Kirkus Reviews QR Code
WHERE I LIVE by Paul B. Janeczko

WHERE I LIVE

Poems About My Home, My Street, and My Town

edited by Paul B. Janeczko ; illustrated by Hyewon Yum

Pub Date: March 14th, 2023
ISBN: 978-1-5362-0094-2
Publisher: Candlewick

A posthumous gathering of short poems on themes of home and neighborhood.

All but four of the 34 poems Janeczko selected before his death in 2019 have appeared elsewhere; most were published after 2000. The roster of contributors will be largely familiar to readers of his many anthologies: X.J. Kennedy leads off with an affirmation that “Home” is “Wherever you sit down / to eat your supper, pet your cat, / do homework, watch TV,” Walter de la Mare describes peeking through window blinds to watch passersby, and Gary Soto offers a suburban “Ode to a Sprinkler.” In more reflective tones, Linda Sue Park writes evocatively of a wind in “October” playing tag with a plastic bag and Naomi Shihab Nye, of people like “leaves drifting / downhill in morning fog” on “Spruce Street, Berkeley.” Nikki Grimes and Nikki Giovanni chime in with summertime celebrations of, respectively, a “Block Party” and “Knoxville, Tennessee,” and Langston Hughes rounds things off with metaphorical images of a “City” that “Spreads its wings” in the morning and “In the evening… / Goes to bed / Hanging lights / About its head.” Yum echoes the pervasive air of peaceful serenity with colored pencil and watercolor scenes in which city, country, and suburban settings share presence with racially diverse groups and individuals, mostly children. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A luminous sendoff, rich in happy memories and sweet nostalgia.

(Picture-book poetry. 6-10)