Reviews

Guinness World Records 2018 by Guinness World Records

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Guinness World Records, 2017. ISBN 9781910561713
(Age: 7+) Highly recommended. The Guinness World Records series needs no introduction and Guinness World Records 2018 continues with the production of a fascinating, exceptionally well produced and interesting book. The amazing records that it contains will keep a reader interested for hours and it is fun to dip in and out of the book to see what incredible feats have been achieved. There are '45,000 claims researched, 3,000 new and updated records published, 1,000 photographs sourced, 60 exclusive photoshoots attended', so there are an enormous number of records to dazzle the reader.
For those who want to know specific information, there is a Contents page which has twelve sections, including Earth, Animals, Superhumans, Adventures, Sci-Tech and Engineering and Sports. An index highlights main entries in bold and is quite comprehensive. Eye-catching full-colour photos accompany the entries, which are written in short crisp language.
A special feature chapter in the 2018 edition is the section on superheroes, which chronicles the rise of the superhero in popular culture. There is also a new feature that celebrates absolutes such as the longest, tallest, fastest and heaviest and it is possible to download free posters with these records on them from the World Guinness records site.
This volume will have readers squabbling over who can read it and is one that can be shared as well. Adults will also find themselves entertained by the amazing feats recorded and some people will have a look at what is necessary to make a record.
Pat Pledger

Guinness World Records 2018 Gamer's edition: The ultimate guide to gaming records by Guinness World Records

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Guinness World Records, 2017. ISBN 9781910561737
(Age: 7+) Recommended. With an introduction by DanTDM who has the most viewed Minecraft channel on YouTube (nearly 10 billion views), The 11th edition of The ultimate guide to gaming records is a must for any gaming fan and is certain to thrill those children who are engrossed with games in their screen time. This edition contains records about favourite games including Mario, Pokemon Go and Minecraft as well as information about gaming heroes and videogames.
The colourful Contents page which is divided into sections that include Fantasy, Viral glitches, Sci-fi, Legends, Superheroes, Real world, Sports and Fighting, makes an easy entry into the book for those who can skim read to find their favourite game. Then there are instructions to the reader on how to become a record-breaker, as well as an index at the back which once again is helpful for readers wanting to find out specific information. There is a special section on Superheroes, with a brief history of superhero games, then sections on Spider-Man, a Marvel and DC round-up, records about Batman and Lego superheroes.
The records themselves make for amazing reading (the oldest videogames YouTuber is Shirley Curry aged 81 years) and the well-produced book, enticing information and the colourful photographs will make it a hit in the library and at home.
Pat Pledger

Piglettes by Clementine Beauvais

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Pushkin Press, 2017. ISBN 9781782691204
(Age: 14+) Highly recommended. This superb YA novel deals with some pretty gritty issues like bullying (cyber and real life), self image, identity and family relationships and is one of the most wickedly funny books you'll read all year.
Mireille, Astrid and Hakima are three girls at the same school and recently voted as the first three place-winners in a Facebook 'Pig Pageant' for the ugliest girls by their schoolmates. This event was initiated by Mireille's erstwhile childhood friend Malo, who is one of the most odious youths ever. Since they both started high school Malo has made it his mission in life to humiliate Mireille at every turn.
While the girls are all pretty crushed by this horrible bullying, they are not going to let it get the better of them and form a friendship that will fly them forever. Each has a particular reason for their proposed plan to cycle to Paris for the huge Bastille Day celebrations; Mireille, wants to confront her biological father, now married to the President, Astrid wants to meet her idols Indochine and Hakima wants to berate the commanding officer about to be awarded the Legion of Honour for the debacle that resulted in her brother Kader losing both his legs in battle.
Overcoming the opposition of parents, the girls set off on what must be the craziest road trip ever with Kader in his super wheel chair as their chaperone. Along the way they garner the respect and adulation of thousands via newspapers and social media and in real life.
Told through Mireille's witty and philosophical voice, the reader is alongside the girls for the entire trip which is joyful, uplifting and totally hilarious.
Proving themselves as true Mighty Girls the trio triumph over the online bullies and even horrid Malo shows some indications of redemption, especially when the reason for his nastiness is revealed. Each girl learns valuable lessons about herself particularly when they finally attain their goals and find that something has changed about their motivations.
Definitely worthy of its achievement of winning France's biggest award for YA/teen fiction I highly recommend this to you for your girls from around 14 years upwards.
Sue Warren

