Reviews

The wolf wilder by Katherine Rundell

cover image

Bloomsbury, 2015. ISBN: 9781408872352.
(Age: 9-13) Highly recommended. Themes: Wolves, Russia, Nineteenth century, Animals, Survival. A totally engrossing adventure story about Feo and her wolves, seeking to survive in the harsh Russian winter while being pursued by those who see wolves as a threat, something to be hunted down and killed.
While a wolf wilder, someone who helps wolves survive in the wild after years of living with humans, may be a fiction, there are many people around the world helping partially domesticated animals return to the wild. Rescue parks exist to return animals to the wild, their natural place rather than be dependent upon humans.
In Russia, the wolf is seen as a sign of strength and power and pups are stolen shortly after birth to be sold for large profits to the idle rich, in whose grand houses the wolves are trained to beg and sit, fed inappropriate food, discarded when they grow too big or become aggressive.
Feo and her mother take these abandoned wolves and show them how to survive in the cold snow covered wilds 1000 miles from St Petersburg, but into their area comes General Rakov, a man obsessed with ridding the woods of these wolves and their benefactors. Feo befriends one of the garrison, a boy her age entranced when he sees a pup born, Ilya, slipping away from his work to help Feo raise the pup.
But one breathless night he comes to warn the women: a cow has been killed and the general is on the rampage, death in his heart.
After seeing her mother bound and taken away by the soldiers, Feo flees, determined to find her and free her.
So she, Ilya, the three wolves and new pup set out on the journey to St Petersburg. They have the most extraordinary of adventures, meeting others, slipping past the soldiers, helping villages with their own survival as the soldiers move against anyone who helps Feo. Staying with others gives her the opportunity to educate them and the readers about wolves, their habits, habitat and lifestyles, and I can assure all readers that they too will come away from this book with a wolf sighting added to their to do list.
Rundell writes with incredible sympathy, engaging the reader in a story so real, you feel the need to brush the snow from your eyelashes, duck beneath the overhanging fir tree boughs and nestle your face in the warm fur of the new pup.
It is the last days of Tsarist Russia, and glimpses of that failed system of government can be seen throughout this amazing story. Teacher's notes are available.
Fran Knight

The flowers of Vashnoi by Lois McMaster Bujold

cover image

Subterranean, 2019. ISBN 9781596068926. 96pg.
(Age: 15+) Highly recommended. Themes: Science fiction. Lovers of Bujold's Hugo Award winning Miles Vorkosigan series will rejoice to discover a short stand-alone novel starring Ekaterin, Miles' clever wife who is determined to help Vashnoi exclusion zone that was been devastated by radiation when the Centagandans attacked the planet. With the help of scientist Enrique Borgos, she has attempted to use bioengineered insects to regenerate a region but when checking on the experiment finds that some have been stolen. Further investigation from the air uncovers the fact that there are four individuals living in the area. It is up to her to help them leave Vashnoi for medical treatment.
Ekaterin is clever and empathetic and readers will enjoy getting to know her character and her abilities in this short work. She emerges a formidable woman who is equally as compassionate and intelligent as her husband and is very good at problem solving. The unique science behind the bioengineered insects is also fascinating.
Fans who want to know more about the planet Barrayar and Miles' wife will not be disappointed and readers new to Bujold's work will discover a satisfying short stand-alone read that will have them searching for the Miles Vorkosigan series.
Pat Pledger

Every child a song by Nicola Davies

cover image

Illus. by Marc Martin. Wren and Rook, 2019. ISBN: 9781526361417.
(Age: 5+) Recommended. Themes: Universal rights of the child, Human rights. A unique and moving picture book combines a tender story with information about the rights that children are entitled to under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. It begins with the birth of a child: 'When you were born, a song began...' and goes on to show that the child needs to be 'nourished, cherished, celebrated.' Using a song as metaphor, the reader sees the child soaring and exploring and meeting other children 'unique and special', but the short lyrical text also shows what it is like to be exploited, imprisoned or part of war and needing refuge. It exhorts everyone to raise their 'voices for the right of every song to sing out loud, bold and unafraid'. In conclusion Davies has chosen some of the rights of the child to emphasise.
Marc Martin's watercolour illustrations complement the text and give the reader extra information to help understand the needs of the child. Dark colours show the tribulations of child labour and boat people, while bright colours portray the happiness of children when their rights are maintained.
This would be a wonderful book to use to celebrate the 30th Anniversary of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (30 November) and could be used at any time when discussing human rights and the needs of children everywhere. It is a book that would help children to show compassion and kindness and to stand up for human rights.
Pat Pledger

