book cover

Once Upon a Rhythm

by James Carter, illustrated by Valerio Vidali

Interest age: 6 to 8
Reading age: 5+

Published by Little Tiger Press, 2020

  • Non-fiction
  • Picture books
  • Poetry and rhyme

About this book

Rhythm and music are all around us, from how we walk down the street to the songs of the birds. Music and a sense of beat seem to be an innate part of being human, something we respond to from the youngest age and something that has been experimented with since the earliest humans walked the earth.

This bold and colourful picture book explores the history of music, thinking about how the first instruments may have been created and how the creation of music grew and expanded into all the different forms we have today and all the different ways we have of making music – the different instruments and the different kinds of music, like classical, folk, jazz, soul, rock ‘n’ roll, and so many more.

Told in rhyme and with its own strong rhythm, this isn’t a detailed analysis or filled with facts but a light-touch introduction in poetical form that makes a great jumping-off point or source of inspiration to explore music further – perhaps even by making some yourself. The language is simple and accessible, with some nice descriptive words, and Valerio Vidali’s illustrations are distinctive and diverse, and full of recognisable cultural and historical references that also offer plenty of opportunity for discussion.

About the author

After fifteen years of writing, performing and recording music (whilst doing a series of jobs from job centre interviewer to recruitment consultant), James Carter went off to Reading University to do a B.Ed degree in primary education and an MA in children's literature.

He is now an award/prize-winning poet, as well as a non-fiction and educational writer. He is the author of many popular and best-selling poetry titles. He travels all over the UK to give lively poetry/music performances and workshops. In the last seventeen years, he has visited well over 1000 schools, and performed at various prestigious literary festivals, including Cheltenham, Hay and Edinburgh.

James lives in Wallingford with his four guitars, three ukuleles, two daughters and one wife.

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