The fairy dancers: Dancing days by Natalie Jane Prior

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Ill. by Cheryl Orsini. ABC Books, 2017. ISBN 9780733335648
(Age: 5-7) Recommended. Ballet dancers. Friendship. Ballet. Natalie Jane Prior's delightful picture book The fairy dancers: Dancing days contains three enjoyable stories about friendship, sleepovers, dance concerts and Christmas celebrations. These are easy to read and fun to share, just right for young dancers beginning to read chapter books.
In 'The fairy sleepover', after a rainy summer holidays, Emma's garden has become a lake. Her friends Mia and Grace spend time outdoors, discovering 'spider webs starred with raindrops, a shiny chrysalis and a wing from a fairy's chariot'. The girls have missed their dance lessons and their dance teacher who has been on holidays too. After they dance around a fairy ring of bright toadstools, Miss Ashleigh surprises them and invites them for a fun sleepover. 'Robots and fairies' introduces the boys' dance troupe, dressed as robots they wait to perform. Unfortunately, the fairy dancers and the robots get into an altercation backstage and costumes end up ripped and torn. Miss Ashleigh steps in to restore the situation and help sort everything out.
Miss Ashleigh takes Emma, Mia and Grace into town to see the lights in 'The Fairy Christmas'. When Grace leaves her doll Emily in the taxi, their caring teacher tries to cheer her up. Dancing around the Christmas tree and looking at the Nativity scene helps Grace feel better. After a visit with Santa, then a dance with the jolly old fellow, followed by a surprise for Grace, makes this a great evening out in the end.
Cheryl Orsini's detailed pastel watercolour and gouache illustrations add excitement and sparkle to the story. Her fluid lines, hidden details and soft pastel colours show the delightful characters dancing across the pages complimenting Prior's gentle descriptive text. This author and illustrator have built a strong collaborative partnership working together on more than twelve books. This is apparent in the second enjoyable picture book The fairy dancers: Dancing days that is a celebration of dancing, fun and friendship.
Rhyllis Bignell

Outback adventure by Jane Smith

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Tommy Bell Bushranger Boy book 4. Big Sky Publishing, 2017. ISBN 9781925520842
(Age: 7-9) Recommended. Bushrangers. Australian history. Time travel. Author Jane Smith continues to weave fact and fiction together in her Tommy Bell Bushranger Boy series. Henry 'Harry' Readford was a cattle rustler whose gang stole a thousand head of cattle from a Queensland station in the late 1800s and took them across country to the Adelaide auctions. He was a horse thief as well; his exploits used to develop the character Captain Starlight in the novel Robbery under Arms.
Young Tommy Bell is off for the school holidays with his friend Martin on the family's Bowen Downs Station in central Queensland. No one knows Tommy's time-travelling secrets, not even his best friend. Tommy's loyal horse Combo joins them and the boys enjoy exploring the countryside on horseback. When Martin discovers a pair of dusty boots hidden in a small rocky cavern, Tommy realises that they have a special ability. Both boys are off on a time-travelling adventure as soon as Martin tries them on and Tommy puts on his cabbage-tree hat. On horseback, they ride into the middle of nowhere and meet up with some scruffy looking men droving a large herd of cattle across country. Henry 'Harry' Readford their leader welcomes the boys and invites them along for the long ride, sleeping under the stars and sharing meals around the campfire. There are plenty of adventures, long days riding, lost in the bush and a chance meeting with a helpful Aboriginal man. They become suspicious of Harry's dealings with the townsfolk in Arcoona, as his stories keep changing and so does his name. Tommy realises that they are helping rustler Henry Readford and his gang steal a thousand head of cattle from the McKenzie's Bowen Station. After a week, they are ready to escape from the dangerous situation so Martin removes his stinky boots and Tommy takes off his sweaty hat. Back in the present, the boys research the life of Henry Readford and discover he changed his ways later in his life, becoming a property owner.
These junior novels are an excellent resource; they support the Year 5 History Curriculum and provide understanding of the historical era, making them an easy to use research tool - comparing and contrasting daily life, transport and the motives behind the bushrangers' actions.
Rhyllis Bignell

