Thursday 7 March 2019

World Book Day with the Emma Press: favourite books from the past year


In celebration of World Book Day 2019, we asked a few of our recent and upcoming authors and poets to tell us the best book they’ve read in the past year…


Aalfred and Aalbert by Morag Hood – Rachel Plummer, poet


‘A book I've really loved sharing with my kids this year is a picture book called Aalfred and Aalbert, by Morag Hood. It is a sweet and funny queer love story for younger children, about two aardvarks who are perfect for each other but need a little push along the way. Sweet and charming, this book is great LGBT representation and a lovely read. What's not to love?’

Don’t miss Wain by Rachel Plummer, a collection of LGBT themed poetry for teens based on retellings of Scottish myths.


The People in the Trees by Hanya Yanagihara – Rassi Narika, author


The People in the Trees was my second Yanagihara after I read A Little Life - I was an emotional wreck after reading it. It was so good, I laughed and cried with it. In 2018, The People in The Trees left me with a different kind of wreck. I kept rereading its pages just because I wasn't sure how I feel about the story. I love the book because my interpretation about each character, and their story, was continuously challenged in every turn of events. I had many moments of self-conversation, questioning the social construct of how we see culture, and who decides – or defines the cultural narrative of the Ivu'ivu's world. It made me think about an alternate universe where civilization has a different storyline than one we have today. And, the fact that this fiction was inspired by true events, made me even more obsessed with how Yanagihara beautifully tells such difficult story.’

Publishing later this month, When It Rains by Rassi Narika is a children’s picture book that spins a story of hope and discovery to brighten even the rainiest of days.


Keats: A Biography by Andrew Motion – Kathy Pimlott, poet


‘My favourite book during 2018 was the only prose book I read, Andrew Motion’s biography of John Keats, published in 1997 and given to me, I see from the inscription, in 2002. I’d started it two or three times but had always been distracted. In 2018 I was just finishing an 18-month Writing School with the Sheffield-based Poetry Business and one ‘homework’ was to read a poet’s biography. Keats was my schoolgirl crush (along with Micky Dolenz of The Monkees, Simon & Garfunkel and Hamlet), the book was on the shelf, so it was a no-brainer. Though, of course, I knew Keats’ short and tragic story, I wasn’t ready for the emotional undertow of the book, how it would drag me into the deeps over and over again. It sent me straight back to the poems I thought I knew so well, to the house on Keats Grove, and prompted four new poems of my own. What more could you ask?’

Newly released, Elastic Glue is a poetry pamphlet by Kathy Pimlott exploring the ways we own and are owned by land – how we both make and are made by the places we inhabit. 


The Bubble Wrap by Dean Parkin – Ieva Flamingo, author & poet


‘It’s so hard to choose! Because all of them are really interesting and special to me. The Bubble Wrap is a poetry book, written and illustrated by Dean Parkin. I choose this book because the author not only writes for children, but also thinks and lives in these poems like children. The poems are vivid, funny, cheerful and heart-warming.’

Ieva Flamingo’s The Girl Who Learned All The Languages of The World is an illustrated story for children exploring the joys of language learning.


Snail, Where Are You? by Tomi Ungerer - Rūta Briede, author & illustrator


‘Sometimes there are books with not a lot of text in them. And sometimes silence and observing is the best state of mind when nothing really happens but everything happens. In Snail, Where Are you? by Tomi Ungerer, there aren’t too many lines to read. Only two. But can a story be told by a good question? Can one feel the author’s bright and playful mind by seeing some illustrations and reading one question and one simple answer? Yes, it’s possible if the author is Tomi Ungerer. This is a book where simplicity is done by a true master and one question is exactly the one that must be asked and the answer is truly simple. Can you guess it?’

Don’t miss Rūta Briede’s latest children’s picture book, The Dog Who Found Sorrow, a beautiful, resonant story about sadness and healing, suitable for all ages.


Insectopedia by Hugh Raffles – Lenni Sanders, poet


Last year I really loved reading Hugh Raffles' collection of essays Insectopedia. It's a fantastic book that I read slowly from summer through to winter, dipping in, reading an essay here and there. This means for months at a time in 2018 I was saying "Oh look, a bee! Hey, did you know...?" and things like that, to anyone around. His style is captivating and clear as he explores our various relationships to insects. I was especially into 'My Nightmares', a poetic and incantatory piece about what it is about insects that can be so frightening to us - 'There is the nightmare of putting the shoe on and of taking the shoe off. There is the slithering nightmare and the one that walks backwards. There is the squirming nightmare and the squishing nightmare.'’

Publishing in May this year, the wryly funny Poacher by Lenni Sanders is influenced by magical realism and puts strange characters in mundane places.


The Book of Clouds by Juris Kronbergs – Reda Gaudiamo, author


‘This is a book I cannot stop talking about. The Book of Clouds by Juris Kronbergs showed me that Indonesian children need to read and enjoy poetry — the format often considered the most serious one compared to other formats. Poems are seen as being the type of text for adult, the rhymes we know are so old, and forgotten. Little do we know that poetry is the type of format that helps children to read, love reading, helps their articulation... and much more. This book makes me want to pursue a new project: working with Indonesian poets to write poems for children.’

Launching at the London Book Fair, The Adventures of Na Willa by Reda Gaudiamo is a collection of stories of curious adventures and musings of a multicultural girl growing up in Indonesia.


The Carrying by Ada Limón – Jeffery Sugarman, poet


‘Ada Limón's newest collection, The Carrying, is one for these times, and I think, for the ages. Her poetic speakers are most always astonished and bewildered in, and by, this troubled world; yet they won't be stopped by it, nor let us be stopped. She's a poet whose very flesh seems composed of compassion—the poems of incandescent feeling, wrought in simplest words. Seeing and feeling with, and through, the flesh—often in emotional and physical pain—she captures essences, in poems which, nonetheless, cast outward toward timeless reflection, resolutions on the desire and will to survive, indeed flourish. She's also a master at "saying the thing", and plays few linguistic games. I marvel at her directness and clarity, how it conjures the profound; and gain great pleasure too from the jewel-like epiphanies that rise up within, and often end, her poems with fresh insight, but seem also inevitable! In this new collection, especially, she's unflinching in her effort to understand and describe the world, even if her methods become ruthless; thus she's able to live in this world, I think, for the better—and so might we. In "Killing Methods" her speaker, reflects— "I'm thinking of how we make stories, / pluck them like beetles out of the air // I don't know how to hold this truth, / so I kill it, pin its terrible wings down / in case, later, no one believes me." The Carrying, helps me to see how we might hold the truth, and believe.’

Jeffery Sugarman’s pamphlet Dear Friend(s) is due to publish in April. Its long title poem is an elegy, to a specific “Dear Friend”, dead from AIDS in its earliest years.


What's your favourite book from the past year? Comment below or tag us @TheEmmaPress on social media. We'd love to know what you're reading!

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