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In this
collection of recent essays and reflections, Richard Lewis shares his
pursuit of teaching as a means of deepening a child's poetic and imaginative
understanding. He makes clear, through examples of his own teaching
and the thoughts and writings of children, how much of what each child
brings with them, as they play and imagine, dream and wonder, is a necessary
and profound part of our human consciousness and creativity.
And throughout
he asks us to listen to the conversation each of us began in childhood,
to the flight and stillness of our own imagining, to those understandings
and learnings, in ourselves and in children, that continue to be the
basis, the poetry, of who we are--and the nature we inhabit.
"Poets
and children are natural companions. The child dreams up worlds apart,
without instruction, and the poet has never outgrown these childhood
necessities. When Richard Lewis comes to visit, the classroom suddenly
opens to a sky filled with celestial beings, and butterflies arrive
to carry us to distant planets. It is but a short distance from the
poet's imagery to a child's sense of joy and sadness, and we readers
take flight with the children as they find the words that express their
feelings. Once again, Mr. Lewis shows us the hidden world of childhood
and makes us want to change our own classrooms into magical places."
—Vivian Gussin Paley
Teacher and author of, among others, A Child’s
Work: The Importance of Fantasy Play; and forthcoming from the
University of Chicago Press, The Boy on the Beach