Binding: Paperback

ISBN 9781906307196

About the Book: 

Kokumo's second collection of poetry explores love, race, nature, freedom and imprisonment, with fun and humour. Alternating between the luscious natural world and feelings of war and anger, Kokumo's poetry takes the reader from resolution to conflict, then back again. Taught in schools across Scotland, her work helps children attain an appreciation for poetry and Black History.

About the Author:

KOKUMO ROCKS was born in Dundee in 1965, but was raised in the Fife mining village of Cowdenbeath. Hers was the only black family in the area, and she left school with no qualifications or spelling. It wasn’t until she attended university in the mid-90s that she was diagnosed as dyslexic.

In 1991 she decided to change the direction of her life following a near-death experience, and began to fulfil her life-long ambition to become a performance poet. Kukumo’s poetry explores the themes of love, race, freedom and imprisonment, and she does so with a sense of the importance of fun and humour – proud to include “the flabby bits”.

She describes herself as an African/Asian/Scottish writer and performance poet, and has performed in the UK, USA, India and Africa.

Kukumo – the name means “this one will not die” – lives by the motto “if you don’t ask you won’t get”, and believes that passion can turn the “mundane into excitement”. She has been inspired by poets including Maya Angelou, Benjamin Zephania and Ivor Cutler, but above all by ‘growing up black in Scotland’.