Books For Keeps
  • Home
  • Reviews
  • Articles
  • Past Issues
  • Latest Issue
  • Authors and Artists
  • Latest News
  • Search
  • Menu Menu
January 1, 2013/in Poetry 10-14 Middle/Secondary /by Angie Hill
BfK Rating:
BfK 198 January 2013
Reviewer: Clive Barnes
ISBN: 978-1529021165
Price: Price not available
Publisher: Macmillan Children's Books
Genre: Poetry
Age Range: 10-14 Middle/Secondary
Length: 224pp
  • Edited by: Carol Ann Duffy
Buy the Book

101 Poems for Children: A Laureate's Choice

Illustrator: Emily Gravett

The laureate’s collection of mostly other people’s poetry is, in some ways, quite conventional, and, in other ways, as a collection for children, rather radical. It’s conventional, perhaps, in concentrating on the pastoral, devoting many pages to the natural world and its creatures. Unconventional in that this a contemplative, even meditative poetry, quietly humorous sometimes, but usually closely observed, precise and evocative, requiring concentration and inviting thoughtfulness from its readers, and only rarely revelling in the sensuousness of sound and rhythm. It’s a mix of the classic and contemporary, although there is a preference, I think, for the modern; and, whether old or new, most of these poems are nor usually found in anthologies for children. Some of the exceptions are poems that I suspect Duffy remembers from her childhood, like The Old Woman Who Swallowed a Fly and Jabberwocky. There are poets that will be new even to child poetry aficionados and unfamiliar work from poets they do know. Women poets are well represented. Duffy gives space to the quirky and to nonsense – Carroll and Lear for instance – but she has little place for the drama and comedy of home, school and leisure time that is the stuff of so much of the best and worst of modern poetry for children. While there are poets here, like Adrian Mitchell, Charles Causley, Jackie Kay and Ted Hughes, who have written children’s collections alongside their adult work; there are none here who write just or predominantly for children, so don’t look for Rosen or Zephaniah. This may reflect Duffy’s own reading. It certainly fulfils her aim of creating a collection that ‘a child can live with for a long time – some poems are lying in wait for future years.’ This is poetry that takes you away from the everyday or, if beginning there, invites you, with Blake, to contemplate a world in a grain of sand. It’s characterised, even in moments of absurdity, by wonder and mystery and tinged with feelings of loss or nostalgia. Emily Gravett provides lively decoration.

Share this entry
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on WhatsApp
  • Share on Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Reddit
  • Share by Mail
http://booksforkeeps.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/bfklogo.png 0 0 Angie Hill http://booksforkeeps.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/bfklogo.png Angie Hill2013-01-01 01:00:352021-11-14 14:21:37101 Poems for Children: A Laureate’s Choice

Search for a specific review

Author Search

Search







Generic filters




Filter by Member Types


Book Author

Download BfK Issue Bfk 277 March 2026
Skip to an Issue:

About Us

Launched in 1980, we’ve reviewed hundreds of new children’s books each year and published articles on every aspect of writing for children.

Read More

Follow Us

Latest News

Celebrating 100th Winnie-the-Pooh anniversary Ashdown Forest Foundation competition opens

April 7, 2026

UKLA Shortlists 2026

March 24, 2026

Jonathan Stroud announced as inaugural patron of the Federation of Children’s Book Groups

March 17, 2026

Contact Us

Books for Keeps,
30 Winton Avenue,
London,
N11 2AT

Telephone: 0780 789 3369

ISSN: 0143-909X (this is our International Standard Serial Number).

© Copyright 2026 - Books For Keeps | Bespoke Website Design by Lemongrass Media
Hunger The Gruffalo in Scots
Scroll to top