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  • Broschiertes Buch

"These students' poems and art are so beautiful and refreshing- they ring of truth in a time of lies. We need them." -Naomi Shihab Nye, Young People's Poet Laureate for 2019-2022 "These poems from The Poetry Studio are cracks in the construction, cures for the hurt, color for the bleakness, and challenges to the system. These poems of love and rage are counterforces to unfeeling and silence. They are maps to be consulted when navigating the world. They are 'like love armies/that hold off the dark.'" (Samuel Garbarino, written at age seven) -Bruce Smith, professor, Syracuse University MFA…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"These students' poems and art are so beautiful and refreshing- they ring of truth in a time of lies. We need them." -Naomi Shihab Nye, Young People's Poet Laureate for 2019-2022 "These poems from The Poetry Studio are cracks in the construction, cures for the hurt, color for the bleakness, and challenges to the system. These poems of love and rage are counterforces to unfeeling and silence. They are maps to be consulted when navigating the world. They are 'like love armies/that hold off the dark.'" (Samuel Garbarino, written at age seven) -Bruce Smith, professor, Syracuse University MFA program and author of Devotions "Reading the wondrous, heart-opening poems of Another World, I feel my whole body humming with hope for the future again. The imaginative and metaphorical leaps of these pieces (What if every flower bloomed a word? What if each stalk was a sentence?) invite readers to dwell for a while in the world beneath this often-distressing world of ours. This book reminds us, with each lovingly presented poem and piece of art, that we were born creative and curious, and these young voices implore us to stay that way for as long as we can. -James Crews, editor of How to Love the World: Poems of Gratitude and Hope ¿"For years, Ann Gengarelly has been working wonders at The Poetry Studio, creating a nurturing space for writers both young and old. Her husband, Tony, joins the studio for summer programs that combine poetry, art and bookmaking. This book captures that magic and more: it illustrates what is possible when we create gardens for creativity, offering warm earth, space, light, and water-such extraordinary flowers grow!" -Robin MacArthur, author of Half Wild: Stories and Heart Spring Mountain.
Autorenporträt
Since 1980, Ann Gengarelly has been a poet-in-the schools throughout Southeastern Vermont and neighboring Massachusetts and New Hampshire.She is Director of The Poetry Studio at her home in Marlboro, Vermont, where during the past twenty-five years she has offered after-school programs in poetry and art for students from kindergarten to eighth grade. The Studio also runs summer workshops that feature poetry, art, and bookmaking with a focus on the natural world. Since 2002, Ann has taught studio creative writing classes for adults as well. Gathering together, participants ranging in age from their 20s to 70s create a rich and extraordinary community. She has had the privilege to teach poetry workshops (2000-2010) on the Navajo Nation at Little Singer Community School in Bird Springs, Arizona. In many ways the indigenous practice of community-the inclusion of young people with elders-has informed the composition of her Studio classes.Ann's connection to indigenous ways began when, under the auspices of the American Friends Service Committee, she spent a summer working on the Cherokee Nation in the smoky mountains of North Carolina.For seven years Ann was a Faculty Associate at Hampshire College where she offered courses such as "Creativity and the Young Child" and "Integrative Seminar: The Creative Process." She has been a consultant for the Integrated Day Program at the University of Massachusetts. Using poetry as a model, Ann has designed and presented professional development workshops for teachers at Lesley University, Bank Street College, and the Antioch NE Graduate School of Education.Ann holds an MA degree from Goddard College in creativity and education with an emphasis on poetry-in-the schools. She received an honorary degree for Teaching Excellence from Marlboro College in 1988.She has published in numerous poetry and professional journals ranging from The Apple Tree Review and Birmingham Arts Journal to The Elementary School Journal (University of Chicago Press) and Literary Cavalcade (Scholastic Magazine). In a recent conversation with one of her grandchildren, she found herself mentioning that in the past she thought she was going to be a social worker. The child responded: "But you are a social worker; you get people to express their emotions;" these words capturing the essence of Ann's teaching, whether she is in a high school dormitory on the Navajo Nation or teaching among her gardens in Marlboro, Vermont.