Busy vet illustrated by Louise Forshaw

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Busy books. Pan Macmillan, 2017. ISBN 9781509828746
(Age: 2-4) Vets. Board book, Interactive book, Rhyme. This is one of the Busy book series (comprising more than 20 titles) that includes Busy cafe, Busy park, Busy baking, and Busy fire station. Each book contains push, pull and slide tabs and is composed of very sturdy board pages. The tabs and pull-outs are equally robust. Each page contains lots of detail, thereby providing opportunities for children to ask questions, make observations and discuss what they notice. As such, it is perfect for inquisitive toddlers. There are also simple questions directed at the reader (e.g. 'How many carrots can you count?'). The text is very short, each page giving a brief rhyme about the vet as she treats each animal (e.g. 'Poor kitty with a broken bone, you'll soon be fixed and going home'). Each page shows a different aspect of the job of a vet (examining injured animals, giving injections, doing x-rays) and the spaces within a clinic (waiting room, animal cages, examination room). The text relates directly to what happens within the interactive push/pull/slide tabs. The scenes are very realistic and contemporary, containing all the things you see in a vet surgery including scales, computers and x-ray machines. Little animal lovers will adore this, especially those who have pets at home and are curious about what happens at the vets.
Nicole Nelson

Sparrow by Scot Gardner

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Allen and Unwin, 2017. ISBN 9781760294472
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Survival, Juvenile detention, Darwin, Kimberley. Nicknamed Sparrow by the people on the Darwin waterfront cafes he has befriended, the mute twelve year old gets leftover food and a few coins after setting up chairs and helping pack them away at the end of the day. Then he goes back to his sleeping bag atop some toilets in the shopping centre. Sometimes he drifts back to his aunty's house but his brother makes this difficult. His brother and his friends are ghost boys, addicted to sniffing paint, their lips revealing a moustache of colour. Sparrow tries to stay away from them, their empty eyes reinforcing the fact that this is a path he does not want to take. But Sparrow's friend Elsa, a backpacker ends up in hospital, beaten after they went to the outdoor cinema together, and he has a good idea of who did this to the girl. But it is Sparrow who is sentenced to detention.
Gardner packs his stories so tightly that every word has an importance, each paragraph is dense with fact and background, but so easily incorporated into the story that the reader is almost unaware of what they are picking up.
Gardner's exposes the seemier layers of Darwin as he talks of homelessness, paint sniffing, drug dependence, drug dealing and children whose lives are outside the law, living on the streets. The impact of these children's lives on the reader is far more decisive than any news report or stack of statistics; we are there, scrambling with Sparrow as he finds things in the rubbish bin that will be useful, avoiding his drug affected brother, then at hospital with his dying mother.
Most of the background we hear of through flashbacks as Sparrow must use all his survival skills to live on crocodile infested beaches in the Kimberley. Now a sixteen year old in Juvenile Detention, he is part of a boot camp along the coast, but things go awry and he jumps from the burning boat and swims for the coast where he must find shelter, water and food. A man who befriended him in Darwin taught him to swim and this skill holds him in good stead in the Kimberley but once on land he must avoid the snakes and crocodiles, mosquitos and pigs while remaining vigilant for the constant search for water. He wrestles with his past and the reasons he is in detention, but when he finds another footprint, things change.
A breathless survival story Sparrow is a gripping read. Survival stories like Hatchet (Gary Paulsen) are a constant must read and often used as a class text, and this modern story set firmly in Australia, will make a remarkable read for students as a class set, literature circle or borrowed from the library. Sparrow's story is infectious, readers will be drawn in by the boy's story, working with him to survive, scrambling from the dangers that lurk in the mangroves, and marveling at the story he is finally able to tell. And with the recent expose of Northern Territory's juvenile justice system, this story has come at a time when the treatment of young offenders is being reconsidered. This is a must read.
Fran Knight

