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GIRL
COMING IN FOR A LANDING
Click
here for 1 minute book trailer
SAMPLE POEMS? SEE BELOW
A Novel in Poems
by April Halprin Wayland,
illustrated with amazing collages by Elaine Clayton
(Knopf)
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Book
Club Conference Calls
Call me on the
phone during your book club! I'd be happy to answer questions
on GIRL COMING IN FOR A LANDING as long as there are at least
10 people present. Email me (aprilwayland@aol.com)
and let me know when you're meeting. Put "Book Club" in the
subject line so I don't think you're trying to sell me life
insurance.
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Would you like an autographed sticker for this book?
Email
your snailmail address & who you want it autographed to
aprilwayland@aol.com
NEWS FLASH!
GIRL COMING IN FOR A
LANDING--A Novel in Poems...
...has won the Myra Cohn
Livingston Award for poetry given by the Children's
Literature Council of Southern California! Yippee!
...has
been named a
Lee Bennett Hopkins Honor Book for Children's Poetry.
The Hopkins award is
presented to the best book of poems published in the
previous year by the College of Education and the University
Libraries at Penn State University and the Pennsylvania
Center for the Book.
It's also a Junior Library Guild Selection, it's been
nominated for a Best Book of the Year for Young Adults
by the American Library Association (ALA) and it has also
been nominated for the ALA's Quick Picks for Reluctant
Readers list.
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I love what my editor at Knopf, Michelle Frey, wrote for this
book:
One Girl. One School year. All poems. From
friends to first dates, school dances to family fights, this
inspiring book captures the highs and lows of teen life with
refreshing honesty and humor. Funny, poignant, and completely
real, Girl Coming In For A Landing is just like high school:
impossible to walk away from unchanged.
REVIEWS
of GIRL COMING IN FOR A LANDING:
KIRKUS:
"…utterly fresh and winning collection of verse …spot-on
observations. Employing many forms of verse, some rhymed,
some not…all of them are accessible and exquisitely crafted.
The narrator says a great deal about writing: “I want to / make
something / beautiful…” She gets her wish."
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY: “Wayland…captures
the truth of (this) age……this work succeeds in making
reading and writing poetry more accessible to teens who may
otherwise find these tasks intimidating. Wayland’s endnote
includes specific suggestions for writing and submitting poems,
noting that her Web site lists places where young writers can
get published.”
THE HORN
BOOK: “…sincere
and overflowing with turbulent emotion. The unnamed
narrator’s innocent exuberance spills forth…as when she
tries to find the words to convey how she felt when her language
arts teacher praised her writing (“Firecrackers! Electric
guitars! Whipped cream!/ Roller coasters! / Carlo!”).
Heartbreaks and humiliations are also strongly
expressed…Eclectic collage artwork decorates the pages, adding
to the volume’s personalized feel, and an author’s note charts
the book’s origins while also offering a pep talk to young
writers.”
VOYA:
“This novel provides
a soft, intimate glimpse into the life of a young teen
girl…The combination of poetry and art is delightful and
amusing. The poems explore different styles, ranging from a
rewrite of a Shakespearean sonnet to concrete poetry that is
artwork on its own. Several (poems) are wonderfully written
and capable of standing on their own without the benefit of a
connecting plot. As a novel, the story has the intimate feel of
being inside someone’s private thought or at the very least
being able to read a private journal. Among the many stories
told through verse, this book is a standout.”
TWIST MAGAZINE: "Need a book for the beach? Look no further
The plot: Author April Halprin Wayland takes a bunch of insightful
poems-about everything from love to finding your own identity-and
puts them together to tell the story of one complicated (aren't
they all?) school year. Why you'll love it: Even if you yawned your way through
Lit class, you'll be hooked on her sincere poetry."
YM:
I’m usually
dense when it comes to poetry, but I finished this novel in
poems in one sitting. Each page is like a diary entry
in which an unnamed protagonist reveals her thoughts on
everything from the major blow-out she had with her best friend
to her roller-coaster crush on the boy of her dreams. It helps
that the language isn’t flowery and confusing, but
straightforward and poignant. For example: “Here’s my chance /
to be someone else / just for tonight. / To be someone who /
wears this dress, / arrives in style, / walking in owning the
room.” The book is also filled with wonderfully sloppy sketches
and collages that illustrate the text. My favorite: the birds
made out of cut-up sheet music that accompany a poem about her
violin recital.
**** four
stars
~"I read it nonstop. April Wayland
breathes teenage clarity onto every page with humor and affection."
Pam Munoz Ryan, author of Riding Freedom &
Esperanza Rising
~"Wayland's semi-autobiographical novel in verse is a delightful
celebration of poetry, parents and the passage from childhood
to adolescence. Filled with fresh imagery and rhythms as natural
as breathing, this sweet-spirited story of family, friendship,
first love and a girl's discovery of the power of words is an
undivided pleasure to read-first silently to yourself...then
aloud to the special people in your own life."
Michael Cart, author, "Booklist" columnist,
YA literature specialist
~"...haunting, yearning, lovely--just the right touch for
a young girl finding the world and herself."
Sonia Levitin, author of The Return & Dream
Freedom
~"April Halprin Wayland speaks in the passionately authentic
voice of a real teenage girl. Her honest, heartfelt, poignant
poems will inspire teens who read them to try writing some of
their own."
Sonya Sones, author of Stop Pretending & What
My Mother Doesn't Know
~"It's dazzling. Her easy-on-the-eyes poetry zings right
to the heart. I can't imagine a warmer companion through adolescence
than Girl Coming In for a Landing."
Sid Fleischman, Newbery award-winning author of The Whipping
Boy & many others
~“Much luck with GIRL COMING IN...; I know it will receive wondrous
reviews.”
poet Lee Bennett Hopkins
About her previous poetry--not this collection:
~"[Her] work is stupendous...some of the best writing I've
seen in a long, long time."
poet Lee Bennett Hopkins
A father's review:
I just wanted to tell you that I got your book and purposed to
give it to my daughter ( I have two -- ages 13 and 14 -- but the
13-year-old reads everything!) but I couldn't put it down. I
love to read myself and enjoy poetry and your book gave me some
great insights into what it is like for my girls. As a licensed
child therapist, I enjoyed it on behalf of all the preteen and
teen girls I work with. I will recommend it to them and my staff
( I direct a children's mental health agency). P.S. I will
give it to my daughter...as soon as I finish it :)
Ron
Huxley, LMFT
Sample
poems from
GIRL COMING IN FOR A LANDING—A Novel
in Poems
It’s hard to choose which poems to share with
you out of the 100-plus poems that make up the school year of
this teen! Some poems I don’t want to share out of
context. Some give away too much of the story...
The narrator writes poems and keeps them hidden:
POETRY IS MY UNDERWEAR
My sister found them.
Read them out loud.
She’s so proud,
she’s running to our parents
waving my poems in the air
Doesn’t she know
she’s waving my underwear?
When she has a fight with a friend, she can’t get
to sleep:
I HAVE TO WRITE
I have to write.
A splinter pushes up through my skin
and I can’t sleep
until this sliver of words
works its way out.
She writes this about a guy she likes:
HEALER
You walk into class—
my head clears.
No kidding.
You are my aspirin.
recipe for lemon waffles (!)
All poems excerpted from Girl Coming in
for a Landing by April Halprin Wayland.
Copyright by April Halprin Wayland. Excerpted by permission
of Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers, a division
of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt
may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing
from the publisher.

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