Books For Keeps
  • Home
  • Reviews
  • Articles
  • Past Issues
  • Latest Issue
  • Authors and Artists
  • Latest News
  • Search
  • Menu Menu
March 1, 2009/in Biography 8-10 Junior/Middle /by Richard Hill
BfK Rating:
BfK 175 March 2009
Reviewer: Clive Barnes
ISBN: 978-1870516389
Price: £6.99
Publisher: Tamarind Books
Genre: Biography
Age Range: 8-10 Junior/Middle
Length: 48pp
Buy the Book

Benjamin Zephaniah

Author: Verna WilkinsIllustrator: Gillian Hunt

Review also includes:

Malorie Blackman, Illustrated by Virginia Gray, 978-1848530010

 

The writing of biographies of famous people to provide inspiration and encouragement to children has a long history in children’s literature. In earlier stories of achievement, young people would be shown emerging from childhoods of misfortune and isolation to achieve success through talent and determination. Here, Verna Wilkins gives the lives of Benjamin Zephaniah and Malorie Blackman this treatment, although the keen reading, school loving young Malorie was clearly very different from the disaffected young Benjamin who fell into street crime. In Malorie’s case it was sickle cell anaemia which posed, and continues to pose, perhaps her greatest challenge. Both these life stories have clear didactic intentions. The values of family, community and education are stressed. Young readers are implicitly advised to follow their dreams and have confidence in themselves; and there are explicit warnings not to be bound by your own or other people’s low expectations. These messages would have relevance to any child coming from a disadvantaged background or lacking in self esteem, but here they are obviously most concerned with black children. The importance of the Caribbean cultural background to both children is mentioned. Benjamin’s story opens with an incident of racial assault. Malorie’s awareness of the absence of black children in the stories she enjoyed as a child and her enjoyment of African American authors in her teens is highlighted. The didactic intention of these biographies, clearly and engagingly written as they are, gives them an old fashioned feel, which is underlined by the black and white line illustrations. Virginia Gray’s drawings for the Malorie Blackman title have a 1950s look, while Gillian Hunt, on the other hand, brings drama, humour and a sense of style to the Benjamin Zephaniah title. There is an interview with Blackman and a full list of her work as an appendix to her biography; and extracts from Zephaniah’s poems are scattered throughout his, with a complete poem to finish.

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 Richard Hill http://booksforkeeps.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/bfklogo.png Richard Hill2009-03-01 15:28:592022-12-22 15:34:15Benjamin Zephaniah

Search for a specific review

Author Search

Search







Generic filters




Filter by Member Types


Book Author

Download BfK Issue Bfk 272 May 2025
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

Margaret McDonald and her editors Alice Swan and Ama Badu win the 2025 Branford Boase Award

July 9, 2025

‘The magic of poetry by heart’ Champions of the 2025 National Poetry Speaking Competition Announced

July 8, 2025
IBC

New National Year of Reading launching January 2026

July 8, 2025

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 2025 - Books For Keeps | Proudly Built by Lemongrass Media - Web Design Buckinghamshire
Toxic! Killer Cures and Other Poisonings Pompeii
Scroll to top