The book of me! by Adam Frost

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Ill. by Sarah Ray. Bloomsbury, 2017. ISBN 9781408876817
(Age: 7-10) Recommended as a 'gift book'. Themes: Identity; Facts; Humour; Interactive Book. The Book of Me is an example of an interactive book - where the reader gets to fill in details about themselves, draw their own cartoons, find out some interesting and quirky facts, laugh at Dad jokes and answer questions and consequently make their own book. It is illustrated in a style that lovers of Diary of a Wimpy Kid would be familiar with - a humourous naive cartoon style. This is not really a book for a library collection, but it would make a wonderful gift for a 7-10 year old about to embark on a holiday where they might need an activity pack or to give to child recuperating after an operation. Written for a UK audience, there are the occasional pages that might miss the mark for an Australian child. However the Australian facts on the upside-down page for the 'Land Down under' will cause a smile.
Give this book with a pencil or coloured pens and it would make a quirky humourous gift.
Carolyn Hull

Sarah and the Steep Slope by Danny Parker and Matt Ottley

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Little Hare, 2017. ISBN 9781742974675
When Sarah opened her door one morning she was confronted by it. A steep slope. Blocking out the sun and casting a shadow across everything. Rising in front her like an insurmountable and impenetrable barrier. And so it proved to be.
Prodding and pushing didn't move it, surprising it didn't shake it and trying to sneak around it was hopeless. And when she tried to climb it, even with her climbing shoes, she got halfway and then slid all the way back down. How was she going to see her friends? Nothing worked - even ignoring it didn't make it go away and neither did the help of the slope doctor so he left clutching a lot of notes for Sarah's friends and going out the door to a flat, sunlit landscape. Next day her friends visited her and they didn't see the steep slope either. They stayed and played all day long. And the next day . . .
This is a sophisticated picture book for older readers who will appreciate its symbolism as Sarah tries to negotiate the steep slope that is only visible to her. Younger readers who are still at a very literal stage of development may not understand that the slope exists only in Sarah's mind and that it is a representation of a problem that she perceives to have no solution.
If used in a class situation, students may make suggestions about the slope that is facing Sarah and be willing to share the "slopes" they have had to navigate - physical, academic, mental and emotional - and how they found their way, while others with slopes in front of them still may draw comfort and even hope that they are not alone and that there is a pathway they can follow. We are all faced with "slopes' as we live and learn - some steeper than others but without them there is no progress in life - and part of the success of climbing them lies in being able to acknowledge and analyse the issue, break it into small steps, develop strategies to tackle each step, understand that others are willing and able to help and it is no shame to ask them, believe success is possible and engage in positive self-talk.
This is a story about the power of friendship, of having the courage to take the next step forward, of being resilient and acknowledging we are part of a village that we can seek support from and that there is always help and hope. The absence of Sarah's family in her solution and her reaching out to a doctor rather than a parent suggest that sometimes the issue is within the family or it is not something the child feels comfortable talking about with a family member for a range of reasons, giving the reader the approval that it is okay to seek advice and assistance beyond the traditional helpers used as they have grown up without feeling guilty that they have betrayed anyone or hurt their feelings.
Apart from the concepts of symbolism, similes and metaphors and all that technical English language stuff, this is an important book in the mindfulness collection as we finally start to acknowledge the mental health issues for even the youngest children and help them develop the strategies and skills that will enable and empower them. Those are the important lessons teachers, and I use the word in its broadest sense, teach.
Barbara Braxton

Busy cafe by Louise Forshaw

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Busy series. Pan Macmillan, 2017. ISBN 9781509828739
(Age: 0-4) Recommended. Busy cafe is one of nine board books in the Busy series by Campbell Books, and in my opinion is fantastic! This little book captured the imagination of my 3 year old and was the starting point of lots of interesting conversations about our daily life and how the cafe world works. The book has push and pull tabs and a spin mechanism that shows the changes in the cafe; whole food to cut up or eaten foods, full to empty cups; and were a hit!
The illustrations by Louise Forshaw are bright and enticing, and the speech bubbles have great questions that also allowed us to do some counting, searching of the page and discussing favourite foods. The words follow a simple rhyme which was mastered by the 3rd reading and also assist to teach children the process of ordering, paying for and collecting food in this scenario.
The other books in the series include Busy bookshop, Busy farm and Busy vet and I feel that they would be good resources to help teach children learn about places and people in our community while enjoying a fun interactive story. Target audience: Up to 4 years.
Lauren Fountain

