Before I  talk more about this book and a few other poetry titles of Marilyn's,  let's learn a bit more about her.
What got you hooked on children’s poetry?Marilyn: My  first books for children were picture books and novels, and most of the  former 
weren’t even in rhyme.  My first full poetry book was 
TURTLE  IN JULY.  It started as a prose story, which 
didn’t work, and  that’s when it hit me—I could write in my favorite genre for KIDS.  That  was an amazing revelation!  And it’s changed my reading, as well as my  writing.  I’d had some of my adult poems published in college journals  and small press magazines, and I’d read a fair amount of poetry by  well-known poets.  Now Barbara 
Genco and I co-host the 
ALSC (Association  for Library Service to Children) 
Poetry  Blast at the ALA (American Library Association) conference every  year, where poets read their work aloud.  To prepare for that, I get to  read a lot of poetry for children and young adults, which is a great  treat.
Have  you had any formal poetry training? If not, how did you learn to write  what you do?Marilyn: I majored in English in college, but took  mostly literature classes.  In the one creative writing class I took, my  teacher said that my poetry was good, but the rest of my work 
wasn’t.   Later for him!  Other than that, I’
ve had no formal training.  However, I  have gotten good teaching from friends and editors.  Their comments  have really helped me write better.
Can describe your poetry writing process?Marilyn: My  poems are generally sparked by questions that I want to answer, by  images that surprise me, by the need to play with language, and by  characters whose voices I hear in my head (not literally!).  My  collections are largely thematic, but I don’t usually feel that there IS  a collection until I’
ve written a minimum of five poems on that theme  and firmly believe that I can write a lot more.
I tend to write  on legal pads or scraps of paper and revise until I’m satisfied, and I  can write anywhere (and I do mean anywhere).  When I’m on a roll, I will  write several poems each day, spending much of the time staring into  space and playing with language—or, as my husband puts it, “
poetizing.”   It’s a pleasant state to be in, but most particularly when I’m sitting  outdoors in the country on warm days with few distractions.
What are the things  you enjoy most about writing poetry for children/young adults?Marilyn:  Writing poetry allows me to answer questions, to play with words and  images, and to surprise, amuse, and even—at the risk of sounding  immodest—move myself, all things I find enjoyable.  Poetry is largely  meant to be read aloud, so it’s easy to share, and, if you love  literature, I believe you enjoy sharing it.  I know that I do.
Do you have a  favorite among all the poems/poetry books you have written?Marilyn: MIRROR, MIRROR: A BOOK OF REVERSIBLE VERSE  is my favorite. It features a form that I invented  called the “
reverso.”  You read the piece down, and it’s one poem.  Read  it up, and it’s another.  All the 
reversos in my book involve fairy  tales.
Would you like to  share the details of any new poetry project(s) that you’re working on?Marilyn: I have a number of other poetry books coming out,  including one about dog holidays (
Dutton), another about games and play  (Clarion), and THE BOY WHO CRIED ALIEN (Disney-Hyperion)—a “silent  movie” in the form of poems.  For that one I made up an alien language  and wrote poems in that. Then I translated the poems into both literal  English and poetic English. Still forthcoming are these poetry books:  TWOSOMES:  Love Poems from the Animal Kingdom (Knopf); A FULL MOON IS RISING (Lee & Low), a lyrical world tour of events that happen during a full moon; A STICK IS AN EXCELLENT THING (Clarion), poems about everyday games and play; THE SUPERHEROES EMPLOYMENT AGENCY (Clarion), featuring B-List superheroes looking for work); RISKY PLACES (Chronicle) about animals that thrive in extreme habitats;  and as yet untitled new book of fairy tale 
reversos (
Dutton). Other forthcoming books include CATERPILLARS (
EarlyLight), a nonfiction book; WHAT IS YOUR DOG DOING? (
Atheneum), a rhymed picture book; and TALLULAH'S TUTU (Clarion), the first of three picture books featuring Tallulah, a young ballet student.
My  most recent published poetry books are 
SHOE  BOP! (
Dutton), poems about shoes, and 
FIRST  FOOD FIGHT THIS FALL (Sterling), poems about school in the voices  of kids from one class, and 
MIRROR, MIRROR, fairy tales in a new form. 
