Pablo Neruda was one of the greatest poets of the twentieth century. His late-career and playful Book of Questions is a terrific book of poetry, probably not intended exclusively for children. I’ll call it an “all ages” book of poetry, which means that children can also read it, which illustrator Paloma Valdiva recognized in creating this book. The hardcover book is beautifully designed, and the mode of illustration is collage, accessible for kids, translated for this bilingual edition by Sara Lissa Paulson
Essential questions:
Does the earth chirp like a cricket in the symphony of the skies?
Who shouted for joy when the color blue was born?
What irritates volcanoes so much that they spit fire, ice, and fury?
How many questions has a cat?
With which stars do they keep talking, the rivers that have no mouth?
Some are researchable questions in a scientific sense: If the rivers are all freshwater, how does the sea get its salt?
Others are more elusive, more. . . . lyrical?:
When I look once more at the sea, does the sea see me?
Why do the waves ask me the same questions of me that I ask of them?
Why, when they expect snow, do the trees take off all their clothes?
Where can you find the bell that rings inside your dreams?
Why in the darkness of times, is everything written in invisible ink?
Surrealism/magical realism? Unanswerable, paradoxical, the logic of a child’s ever-expanding universe of curiosity, which continues in those who remain artists and writers and scientists and children forever.
Might I ask my book if I’m the one who really wrote it?
Neruda completed his book just months before his death in 1973
The book draws on 70 questions from 39 of the 74 poems in the marvelous book. I own this? Jealous? 2017 book, one of my fave of the year, obvs.