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The Poem Forest

Poet W. S. Merwin and the Palm Tree Forest He Grew from Scratch

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"All his life, William Stanley searched for a wild place of his own. Growing up in the straightened-out city blocks of his childhood and finding some respite in summer trips to a cabin in the woods, he yearned for space, fragrant soil, tall trees, and the silence that surrounds them. In Hawaii, he learned of acres of land depleted from toxic agricultural practices, and he became determined to restore that land and create one of the most comprehensive palm gardens in the world. With hope and lyricism, this enchanting story reveals how famed US Poet Laureate and ecologist W. S. Merwin planted nearly three thousand palm trees on his property in Hawaii, leaving as his legacy a wild space for everyone."
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 17, 2022
      “For William Stanley, writing poetry was like visiting a wild place—a surprising place always just exactly itself, language growing wherever it pleased.” This simplified biographical work describes the late U.S. poet laureate W.S. Merwin (1927–2019) growing up amid American city blocks “where the wild parts had been straightened out” and creating a home on a Maui plot deemed a “wasteland.” Planting at least one palm tree “every day during the rainy season” to help heal the earth, Merwin, later collaborating with his wife, plants thousands of palms, including endangered species, creating a forest that eventually becomes the Merwin Conservancy. Earth-toned digital illustrations by Turnham use simple applications of color to depict the poet’s life and the changing landscape, eventually visited by guests of varied ages and skin tones. Fountain’s prose poetry gently narrates Merwin’s steady, determined action—both in poetics and in planting. Merwin’s poem “Palm” concludes. Ages 4–8.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Carrington MacDuffie narrates this biography of the award-winning poet and ecologist W.S. Merwin. She speaks clearly and simply, complementing the poet's love of nature and suiting the book's target audience of young children. In addition to being a renowned poet (he was a two-time U.S. poet laureate), Merwin was concerned with preserving the natural world. The story skims through his early years. Beginning with his arrival in Hawaii, background music accompanies the narration. The Hawaiian hand drums, in particular, give a sense of the relentless purpose with which he worked--not only in writing poetry but also in planting a protected palm forest on land that was previously deemed a wasteland. An author's note and MacDuffie's reading of Merwin's poem "Palm" conclude the audiobook. L.T. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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