Pop Quiz!Your favorite dead poet?Marilyn:  Shakespeare is my favorite author, and he was a grand poet.  I also love  Dylan Thomas.
Your favorite place to write?Marilyn: I write poetry in a lot  of places because it’s portable.    I’
ve written it in coffee shops, in  the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, at the Bronx Zoo, on the subway, on  airplanes, by my pond in CT, in my apartment in Brooklyn—everywhere.   Writing on the subway is fun because it makes the ride go a lot faster!
Favorite quote on  writing/poetry?Marilyn: I’
ve always loved Coleridge’s quote:   “Prose:  words in the best order; Poetry:  the best words in the best  order.”  I totally agree with it.
***************One of the things  about 
Turtle  in July that works so well is the pairing of the animals with the  months. For example, October is the Canada goose, January the  white-tailed deer, and March  the brown bear. My favorite poem is the  book is for the month of September.
Timber Rattlesnake
Summer it  still is
Yes
September stones
Warm bones
Warm blood
Strike  I still can
Yes
Snare and swallow the harvesting mouse
                        the  shuffling rat
But slant they do the sun's rays
Shorter grow the  days
Yes
Soon September stones
Chill bones
Chill blood
Stiff  shall I grow
And so below I'll slide
Beneath stones
Beneath  soil
Coil I still can
Yes
Sleep safe
Sleep sound
Snake  underground
Marilyn followed up this effort with the book 
Fireflies  at Midnight. Instead of describing animals throughout the year,  this one is focused on a single day at different hours. Can you guess  which animal is an early riser?
Robin
Up cheerup I'm up
Let me be the first to  greet the light
First cheerily first
Hello day, good-bye night
Up  cheerup I'm up
In this tree soon chicks will hatch
Soon cheerily  soon
Down below are worms to catch
Up cheerup I'm up
Hail  chicks and worms and sky!
Hail cheerily hail
Morning robins are  not shy
The great thing about these books is that  Marilyn  has conceived of and written the animal voices and thoughts in such  convincing ways. She talks about this in Paul 
Janeczko's book 
Seeing  the Blue Between: Advice and Inspiration for New Poets.
Why  do I have animals and people speak poetry, when we know that in real  life they don't? For me, poetry is they're saying inside—their true  thoughts and feelings. And it's not just what they'd say, but how they  might say it. You know that some folks are more down-to-earth and have a  plainer way of talking while others use fancier language. I think, if  they could talk, some animals would speak in many different ways, as  well. A turtle, for example, might talk slowly and use few words. A dog,  on the other hand, would probably blabber excitedly. He'd also use  slang. At least, that's how I imagine these animals would sound. In my  poetry, I get to know these people and animals—and I hope you do too.

As you  may have noticed, I am quite fond of animal poems, but Marilyn has  written about many diverse topics including water, fire, nature, shoes,  the Mississippi River, and more. One book about beasts of legend and  fable, 
Creature  Carnival, was named an honor book for the 
Lee  Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award. Another book (released in September  of 2008), 
First  Food Fight This Fall: And Other School Poems follows a group of  children as they learn and grow over the course of a school year. These  poems are written in the children's voices and fairly sing about the  highs and lows of school. Here's what 
Laksmi has to say about poetry at  the beginning of the year.
What I Think of Poetry
by Laksmi
Poetry  makes me
sleepy: lullaby words in
a warm, quiet room
Here's  what she and 
Kwan thought a bit later in the year.
When Ms. Mundy Read Us A Poem
by  Laksmi & Kwan
I fell asleep as
usual. Only this time
I  dreamed of flowers.
On the
grayest fall day,
all the maples  outside
were bare, but in our room cherry
trees bloomed.

One of Marilyn's most recent books has had me reading and puzzling over the poems for a while now. In 
Mirror, Mirror: A  Book of Reversible Verse, the poems in the book are based on  fairy tales and tell two sides of the same story. Here's the catch. The  poems are inverses of one another. The second poem is created by  reading the first poem in reverse (hence 
reverso).
Here's the  example Marilyn provides in her note about the form.
A cat without a  chair: incomplete | Incomplete: a  chair without a cat. | 
Brilliant, isn't it? The poems in this one are crafty. I've read them forwards, backwards, and over and over and find myself wondering how she did it. Perhaps one day she'll share her secret.
 All poems ©Marilyn  Singer. All rights reserved.