Margins
Mangoes and Bullets book cover
Mangoes and Bullets
1991
First Published
4.17
Average Rating
64
Number of Pages
The themes of these poems - steelbands, stereotypes, weathermen and English girls eating mangoes - mirror the poet's personal itinerary from the Caribbean: a journey with consequences that are political as well as meteorological.
Avg Rating
4.17
Number of Ratings
30
5 STARS
33%
4 STARS
50%
3 STARS
17%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

John Agard
John Agard
Author · 23 books

John Agard was born in Guyana and emigrated to Britain in 1977. He has worked as an actor and a performer with a jazz group and spent several years as a lecturer for the Commonwealth Institute, travelling all over Britain giving talks, performances and workshops. He has visited literally thousands of schools and enjoys the live contact and the joy of children responding although it can be hard work. John Agard started writing poems when he was about 16 - some of these early efforts were published in his school magazine. Many of his poems now are composed while looking out of train windows. "Try the best with what you have right now If you don't have horse, then ride cow." It is in his poetry that John Agard makes his greatest contribution to children's literature. Like the best authors, he brings something unique to children's experience - a view of the world tempered by his own childhood, a feeling for the rhythms and cadences of its language, and a sophisticated understanding of the advantages and limitations of several forms of English. That he can make the "standard" forms work superbly is evident from many of his poems for adults. For children, with whom he communicates more directly, the lyrical Guyanese forms serve his purposes to perfection. Agard is not a literary poet but also a performing poet and has a strong sense of his audience. When he writes for children, he seems to see them sitting at his feet. He is more interested in the ideas and words he is delivering to them than in the creation of complex fictional characters with whom his readers might engage. He lives in Sussex and is married to Grace Nichols, a respected Caribbean poet and co-author of a collection of Caribbean nursery rhymes, NO HICKORY, NO DICKORY, NO DOCK.

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