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Animal Poems

This collection of poems celebrates the animal kingdom with wonder and wit, bringing creatures from air, land, and sea to vivid life. Through evocative language and charming illustrations, each piece offers a unique perspective on the natural world. It's an engaging introduction for young readers to the beauty and mystery of animals. The series encourages exploration and fosters a deep appreciation for nature's inhabitants.

The Iron Wolf
What is the Truth?
A March Calf
The Thought Fox

Recommended Reading Order

  1. 1

    The Iron Wolf

    • 112 pages
    • 4 hours of reading
    3.7(17)Add rating

    Animals of air, land and sea are brilliantly imagined in this perfect introduction for young readers to the work of Ted Hughes. Previously unpublished poems appear with selections from Under the North Star and The Cat and the Cuckoo. Part of Hughes's Collected Animal Poems, The Iron Wolf is for the youngest readers, both to listen to and explore themselves. Chris Riddell's delightful line illustrations add to the journey of discovery.

    The Iron Wolf
  2. 2

    What is the Truth?

    • 128 pages
    • 5 hours of reading

    First published in 1984, this book of prose-linked animal poems won both the Guardian Children's Fiction Award and the Signal Poetry Award. This new, illustated edition remains 'a very beautiful book: God and his son go to visit mankind and ask a few simple questions . . . the poems are pure enchantment' (The School Librarian).

    What is the Truth?
  3. 3

    A March Calf

    • 144 pages
    • 6 hours of reading

    From the trembling new-born calf in Season Songs to the gently sleeping one recorded in Moortown Diary, animal life as observed in the pages of Flowers and Insects, Elmet, River, Lupercal and Hawk in the Rain is seen afresh through the diversity and imaginative energy of this collected volume.

    A March Calf
  4. 4

    The Thought Fox

    • 80 pages
    • 3 hours of reading
    4.1(113)Add rating

    All the richness of the wild is seen through the poet's eye. Here are poems from Hawk in the Rain, Wodwo, Wolfwatching, Lupercal and River as well as from Adam and the Sacred Nine, their juxtaposition highlighting the variety of the natural world and of Hughes's poetry about it.

    The Thought Fox