Poem of the Week, by Shel Silverstein

Friends, my novel Telephone of the Tree has received three starred reviews so far and is an Amazon Best Book of the YearIf you know a young or not-so-young person who might be comforted by it, please respond and let me know why and I’ll enter their name in a drawing for a free signed copy. 

I keep trying to write about why competition bothers me, how if someone’s a winner then someone else must be a loser, how sometimes I’ll secretly and intentionally lose a board game if I know it’ll make someone else happy, but the truth is the thing that keeps coming to me when I read this poem is the week my siblings and I spent every summer at our grandparents’ farm in downstate New York.

The red barns and weeping willow and white birch and porch swing. Our grandfather in coveralls, washing up at the laundry sink with Lava soap. Our grandmother driving us to Rudd Pond to go swimming. Both of them taking us all on a long country drive after dinner that would end up at Dairy Queen. How my grandmother always tried to get me to order more than a small vanilla cone – Oh honey, just that little cone? Can’t we get you a sundae instead? How my sister cried at the end of those summer weeks, because nothing in the world was like time spent with those two people: their laughter, their love, their absolute acceptance.

Hug o’ War, by Shel Silverstein

I will not play at tug o’ war.
I’d rather play at hug o’ war,
Where everyone hugs
Instead of tugs,
Where everyone giggles
And rolls on the rug,
Where everyone kisses,
And everyone grins,
And everyone cuddles,
And everyone wins.

Click here for more information about Shel Silverstein. Today’s poem is included in his collection Where the Sidewalk Ends, published by Harper & Row in 1974.

alisonmcghee.com
My podcast: Words by Winter

Poem of the Week, by Shel Silverstein

My new poems podcast, Words by Wintercan be found here.

Do you ever talk out loud to yourself? Sometimes I do, like last night in my little kitchen, making batches of toffee. To make toffee you have to stir and stir and stir, which is good because I like slow repetitive motion that takes a long time. Soothes me. Then came a voice: What a hard year it’s been, Allie. You’re doing a good job in a hard time. You’re really trying. Me, talking to myself as if I were my own daughter. The room was full of the smell of caramelized brown sugar and butter, and unlike the way I usually talk to myself, which is scolding and impatient, this voice was soft and soothing.

Forgotten Language, by Shel Silverstein

Once I spoke the language of the flowers,
once I understood each word the caterpillar said,
once I smiled in secret at the gossip of the starlings,
and shared a conversation with the housefly
in my bed.
Once I heard and answered all the questions
of the crickets,
and joined the crying of each falling dying
flake of snow,
once I spoke the language of the flowers. . . .
How did it go?
How did it go?


For more information about Shel Silverstein, please check out his website.

alisonmcghee.com
Words by Winter: my new podcast