Zooming the Zoo

Zooming the Zoo

Zooming the Zoo

Zooming the Zoo

Paperback

$14.99 
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Overview

The author of Stinkbomb and Ketchup-Face and the Badness of Badgers and the illustrator of The Boy Who Biked the World team up for a hugely entertaining new collection of poems for children

Suggesting this zoo hold a meeting on zoom
Was not sensible, wise or astute
For the sloths all appear to have frozen onscreen
And I think that the swan’s stuck on mute.


Poems that play with words and ideas are John Dougherty's specialty.

Meet Rover, the dog "who'll chew through anything, except the things we let him chew", enjoy Grandad's wrestle with the deckchair (it won), find out what the Ghosts of Grizzerley Grange are really scared of, admire the woman who's made out of rainbows and steel, and be shocked by the Man of Naughtiness.

Comedy abounds, but there is also much good advice and mindfulness to be found in this feast of varied verse:

"Please know that this is true: You're important. You matter. It's okay to be you."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781915659217
Publisher: Otter-Barry Books
Publication date: 07/23/2024
Pages: 98
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.75(h) x (d)
Age Range: 7 - 9 Years

About the Author

John Dougherty was born in Larne, Northern Ireland, and some of the poems in this collection reflect his childhood there. He became a teacher (the nice sort, he says) but gave up teaching to become a full-time writer and performer, of songs as well as poems and stories, and now has over forty books published.

Tom Morgan-Jones also illustrated John's previous collection for Otter-Barry Books, Dinosaurs and Dinner Ladies. A professional illustrator, author, events artist and inky hand-letterist, he has illustrated over 75 books and series for children.

Read an Excerpt

Poetry Rules

Poetry rules
Even though it has none
But if you need some...

Rule one:
have fun

Rule two:
do what you want to do

Rule three:
set your imagination free

Rule four:
there aren't any more


Grandad and the Deckchair

We left Grandad wrestling a deckchair
He wanted to lie in the sun

But when we came back minutes later
The deckchair had won.

There wasn’t a sign of poor Grandad
Except for his cap on the floor.

The deckchair just grinned and let out a burp
Then lay down and started to snore.


Cardi B

Cardi B
Is stylish, you’ll agree
But it should not be forgotten
That her full name is Cardigan Button


The Problem with Acrostics

Acrostic poems make me
Cross sometimes, because
Really when you write a poem you should be focusing
On choosing the right words, not on the letters that go at the
Start of The line, which can lead to lines beginning
In the wrong places and
Containing the wrong words.

Perhaps we should
Only write an acrostic when it’s the best way to
Express what we want to say. I think that would
Make sense.
 

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