, and lesser-known ones, including the Oneida Nation Museum near Green Bay, WI, and the Ringling Circus Museum in Sarasota, FL. Each highlighted place, whether natural, cultural, or historical, is refreshingly unique, while the poems vary in form and perspective. In one poem, a girl and her grandfather eat clam chowder and high-five at a Red Sox game; in another, a tree describes how it clings to the edge of the Grand Canyon. These offerings are carefully orchestrated, allowing children to uncover lesser-known gems, and emphasize the strong connections between place and history. The illustrations plunge readers in even deeper. Soentpiet and Hales’s nuanced portrayal of Americans ensures that most kids will find reflections of themselves as well as windows into the lives of others. “Amazing Places” rounds out the collection with further information about each location.

VERDICT An excellent addition for any library in search of a new poetry collection or an entry point into the study of American history or culture.”

Notable Poets Featured in Amazing Places

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Janet S. Wong

Janet is an award-winning author and anthologist of more than two dozen books for young readers, teachers, and parents. One of the most distinctive things about Janet Wong’s body of work is its variety. There’s at least one book for anyone – and EVERYONE!

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Rebecca Kai Dotlich

Rebecca is a children’s author & poet who is slightly obsessed with words, journals, small things, comic books & marbles, the writing process, wishes and wonder. Her 20+ books include Lemonade Sun, What Can A Crane Pick Up? and What Is Science? She lives in the Midwest not far from where she built snowmen and rode bike trails when she was young.

Linda Sue Park

Linda Sue Park is the author of the Newbery Medal book A Single Shard, many other novels, several picture books, and most recently a book of poetry: Tap Dancing on the Roof: Sijo (Poems). She lives in Rochester, New York, with her family, and is now a devoted fan of the New York Mets.

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Jaime Adoff

Jaime has worked with students from Kindergarten through High School, giving them all a “backstage- all access- pass” into the life, creative process, and works of one of the most groundbreaking, unique and innovative voices writing for children and teens today. Son of the late Newbery Award-winning author Virginia Hamilton and renowned poet Arnold Adoff, he lives in Yellow Springs, Ohio, with his family.

Joseph Bruchac

Joseph is a highly acclaimed Abenaki children’s book author, poet, novelist and storyteller, as well as a scholar of Native American culture. Coauthor with Michael Caduto of the bestselling Keepers of the Earth series, Bruchac’s poems, articles and stories have appeared in over 500 publications, from Akwesasne Notes and American Poetry Review to National Geographic and Parabola. He has authored more than 50 books for adults and children.

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J. Patrick Lewis

After nearly three decades as a professor of economics, J. Patrick Lewis turned to poetry. He is the author of more than 75 children’s books including A Hippopotamusn’t (1990), BoshBlobberBosh (1998), Please Bury Me in the Library (2004), First Dog (2009), Spot the Plot (2009), and The House (2009). He has recently been named the third U.S. Children’s Poet Laureate (2011-2013) by the Poetry Foundation.

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Kristine O’Connell George

Kristine is one of the principal voices in contemporary children’s poetry. Awards for her books include the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award, International Reading Association / Lee Bennett Hopkins Promising Poet Award, the Golden Kite, Myra Cohn Livingston Poetry Awards, Claudia Lewis Awards, ALA notables, NCTE notables, School Library Journal Best Books, Hornbook Fanfare, Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Gold Award, and IRA-CBC Children’s Choice.

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Alma Flor Ada

Alma, Pro­fes­sor Emerita at the Uni­ver­sity of San Fran­cisco, has devoted her life to advo­cacy for peace by pro­mot­ing a ped­a­gogy ori­ented to per­sonal real­iza­tion and social jus­tice. A for­mer Rad­cliffe Scholar at Har­vard Uni­ver­sity and Ful­bright Research Scholar she is an inter­na­tion­ally re-known speaker and the author of numer­ous children’s books of poetry, nar­ra­tive, folk­lore and non-fic­tion.

Jane Medina

Jane is a teacher and poet. She lives with her husband Pablo and their children, Annie and Joey, in Orange, California.

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Joan Bransfield Graham

Joan is an award-winning poet who can’t stop writing poetry. Her poems have been featured in anthologies, magazines, textbooks, and on CDs. Her books Splish Splash and Flicker Flash—shape poems about water and light—were both chosen as School Library Journal Best Books of the Year, and her poetry has been described as “ingenious,” “refreshing,” and “wonderfully evocative.”

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Charles Waters

Charles is a Children’s Poet, Actor and Educator. His poems have appeared in various anthologies including: THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC BOOK OF ANIMAL POETRY, AMAZING PLACES and ONE MINUTE TILL BEDTIME. Charles performs his one person show, as well as conducts poetry performance and writing workshops for elementary and middle school audiences.