Boys Are Us; Dear Alien
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Cover Story
This issue’s cover is from The Hutchinson Treasury of Children’s Poetry (cover illustration by Peter Weevers). Edited by Alison Sage (who also edited The Hutchinson Treasury of Children’s Literature), this sumptuous anthology is loosely divided into four sections corresponding to age starting with nursery rhymes and first poems through to poems for older children and classic poetry. Poems from such modern poets as Roger McGough, Ted Hughes, Wendy Cope and Maya Angelou sit alongside poems by Longfellow, Robert Louis Stevenson, Shelley and Shakespeare. The anthology is illustrated in full colour and black and white. Newly commissioned illustrations from, for example, Quentin Blake, Shirley Hughes and Nicola Bayley are included alongside illustrations by Randolph Caldecott, Jessie Willcox Smith and Kate Greenaway. With such a comprehensive range of poems for 2-11 year olds and upwards, this is a wonderful family book.
Boys Are Us
Dear Alien
Books for beginner readers frequently have 'worthy' written all over them - subliminally if not literally - but not so these 'Colour Jets'. Good humour, energy and approachability are exuded by their pages, and readers, beginners and experienced, will be carried along by visual jokes and playfulness within the illustrations and written text. The latter is laid out in speech bubbles, captions, letters and straight narrative, all appropriate to whatever is happening within the plot.
In Boys Are Us a budding boy pop group meet The Nice Girls in a race to make a Christmas No. 1 in the charts. Dear Alien concerns a correspondence between sam, a human boy and Luek, an ... . Yes, the point is nicely made about who perceives whom as an alien. Both of these books are highly recommended to reluctant readers and indeed to any other readers who enjoy fun that is never frivolous.