Dawn Reader

Dawn Reader
from Open Door Coffee Co.; Hudson, OH; Oct. 26, 2016

Saturday, November 16, 2019

A New Book of Doggerel/Wolferel on Kindle

I've just uploaded my latest collection of doggerel/wolferel to Kindle Direct--and I'll let you know when it's available for purchase for the staggering price of $2.99 (the lowest price they will allow me to charge--worth every penny).

It's called Final Words from a Middle School English Teacher's Final Year--"poems" based on the final 200-wd vocabulary list I used my final full year at Harmon Middle School; Aurora, OH; 1996-97.

Here is the introductory material ...



Final Words from a Middle School English Teacher’s Final Year

And Other Doggerel and Wolferel


(July 14–November 1, 2019)

by

Daniel Dyer


Copyright © 2019 by Daniel Dyer


Dedication

To our son and his family:

Stephen Osborn Dyer
Melissa McGowan Dyer
Logan Thomas Dyer
Carson William Daniel Dyer



 
“Words, words, words.”

—Prince Hamlet in Hamlet, 2.2


Preface


            When I began my teaching career (seventh grade English, the fall of 1966), I didn’t pay much attention to vocabulary instruction. Oh, I taught spelling (you cannot overestimate the appeal to inexperienced teachers of something that’s either right or wrong!), grammar, usage. But for some reason I cannot recall, I just did not do much with vocabulary.
            That changed.
            Later on, I read in some teachers’ magazine a research piece that said that there was no One Best Way to teach it—but that some approach was better than no approach. And so I eventually settled on this:
            • I took all words from the texts we would be reading throughout the year (those final years it was The Diary of Anne Frank, the play script; The Call of the Wild; Much Ado About Nothing; a variety of short stories and nonfiction).
            • I arranged them into twenty groups of ten. (That’s 200 words, if you’re mathematically challenged.)
            • We reviewed them continually.
            • On quiz day, the students had to spell each word, write its definition (and make it accurate enough to be acceptable—for some years I made them write it verbatim), and be prepared to use five of them in sentences (they never knew which five).
            I retired from middle-school teaching in January 1997, so what you see here are the words from my final full school year, 1996–97.
A few years later (2001) I started teaching high school juniors in Hudson, Ohio, at Western Reserve Academy, a nearby boarding school (I could walk or bike to work), and I continued with the technique outlined above. The words were “harder” (though I still took them from our literary texts), and so I continued until the spring of 2011, when, once again, I retired.
            And all the vocabulary lists went into file folders in my study.
            Until I got the idea to write a series of doggerel about those middle-school words.


**

            This volume you’re now viewing on your Kindle device (or app) is one of a series of such volumes—a collection of doggerel (silly poems with little literary merit) that I’ve assembled from the posts I do on Facebook and from my blog Daily Doggerel (which lives on blogspot.com).
            In Daily Doggerel I focus on a theme—and usually crank out 100 or more, uh, “poems” on that topic before I shove it all into a Kindle book. (If you check my author page on Amazon, you can see how much of my time I’ve … devoted? … to this enterprise.)
            So … here in this volume you will find one hundred “poems” based on the vocabulary words I used with my eighth graders back in the mid-1990s. Each “poem” employs two of our words. I do them in order, list by list, all twenty of them.
            In this volume you will also find a section called “Desultory Doggerel”: These are lines I’ve written and generally, though not always, posted on Facebook—lines about various quotidian and/or silly things. Like changes in the weather, critters that wander through our yard (or don’t quite make it across the road), coffee-shop moments, memories, and so on.
            Finally, there is a third collection of lines, the sort that I’ve been, for quite a while, calling “Wolferel,” a word I invented many volumes ago, a word to identify lines that are a rung or two (or three or more) up from doggerel but not quite far enough up the ladder to qualify as poetry. A wolferel is a more serious doggerel, just as, you know, a wolf is a more serious dog.


**

            You’ll notice that there’s a bit of a break in mid-October. The reason? Illness. I came down with some sort of virus that basically shut me down—it seemed, at times, for good. And, at times, I was almost grateful for that. For … The End. Couldn’t eat. Couldn’t drink. No energy. Slept about twenty hours a day.
            I ended up in the ER, where they re-hydrated me, and, for the first time, I saw on my interior GPS the Road to Recovery. And I hopped on it. Eagerly so.
            One result? This volume. So … don’t blame me for it. Blame the medical profession!

            —Daniel Dyer
            Hudson, Ohio
            November 1, 2019

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