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She won the 2015 Drinking Gourd Chapbook Poetry Prize for The Animal After Whom Other Animals Are Named, and her collection Ordinary Beast was a finalist for the 2018 PEN Open Book Award. [4] Her poem "Pages 22–29, an excerpt from The Ferguson Report: An Erasure" (Poetry London) won a Forward Prize for Poetry in October 2021. [5]
"Crocodile" (Russian: Крокодил) is a 1916-1917 fairy tale poem for children by Korney Chukovsky about a crocodile strolling along the streets of Petrograd (the contemporary name of St. Petersburg, Russia). It quickly became very popular, due to its utter nonsense, previously unseen in print, and skillful wordplay. [1] Chukovsky himself ...
Poems about talking animals (1 C, 19 P) Pages in category "Poems about animals" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect ...
Pages in category "Poems about talking animals" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Count Me a Rhyme: Animal Poems by the Numbers (2006, photos by Jason Stemple) Shape Me a Rhyme: Nature's Forms in Poetry (2007, photos by Jason Stemple) A Mirror to Nature: Poems About Reflection (2009, photos by Jason Stemple) An Egret's Day (2010, photos by Jason Stemple) Things to Say to a Dead Man: Poems at the End of a Marriage and After ...
Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats (1939) is a collection of whimsical light poems by T. S. Eliot about feline psychology and sociology, published by Faber and Faber. It serves as the basis for Andrew Lloyd Webber's 1981 musical Cats. Eliot wrote the poems in the 1930s and included them, under his assumed name "Old Possum", in letters to his ...
Dark Emperor & Other Poems of The Night” is a nonfiction compilation of poems about animals that are active during the night time. The author Joyce Sidman reveals the loveliness and diversification of the nocturnal world through twelve lyrical poems.
Lear wrote the poem for a three-year-old girl, Janet Symonds, the daughter of Lear's friend and fellow poet John Addington Symonds and his wife Catherine Symonds. The term "runcible", used for the phrase "runcible spoon", was invented for the poem. It is believed that the cat in the poem was based on Lear's own pet cat, Foss. [2]