Reviews

I remember by Joanne Crawford

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Ill. by Kerry Anne Jordinson. Magabala Books, 2018. ISBN 9781925360769
(Ages: 4-8) Themes: Memory, Childhood. This is the recollection of an elderly woman about the Murchison River camping trips she went on with her family when she was a child. While presumably based on the memories of the author, the elderly storyteller pictured is fictional. She begins, "When I was young, I remember . . . " and what follows is her reminiscing about how she felt, what she thought and the evocative nature of her memories ("I can almost feel the slimy, squishy river mud between my toes"). At the end of the book we are taken back to our storyteller who tells us about how memory can be elusive ("The memories don't come all that often, just flashes here and there") and are reminded of the fragility of memory but also about how sharing our stories keeps them alive. The illustrations help to bring her memories to life, not just how it was but how she remembers it (the wildflowers as far as her eyes could see, the dark water of the dam that terrified her, etc.). This tale will resonate with parents and grandparents all over Australia, who will have memories of similar cherished memories. In addition, most children who have ever been on a family holiday will be able to relate to the storyteller's excitement about packing things into the car, the anticipation felt driving to the destination and then the peaceful time spent with family. This could be a useful educational resource when dealing with memory, family history and oral traditions of storytelling.
Nicole Nelson

Tempests and slaughter by Tamora Pierce

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The Numair Chronicles book 1. Lothian, 2018. ISBN 9780734418678
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Themes: Fantasy, Magic, Wizards, Sorcery, Puberty. Arram Draper is the youngest student in his class at the Imperial University of Carthak, and his gifts are so great that he is constantly being put into higher classes with older students. When he meets Varice, a clever girl with kitchen magic, and Ozorne, the left-over prince, he finds two friends who help him fit in and the three of them form a bond that will have far reaching consequences.
In this long, slow moving and absorbing story of the boy who will become the great mage Numar Salmalin, featured in Pierce's previous Tortall stories (Song of the Lionness series and The immortals series), the reader follows the schooling of the three friends. It is fascinating to see the growth of Arram's skills and beliefs and follow his encounters with gods, a sunbird and the friends that he makes among the gladiators and creatures in the river. His curiosity and well-meaning nature will endear him to the reader, who will empathise with his feelings about slavery and follow his ability as a healer and water wizard with great interest. Meanwhile Ozorne is schooled in the magic of warfare and the reader knows that danger will follow from that, while Varice is shown as a caring attractive girl who has great social and culinary skills.
I had read the books about Alanna (Song of the Lionness series) many years ago, and found the story of Arram so fascinating that I immediately borrowed the four books in The immortals series to find out about Arram (Numar) as a grown man.
Tempests and slaughter can be read as a stand alone story, and fans of the books originally set in Tortall will especially welcome this new series about a favourite character. Books by Tamora Pierce are must reads for any fantasy lover.
Pat Pledger

Dig, dump, roll by Sally Sutton

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Ill. by Brian Lovelock. Walker Books, 2018 ISBN 9781760650056
(Age: 3+) Highly recommended. Themes: Machinery. School. Workers. The building of a school is shown in new light as the different machines are brought in to help in its construction. First is the bulldozer, crashing, rumbling, crashing and grumbling as it clears the ground. In two rhyming sentences the author distills the work done by this great machine, ending with the word that describes the machine and the refrain, 'coming through!'
From there other machines are described just as pithily, with the repeated 'here's a clue' and 'coming through', inviting children to yell these out as the book is read to them.
The bulldozer is followed by the digger, then the dump truck, roller, concrete mixer and finally the builders, building a school.
Each page is brightly illustrated with lots for children to recognise and ask about. The builders are all enveloped in fluoro vests and hard hats, inviting discussions about safety, each machine is wonderfully drawn, inviting children to look more closely at its separate parts, the builders are shown working with the machines to get the job done.
The first two lines of each stanza about a particular machine is full of movement and action, inviting students to move along with the words or sound them out.
I can imagine groups of kids having a great deal of fun with this story, moving, yelling, predicting, learning lines, making the noises of the machines and finally building the school. On the last page is an outline of the machines presented in the book with further information about their parts. Readers will love it.
Fran Knight

