An anthology that aims to do two things: to set fire to the imagination and to bring together a collection of memorable poems. It includes poems by writers as diverse as Spike Milligan and Louis MacNeice, Stevie Smith and John Lennon, Jo Shapcott and Lewis Carroll. Ages 7+.
This is a truly splendid anthology, chosen by the excellent Michael Morpurgo and with tremendous illustrations from Quentin Blake. It will reach out to children of a wide range of different ages and introduce them to some wonderful poems.
Some in the selection offer simply light-hearted fun, more are well worth returning to over and over. There are plenty of indifferent anthologies cashing in on the latest fad. Here, the words of the publishers about learning the difference between the genuine and the shoddy are borne out in the words of gifted poets, whose work has withstood the test of time. There are some outstanding individual pieces here from Shakespeare to Dylan Thomas, Robert Frost and so many more. As with all good books for children, this one affords great delight to adults as well. I look forward to reading them all with my niece, who is sure to respond with enthusiasm.
This edited collection by Michael Morpurgo contains 101 poems to mention R.L. Stevenson, John Lennon, Rudyard Kipling, Edward Lear, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, H.W. Longfellow, Ted Hughes, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Walter De La Mare, T.S. Eliot and W.B. Yeats. I enjoyed reading: "Soldier, Soldier, Will You Marry Me?" (Anonymous) "The Spider and the Fly" by Mary Howitt "All the World's A Stage" by William Shakespeare "Friends" by Elizabeth Jennings and my favourite poem "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost
This collection of poems were really good it was illustrated by Quentin Blake so the illustrations were really good I liked a lot of the poems because they were really funny. I liked this poem called lullaby especially because it was telling a young boy a lullaby by telling the things the writer will get him.
I chose this book as part of research into a poetry session I was organising for a teenage reading group. It was brilliant going through it and it reminded me of all the poems I had grown up with and some more besides, including songs and Shakespeare quotes along the way. I would recommend for those trying to get their children into reading rhymes or poems as the illustrations by Quentin Blake are excellent and the poems range from the absurd (I Eat My Peas with Honey - Anonymous) to the dramatic (Stop All the Clocks - W D Auden)
I bought this at Tate Modern in London (it has nothing to do with modern art, really, but I liked it). It has some of my favorite poems, paired with Quentin Blake's whimsical illustrations