Sunday, January 04, 2026

Letters between friends



There’s a special feeling that you get when you hold the new book of an author whose work you've loved in the past. 

It’s a little like when you meet an old friend on the street and she shares good news with you, or maybe like when you return to a favorite spot and find it’s the same but different, still special but with a newness that wasn’t there before. 


That’s how I felt when I held my copy of Joyce Sidman’’s Dear Acorn (Love, Oak): Letter Poems to Friends by Joyce Sidman (Illustrated by Melissa Sweet). 


What a remarkable collection of letters in the form of poems that friends send to each other. 


The “friends,” however, are different than you might expect. 


Imagine an oak tree sending a letter to an acorn, or an acorn responding with a letter of its own. 


And what if a bubble could write a letter to sky?


Dear Sky,

Hello! It’s me, Bubble!

I’m here!

Someone breathed me

awake!


Or what if baby sea turtles could share a poem with the ocean, and the ocean could respond with a poem of its own to all the creatures who live in its water?


Not only is Dear Acorn a collection of love letters between friends, it’s a book where each poem and illustration connect us more deeply to each other and to the world around us, and encourage us to use our imaginations to envision the world in a way that makes it clear how all of life is interconnected. 


Melissa Sweet’s illustrations are perfect compliments to the poems and equally wonderful, bringing to life Sidman’s words and offering readers a world in these pages as colorful and enthralling as the world itself.


Here’s Oak writing to Acorn:


Dear Acorn,


I feel you there,

a tickle at my twig tips,


a plump promise

against my rough bark.


Your whole life ahead of you

and weeks till you fall.


Take a good look around, Acorn.

Drink in the view.


The next stop is earth.

Then years upon years

until you see this sky

this high

again.


I’ll be waiting,

Oak


And here’s Acorn’s response:


Dear Oak,


I am round and ready. Bursting

with hope, crammed with possibilities.

I know I must drop and sleep andrtificate

sprout and grow. So slow! But then,

Oak, I’ll stretch up my arms,

strong and true. I’ll be your

friend, the one who rises

up beside you.

Love,

Acorn


For budding poets (young and old), Sidman includes a handful of suggestions for how to write your own letter poems, such as how to choose a subject, what to think about, and how to begin writing a poem. 


I hope you’ll get the chance to pick up your own copy of Dear Acorn (Love, Oak): Letter Poems to Friends from a bookstore or library near you and enjoy Sidman’s poems and Sweet’s illustrations. 


It’s a marvelous collection that helps both adults and children see the world anew. 




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