The perfect girlfriend by Karen Hamilton

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Wildfire, 2018. ISBN 9781472244260
(Age: Adult) Highly recommended. The story opens with a death, the accidental drowning death of a four year old child when his 10 year old sister's attention is distracted... or was it accidental? As we are led inside the mind of Elizabeth / Lily / Juliette we come to understand that this is a cold and dangerous person, and maybe it even started when she was a child. She becomes a person completely obsessed with the man she sees as her only love, the man who is supposed to marry her and make everything perfect. Juliette has a plan, and she is going to stick to it, and the ultimate goal is Nate, and the perfect wedding, the perfect marriage, the perfect family. She will stop at nothing, she sneaks into people's homes, she takes photographs, she steals things, she leaves traces behind, she follows and stalks... She is another Amy from 'Gone Girl' or Alex from 'Fatal Attraction' - she is ruthless in her obsession, and she will get what she wants. At the same time she is hurt, a neglected child, a bullied victim, a rejected girlfriend. Hamilton tries to round out her character and explain how she came to be what she is.
There is a kind of fascination in reading about a character that knows no boundaries, who breaks rules, and goes further than anybody else ever would - someone who is so delusional that she can't see how that by her very actions, she is never going to attain the trust of the friends she wants. At the same time we have insight into her mind, and we understand her thoughts, her justifications, her desire for revenge. That makes her a bit more human, and a bit less of a stereotype.
That sense of the dangerous person, the brooding feeling that things are going to get worse and horrible things are going to happen, doesn't let up, and we know that there is eventually going to be another victim. Although the pace falters at times, The perfect girlfriend is a great thriller that holds you to the end.
Helen Eddy

Over is out by Lachlan Creagh

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Ill. by Sarah Creagh. Lothian, 2018. ISBN 9780734417657
(Age: 4+) Themes: Humour, Cricket, Dinosaurs. Readers will get lots of laughs from this book as they read of the two boys playing cricket in their back yard. When the ball goes over the fence one is designated to climb the fence and retrieve the ball, but without waking the nighbours. Children will laugh out loud as the neighbours turn out to be a range of rather large dinosaurs, mainly sleeping, but the boy over the fence tries very carefully to avoid waking them. Each time the page is turned another descriptive word is given in a different colour and font size, making it a useful book when teaching about words which define where you are: over, under, on top, between and behind.
Great fun will be had as the readers will the boy not to wake the sleeping giants. Dinosaur recognition will be a must with many children as each page is turned.
And a twist at the end will further tickle the fancies of the readers.
Fran Knight

Shout out to the girls: a celebration of awesome Australian women by various authors

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Penguin Random House Australia, 2018. ISBN 9780143789420
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Themes: Women, Achievement, Biographies. Fifty amazing Australian women from all walks of life star in this shout-out ("Noun, colloquial a public expression of thanks"). The women range from names that are well known in the media (Rosie Batty, Cate Blanchett and Olivia Newton-John), to historical figures ( Mary Reiby, Mary Mackillop and May Emmeline Wirth), scientists and doctors (Dharmica Mistry, Elizabeth Blackburn and Fiona Wood) to less well known figures who will appeal to young and old alike.
The Contents page is organised with the woman's name and her field of expertise listed beneath. Each entry has a full page description of the woman and her achievements with a colourful portrait accompanying it on the opposite page, each done by different artists, who have their own portraits at the back of the book. Different sections begin with a though provoking phrase that broadly describes the achievements of the women following: the reader is led straight into the book with "a pat on the back to all the excellent entrepreneurs taking chances and thinking outside the box." Aheda Zanetti then leads the field with her invention of the hijood for sportwear and the burkini for swimwear giving Muslim women and girls access to sports.
I was thrilled to see Melina Marchetta featured as a writer, and found many younger women like Molly Taylor, rally car driver and Marita Cheng, a technology entrepreneur to have quite amazing achievements.
Beautiful illustrations of Australian flora feature on the cover and title page, as symbols of the 'strength and heart of the women featured in the book. Australian flowers aren't wilting violets . . . "
There is also a shout-out to the Smith family, which will receive all royalties from the sale of Shout out to the girls.
Reading about the fifty women in this book will provide inspiration to any reader. It is written in an easy to read style and is a must have for all libraries.
Pat Pledger

