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THE BOOK OF NOT ENTIRELY USEFUL ADVICE by A.F. Harrold

THE BOOK OF NOT ENTIRELY USEFUL ADVICE

by A.F. Harrold ; illustrated by Mini Grey

Pub Date: March 23rd, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-5476-0677-1
Publisher: Bloomsbury

Who wouldn’t welcome a smattering of advice now and then? Even if some of its practicality seems questionable.

This collection is divided into four sections “mainly relating” to broad topics such as food or animals. Explored largely in free verse are topics ranging from the many similarities between blackbirds and bananas, how many is too many tigers at a picnic, and the value of an onion for self-defense. Of course, there is a healthy mix of wordplay, absurdism, and the occasional actually profound thought. Harrold includes some interactive features, such as blank spaces for readers to contribute their own poems or drawings and the Advice-a-Tron 216, a chart that generates pieces of advice with a six-sided die. In addition to some pages of “free-floating advice” readers are encouraged to cut out, there is an index that locates both references within the book and sundry other things, like “where to find more” books (“the library”). This collection contains a fair amount of Briticisms (a poem called “Jumper” closes cheekily with a joke about “a sweater”) that may require some help for readers new to them. As observed in the initial “Note for the Reader,” Grey’s illustrations are “beautifully colorful,” with a fancy-free, sketchlike quality characterized by dynamic lines and perspectives. The author, a White, bearded man, appears in a drawn incarnation throughout; of background human characters, only a couple read as people of color.

A good bit of fun.

(Poetry. 8-12)