The Poetry World of John Agard

by John Agard, illustrated by Shirley Hottier

Interest age: 9 to 11
Reading age: 7+

Published by Otter-Barry, 2025

  • Funny
  • Poetry and rhyme
  • Interactive

About this book

This book is a total delight for John Agard fans new and old. 

It brings together a collection of 80 of his poems for younger children, taken from eight previous books published since the 1980s, so it’s quite the bargain, too! Poems from each book form each chapter, and there’s a lovely message from the poet introducing every section.  

It’s fascinating, heartwarming, and thrilling to look back at all these absolute classics, including 'I Din Do Nuttin' and 'Hurry-Hurry Mek Bad Curry'. 

Over the decades John Agard has brought sayings and words from the Caribbean Creole of Guyana, where he was born, into the classroom. He paved the way for a more inclusive world where everyone is welcome.  

It’s no exaggeration to say John Agard is a genius; his poems are very funny, very playful, full of empathy, and just the best to read out loud. The illustrator Shirley Hottier has done a wonderful job, and the front cover illustration just looks exactly like John Agard. 

This is a masterful collection of wonderful poems that every primary school and home should have on its shelves. 

About the author

John Agard was born in 1949 in Georgetown, Guyana (then called British Guiana). He moved to England in 1977 when he became a touring lecturer for the Commonwealth Institute to promote a better understanding of Caribbean culture. Over the course of the next 8 years he visited 2,500 schools - and started writing poetry for children. Since then, he has published more than 50 books of poetry for all ages, stories and non fiction, including A Caribbean Dozen which he also co-edited with his wife Grace Nichols. 

His collections for young readers include The Young Inferno, a teenage spin on Dante's Inferno, Einstein, The Girl Who Hated Maths and Hello H20, both illustrated by Satoshi Kitamura. His adult collections include Alternative Anthem and his latest, Playing the Ghost Of Maimonides. His first non-fiction, entitled Book, tells the history of the book in the voice of the book. His awards include the Casa de las Americas Poetry Prize, the Paul Hamlyn Award and the 2012 Queen's Gold Medal for poetry. His poems Half Caste and Checking Out Me History have been on the GCSE curriculum since 2002. In 2021, he was awarded the BookTrust Lifetime Achievement Award. He lives in Sussex.

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