Goodly and Grave in a deadly case of murder by Justine Windsor

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Goodly and Grave series. HarperCollins, 2018. ISBN 9780008183561
(Age: 10+) Recommended. Themes: Humour, Magic, Murder, Grave robbers. The second in this series of adventure books, Goodly and Grave, is about Lucy's attempts to prove herself. She and Lord Grave, initially investigate a series of thefts of bodies from the local cemetery, but it turns out that the thief is stealing soil, and they hang out one night at the cemetery ready to catch the thief. But things do not turn out well, and that night the household is woken by a loud crash and screams. On investigation it appears someone has tried to steal the strange book they found at the cemetery and has hit Lord Grave over the head.
Part of an organisation called Magicians Against the Abuse of Magic (MAAM) it falls upon our duo, Goodly and Grave to capture the thief, but when it turns into a murder, their skills are put on high alert. Goodly works in Lord Grave's employment as a boot boy, but is secretly being trained by him to better use her incredible magical powers.
The first in the series: Goodly and Grave, in a bad case of kidnap, had Lucy using her card skills to advantage, while the second sees her cement her place in Grave Hall as Lord Grave refines her considerable skills.
At once funny and delightfully scary, packed with greatly detailed illustrations by Becka Moor, this second in the series of books is a wonder to read, with lots of odd characters: Bathsheba, Lord Grave's companion is a jaguar from his extensive wild life park, the housekeeper, Mrs Carthew is a man with a huge beard which he plaits at night, Smell, the cat is able to sniff out potents easily, and so on. All fascinating, intriguing and inviting.
I found this book delicious, filled with humour and nods to a range of scary stories including grave robbing, vampires, Dracula, image changes, time travel, and a golem.
Fran Knight

Little lunch: triple the games by Danny Katz

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Ill. by Mitch Vane. Black Dog Books, 2018. ISBN 9781760650278
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Themes: Friendship, School, Playground. Another series of stories from the very popular TV series, Little Lunch, will find even more friends as children pick it up in school libraries. Funny illustrations litter the pages as the children, Rory and Tamara find that fifteen minutes is enough to get into all sorts of trouble. In the first chapter, 'Walkathon', Tamara wants to find a walking buddy for the upcoming walkathon, and holds interviews with the applicants during recess. The second chapter, 'The election', Rory decides he wants to be Australia's next prime minister, while the third chapter, entitled, 'The girls' toilets', has the class practising for the school talent show.
Each chapter is short and pithy, funny and illustrated, just long enough for readers to read during recess, and exciting enough for them to make sure they finish the episode by the time the siren goes. Children will love to read of the antics of this group of school kids, and what they get up to and revel in the similarities with their own escapades and daily routines.
With the popularity of the TV series, this new book will find a host of fans.
Fran Knight

