Last
Tuesday evening I attended the CLPE 2012 Poetry Award Ceremony. After sampling
the delicious canapés I headed for the book table and before the proceedings
had begun found myself on impulse buying Brian’s book.
I had been taken by the appearance of the
book. It has a dark cover depicting two boys in shadow. The sun is setting with
dark brooding clouds. One boy is standing on top of a hill reaching out a
helping hand to the boy below him. It wasn’t the usual bright cartoonish cover
that adorns so much of children’s poetry books. And yet the dreaded age banding
on the back said 7+. I was intrigued. I picked up the book. It was small and
light and hard to let go of. I could easily imagine it in a child’s hands.
The blurb on the back informed me that this
was a recollection of his childhood in the 1950s and 1960’s.
Nostalgia
for me and history for children then? Was that all there was to it?
I sat in the garden and started to read.
Usually I am a dipper of poetry books but I read each poem in order. The
selection of the poems has a narrative feel as you accompany the boy as he
takes his tentative steps towards growing up and goes from climbing walls to
kissing girls with unsettling encounters with bullies and heartless teachers in
between.
I loved the nostalgia that such poems as
Fire, The Bonfire at Barton Point, Tall Stories and Tortoise invoked in me. As
a child I always envied someone who had a tortoise in their garden and still
suffer pangs of guilt about the terrapin I insisted my Mum bought for me and
that we tried to keep in a biscuit tin. I could imagine teachers having fun
reading out these poems to their classes and generating lots of discussion. I
found the trilogy of bully poems very affecting. Although I do think these
poems would be better suited for 9+.
I found the characters of Mum and Dad that
cropped up throughout the poems both humorous and touching,
Dad
was a ‘wait and see’ man
and
sometimes it seemed an eternity,
all
those times I waited and saw
whether
what Dad had finally decided
was
what I was hoping for.
These poems are relevant to children now
and despite the lure of technology, if given the chance, children are still led
by their imaginations just as they were in the 1960’s. And I hope their
imaginations will lead them to this collection
Holding the Hands of Angels is published by
Salt Publishing
p.s Congratulation to Rachel Rooney for
winning with her debut collection The Language of Cat
Return to REVIEWS HOMEPAGE
5 comments:
Lovely review, Lynda. As a child of the 1950s myself, I want to read this. And what a beautiful cover!
Yes, a lovely review - thank you. I'll away to amazon now to order it...
Thank you for this terrific review. So glad you enjoyed the book. Am currently writing my childhood autobiography - filling in the gaps between the poems.
Just returned from holiday so am late responding. Look forward to the autobiography Brian.
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