Price: £5.99
Publisher: Rabbit Hole Publications
Genre: Poetry
Age Range: 10-14 Middle/Secondary
Length: 64pp
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I Don't Want an Avocado for an Uncle
There are not many solo collections of poetry for children being published lately, so it’s good to see something getting through, even if it does entail small- or self-publication. Chrissie Gittins is not the only poet currently to take this course, which neatly sidesteps the problems of being taken up by a major house and undergoing the rigours of being edited to their strictures. The result is a book which bears and wears the individualities and eccentricities of its author. I note that in reviews of her previous collection words like quirky, surreal, idiomatic and zany come into play. This book has plenty to fall into line with those attributes, but there are also tenderer and more lyrical aspects and moments. I have yet to get the feel of her poetic voice as her verse tends not to play to my preferences. But there’s a confidence and assurance about her writing that clearly appeals to an audience that is already receiving her with enthusiasm. A reading shows she knows what she’s doing and is creating an idiom of her own. If you’re interested in poetry written for children, you should definitely read this book and see how it takes you and the children you’re in contact with. There’s a distinctive voice evolving here and I’ll watch with interest to see what it produces in future. The book itself is nicely produced with good layout and typeface and very apt illustrations by Kev Adamson whose work for me, while carrying traces of Satoshi Kitamura, nevertheless has a strong individuality of its own.