The Mouse of Amherst
by Elizabeth Spires
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When she moves into Emily Dickinson's bedroom, Emmaline the mouse discovers her own propensity for poetry.Tags
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The only way this book could be more adorable is if it were also a stuffed animal.
The main character mouse in question is so flippin' cute, I found myself wishing this book were a stuffed animal, or at least came along with one so you could hug it while you were reading and maybe ask if it was ready for you to turn the page yet.
Wow. It's official. If a book is charming enough, it will turn me into a blithering idiot.
Anyway. Although the delicately expressive line drawings of Claire A. Nivola would have sufficed to win me over, Elizabeth Spires' story is outstanding. At one point, I was howling with laughter. (I'll tell you which point in a minute.)
Emmaline is a well-bred but adventurous mouse who moves into a New England house. She soon show more realizes that she is sharing a chamber with a most unusual housemate: Emily Dickinson.
Dickinson teaches Emmaline to love poetry and even to turn her paw to versification herself. These two shy, mischievous, nature-loving creatures communicate by leaving one another poems on bits of paper placed where no one else will find them.
Dickinson favors helpless mice over marauding cats (a fancy supported by her verse as well as by her niece's recollections), and keeps Emmaline safe from harm. In exchange, Emmaline is fiercely loyal to her dear Emily. When writer/editor Thomas Wentworth Higginson pays a visit and doesn't properly appreciate the genius of Dickinson's work, Emmaline is so furious she knocks a vase over, "missing him by a hair."
That's when I laughed. The ferocious expression the artist gives Emmaline's usually delicate features on this page is worth the price of the book, even if the rest of it weren't absolutely wonderful. The good news? It is.
Emily and Emmaline are loyal, loving friends; but eventually Emmaline realizes that it's time for her to make a choice:
I saw I must decide once and for all whether to leave the Dickinsons' – as Emily never would. For although she was content with her life's "circumference," narrow but infinitely deep, I felt stirred to see more of life.
I love that the author references the geographical smallness of Dickinson's existence while also acknowledging that this was what Dickinson had chosen, and what she needed in order to work – and her work was her life.
I'm also deeply impressed that the poetry Emmaline writes doesn't present as mediocre next to Dickinson's verse, but in fact is so good that at one point I had to check and see if one of Emmaline's poems wasn't actually one of Dickinson's.
I'm still in the middle of my Dickinson research, so I'm not sure what tragedy of ED's life Spires is referring to when she has Dickinson reacting with great agitation to the arrival of a letter. (Nerd outburst: I think it might be the death of Judge Otis Lord, but in this book ED's father is still alive when the letter arrives, and in real life Mr. Dickinson had died before Lord, who loved and was loved by Dickinson, passed on.) But the scene is beautifully handled, and shows a tender friendship between mouse and poet. After Emily falls asleep at her writing desk, Emmaline composes a lovely poem to console her, then carefully extinguishes the candle (another adorable illustration).
The next time you're at the library, check this book out and treat yourself to 15 minutes of absolute delight. Even if you've never been especially interested in Dickinson, or poetry, or mice, this book is irresistible – and it's a terrific introduction to the life and work of the great poet of Amherst. show less
The main character mouse in question is so flippin' cute, I found myself wishing this book were a stuffed animal, or at least came along with one so you could hug it while you were reading and maybe ask if it was ready for you to turn the page yet.
Wow. It's official. If a book is charming enough, it will turn me into a blithering idiot.
Anyway. Although the delicately expressive line drawings of Claire A. Nivola would have sufficed to win me over, Elizabeth Spires' story is outstanding. At one point, I was howling with laughter. (I'll tell you which point in a minute.)
Emmaline is a well-bred but adventurous mouse who moves into a New England house. She soon show more realizes that she is sharing a chamber with a most unusual housemate: Emily Dickinson.
Dickinson teaches Emmaline to love poetry and even to turn her paw to versification herself. These two shy, mischievous, nature-loving creatures communicate by leaving one another poems on bits of paper placed where no one else will find them.
Dickinson favors helpless mice over marauding cats (a fancy supported by her verse as well as by her niece's recollections), and keeps Emmaline safe from harm. In exchange, Emmaline is fiercely loyal to her dear Emily. When writer/editor Thomas Wentworth Higginson pays a visit and doesn't properly appreciate the genius of Dickinson's work, Emmaline is so furious she knocks a vase over, "missing him by a hair."
That's when I laughed. The ferocious expression the artist gives Emmaline's usually delicate features on this page is worth the price of the book, even if the rest of it weren't absolutely wonderful. The good news? It is.