All aboard! True train tales by Pauline Deeves

cover image

National Library of Australia, 2019. ISBN: 9780642279392.
(Age: 9+) Recommended. Subjects: Trains - History, Australian Railway History, Museums, Grandfathers. Eight-year-old Jack's family are train enthusiasts, his parents work for the railways and his grandparents worked on trains before retiring. His grandpa always has an interesting train tale to tell and Jack loves helping him at the local railway museum. Once a year, there's a special Open Day at the end of the spring school holidays. With the museum under threat of closing, Jack and his family come up with creative ways of raising enough funds to save the station, trains and memorabilia.
Each one of Grandpa's stories lead into a recount of historic events, the convict powered train in Tasmania, the Hawkesbury Crash, as well as Ned Kelly's stand at Glen Rowan. Before the Sydney Harbour Bridge opened it was loaded with more than 90 engines to test its strength! Each section has a Position Vacant box that lists the skills needed to be a guard, driver, even the fettler who kept the tracks in good condition.
Interspersed between the factual accounts, the story continues. The museum committee listen to the fundraising suggestions from Jack and his family; they veto younger brother Max's bank robbery idea! The local community, football club and service groups rally together to support the Open Day, providing food, help with preparation and clean up and managing the crowds. Grandpa surprises everyone, organising two smelly camels corralled in the old station yard, reminding everyone about the times when circus trains carried the performers and animals from town to town.
Pauline Deeves All aboard! True train tales is an engaging read, just right for families to share, discovering a very important part of Australia's past, linked with the fictional account of Jack's family and the journey to save the Railway Museum. Many of the photos included are from the National Library of Australia, showcasing the eras when trains connected the capital cities and inland routes. Presented in colourful boxes, with speech bubbles and captions added, each section of well researched information covers all aspects of the railways from signals, tracks to goods trains. An excellent HASS resource for Middle Primary classes investigating the importance of the rail industry, connecting the country, moving passengers and goods.
Rhyllis Bignell

Ella and Mrs Gooseberry by Vikki Conley and Penelope Pratley

cover image

EK Books, 2019. ISBN: 9781925335255.
(Age: 4+) Themes: Old age, Friendship, Neighbours, Caring, love, Family. With one in four Australians living alone, the impetus to write this book was to remind people about their neighbours and their need for love and companionship. Ella is aware that Mrs Gooseberry next door slams the front door and does not return her ball if it goes into her yard. But when she watches the old woman in her backyard she talks to her chickens and smiles picking the tomatoes from the vines. Ella asks her mother why Mrs Gooseberry can be so different. Mum's reasoning is that she has lost her love. With that Ella asks a variety of people what love is: her ballet teacher, her gran, her teacher and her mother all giving various answers that include warmth, caring and kindness.
Each of these answers will encourage the readers to think about what they think love is, and add answers of their own.
Ella tries to work out a response for herself and when her gran's cat has kittens she has an idea. She puts one of the kittens in a box on Mrs Gooseberry's front verandah.
The reaction of the old lady to the kitten is just what Ella expected as she hears the two talking to each other and sees the woman with the cat on her knees in the back garden.
Over the next few pages we see Mrs Gooseberry doing all the things that Ella's questioning elicited from people: dancing like a bird, singing, sparkling, sharing food, and having sweet dreams both day and night. Mrs Gooseberry is happy and radiates love. A neat resolution.
Through her kindness Ella and her family have brought love back to their next door neighbour and found a new friend.
This earnest book could provide a platform for discussions about love and kindness, neighbours, loneliness and friendship.
Fran Knight

