Author picture

Blanche Jennings Thompson

Author of Saint Elizabeth's Three Crowns

17+ Works 716 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Blanche Jennings Thompson

Silver Pennies (1931) 161 copies, 4 reviews
All the Silver Pennies (1967) 62 copies, 2 reviews
Saints of the Byzantine World (2012) 49 copies, 1 review
When Saints Were Young (1963) 40 copies
More Silver Pennies (1938) 23 copies
Peter and Paul (1966) 21 copies
Adventures in reading (1952) 20 copies
St. Francis de Sales (1965) 20 copies, 1 review
Four Novels for Appreciation (1960) — Editor — 14 copies
With Harp and Lute (2024) 6 copies
All Day with God (1939) 3 copies

Associated Works

Americans All: Stories of American Life To-Day (1920) — Editor, some editions — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1887
Gender
female

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
I'm not gonna "review" this book, but I will sample and savor it from time to time. The original SILVER PENNIES (1925) was a book of poems for children that my mom had as a little girl and she always talked about it, often while she was reading to my brothers and me from Robert Louis Stevenson's A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VERSES. It had been lost long ago. So I can only imagine how pleased she must have been to find this 1967 first edition of ALL THE SILVER PENNIES, which combined that first book show more with its companion volume, MORE SILVER PENNIES (1938). It is filled with poems that children will love, by poets such as Sara Teasdale, Vachel Lindsay, Katherine Mansfield, Carl Sandburg, Robert Frost, Mark Van Doren, Elizabeth Coatsworth, Emily Dickinson, Yeats, and many other takented poets now long forgotten. But I'm pretty sure little kids even today would still enjoy having these poems read aloud to them. A particular favorite of mine is a Joyce Kilmer poem called "The House with Nobody in It." It's about a falling in, abandoned house, and here's a verse -

"If I had a lot of money and all my debts were paid / I'd put a gang of men to work with brush and saw and spade. / I'd buy that place and fix it up the way it used to be / And I'd find some people who wanted a home and give it to them free."

Mom loved that one too. And I remember her own interest in old abandoned houses we'd see when we took Sunday rides through the countryside when I was small. Sometimes we even stopped to 'explore' them.

All my grandkids are too old for this book now. It's best for reading to lap-size little ones. I'll hang on to it. Maybe we'll be graced with some great-grandkids one day, and I'll read to them of fairies and kittens, poppies and lost mittens. I see why Mom loved these poems, lovingly collected and annotated by editor Blanche Jennings Thompson, and the illustrations by Ursula Arndt are equally delightful. Very highly recommended, especially if you have little ones - and if you can FIND a copy.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
show less
My copy went missing years and years ago but I still remember the lovely poems and the pen and ink drawings. I was reminded of it recently and I'll have to seek out a copy some day.

Finally got it from the library and I'm really excited to read it!

Another childhood memory ruined. The pen and ink drawings were, indeed, charming but the poems were trite and I quickly learned to skip the editor intros, the worst kind of "how to understand this poem" twaddle. Ugh.
My husband and I picked this sweet little book up in a batch of books at an estate auction. We quickly fell in love with it. The book is meant for children, so before each poem, she give you some ideas to be thinking about while reading the poem. I would highly recommend this book to any one just being introduced to poetry.

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
17
Also by
1
Members
716
Popularity
#35,435
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
8
ISBNs
10

Charts & Graphs