Turkeys are your friends

Today (Christmas Eve 2024), I’m reminded of a wonderful poem by the late Benjamin Zephaniah. Taken from his book of the same name, it makes the fun case that a turkey is not just for Christmas, they’re so much more! Here’s the first verse. I encourage you to read it, in full, either at Benjamin Zephaniah as well as other places on the web. You can even download a pdf.

Be nice to you turkeys dis christmas
Cos’ turkeys just wanna have fun
Turkeys are cool, turkeys are wicked
An every turkey has a Mum.
Be nice to you turkeys dis christmas,
Don’t eat it, keep it alive,
It could be yu mate, an not on yu plate
Say, Yo! Turkey I’m on your side.

Zephaniah, B. 2015, Turkeys, Puffin Books.

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Following Black History

You may recall that October was Black History Month. It was a very busy time for publishers and authors, so much so that I’m still waiting for feedback from some of them! However, a trawl through my own library produced three particular books I’d like to share.

The first is Propa Propaganda by the late Benjamin Zephaniah, writer, dub poet, actor and musician as well as professor of poetry and creative writing at Brunel University London. It was a huge loss to the world when he died aged 65 less than a year ago.

Propa Propaganda (Bloodaxe Books 1996) is a few years old now, but right from the start carries the distinctive BZ voice we all came to know. This collection is short treasure, if you’ve never read any of his poems: Terrible World based on Louis Armstrong’s memorable song, White Comedy (I waz whitemailed/ By a white witch,/Wiz white magic), De Queen an I and his three part Acts of Parliament which loses nothing with time and could have been written yesterday!

Acknowledging Black Authors: A couple of years ago I met Garfield Robinson at an event and spent some time talking about the work of black authors, poets, songwriters, all types of storytellers.

His book Keepers of the Flame (POH Books, 2022) is an excellent collection saluting the work of 100 Black authors – all the way from Shirley Anstis, a mental health counsellor, to Lyndon Wissart a professional chef. Every one of the hundred has a story to tell – inspirational, heart-warming, inquisitive, passionate. The illustrations, printed like engravings or woodcuts, provide an image to accompany the voice explaining their reasons for writing. Some writers you may know, many you will not.

If you want to investigate further, this is the place to start. A ready-made reference compile by Garfield Robinson – bookseller, author and publisher.


My third choice is The Perseverance by British-Jamaican poet Raymond Antrobus. I had the pleasure of interviewing Raymond back in 2019 at the London Book Fair, where he was performing readings from this debut collection.

Beginning with his deafness he merges masculinity, race his mother’s dementia and his father’s death – with a lot of focus on his father. There’s a wonderful series of poems ‘Samantha’ based on an interview he did with a deaf Jamaican woman about her arrival in England. As we might expect his own deafness and communication, his identity (Jamaican British or Jamaican, British? choose) run throughout these poems.

The Perseverance is published by Penned in the Margins 2018.

That’s just a small but belated contribution to Black History month. All well worth a read.

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Not quite the house of their dreams!

After much searching, the happily married young couple, Amber and Stevie, think they have found the perfect spot in Grimaldi Square. Number 4 is the house of their dreams, despite one or two negative surroundings.

But, upstairs in their new home, seated on an old red sofa is the woman they bought the place from – seventy-nine-year-old, foul-mouthed, straight-talking, wise-cracking Dorothy – who has decided that she’s not going anywhere. As it transpires, Dorothy will be only the first in a line of life-changing surprises. 

Friends of Dorothy is a funny, touching novel about a family that is not biological, but logical; a story close to Sandi Toksvig’s heart. 

Sandi Toksvig needs, as they say, no introduction and is familiar to UK audiences as a broadcaster. Her TV career includes ‘Call My Bluff’, ‘Whose Line Is It Anyway?’, ‘QI’, and ‘The Great British Bake Off’. Most recently her ‘Extraordinary Escapes’ series on Channel 4 proved immensely popular.  

Picture by Debbie Toksvig

Much of Sandi’s time is devoted to writing and in 2019 she became president of the Writers’ Guild of Great Britain. She has more than 20 fiction and non-fiction books for children and adults to her credit, has co-authored the musical Big Night Out at the Little Sands Picture Palace Theatre (with Dillie Keane) and the Shakespeare deconstruction The Pocket Dream (with Elly Brewer). She adapted Treasure Island for Leicester Haymarket Theatre (2018} and Mamma Mia the Party (2019). Sandi is an activist for gender equality and co-founded the Women’s Equality Party.

Friends of Dorothy is published by Virago.

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