Bookshelf at Home
Photo by Amy LV
Students - This week has been Banned Books Week, and so I decided to write a poem for the greatest champions of books...librarians. When librarians stand up for books, they stand up for you and for me and for all of the ideas we share and for all of the ideas we do not share. Librarians stand up for thought and for freedom. All of my gratitude to them. Librarians are the lifeguards of thought.To whom are you grateful? This may be one person or it may a whole group of people who do a particular job or who share a characteristic. Thank you notes can be personal and given to one person or general and written for all to read such as mine today. If you write a thank you poem, you may choose to write your poem in your own voice...or you may choose to write it in the voice of another as I did today. Your voice need not even be human! Feel free to title it as I did..."A Thank You to..."
I look forward to Saturday when I will have the good fortune to learn the educators of The Literacy Connection, a professional organization in Ohio. We will be reading and writing poems together, discovering the many ways that poems can teach us about writing and life as we dig into my book POEMS ARE TEACHERS and the poems of so many.
Tomorrow, Irene will be hosting this week's Poetry Friday roundup over at Live Your Poem. Each Friday, all are invited to share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship in this open and welcoming poetry community.
Read, my friends...
xo,
Amy
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"stories must always be free" - so true. I love this thank you to librarians from the books. Your perspective and voice pulled me right in. Thank you, Amy!
ReplyDeleteWho am I thankful for? YOU! Librarians, too, and all the people involved in creating all those beautiful books on your home bookshelf (which I love for its wildflower-rather-than-manicured look!). xo
ReplyDeleteAmy, thanking librarians with a poem is an act of kindness. The library is the hub of a school and librarians do protect their treasures and encourage students to do the same. On the subject of banned books, I agree with your lines, "stories and facts must always free".
ReplyDeleteWhat a terrific lesson on giving voice to the books themselves, Amy. I can imagine a classroom teacher asking students: What would a book want to say?
ReplyDeleteHoping all librarians could read this, Amy, an important & thoughtful poem, fighting for "all readers' choices." Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThose books speak the truth! Thanks for sharing their voice, Amy.
ReplyDeleteSo much to love here, Amy--thank you for this poem!
ReplyDeleteI'll share this one with my daughter the librarian, Amy!
ReplyDeleteThank YOU! I'm feeling the love.
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