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Only One of Me

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BfK No. 147 - July 2004

Cover Story
This issue's cover illustration by Adrian Reynolds is from Julia Jarman's Big Red Bath, published by Orchard Books. Julia Jarman is interviewed by Stephanie Nettell. Thanks to Orchard Books for their help with this July cover.

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Only One of Me

James Berry
(Macmillan Children's Books)
208pp, POETRY, 978-0330418317, RRP £4.99, Paperback
10-14 Middle/Secondary
Buy "Only One of ME: Selected Poems (Pick a Poem)" on Amazon

This is James Berry's selection of his poetry from four previously published collections for young people over the last 15 years or so. It also includes eight new poems. His very first collection was awarded the Signal Poetry Award, making him part of a select band of modern children's poets, and a lot of these early works can be found here. His subsequent collections have maintained the same high standard. Berry's Caribbean origins are celebrated often in the themes of his poems but consistently in his use of language. Even when his is not using dialect, his language is an intoxicating mix of the cadences of the spoken word and the literary, coining new words and syntax. His preoccupations and sensibilities move between the enjoyments of the rural world of his own youth and the urban pleasures and trials of the childhood of his readers in Britain, giving equal weight to each and always, whatever his recognition of tragedy and injustice, rejoicing in the gift and enjoyment of the life around us and within us. These are lip-smacking poems to be relished in their music and their passion, but they are also thought provoking. Berry never patronises his readers, never goes for the cliche or the easy effect. As the title of this collection suggests, he is always pushing his readers to recognise the individual voice in others and themselves: often imagining himself into other personas and equally at home as a pet rabbit or a girl dressing up for a night on the town. His 'People Equal' is as much a hymn to difference and a plea for tolerance and understanding as it is an assertion of equality: 'Some people rush to the front. / Others hang back, feeling they can't. / Yet people equal. Equal.'

Reviewer: 
Clive Barnes
5
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