Kensy and Max: Breaking news by Jacqueline Harvey

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Penguin Random House, 2018. ISBN 9780143780656
(Age: 8-12) Highly recommended. Themes: Mystery. Adventure. Detectives. Family life. Spies. Brothers and sisters. Kensy and Max: Breaking news is a meticulously built mystery story, a wonderful introduction to a cast of new and intriguing characters, relatable protagonists, mysterious settings and fast-paced adventures. Popular children's author Jacqueline Harvey draws the reader in, sharing her creative insights into the development of Kensy and Max's characters. She shares her inspiration for her background setting of the Morpeth Arms pub with its secret underground spaces situated opposite the London headquarters of MI6.
Eleven year old twins Kensy and Max enjoy a nomadic lifestyle travelling the world with their parents, who work in the ski fields and medical clinics. Changes occur when their parents disappear on an African holiday and the twins are driven across Europe to the relative safety of a huge ancestral home in North Yorkshire. Feisty Kensy and more measured Max explore Dame Spencer's vast home and gardens uncovering secret rooms, quirky characters, hidden cameras and treasures from their past. Fitz their constant companion, tutor and manny, travels to London to investigate their parent's whereabouts leaving Kensy and Max in the safe hands of Song the quirky butler.
With Fitz planning to leave for Africa to search for the missing parents, the twins move to Dame Spencer's townhouse with Song and are placed in the Central London Free School. On their first day, eccentric headmaster Mr MacGregor challenges Max to a computer generated race around London where the young boy's brilliant memory and map reading skills prove advantageous. Kensy and Max settle in to school life, curiously observing mysterious activities and disappearances of their friends, secret meetings and their miraculous escape from a gallery.
Kensy and Max keep a special secret, a communication received from their parents via a message on Max's watch.
Kensy and Max: Breaking news is a suspenseful, intriguing and finely crafted story perfect for readers who enjoy action-packed spy stories. Jacqueline Harvey's initial novel introduces exciting characters, mysterious settings and family secrets waiting to be uncovered. Here the author teases us with little clues, snippets of information, curious conversations with people instrumental in their future plans, and this builds an air of excitement and promise for future stories. Her writing style is bright and lively, alliterative and lyrically descriptive, and the protagonists are perfect foils, each with a unique set of skills and traits that complement the other. The author peoples her narrative with colourful characters, even the settings are imbued with special secretive qualities.
For Middle Primary English students, this narrative provides excellent examples of character development, plot tension, genre writing and presenting realistic settings.
Rhyllis Bignell

The true colour of forever by Carrie Firestone

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Hodder Children's Books, 2017. ISBN 9781444929676
(Age: 14yrs+) This book ensnared me! Not by its cover, which is very impressive, and not by the blurb on the back, which is rather lame, but from the opening passage found in the prologue: "A few minutes before the incident, I noticed a tuft of dune grass stuck to a discarded strawberry crate... I was twelve hours into downsizing my life and just beginning to become more aware of my surroundings." For me, this laid the foundation for the entire story. This is a book about looking directly in front of you and seeing the obvious things you can do which will cause a flow effect that improves the wellbeing of others.
Embedded into the story is the importance of solid friendships which are developed over a lifetime, yet finding that these friendships ebb and flow as we all grow up to find our place in society. Sadie is a year younger than her friends and struggling to reconcile herself to her new loner status when the end of their school career looms closer. The depth of these friendships is demonstrated by the wonderfully creative care packages Sadie makes for her friends. They demonstrate key moments she had shared with each person, embodying the impact of each unique friendship perfectly.
The careful blending of the secondary characters adds fine details to the life and events that continue in the background of Sadie's story, old friends, new friends, family and passing strangers. We meet Izzy, struggling with addiction, Gordie, trying to affirm his sexuality, and Sadie's two unique grandmothers.
Carrie Firestone not only skilfully approaches the topic of teen friendship but topics of assault, cyberbullying, peer pressure, discrimination, self-esteem and stress by creating a realistic voice in Sadie's character. Many teens will feel comfortable reading The true colour of forever and considering all of these topics in relation to their own life.
After reading this book try Saints and misfits by S. K. Ali and The lake effect by Erin McCahan.
Sharon Smith

Macca the alpaca by Matt Cosgrove

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Koala Books, 2018. ISBN 9781743816332
(Age: 3+) Recommended. Bullying. Alpacas. Llamas. South America. Against a bright blue background, the white alpaca, Macca, stares out at the audience. Children will at once be able to distinguish his features, and see the differences between him and other animals they have come across. The chirpy look on his face gives a clue to the sort of animal he is. Turning the pages we see him gamboling around with other animals, butterflies, a sloth, jaguar cubs, monkeys and an armadillo, that is until he meets the llama. Harmer the llama is a bully, and does some despicable things to Macca, until they decide to a challenge to see who is the best. Each test reveals some of the characteristics of each animal, but it is the alpaca who comes out on top, using his skills to outshine the llama.
Readers will laugh out loud at the antics of these two, taking in their traits as they spar with each other, climbing a tree, climbing a mountain and moving a huge boulder.
The bright clear illustrations will delight younger readers, and the moral of the tale will have a resonance for all children who read the book. In classrooms this may be one of the books read out loud to initiate discussions about bullying and its appearance in the school, and who could resist launching into discussions about South America and its wildlife. And worth mentioning, the endpapaers showcase a little of the human activity of South America.
Fran Knight

