You Need More Than Dreams
Category: | Poetry - General |
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Author: | Tolu' A. Akinyemi |
Publisher: | The Roaring Lion Newcastle |
Publication Date: | January 1, 2023 |
Number of Pages: | 80 |
ISBN-10: | 1913636305 |
ISBN-13: | 978-1913636302 |
ASIN: | B09VLD54V8 |
Tolu’ A. Akinyemi’s poetry collection, You Need More Than Dreams, is a poignant and incisive exploration of youth, identity, and the pursuit of dreams. Akinyemi offers a collection that resonates with raw emotion, sharp observations, and a clear message: dreams alone are insufficient; action, grit, and self-awareness are essential to success. This collection is crafted for young audiences and features two parts. Part 1 dives deep into the experiences of young people. “Best of My Youth” sets the stage, reflecting on a life of emotional extremes and a quest for self-definition: ‘The best of my youth was spent/wiping out / labels. / I wasn’t my father’s mirror image nor the / caricature of my mother.” This poem immediately establishes a theme of individual agency and the fight against external pressures, which persists throughout the collection. “Teenage Fantasies” and ‘Peer Pressure” address the challenges of adolescence. The poet captures the internal conflict, “My teenage fantasies are driving / my mother into a / rage.” The speaker's struggle with parental expectations, peer pressures, and self-discovery is a recurrent theme.
Akinyemi's writing often emphasizes the power of the
individual. The poem “Young Thinker” is particularly striking, “I would rather
be a young thinker, / with excellence tattooed boldly / on my skin, / than grow
up with no vision.” This piece embodies a proactive mindset, urging the reader
to cultivate ambition and imagination. “Magic” reminds readers of their
potential with urgent and inviting lines: “Don’t live life on the prism of
dreams / and make-believe: / You are magic / walking on two legs.” Notice the
imagery and the metaphor of motion and growth conveyed in the short phrases.
Poems like “You Need More Than Dreams (II)” explicitly articulate the
collection's core message. “You need more than aspirations to make your life a
book worth reading,” and “You need more than dreams to make your dream come
true.” Part 2 of the collection extends the themes of social commentary and
personal reflection, continuing the author's exploration of identity. In “No
Room for Racism,” the author offers a clarion call for solidarity and action,
asking the reader, “Would you take the knee with me and stand as an equal?” From
exploring personal struggles to elements and habits that bolster growth to
examining the beauty of friendship, You Need More Than Dreams presents an
engaging collection that will inspire young adults and fans of poetry. It
reminds us that dreams, while important, must be supplemented with
determination, self-awareness, and a commitment to action. Akinyemi's poems are
not just words on a page; they are calls to action, invitations to reflect, and
affirmations that steer the soul towards nobler causes.