Inland by Tea Obreht

cover image

Hachette, 2019. ISBN: 9780297867074.
(Age: 16+) Highly recommended. Themes: Historical fiction, Survival, Drought, Cameleers, Ghosts, Trust, Relationships. Set in the harsh drought ridden country of 1890's southwest America, Obrecht's Inland tells two stories that gradually draw closer together, both set in harsh inhospitable environments, with people struggling to make an existence, dealing with loneliness and ghosts of people dead.
Outlaw, Lurie, described as a 'hirsute Levantine' on the wanted posters, travels for a while with a band of cameleers attached to a US military expedition into the desert but pursuit by the relentless Marshal Berger sees him once again finding his own way, but this time with a strange companion for whom he feels a growing attachment.
The other story is one day in the life of homesteader Nora. With her husband gone to find water, and her two adult sons disappearing early in the morning, she is left with her anxious child Toby, a wheelchair-bound mother-in-law, and young helpmate, Josie, who communicates with the spirit world. With only the last dregs of water to contend with the scorching heat, Nora has to stand guard against hostile outsiders, and now, a phantom wild beast that has put fear into Josie and Toby.
Both Lurie and Nora are tough individuals each dealing with ghosts of the past. For Lurie it is past companions he continues to see and who infect him with their needs; for Nora it is the ghost of her daughter, dead from heat stroke many years ago. Both have to contend with loneliness, hardship, and distrust of others. Their stories are a journey of self-enlightenment and exploration of the human need for trust and companionship. The reader is drawn into the two stories, wondering how they will eventually come together. The twist at the end makes for an unforgettable ending.
It is a panoramic novel, each chapter written with a different voice, the language rich and poetic, evoking another time and place. It has many of the elements of the American western but is highly original in weaving in the little known history of the U.S. Camel Cavalry Corp, and the mix of Middle Eastern migrants, Mexicans, and Indians. It is a good reminder that America, like Australia, has always been a multicultural mix of people.
Helen Eddy

The secret dragon by Ed Clarke

cover image

Puffin, 2019. ISBN: 9780241360514. 239p.
(Age: 9+) Highly recommended. Themes: Fantasy. If life is a paradox, then The Secret Dragon is duplicitous to its core. Mari wants to be a palaeontologist like her father, who was tragically struck by lightning when she was a toddler. Her mother, Rhian, is not academically minded but invested in the living animals on their farm. Mari finds the dragon egg after the new vet's son, Dylan, sets off a landslide near her dig on the cliffs. Inside, is the stuff of folklore, a living red Gwiber or Wyvern, which Mari christens 'Gwebe'. The Gwiber is also conflicted - affectionate and troublesome. Mari thinks about making her father proud and naming her momentous find in his honour - Pterodactyl Jonathani. She deceives her mother and wags school in order to discuss the discovery with Professor Griff Griffiths, a palaeontologist working in children's television.
With Dylan as her assistant, Mari learns to connect to her own mammalian wisdom. Yet paradoxically, it is Dylan who is taken in by Ffion's charms, allowing their classmate to steal Gwebe from Dylan's shed. Tension between mum and daughter mounts when Dylan's dad, Gareth asks her mum out on a date. Rhian feels 6 years is long enough for Mari to get used to the idea of replacing her father. But, more lies surface . . .
The book captures the inevitable tension between different types of people and their motivations. Professor Griff turns out to be other than he seems and Dylan helps Mari to choose between the living dragon or her prospective career. When Mari sneers that being popular means both wanting to be like everyone else before being collectively mean to someone different, she echoes the nuances of the human paradox in Clarke's book. This is a novel ideal for group study. It ably demonstrates that very little is what it seems.
Ed Clarke is a film and TV producer versed in adult drama, but we eagerly await his next children's adventure, The Order of the Dragon, due in 2020. The 10 fossil facts appended, are mostly devoted to Clarke's inspiration, Mary Anning - the first person to find a 'sea dragon'(Plesiosaurus) skeleton. It was so strange at the time, it was thought to be fake. You see, in the best novels, the circle closes for the reader's plenitude.
Deborah Robins

The fated sky by Mary Robinette Kowal

cover image

Lady Astronaut book 2. Tor Books, 2018. ISBN: 9780765398949.
(Age: Adult - Senior secondary) Recommended. Themes: Science fiction, Women astronauts, Space colonies, Mathematicians, Gender stereotyping, Racism. Fans of the award winning The Calculating Stars will devour The fated sky which is set a couple of years later. Lady Astronaut Elma York is now living on a colony on the Moon and may have the chance to be part of a trip to Mars. After an asteroid devastated Earth it had became imperative for new worlds to be discovered, and Elma is determined to be part of that journey. Along with 13 other astronauts of differing race and nationalities, she is assigned to the Martian mission and sets out into space.
Kowal examines what it would be like to live and work together in a space vehicle, where the Captain doesn't believe that women should be allowed into space, and where a South African man doesn't trust his non-white companions. This examination of gender stereotyping and racist attitudes as well as the dangers of the voyage, make for a breathtaking and thought provoking read in this alternative history. It is fascinating to ponder what would have happened if the NASA space program had continued in the 60s, and what effects the racism and sexism so evident then would have had.
The fated sky, like The calculating stars, is sure to be on many short lists and award lists and readers will hope for a third book, while looking out the short story, The lady astronaut of Mars (2014), which was the catalyst for the series.
Pat Pledger

My dad snores by John Williamson

cover image

Illus. by Peter Carnavas. Puffin Books, 2019. ISBN: 9780143793793.
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Snoring, Fathers, Family. From the pen of well known Australian writer, musician and entertainer, John Williamson, comes this wonderfully inviting read aloud about fathers and snoring.
All children will recognise someone in their family with snores so loud they keep the house awake and drown out the television.
Readers will love reading the rhyming lines ending with the rhyming phrases,
What are we going to do?
Your dad, does he snore too?

This repeated pair of lines invites the readers to share stories from their experiences, and laugh at the familiarity of seeing another family so afflicted.
Each page brims with an inviting easily read text, begging to be read aloud, asking children to come in with the repeated refrain, while getting a kick out of the illustrations.
We see dad snoring through doors and walls, mum kicking him to get him to stop. We see him compared to a steam train, thunder and rain, an old school bus, and while the house rattles and shakes, he hisses like a brown snake or a dinosaur.
The family tries a number of remedies to halt the noise, putting a peg on his nose, wearing ear muffs, putting pillows over their heads, but he laughs, not seeing the problem at all. Even taking a film of him snoring does not have any effect. Eventually the family works out a solution and the image of the sleep deprived family hammering in the tent pegs at the bottom of the garden will satisfy all readers that a way to fix the problem has been found.
Carnavas' illustrations hit the mark. I loved reading the book again, spying the looks on the faces as I turned the pages, seeing the animals included in the snore affected family, and helping with the resolution at the end.
I love the endpapers initially showing five frazzled galahs unable to roost because of the noise, while the last endpaper shows them happily asleep on the chimney.
This is an enjoyable read for families and classes as Father's Day approaches but its universal theme of solving a universal problem will be lauded.
Fran Knight

My dad is a dragon by Damon Young

cover image

Illus. by Peter Carnavas. UQP, 2019. ISBN: 9780702260490.
(Age: 4+) Recommended. Themes: Humour, Fathers, Dragons. With a series of rhyming pairs of lines Young describes an overview of various fathers and what they do in their families. From dads who collect cars or stockpile sneakers, collect swords, scimitars and sabres, my dad is a dragon who collects chocolate gold.
Then some dads have pencils to design bridges or trolleys for fridges, or wear a special suit to collect honey, while my dad is a dragon who loves to sing.
On again, to dads who shriek 'shiver' or 'yow' or why' my dad is a dragon with blazing chilli breath.
Each set of rhyming lines introduces the reader to a range of what dads do, ending with 'my dad is a dragon' raising the expectations of the reader.
They will love reading of the variousness of fathers' roles within the family, and have fun sharing what their fathers do. The repeated lines will evoke a response as the children turn the page to read for themselves: 'but my dad is a dragon . . . and laugh out loud at the offered line.
The next set of lines refers to food, with some dads grabbing the potatoes from a hotpot, or the pork bun form the table spinner, or pinch the sprinkles from the top of a birthday cake, but my dad is a dragon, with smoky charcoal steaks.
And on the tale goes until we find out why dad is a dragon, and all is well as the dragon folds his wings around his offspring and they fall asleep.
Carnavas' ink and watercolour illustrations are always a treat, evoking laughs from the reading audience, and recognition from the adults, reflecting the variety of fathers and the work they do in the home. I always admire the expressions Carnavas gets on his faces: a few lines and he has them happy, struggling, abashed, in control (or not), sad, worried or glad.
This is the sixth book in the series from UQP, including My Nanna is a Ninja, My pop is a pirate, My mum is a magician, My sister is a superhero and My brother is a beast, written and illustrated by Young and Carnavas. Teacher's notes are available.
Fran Knight

Run away by Harlan Coben

cover image

Cornerstone, 2019. ISBN: 9781784751173.
(Age: 16+) Recommended for lovers of thrillers. Themes: Mystery, Drug addiction, Fathers. An exciting stand-alone thriller, Run away grabs the reader right from the first page and with many twists and hooks, keeps up the momentum until the unexpected end. Simon Greene's daughter Paige has disappeared. A drug addict, she has an abusive partner. Simon continually searches for her and one day he believes that he has spotted her in Central Park. She runs and following her trail leads Simon to danger and things that he could not have imagined.
Harlan Coben is a master at hooking the reader in and keeping the suspense and tension going until the dramatic conclusion. Coben's portrayal of the father who just can't give up on his daughter, even after her abusive boyfriend is found dead, is very effective. Simon's steps to find Paige and to find out who is the murderer, are vividly described and make it very difficult to put the book down. The dark side of the drug world is a dangerous place for him to venture into and this background makes the story even more thrilling.
Run away kept me guessing until the end and although all the clues are there when you know what has happened, they weren't obvious to me while reading. Verdict: An exciting thriller that was hard to put down and easy to read as it was a stand-alone.
Pat Pledger

Computer coding games for kids by Carol Vorderman

cover image

Dorling Kindersley, 2019. ISBN: 9780241317747.
(Age: 8-16) Themes: Computer programming, Programming languages, Computer games - design and construction. Computer coding projects for kids presents a visually appealing step by step guide to computer programming for kids, beginning with the playability components that make a fantastic computer game, characters, mechanics, objects, rules, goals, controls difficulty levels and the game world. Computer games range span across different genres - traditional, combat, role playing or puzzles. By developing understandings of how coding works, the basics of Scratch 3.0 and sourcing the program, we are introduced to the first game Star Hunter. With clear instructions, screen grabs, easy to follow instructions and little pixelated characters providing helpful hints, young programmers will soon achieve success.
Computer coding concepts are also explained from using coordinates, looping, Boolean expressions and writing strings of coding. In the Scratch section, there are progressively longer games to program. Cheese Chase is a maze game where Mimi the Mouse tries to avoid the beetles and ghosts on her journey to find the cheese. Jumpy Monkey's mission is to jump and eat all the bananas. In the second section, the Python language is introduced, utilising the same format while building on the concepts learned in the Scratch chapters.
Dorling Kindersley publications are always visually appealing and realistically written to suit the target audience. Each computer game is precisely broken down into easy to understand steps, with plenty of tips and concepts explained. Computer programming for kids has been revised from the 2015 edition to bring the coding up-to-date with Scratch 3.0. Just right for young techies keen to begin programming and for those who enjoy the challenges of mastering more complex gaming techniques.
Rhyllis Bignell

