About the Book
A collection of fifty poems about love: Shared and unrequited. Lasting a moment and lasting a lifetime. Love for a pet, a sport, music. And love for a boyfriend or girlfriend, family, our world. This collection explores the intensity, pain, and beauty that love brings - from first crush to love's bloom, from a breakup catastrophe to starting over. Love is an experience that makes us think: No one has felt like this. Ever. It can make us look at someone and feel dizzy in his or her eyes.
Dizzy in Your Eyes has been nominated for the Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers 2011 List.
Highlighted Reviews
“From family and school to dating and being dumped, the subjects in these 50 poems cover teens’
experiences of love in many voices and situations. Several entries incorporate Spanish words and idioms, as in “Ode to Teachers,” a moving tribute in English with a Spanish translation
…
Mora writes in free verse, as well as a wide variety of classic poetic forms—including haiku, clerihew, sonnet, cinquain, and blank verse—and for each form, there is an unobtrusive explanatory note on the facing page.
The tight structures intensify the strong feelings in the poems, which teens will enjoy reading on their own or hearing aloud in the classroom.”—Booklist
“A lovely collection of poems about the uncertainties of teenage love in all its greatness and through all its varied forms of expression. Mora explores the first love between a girl and a boy, the filial love between a daughter and her father, the fraternal love between sisters, the love of family, friends and teachers, picturing each variation as a strong force that strikes, blesses, empowers and beautifies the lives of the ones touched by its light. The poet’s voice is multifaceted: tender, humorous and joyful but also profound
…
The author employs an extraordinary diversity of poetic forms, from blank verse to a tanka, a cinquain to an anaphora, a haiku to a triolet and more, short notations adding a learning component for budding poets
…
A must read for lovestruck teens, whether they’re poets or not.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Peppered with Spanish, the selections define the emotion in countless ways. The quiet lyricism of some lines will prompt many readers to roll them over and over on their tongues; this is a world in which a simple smile can make a boy feel as if he’s “swallowed the sun” or one’s worst fear might be a kiss “dull like oatmeal.” Where relevant, poetic form is indicated, defined, and discussed on the adjacent page … The love here is neither hot and heavy nor clichéd, however, but rather a glimpse into the last remaining innocence of the teen years … Teachers in need of a fresh new avenue for teaching poetic form, lovers of language, and teens in search of a broader definition of love will find it here.”—School Library Journal
“With nothing but a very basic knowledge of poetry, I still enjoyed this quick read. DIZZY IN YOUR EYES
offers many takes on love, not just the expected ones. The first poem drew me in instantly with the simple
lines “the letters on the screen don’t match the letters I type...No matter what I do, the keys type your
name.” Each poem was unique, but also went with the others. I especially appreciate this collection because
it could be read in one sitting or drawn out over the course of time, revisited again and again. more”—TeenReads.com
“Pat Mora explores the intense sensation of teenage love in Dizzy in Your
Eyes: Poems About Love. In 50 poems, Ms. Mora writes about the
joys, sorrows and challenges that love can bring … Ms. Mora's poems are nicely organized in an easy-to-read style that will appeal to teen readers, who may even be inspired to try writing their own poetry.”—Scripps Howard News Service
|