Recommended children's booklists sorted by age or topic

Author & Illustrators

Zaro Weil Books

The epigraph of this children’s poetry collection sets the aim of the poems for the reader: “when I walk/ wide-eyed/ through today/ yesterday is forgotten/ tomorrow faraway.” ‘I Hear the Trees’ is another wonderful collection of poems by Zaro Weil, which again immerses the reader in the splendours and mysteries of Mother Earth, presenting a wide range of poems, from the sensory joys of nature to the deepest emotions, expressed in a variety of poetic styles and forms, offering something for everyone.

Author Zaro Weil invites readers to exist in the moment and immerse themselves in these poems and nature. Her poems address the entire sensory experience of nature and touch on a variety of emotions, ranging from a moving poem that includes a mention of the death of a dog to a humorous alliterative poem about berries eaten by birds. There is subject matter for nearly every reader—these poems feature themes such as space, snakes, insects, dinosaurs, and even a poem highlighting the repulsiveness of rotting fruits and vegetables that provide a home for insects, some serious, others whimsical. All of them enchant and engage in different ways. There’s even a poem in play format, ‘A Little Kew Gardens Play’, to encourage some dramatic responses. No book of nature poetry would be complete without a discussion of conservation, and the author reminds readers that “hold on tight to your world, for your world is my world, your planet my planet”.

The format, with colourful illustrations beautifully created by Junli Song, makes them accessible to a younger pre-reader audience; however, the content and the vocabulary are perhaps aimed at older readers. Suggestions at the end of the book from the Centre on Literacy in Primary Education offer ways to further engage in some of the poems. Teachers, librarians, and parents will be able to use these as a springboard for their own activities that engage children in literature and nature.

Nominated for the 2023 Yoto Carnegie Medal for Writing and the Yoto Carnegie Medal for Illustration.

Original, inspiring and intimate, When Poems Fall From the Sky marries science and poetry to create a tender and thoughtful love-letter to Earth promising children a riot of imagination, humour and joy – the perfect book to celebrate National Poetry Day on 6th October.

The collection of poems, raps, rhymes, haiku and little plays is written by Zaro Weil, winner of the 2020 CLiPPA children’s poetry prize and is illustrated in full colour throughout by artist Junli Song.

When Poems Fall From the Sky is the first title to publish since the pair won the coveted CLiPPA prize with their stunning poetry anthology, Cherry Moon.

In exquisitely illustrated full-colour pages, trees, birds, animals, rivers, flowers, mountains and insects each share their own magical stories. And the stories they tell, the ‘poems’ that fall from the sky, subtly and powerfully illuminate our hope and collective role as guardians of our earth.

This wondrous new poetry collection captures eye-popping moments, tender observations and a thousand whimsical reflections on the sheer joy of the natural world. Thought-provoking, sensitive and delightfully original, Cherry Moon, poses big questions about life with poems and other small gatherings of words; encouraging children of every age to explore the power, enchantment and sheer wonderfulness of nature.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Your Review

Stone Girl Bone Girl

review

Year group(s) the book is most suitable for:

Year group(s) the book is most suitable for:

Does the book contain anything that teachers would wish to know about before recommending in class (strong language, sensitive topics etc.)?

Does the book contain anything that teachers would wish to know about before recommending in class (strong language, sensitive topics etc.)?

Would you recommend the book for use in primary schools?

yes

Curriculum links (if relevant)

Curriculum links (if relevant)

Any other comments

Any other comments