Echo Echo: Reverso Poems About Greek Myths
In this third collection of brilliant reversos, the author moves from classic fairy tales to the Greek myths for the poems' dueling perspectives. What's a reverso, you wonder? Listen to these outstanding recordings and be amazed!
1123024121
Echo Echo: Reverso Poems About Greek Myths
In this third collection of brilliant reversos, the author moves from classic fairy tales to the Greek myths for the poems' dueling perspectives. What's a reverso, you wonder? Listen to these outstanding recordings and be amazed!
12.95 In Stock
Echo Echo: Reverso Poems About Greek Myths

Echo Echo: Reverso Poems About Greek Myths

by Marilyn Singer

Narrated by Marilyn Singer, Joe Morton

Unabridged — 31 minutes

Echo Echo: Reverso Poems About Greek Myths

Echo Echo: Reverso Poems About Greek Myths

by Marilyn Singer

Narrated by Marilyn Singer, Joe Morton

Unabridged — 31 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$12.95
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $12.95

Overview

In this third collection of brilliant reversos, the author moves from classic fairy tales to the Greek myths for the poems' dueling perspectives. What's a reverso, you wonder? Listen to these outstanding recordings and be amazed!

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times Book Review - Maria Russo

Marilyn Singer's ingenious "reverso" poems are child-friendly feats of verbal pyrotechnics: They can be read from the top down or the bottom up, with just small changes of punctuation and capitalization. Reading in each direction yields a completely different meaning and point of view. Singer keeps the poems to a dozen or so mostly short lines, some just one word long, so they look spacious on the page and are easily accessible to younger child readers. Her first two collections, Mirror Mirror and Follow Follow, retold classic fairy tales. Now she's plunging into Greek mythology with Echo, Echo, and the results are just as much fun, no matter the age of the reader.

From the Publisher

A New York Public Library Best of the Year pick
An SLJ Best Book of the Year

A Nerdy Book Club Award winner


* "Another inventive exploration of stories readers thought they knew." — Publishers Weekly

* "A witty, seductive pairing of poetic imagination and artistic vision." — School Library Journal

"A visual and interpretive feast bringing timeless tales to a young audience." — Kirkus Reviews

"A wonderful addition to poetry collections andaccompaniment for the myths."—  Booklist

"Marilyn Singer’s ingenious ‘reverso’ poems are child-friendly feats of verbal pyrotechnics" — The New York Times

"The perfect supplement or introduction to Pandora, King Midas, Icarus, and the rest of the bunch of fantastically flawed gods, monsters, and mortals…easy and rewarding to read." — The Boston Globe

"Delightful...vivid, glowing." —The Wall Street Journal

"Mythology and Western civ curricula will grab greedily for this one." —BCCB

Kirkus Reviews

2015-11-03
Poetic portraits of well-known figures from Greek mythology. Picking up where they left off with their "reverso" renderings of classic fairy tales (Follow Follow: A Book of Reversos, 2013, etc.), poet Singer and illustrator Masse take on Greek myth, choosing some of the most famous legends to explore from multiple perspectives. In 2010, Singer created the provocative reverso form, in which—not unlike an extended palindrome—a lyric poem presents a portrait and then recasts it backward, line by line, in a companion poem. The complicated fates of the dozen mythic figures portrayed here, among them Arachne, Midas, Demeter, and Persephone, lend themselves particularly well to this reflective form, and Masse's gorgeous acrylics, richly stylized in blues and gold, effectively capture the dualistic nature of the reverso form. Here, curious Pandora, forever blamed for unleashing untold evils into the world when she "opened that darn box," gets a sympathetic reprieve when the story flips: "She let loose those evils, / but / she didn't collect them. / She gets the blame. / No matter that / it might have been great Zeus's game." The myth of "Eurydice and Orpheus," though, again hinging on succumbing to desire, here relies rather too heavily on the narrative note at the bottom of the page to convey the tragic plot to young readers. In all, though, a visual and interpretive feast bringing timeless tales to a young audience. (Picture book/poetry. 8-12)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178750711
Publisher: Live Oak Media
Publication date: 10/23/2017
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 5 - 8 Years
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews