Reviews

The Catalpa rescue by Peter FitzSimons

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Hachette, April 2019, ISBN: 9780733641244.
(Age: Senior Secondary - Adult) In this book, Peter FitzSimons tells the true story of the Irish fight for independence from British occupation, the life sentences for six of the captured Fenian rebels, including transportation to a harsh prison in Fremantle, Western Australia in the 1860s and a consequent daring Irish-American rescue attempt using a disguised whaling ship, the Catalpa.
Like all great escape stories this exciting tale includes portraits of courageous and principled individuals, outstanding leadership, adventure, a thrilling chase and a triumphant escape. The story is told with excellent footnoted detail and offers a strong glimpse of life in British occupied Ireland, the prideful weakness of the British colonial gaol administration in Australia and the strength of American Irish support for Irish independence. The author includes useful maps and photographs showing the individuals and settings featured in the gripping story.
Paul Pledger

Field notes on love by Jennifer E. Smith

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Macmillan Children's Books, 2019. 311 pages, paperback. ISBN: 9781529014563.
(Age: Mid teens+) Recommended. Field Notes on Love is a romantic novel about two strangers travelling across America by train. Just like an old romance film, right? This story doesn't start by them catching each other's eyes from across the platform and falling helplessly in love though. No this starts with Hugo Wilkinson, who just recently got dumped by his long-term girlfriend Margaret Campbell. And her parting gift? The tickets for their long-planned train trip before they went to university. If only they had not booked it under her name, non-transferable and no exceptions. Luckily when Mae finds an ad for a replacement for Margaret Campbell for an adventure across America by train, she is certain this is what she needs to get over her rejection from film school. Now a train trip with a complete stranger might not sound like the best idea, but both of them are looking for something more. More of what? They don't know, but they might be able to help each other out.
Both Hugo and Mae's journey throughout this story are personal and moving and it was the perfect escape from my usual mystery driven reads. The little romantic moments that Hugo and Mae share together on this trip kept me reading late into the night and also into my work breaks. Jennifer E. Smith has done a wonderful job of telling a purely romantic story between two strangers. She has also managed to give so much life to the other characters as well. Both Hugo and Mae's family's feel grounded in the story, and it was refreshing to read about families that are loving and supportive and accepting of their children. And as for the travelers they met along the way, they were all interesting and different and not one of them was forgetful.
I think that this is a very refreshing young adult romance novel that would be a great read if you need a step back from drama driven stories. I would recommend it to mid-teens and up, and those who just want to enjoy a nice light romance.
Kayla Raphael

Ron the royal guard by Deano Yipadee

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Illus. by Paul Beavis. New Frontier Books, 2019. ISBN: 9781925594614.
(Age: 4+) Recommended. Themes: Toilets, Buckingham Palace, Corgis, Humour. When Ron is on duty at the palace, he never tires of people taking selfies with him or the royal corgis scuttling around his feet. He loves guarding the queen and the others inside the palace, but really looks forward to his shift's end when he can relax, take off his uniform and have a cup of tea.
Told in rhyming couplets, the story moves along breezily, encouraging young readers to learn the lines and join in, predicting the rhyming word and call out the words in bold.
But one day after having three cups of tea while relaxing, he finds that back on his shift, he desperately needs the toilet. Readers will laugh out loud at his predicament, mist of them having been in the same situation themselves. They will laugh at the words used for toilet as the lines proceed, and the increasingly funny looks on his face as the situation becomes dire.
A solution seems near but the tourists do not want to dress up as him while he makes a quick trip, and he must be more imaginative to solve his problem. Even the queen does not see the trick he has played as she walks past and says good morning to Ron.
A very funny look at a known situation, children will regale the class with anecdotes of when they were in need, and this will lead to discussions of what to do. The funny illustrations are enticing, causing lots of laughter and sympathy with poor Ron, and the humour behind the tale will not be lost on the audience. And what child can resist the cover cut out.
Fran Knight

Aussie Nibbles series by various authors

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Puffin, 2019.
The mermaid's tail by Raewyn Caisley, illus. by Ann James. ISBN: 9780141306155.
Scruffy's day out by Rachel Flynn, illus. byJocelyn Bell. ISBN: 9780141311692.
Fairy bread by Ursula Dobosarsky, illus. by Mitch Vane. ISBN: 9780141311753.
Bad Buster by Sofie Leguna, illus. by Leigh Hobbs. ISBN: 9780143300335.
The littlest pirate by Sheryl Clark, illus. by Tom Jellett. ISBN: 9780141313382.
Blast off by Margaret Clark, illus. by Tom Jellett. ISBN: 9780143301851.
(Age: 6-8) Highly recommended. Themes: Chapter books, Humour. Puffin is republishing some of the Aussie Nibbles books which first appeared in the early 2000s. These were all highly popular and were rarely on the shelves, tapping into a market that was, up until then, ill served. With fabulous authors and illustrators, the series proved a hit with younger readers and will now be available for a new generation of readers. They are aimed at those kids who have learnt to read and are looking for something with chapters. Each book has six to eight chapters, each of 8 or so pages with half page illustrations. They are full of humour.
In The mermaid's tail, Crystal is determined to be a mermaid. She practises joining her legs together and collects seaweed for her hair from the beach. Mum makes her a tail, covered in sequins. She wears it everywhere, hoping that one day she will turn into a mermaid, but is dismayed when the sequins begin to fall off her costume. But when a dolphin comes into the room one night, she must make a choice.
Scruffy's day out is similarly based around a strong family unit, and the children learn a lesson about a stray dog. He comes into their lives when Dad rescues him from under the wheels of a passing Land Rover. They take him around the neighbourhood looking for a possible owner, and eventually ring RSPCA where they are given a number to ring. The family would love to keep the dog, but in giving it back find new friends.
In Fairy bread, When Becky's Mum asks what she wants as her party food at her birthday party, she answers fairy bread. So Mum makes plates of it for the guests, but when the great day comes, they only eat the birthday cake. Becky and her family find lots of things to do with leftover fairy bread but when the leftovers start to stale, then Mum thinks of an idea to get rid of it all. A funny look at solving a problem with Becky coming up with some very odd ways of disposing of all the fairy bread.
Bad Buster is a really bad boy, doing all sorts of things to get himself into trouble. And his parents are not much better. Made to work at a dog rescue home as punishment after a particularly naughty series of bad behaviours, he becomes attached to the dogs and the owner, Rhonda. His behaviour begins to change with these friends, and when in class one day he feels there is something wrong, he and the dogs foil a burglary at Rhonda's house. A funny look at the difference friends can make to someone's life, with lots of humour in pointing out the different dogs in the home.
In The littlest pirate, Nicholas Nash wants to prove himself. He is left at home with his babysitter Gretta when his parents and older siblings go off pirating in their ship, The Pig's Breakfast. When his family is captured by Red Beard, Nicholas springs into action, saving the day and the ship, and finding a load of treasure along the way.
Blast off! is similar to The littlest pirate, in that it is about following your dream. Adam simply wants to be an astronaut, and reads every thing he can lay his hands on to achieve his dream. Going to visit Aunt Sue with Mum he meets the next door neighbour, Marvin who needs help with his invention.
Fran Knight

Catching Teller Crow by Ambelin Kwaymullina and Ezekiel Kwaymullina

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Allen and Unwin, 2018. ISBN: 9781760631628.
(Age: 16+) Highly recommended. Themes: Crime, Thriller, Aboriginal themes, Stolen generation. When detective Michael Teller is brought to a small country town to investigate a fire at a local children's home, he brings with him his daughter, Beth, killed in a car accident several years before. Both have serious problems to deal with and these are resolved as this wonderfully evocative crime thriller unfolds. Beth cannot leave her father, knowing he has been unable to contend with her death and unable to reach out to his dead wife's family, one that had taken him in as their son. Beth knows from her aunties that her mother is waiting for her on the other side, but she cannot leave while her father is grieving.
When a witness is questioned at the local hospital, Beth is startled that Isobel Catching can see her and as Beth narrates the journey of the investigation, the two become friends. They share an Aboriginal background that supports and nurtures their understanding of what has transpired. The spirituality shared by the girls is wonderfully evoked, giving them a deep inner strength inherited from their women forebears and it is this understanding that permeates the story.
But things have happened in this town in the past which have been covered up, Aboriginal people from the community were not listened to as children were taken away. When Teller discovers the remains of a young girl who disappeared more than twenty years ago, he solves a problem for the constable in the town, a school friend of the girl who disappeared. But this discovery leads to others. The grieving detective questions Catching who gives elusive answers, outlining some of the injustices doled out to her people from colonial times.
The conspiracy at the children's home involved people in the town, police who didn't take the girl's disappearance seriously, or because they were friends of the house owner, deliberately took things slowly, leaving children even more vulnerable.
The almost poetic lines from Catching outline her suffering, but readers will take pause at the strength of her character, her resolve in a situation that although she cannot change, she can lead the detective to the place where the mystery will be solved. At the same time she is able to help him accept his daughter's death and Beth is finally able to leave her father and join her mother.
This is a great read, full of women showing strength in the most dire of circumstances: the aunties, mothers and daughters shining through with courage and compassion, their words and stories telling the reader about the injustices of the past, with the story ending on a positive note offering hope for the future.
Ambelin Kwaymullina and Ezekiel Kwaymullina are sibling authors who are Palyku from the Pilbara region, North Western Australia. This novel is their first joint effort writing a young adult fiction and hopefully one of many. They have woven an absorbing and realistic crime thriller around the storytelling, magic and poetry of the women in their tale. Scroll for teacher's notes.
Fran Knight

Touch the moon by Phil Cummings

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Illus. by Coral Tulloch. Allen and Unwin, 2019. ISBN 9781760523657.
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Everyone has a story about where they were the day Neil Armstrong walked on the moon, but the one told by Phil Cummings in his stunning new picture book, published to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of that day, is second to none.
A young lad sitting in front of his television set in Peterborough in South Australia, has to decide between going out into the snow or watching the moon landing.
A remote town in the Mid North of South Australia, Peterborough experiences very cold winter weather, but 1969 was the coldest day for a long time. Sitting by his television, a newspaper left open on the front page broadcasting the event of the century, he watches the garden around his house become quiet and still as flakes of snow drift down. The young boy rushes out, allowing the snow to fall on his eyes, face and tongue. He has never seen snow before.
Mum aware of the momentous event about to unfold in their living room, calls him back, and he watches as Armstrong places one foot on the moon, saying his now iconic words. Friends call from the yard and he joins them placing their own footsteps in the snow, paralleling what is happening on the moon.
A beautifully circular story, Phil Cummings was that eleven year old boy, seeing snow for the first time, drawn between an event in his home town and an awe inspiring happening on the moon. What better way to celebrate fifty years since the moon landing than to recall an incident at home, making the almost impossible walk on the moon comparable with steps taken by a young lad and his friends in their back yard.
Cummings is always able to recreate the small events in people's lives, giving them a universality which is memorable. His work links the everyday to the momentous, connecting small events in a child's life to something much bigger, effortlessly giving a sense of authenticity to his stories.
And Coral Tulloch's illustrations underline the ordinariness of the day; Mum working in the kitchen washing dishes at the sink, apron around her waist, the breakfast things on the table, ironing table ready to the side, calling out to him to make sure he doesn't miss the event. The house and its environs are crammed full of images from the sixties, allowing readers to view a snapshot of the past. This image of a warm, close family, lovingly detailed with Tulloch's soft illustrative technique, explodes when the images of the moon take over the pages, bold and sharp, using few colours to recreate the scene.
Themes: Space. Man on the moon, Snow, Peterborough (SA).
Fran Knight

Violet and nothing by Fiona Burrows

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Fremantle Press, 2019. ISBN: 9781925591552.
(Age: 6+) Recommended. Themes: Philosophy, Questions. Violet has big ideas and is always thinking about them. But when she starts thinking about nothing, it creates an impossible range of more questions to ponder and try to answer. She asks a range of people for their idea about nothing, and tries out their responses for herself, but still cannot come to any conclusion. She asks, what is nothing? and where is nothing? She ponders about whether it is real and if nothing is real, then is anything real?
A quizzical book for those who like to find an answer to the big questions of life, or at least ponder the big questions of life, this book encourages creativity and imagination as readers will share Violet's questioning with their cohort, eager to find some answers. Readers will follow Violet's pursuit of the answers to her big questions, hoping that she does reach a conclusion, but equally satisfied that one question leads to another. Children will use their imaginations along with Violet in seeking out answers to the big questions.
The imaginative illustrations showcase the ordinariness of Violet's home life, contrasted with the jumble of colours and lines representing her mind as she thinks about things. I love Mum putting on her shoes or Gran painting, while Violet's mind is a kaleidoscope of colour. Readers will love picking out all the things within that mess of colour, showing what is going on in Violet's mind as she thinks about all sorts of things at the same time. The wonderful endpapers had me hooked for some little while trying to pursue some of Violet's thinkings.
Fran Knight

Devoted by Jennifer Mathieu

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Hachette, 2019. ISBN: 9781444945256.
(Age: 15+) Recommended. This book was captivating and disturbing. A confronting story of family relationships is told through the eyes of Rachel. Rachel belongs to a family devoted to a fundamentalist Christian religion.
The family church emphasises female submission and follows a rigid interpretation of the Bible that sets all followers apart from the rest of civilisation. Family members do not attend school or associate with members of the wider community.
Rachel accesses the one computer in the house to manage her father's business. This opens the door to knowledge - and Rachel begins to realise that there might be more to life. This book sensitively and intelligently explores the relationship Rachel has with her faith. The reader considers the actions of her family when her access to wider knowledge is discovered. As Rachel interrogates the differing perspectives on offer the reader also interprets their perspectives of the Bible, feminism, and vegetarian lifestyles.
There is a delicate touch to the writing that shows Rachel evolving through the experience of leaving the community. The support she receives nurtures her and is provided without judgement. 'Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?' is the question that returns throughout the book. Devoted is an essential read.
Linda Guthrie

Super cats by Gwyneth Rees and Becka Moir

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Bloomsbury, 2019 ISBN: 9781408894194.
(Age: 5-8) Themes: Cats, Superpowers. Gwyneth Rees brings cats, magic, superpowers and villains together in her new book Super cats, just right for young readers.
Tagg the tabby kitten was born in spring to Melody and Chester. Whilst his other brothers and sisters find new homes, he keeps coming back after several attempts to find him a family. Of course, there's a special reason for this, young Tagg has been born with a superpower just like his mum and dad. His brother Rowdy from a previous litter also has a super feline ability.
In the summer house, his great-uncle shares stories of previous Feline Force adventures and Tagg tries to imagine what his talent will be. When beautiful cat Glamour lands on the roof to report her partner Flash, is missing after leaving home to purchase tickets for an upcoming concert, the other cats become worried. Why is the concert venue in an abandoned factory? What is the eccentric human scientist and his feline offsider planning? With three other supercats missing, all the adult Feline Force team gather to plan and then infiltrate the concert to search for their missing friends. Tagg sneaks off against his parents' instructions and teams up with Sugarfoot the kitten. Together they become involved in dangerous adventures, narrow escapes, scary bodyguards and foil evil plots. As Tagg grows and helps save the missing cats, his surprising super talent appears.
Gwyneth Rees' fast-paced story is just right for young animal fans and Becca Moir's line drawings show all the feline action. What's next for young Tagg and his new kitten friends - time for a team of new super-agents?
Rhyllis Bignell

Things nobody knows but me by Amra Pajalic

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Transit Lounge, 2019. ISBN: 9781925760200.
(Age: Adult) Memoir. Pajalic writes that as a young person she had judged her mother and found her wanting, as a mother, as a wife, as a human being. It was only when she was 16 that a school counsellor helped her realise that her mother was most likely suffering from manic depression, that there was a chemical imbalance in her brain that caused her moods and behaviour to change in ways she could not control. This was a revelation that changed Pajalic's perspective of her mother, and led her to better understanding and forgiveness.
Things nobody knows but me is a record of Pajalic's chaotic childhood, the highs and lows of a life where parental guidance was lacking, and where one unpredictable thing could happen after another. The child Amra and her younger brother had to largely fend for themselves, and try to work out the mysteries of the adult world around them, often in situations that veered on dangerous.
When they travel to Bosnia, and stay with her mother's parents, there is at least the security of rules and boundaries, but it comes with harsh physical punishments for any wrongdoing. Amra comes to realise that her mother and in fact all the women in her family have had a very restricted life, where men have a free hand, and women have to fearfully guard their moral reputations.
With the realisation of the things her mother had to bear, Pajalic has a better appreciation of the opportunities now available to her, and the freedoms that she in turn can offer her own daughter.
For the reader, it provides an intimate insight into mental health issues, parenting styles and abuse, and women's rights.
Helen Eddy

We're stuck by Sue deGennaro

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Scholastic, 2019. ISBN: 9781760663476.
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Elevators, Friendship, City life. With a tongue in cheek swipe at the unfriendly attitude of people when getting into a lift in a city apartment, Sue deGennaro highlights the isolation that many city dwellers create. Separated from each other, rarely acknowledging another's existence, the animals living in this apartment only needed a small prod to communicate with each other.
A wonderful double page opens before the reader, making them turn the book on its side so they can see the apartment house in its entirety and the animals that live on each floor getting ready to leave for work. Readers will have fun looking closely at the animals to see what each wears and what work each does, so musing about where they are going. DeGennaro's illustrations are enticing with her pen and ink techniques, giving a humanity to the animals which all readers will recognise; the large tuba player, the very busy lion looking at his watch, the shy turtle sliding into the corner of the lift, the very round hippo chef, the tall giraffe with a ladder! and so on. Each is polite but stays guardedly aloof from the others in the lift.
But something happens to bring them all together. The lift breaks down and is stuck.
Turtle mentions that it is his birthday so without saying too many words, the animals look into their various bags to find things to help him celebrate his special day. Readers will be delighted and amused seeing what each animal can design out of something very simple - Crocodile inflates her rubber gloves, Hippo uses the newspaper to make paper hats, Pelican finds a cake in his bag, and they all sing out surprise to Turtle. Hippo helps Giraffe with her allergies, Whale tells everyone she is a hairdresser and cuts lion's mane, and they all settle down to chat and eat cake. When their rescuers arrive, no rescuing is needed, and the firemen are invited in for a cup of tea.
A delightful story well told will have children begging it to be read again. Layers of understanding about life in a city, isolation and lack of communication will not go unnoticed by the readers, as they see that it only needs a small trigger for people to break down the barriers. Readers will love to contemplate the next steps for the residents of apartment block 24, now that their lives have changed so completely.
Fran Knight

It's Trevor Noah: born a crime by Trevor Noah

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Hachette, 2019. ISBN: 9781529318760.
(Age: 12+) Recommended. Trevor Noah is a stand-up comedian and so you would expect his book to be funny. And funny it is, with many stories that made me laugh out loud. But what readers might not be so aware of, is that he grew up in apartheid South Africa, the son of a black woman and a white man, at a time when it was a crime to have any kind of inter-racial relationship, so his very existence was a crime.
Apartheid was a rigid policy of segregation and discrimination where people were assigned to one of four different racial groups: black, white, coloured, or Asian (Indian and Pakistani). Bizarrely, Japanese were considered white, because it suited the government's trade relations. South Africa was a police state designed to keep black people, the majority, oppressed by the white minority; with movement, education and job opportunities for black people severely restricted.
So how was Trevor Noah able to grow up largely unscathed and able to follow his dreams? It is all thanks to his fiercely independent and proud mother, who refused to bow to any racist laws and who always found a way to get around the restrictions. She was a fervent Christian who believed that Jesus would look after her and her family if they did the right thing in God's eyes. She was also a strong disciplinarian, motivated by love and determination that her son would follow the right path. As a result Noah had an amazing life, with many adventures, that is so fascinating to read about. He credits a lot his ability to mix between the racial groups to his grasp of the different languages of each group, and promotes multilingualism as a great way to overcome stereotypes and break down barriers.
This version of his book has been adapted for young readers. It interleaves short descriptions of the apartheid regime with rollicking stories of the misadventures that made up his life. It makes for informative and also thoroughly enjoyable reading that will be sure to make you laugh.
Helen Eddy

The Fork, The Witch and The Worm by Christopher Paolini

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Tales from Alagaesia bk. 1. Penguin, 2019. ISBN: 9780241392379.
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. This is a new collection of stories based in the world of the Inheritance Cycle. Can you enjoy this book when you have not read the Inheritance Cycle series? Yes. This book may be just the book you are looking for to entice those readers a little reluctant to take on the Inheritance Cycle series because of the size of the volumes.
The book comprises three stories: The Fork; The Witch (with the chapter 'On the Nature Stars' written by Christopher's sister Angela and The Worm. The book begins with Eragon working to establish Mount Arngor as the Dragon Rider's new home.
Of these stories it is 'The Worm' and 'The Fork' that really captivate the reader. In 'The Fork', an innkeeper's daughter encounters a mysterious traveller at a tipping point in her life. She confides in the traveller who provides timely advice. Later when the traveller's meeting with traders has an unexpected outcome, the wisdom of the advice becomes clear. This story relates the advantages of confronting your fears.
'The Worm' is the story of Ilgra. She lives in a village that is attacked by a dragon. Following the attack, that kills her father, dragon takes up residence above the village. Ilgra trains herself to be a mighty warrior and then convinces a shaman to teach her the magic she needs to defeat the dragon. There is a real feeling of a Norse saga about this story. The themes of courage, loss and persistence are well told in this final story.
Linda Guthrie

The multiplying mysteries of Mount Ten by Krista Van Dolzer

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Bloomsbury, 2019. ISBN: 9781681197708.
(Age: 8 - 12) Esther, an aspiring 12-year-old artist has worked hard to get her art portfolio perfect and is on her way to attend a prestigious art camp in her holidays but finds herself at a Maths camp after getting hopelessly lost in a storm with her step-father.
She feels like a fish out of water at Camp Archimedes but after getting involved in some of the camp's puzzles and activities and then solving a very complicated brain teaser in a single day her confidence lifts.
So, when faced with the cryptic, threatening notes left for her and some of her fellow campers she resolves not only solve to the mystery but save the victims she thinks have been kidnapped, including her stepfather. Not knowing who she can really trust Esther works with the children who have found the notes and they show great cooperation skills as they work together to find a way to make the notes lead them to a solution.
The book provides the reader with a variety of good puzzles to solve along the way and if read to a class it would be entertaining to try to solve the puzzles along with the characters.
The characters were not as well developed as in some other books for this age group, but they are strong enough to make this an entertaining story. The story moves a little slowly at first but has a satisfying resolution and picks up the pace through the book to reach it.
The relationship Esther has with her stepfather Toby and the way they interact will resonate with the many children who are living in mixed families.
A side story about a character called the Fenimore Forger is not a necessary part of the overall story but perhaps the author has included it as an added interest for art lovers.
A good book for readers who like maths. Themes: Mathematics puzzles, Problem-solving, Friendship.
Gabrielle Anderson

Maple the brave by Chloe Jasmine Harris

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Walker Books, 2019. ISBN: 9781925381924.
(Age: 4+) Bravery, Fear, Seasons. Madge lives in a little house, high above the trees. Here she has the water from the roof and the trees are so close that she can pick the fruit from their branches. But she is wracked by fear of the unknown. And the worst fear is about the animals that live on the forest floor, so she never ventures there.
But one day the water stops falling and the trees begin to wilt, no longer producing any fruit. She must go to the forest floor to find food. But she is so frightened. She ventures down amongst the dark trees and once there meets the animals she has been so frightened of. They are welcoming, and teach her to run swiftly, to swim, to climb and to travel over rough waters. She becomes an adventurer, staying with her new friends, learning from them how to survive. But she must return to her home and her friends go back with her until it is time for them to return to their on homes.
Cutely illustrated, the story of Maple and her home in the sky will appeal to those who like to be by themselves, who crave time out, but also know that they cannot live by themselves, that we all need others to survive.
Maple is a engaging young girl, and readers will enjoy seeing how she lives by herself, picking out the detail shown in her home. Teachers will be able to talk about the seasons represented in the book and the sort of adventures Maple has on the forest floor and how she overcomes her irrational fears of the unknown. Activities are available in Walker's storytime kit.
Fran Knight