Herobrine goes to school by Zack Zombie

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The adventures of Herobrine book 1. Scholastic, 2017. ISBN 9781742765907
(Age: 8-9) The Adventures of Herobrine book 1: Herobrine goes to school is another series by Zack Zombie, aimed at children who both love the game Minecraft and possibly his previous series The Diary of a Minecraft Zombie. This book is written from the perspective of Herobrine who has entered the human world as part of a collaborative experiment, but is the only Minecraft character in the town. The overarching topic of the book is of how Herobrine does not fit in and all that comes with that scenario in a middle school setting.
It does have a lot of relatable experiences for children, including a school bully, liking a girl and having to learn new things (like dancing to fit in at the school dance). I can see how this story and Herobrine's attitude of getting on with it, and not taking too much to heart could be of benefit to lots of children, but I felt like I was consistently comparing it to Zack Zombie's last series and in my opinion it is nowhere near as good. It is easy to read but lacks the humour of Diary of a Minecraft Zombie, and my 7 year old reader did not find it as engaging. Fluent readers from around 8-9 years old would probably like this story, and enjoy reading about the softer side of Herobrine, who in the game is not really a character but more of a superstition who many say they have seen appear in the game and claim to be quite creepy! Although we may not have enjoyed this book I am sure that die-hard Minecraft fans around 8 years and up would like it as an easy read with some relatable settings.
Lauren Fountain

Reena's Rainbow by Dee White

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Ill. by Tracie Grimwood. EK Books, ISBN 9781925335491
Reena is deaf and the little brown dog in the park is homeless. But even though her ears didn't work, her eyes did and she saw the things that others take for granted. So even though she couldn't hear the wind in the trees, she could still see the leaves swirling and Dog leap to catch the acorns.
When the children came to play hide and seek in the park she was very good at finding their hiding places, but when it was her turn to hide no one could find her and she couldn't hear them calling so they left her there alone. Luckily Dog was able to fetch her mother who explained that people are like the colours of the rainbow - each one different but together a strong and beautiful entity. But both Reena and Dog felt like they didn't belong in the rainbow. Will they ever fit in?
As well as windows that show readers a new world, stories should also be mirrors that reflect their own lives. Children, in particular, should be able to read about themselves and children like them in everyday stories so they understand they are not freaks and that others share their differences and difficulties. Reena's Rainbow is a wonderful addition to a growing collection of stories that celebrate the uniqueness of every person and not only show them they are not alone but also help others to understand their special needs. Imagine how frightened Reena must have felt when all the children left the park because they assumed she had gone home.
Young children are remarkably accepting and resilient - they don't see colour, language, dress or disability as a barrier to the child within - those are handicaps that adults impose on themselves - but the more stories like this that we share with them, the more likely they are to develop knowledge, understanding, tolerance and acceptance and thus develop into adults who embrace difference rather than shunning it. Close inspection shows that rainbows actually include every shade of every colour, not just those visible to the eye, and through Reena and Dog and characters like them we can all learn to discern the not-so-obvious beauty.
Barbara Braxton

The children of Willesden Lane: a true story of hope and survival during World War II by Mona Golabek and Lee Cohen

