Poetry Comics
by Grant Snider
DETAILS: Publisher: Chronicle Books Publication Date: March 26, 2024 Format: Hardcover Length: 96 pgs. Read Date: June 1, 2024
What’s Poetry Comics About?
Rather than try to really describe this book (and I wouldn’t do a great job of it), here’s a shody photo of the back cover (forgive the partial library barcode)
A Word About the Art
If you’re a fan of Snider’s characteristic simple drawings, you’ll enjoy the art here. I am one of those, so I did.
The panels pair up really nicely with the poems—sometimes augmenting the shape and construction of the poem, sometimes simply illustrating them. Either way, it’s just what you want in this kind of book. They never detract from the poems (they probably make some of the simpler ones better—they definitely disguise their brevity*).
* I don’t mean to suggest that simple/brief poems are bad, they’re simply short.
So, what did I think about Poetry Comics?
This book is a shining example of adequasivity. It was perfectly fine, but on the whole, it really didn’t do much for me.
There were a few poems about writing a poem—they were nice (not particularly practical). Most seemed to be trying really hard to be uplifting—and many of those fell flat to me, primarily because they were clearly trying really hard, but I did enjoy a couple of those. I’m going to guess that I really enjoyed about 10% of them—but there were none that I’d consider “bad,” on the whole, the book was adequate.
So adequate that I knew halfway through that I’d have to look up that Newsradio video linked above.
Do I think readers in the target age range would appreciate this more than I did? Sure, if they like poetry (and possibly those who are ambivalent to it).
This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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