Emily and Emmaline are loyal, loving friends; but eventually Emmaline realizes that it's time for her to make a choice:
I saw I must decide once and for all whether to leave the Dickinsons' – as Emily never would. For although she was content with her life's "circumference," narrow but infinitely deep, I felt stirred to see more of life.
I love that the author references the geographical smallness of Dickinson's existence while also acknowledging that this was what Dickinson had chosen, and what she needed in order to work – and her work was her life.
I'm also deeply impressed that the poetry Emmaline writes doesn't present as mediocre next to Dickinson's verse, but in fact is so good that at one point I had to check and see if one of Emmaline's poems wasn't actually one of Dickinson's.
I'm still in the middle of my Dickinson research, so I'm not sure what tragedy of ED's life Spires is referring to when she has Dickinson reacting with great agitation to the arrival of a letter. (Nerd outburst: I think it might be the death of Judge Otis Lord, but in this book ED's father is still alive when the letter arrives, and in real life Mr. Dickinson had died before Lord, who loved and was loved by Dickinson, passed on.) But the scene is beautifully handled, and shows a tender friendship between mouse and poet. After Emily falls asleep at her writing desk, Emmaline composes a lovely poem to console her, then carefully extinguishes the candle (another adorable illustration).
The next time you're at the library, check this book out and treat yourself to 15 minutes of absolute delight. Even if you've never been especially interested in Dickinson, or poetry, or mice, this book is irresistible – and it's a terrific introduction to the life and work of the great poet of Amherst. show less
Lovely little book, interesting for adults as well as children. A very literate mouse moves in to Emily Dickenson's house and shares a love of poems with her. We learn a bit about Emily's life, and some about the perils of being a small mouse in a house with a cat. A number of Emily's poems are made part of the story. I think this is a great incentive for readers to try writing their own poems, tho it is a genteel book & likely won't appeal to rowdier kids. Since I live in Amherst (but not MA) I had to get this book.
A charming, but not saccharine story of a white mouse named Emmaline who takes up resident in Emily Dickinson's bedroom and starts writing poetry. The pen and ink illustrations add much to the story.
The Mouse of Amherst is about a white mouse named Emmaline that becomes a residence behind the wainscoting of Emily Dickson’s bedroom. She observes Emily and wonders why Emily is always scribbling. Emmaline sneaks to look at it and finds that it is poetry. Emmaline secretly writes her own poem and places it on Emily’s desk. That is when Emily answers with another poem. After that the mouse and Emily start exchanging poems. This book has eight poems by the famous Emily Dickson, and seven poems by the white mouse. This is a good way for kids to enjoy poetry and learn about one of the most amazing poets of all time.
Emmaline the mouse moves into the Dickinson house and becomes enchanted and inspired by Emily's poems, daring to write several of her own to exchange with the great poet. She pushes a vase nearly onto the head of an editor who rejects Emily's poems, and has a close encounter with the cat and with the ratcatcher, before deciding to move on to have adventures in the outside world. Many of Emily's poems are included, along with charming line drawings by Claire A. Nivola.
See also: Stuart Little by E.B. White; Emily by Michael Bedard, illus. Barbara Cooney
See also: Stuart Little by E.B. White; Emily by Michael Bedard, illus. Barbara Cooney
Your child will undoubtedly delight in the discovery that the title of this book is a pun: a mouse named Emmaline dwells in the bedroom of a shy and retiring poet named Emily… Emily Dickinson, that is. Emmaline, who narrates, thinks of herself as “nothing more than a crumb gatherer, a cheese nibbler, a mouse-of-little-purpose.” But that was before she met “the great poet of Amherst.”
Full review:
http://www.twentybyjenny.com/812Books/review/mouse-amherst/
Full review:
http://www.twentybyjenny.com/812Books/review/mouse-amherst/
A delightful tale of Emmaline, the white mouse who lives in Emily Dickinson's room & discovers she too can write poetry.
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Common Knowledge
- People/Characters
- Emmaline; Emily Dickinson
- Important places
- Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
- Dedication
- For my mother and Celia -E.S.
By Chivalries as tiny,/A Blossom, or a Book,/The seeds of smiles are planted--/Which blossom in the dark. -E.D.
For Nafu/How could a body so small/contain such a large heart? -C.A.N. - First words
- I am a mouse, a white mouse.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)There is no Frigate like a Book/To take us Lands away/Nor any Coursers like a Page/Of prancing Poetry-/This Travel may the poorest take/Without oppress of Toll-/How frugal is the Chariot/That bears the Human [Mouse's] soul.
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- Reviews
- 9
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- (3.92)
- Languages
- English
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- ISBNs
- 4

























