Zanzibar by Catherina Valckx

cover image

Gecko Press, 2019. ISBN: 9781776572564. 65p
(Age: 7+) Early Chapter Book. Zanzibar is an ordinary, contented crow who unfortunately begins to believe that he is lacking in some way. Achille LeBlab is to blame. As the special correspondent to the 'Voices of the Forest' newspaper, he is seeking interesting subjects to write about. He tells Zanzibar that apart from his name, there is absolutely nothing special about him.
Without rhyme or reason, Zanzibar reaches the very arbitrary but specific belief that his special talent is the ability to lift a dromedary in the air with one wing.
The quest for an Arabian camel begins and he tells Paulette the mole his intentions. Sidi, the Fennec fox, helps him to find a very thin camel called Cheb. Madam Adelle is a moth yet the postman is a Seagull, named Monsieur Seagull. It seems only animals with jobs have surnames and these describe their species, or their occupation, since the lizard reporter is Monsieur LeBlab.
But will Zanzibar's belief in his ability be justified and will Monsieur LeBlab want to write a story about an incredible feat? Indeed, where is the evidence?
Historically, crows were trouble and not extraordinary. Nearly 200 years ago, the Indian crow was introduced to the island of Zanzibar but spread to the mainland where it very quickly became a pest. Coincidentally, 100 yrs ago, George Bateman translated an East African folktale about a clever crow in his collection, Zanzibar Tales. Science has decided, they are actually extremely good problem solvers.
Thus, the retro look and feel of this children's book hints at the kind of story we will read. But Valckx's Zanzibar is naive, more like the characters in enchanting French classics such as Babar, where animals seem to be concerned with one dimensional circumstances before reaching a simple conclusion. And so . . . we discover that it is never too late to do something incredible.
Learn more about this Dutch author.
Deborah Robins

Searching for cicadas by Lesley Gibbes and Judy Watson

cover image

Nature Storybooks. Walker Books, 2019. ISBN: 9781922244420.
(Age: 5+) Highly recommended. Themes: Cicadas, Environment, Observation, Grandparents. An older man and his grandson go cicada watching each summer. The pair pack their sleeping bags and tent and walk down to the Apex Reserve where they camp with others to observe the insects. They look out for the insects called surprisingly, Double Drummers, Yellow Mondays, Green Grocers and Floury Bakers. Each cicada has a strong body and six legs and two pairs of wings that fold back. The boy's excitement is obvious. This year he wants to spot a Black Prince, a cicada rarely seen.
Beautifully told, the pages have text in two different fonts: one is a more formal font which outlines the story of the boy and his grandfather, while the other more casual font gives information about the cicadas. In this way, as with all the wonderful books in the Nature Storybooks series, the reader can enjoy the story and read the facts as well.
On each page the pair is depicted strolling to the park, setting up their tent, waiting for the dark when they get their torches out to search for the cicadas.
The illustrations rendered first in pencil, brush ad ink, use a monotype technique before all is transferred to Photoshop for assemblage and colour. And the finished product is stunning. Readers will pore over the pages looking at the incredible detail included on each page, the depiction of Australian plants producing a chorus of wows amongst the children, while the detailed cicada will draw entreaties to go out and see them for themselves.
The relationship between grandpa and grandson is beautifully presented and the subtle layering of community gives an extra warm moment for the readers. What the people are doing is not common and so will encourage others to look out for these themselves, to observe, to research, to wonder. A beautifully arresting book with an index, and extra information about the cicadas, author and illustrator on the last pages. Classroom ideas are available.
Fran Knight

The agony house by Cherie Priest

cover image

Illus. by Tara O'Connor. Arthur A. Levine Books, 2018. ISBN: 9780545934299.
(Age: 12+) Recommended. YALSA Quick Pick for Reluctant Young Adult Readers. Themes: Ghosts, Horror. With a clever graphic/novel hybrid The Agony House provides chills and thrills for the teen reader. Seventeen-year-old Denise Farber, her mom, and her stepfather are trying to renovate the Argonne House, a very old run down house in New Orleans, but ghosts inhabiting the house are not happy. Denise finds an old comic book in the attic, starring feisty Lucida Might, crime fighter and it may have clues to an old crime and the reason that horrifying incidents are happening in the 'Agony' house.
The gripping composition of this combination of types, graphic and novel, make it quite difficult to put down. O'Connor's illustrations from the comic and stand-alone pictures all stand out in blue, while the text from Priest is engrossing and easy to read. Denise is a determined heroine, very able in confronting not only ghosts but opposition to the renovation from her neighbourhood.
The agony house is a memorable ghost story that fans of ghost stories and the supernatural are sure to enjoy.
Pat Pledger