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Allen and Unwin, 2017. ISBN 9781760630805
(Age: 13+) Highly recommended. In Austria, following the 1938 Kristallnacht (The night of the broken glass) Malka and Abraham Jura, parents of Rosie, Lisa and Sonia made an indescribably painful choice to save one of their daughters from the evil brutality of Nazism.
Having secured only a single seat on the Kindertransport, these loving parents chose their fourteen year old daughter Lisa, a musical prodigy who dreamed of becoming a concert pianist. Lisa's mother urged that she must 'hold on to her music and let it be her best friend'.
The hearts of all family members were torn when she left on a train via Holland to take refuge in England where Jewish children were accepted if sponsored by a relative. Lisa feared for her family and experienced natural distress caused by separation and feeling displaced in an unfamiliar country. This was made worse when her sponsoring relative essentially abandoned her at the railway station and she found herself assigned as a maid to a wealthy family in the country. Whilst shown kindness by staff, Lisa realised that she could not respect her mother's wish to follow her dream if she stagnated, so the plucky girl left and arranged her own transport to London.
Life became more bearable for Lisa when she was given accommodation at Bloomsbury House, a hostel for a large number of Jewish refugee children of varying ages, run by the kindly Mrs. Cohen. All the refugee children undertook paid work for their support and when Great Britain declared war on Germany, they laboured for the war effort as they anxiously watched Hitler's armies rolling through Europe to threaten from across the Channel.
Reading historical biographies so often causes me to reflect on how stoic and resilient previous generations have been under the most impossible circumstances. I cannot imagine the sense of loss and fear Lisa Jura must have felt during her early adolescence, yet she endured mental and physical exhaustion from long days of demanding work and lack of sleep from nightly bombing during the blitz.
This story centres on the courage and persistence of a child who yearned to fulfil her musical dreams and quickly matured beyond her years in a time of grave uncertainty.
I highly recommend this book for 13 years onwards.
Rob Welsh

I just ate my friend by Heidi McKinnon

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Allen & Unwin, 2017 ISBN 9781760294342
(Age: 4+) Recommended. Friendship. Belonging. Control. A creature tells us that he has just eaten his friend. The look on his face is one of remorse and a little embarrassment as he then goes searching for a new friend. But it is all too hard. One rejects him because he is too big, one too small, another too slow, and another too scary. He keeps on asking other creatures whether they will be his friend, but still no one is suitable. He begins to question whether he will ever get a friend, when another creature pops up saying that he will be a friend. But a twist in the tale occurs overleaf, which will have readers laughing out loud.
Readers will readily recognise that need to have a friend, and the joy of finally having a friend after a falling out with a former friend, or when one moves, or becomes friendly with someone else. The possibilities of losing a friend are endless and many students will recall how they lost a friend and the importance of filling that gap in their lives. The idea of eating a friend too will bring up discussions of how to keep a friend, of working at a friendship, of being a good friend.
The spare text is complimented with bright colourful illustrations denoting the creature who has lost his friend. The use of only a few colours makes each page stand out boldly, the face with only a few lines tells us all we need to know about the main character. Its amazing how a straght line for the mouth and the pin prick eyes show us remorse or embarrassment, while a slight twitch of the line for the mouth depicts happiness when a friend is found. Readers will have fun with this book, watching the journey taken by the yellow creature and seeing the same thing happening all over again with the blue friend.
Fran Knight

Sir Scaly Pants and the dragon thief by John Kelly

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Bloomsbury, 2017. ISBN 9781408856062
(Age: 4-7) Recommended. This is the second story about Sir Scaly Pants the Dragon Knight and is just as entertaining as the first. This time the king is kidnapped by an evil dragon and Sir Scaly and his clever horse Guinevere, go to the rescue. After traipsing past a cyclops, a warty witch and a long-haired lady, Sir Scaly discovers the king tied up to a flagpole on the top of a very tall dragon tower.
Then he and Guinevere have to use all their wits to work out a way to rescue him.
The reader is introduced to 'The story so far' in an explanatory one page rhyme which describes how a knight raised him, how he went to Knight School, beat a smelly giant and became the King's champion. Then the story continues in humorous rhymes which are a joy to read aloud. The allusions to myths and fairy tales, like Rapunzel, will also appeal to astute readers, who will also appreciate the twisty ending.
John Kelly has been shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Medal and his illustrations, bold and very colourful, will certainly appeal to his young audience. The evil dragon is a joy to behold, gripping the king in its forelegs and the looks on all the faces of both people and animals will have young readers giggling aloud.
This is an uplifting and very humorous story that will have instant appeal to young readers and listeners.
Pat Pledger