Untangling Spaghetti: Selected Poems
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About this ebook
Are toenails a good source of vitamin C? What are ten things you will never hear your parents say? How do you untangle spaghetti? This collection of humorous, touching, and thought-provoking poems celebrates the everyday lives of children through topics such as food, animals, school, friends, and sports.
Steven Herrick
Steven Herrick is one of Australia's most popular poets. His books for teens include Love, Ghosts, & Facial Hair; A Place Like This; and The Simple Gift.
Read more from Steven Herrick
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Book preview
Untangling Spaghetti - Steven Herrick
Steven Herrick was born in Brisbane, the youngest of seven children. At school his favourite subject was soccer, and he dreamed of football glory while he worked at various jobs. For the past twenty-five years he’s been a full-time writer and regularly performs his work in schools throughout the world. Steven lives in the Blue Mountains with his partner Cathie, a belly dance teacher. They have two adult sons, Jack and Joe.
www.stevenherrick.com.au
Also by Steven Herrick
Young Adult
Slice
Black painted fingernails
Water bombs
Love, ghosts and nose hair
A place like this
The simple gift
By the river
Lonesome howl
Cold skin
Children
Pookie Aleera is not my boyfriend
The place where the planes take off
My life, my love, my lasagne
Poetry to the rescue
Love poems and leg-spinners
Tom Jones saves the world
Do-wrong Ron
Naked bunyip dancing
Rhyming boy
To Jack and Joe,
With love, football and poetry . . .
contents
Introduction
Chapter One: House rules
Chapter Two: There once was a limerick called Steven
Chapter Three: The big match
Chapter Four: Ms Understanding
Chapter Five: Spaghetti Jack
Chapter Six: Seeing the world
introduction
These poems are personal favourites from my three collections for children: Poetry to the Rescue; My Life, my love, my lasagne; and Love poems and leg spinners. Many of the poems in this selection were inspired by the childhoods of my two sons, Jack and Joe. As I write this, Jack is living in London and Joe is starting university. They are no longer boys, but young men.
Hairy young men!
When they were children, both boys would come home every afternoon from primary school and eagerly tell me about the events of their day. Because I was their dad, they also knew I’d turn their stories into poems.
Jack and Joe were so generous in allowing a house-bound poet to leave his desk and journey with them through the classroom and schoolyard.
We’d have afternoon tea of biscuits, cake and giggles before venturing into the backyard for the obligatory game of soccer. The boys would tell me about what happened at school. Joe in his quiet observant way. Jack would be much more animated, often adding theatrical flourishes of his own. From these stories, I’d create a poem the next day. When the boys arrived home from school that afternoon, I’d read the freshly-minted poem.
Their response?
Often giggles, but sometimes they’d frown and say, ‘But Dad, that’s not how it happened.’
Then we’d discuss the poem, or the incident that lead me to write about it and I’d try again the next day. Occasionally, I’d want to leave the poem as it was and I’d explain how it was saying something different from their reality. The boys would understand. However, I always felt that they were a little . . . disappointed. As if I hadn’t kept my end of the bargain.
They tell me the truth. I write the truth. Poetry or journalism?
Of course, the best poems speak more than the truth. They take us into the emotion and joy and humour and the simple thereness of the moment. That’s an awfully clumsy word for a poet to use. But it best describes what many of these poems are about – me trying to be with my two sons as they made their way through childhood.
It was the best journey of my life.
Steven Herrick
Katoomba, 2009
digital clock
It’s my first digital clock.
I’m learning to tell the time
(although I don’t tell it anything).
At night I read in bed until
7:00