The centre of my everything by Allayne L. Webster

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Penguin Random House, 2018. ISBN 9780143783336
(Age: Older high school students) Recommended. Themes: Country life. Alcohol. Drugs. Sexual violence. With the opening words, "My head's gunna explode", we know that we are in Australia. Language, way of life, characters and the issues of country town life, are all vital elements that are explored in Webster's very emotional story.
Told by four main characters in sequential order, the slowly unravelling narrative is confrontational. Webster depicts the issues of modern country towns, the isolation, the lack of jobs, the drinking, drug use and the violence, in a narrative that reveals events slowly, and one that only presents each of the four narrators' understanding of what has happened. Yet slowly we begin to grasp the background story and come to understand the web of relationships, connections and issues that face the local adolescents and their families.
This is not a book for the faint-hearted, as Webster plunges us into the harsh elements of modern country life, the binge drinking, parties with alcohol, drugs and sexual violence. With the depiction of good, loving, kind characters juxtaposed to the angry, abusive characters, we slowly begin to understand the complexity and troubles of the past and present, and the different relationships and families. The adolescents are fearful of the future, knowing that there is little for them in the town, unsure of what they can do when school is over. They are desperate to understand what their lives will be like, given the traumas and the violence to which so many have been subjected.
Told from the perspective of the different characters, this book is vibrant and challenging. It would be recommended for older high school readers, with its description of anger, family troubles, binge-drinking, sexual violence and emotional trauma.
Liz Bondar

Barney and the secret of the French spies by Jackie French

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The Secret Histories series book 4. Angus and Robertson, 2018. ISBN 9781460751305
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Themes: New South Wales (1788-1851), Australian history, Convicts, Sydney Town, Spies. When orphaned Barney finds a mute girl hidden under a ledge in the bush outside Sydney Town the pair is taken in by the colony's minister Mr Johnson and his wife, there to thrive with care and tutelage. Barney names the girl Elsie after his dead mother, the pair sent to Australia as convicts several years before. And in looking out for Elsie, Barney pictures a life for them in the new colony as he makes a place for himself. Given land and convict labour, he sets up a small farm along the Parramatta River. Here one day he hopes the two of them will be happy. But when the Johnsons call him to come to Sydney quickly, he arrives to find Elsie in the grip of a debilitating lung complaint and while ill she speaks French.
He is taken aback, as stories of French spies are rife with the threat of a French takeover always on the horizon. La Perousse stopped at Botany Bay when the First Fleet was about to sail to Sydney Cove but he was not heard of again. And later, Baudin stopped for help. while Britain and France were at war. Against this background French has woven her story, that of a young French girl and her family checking on the English defenses, but when her parents are killed by convicts she is left alone.
French very carefully plies the story with an incredible amount of factual information about the early days of Sydney, so cunningly tied with the story that no one will suspect that they are having a fascinating history lesson. Every sentence is replete with meaning, every paragraph gives the reader a substantial lesson in Australia's early days, and all told with adventure and intrigue, sure to reel in the most reluctant of readers. Barney and Elsie are an engaging pair of characters and the secret each holds ensures a captive readership. The illustrations at the start of each chapter, too, give a view of Sydney that will be new to many, encouraging the readers to take notice of small details, reflecting those seen in the text. This is the fourth in French's series, Secret Histories.
Fran Knight

A lion is a lion by Polly Dunbar

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Walker Books, 2018. ISBN 9781406371536
(Ages: 2-7) Highly recommended. The talented Polly Dunbar (probably best known for Penguin) has created this humorous and unique feast for the eyes and the ears. It looks amazing, from the eye-catching front cover onwards, and is fantastic to read. The cover shows a distinguished-looking lion sitting at a table with knife and fork at the ready and two children on either side staring at him in astonishment. Is he still a lion? He's wearing a hat and coat! Would a lion eat with a knife and a fork?! This sets the premise for the book. "Is a lion still a lion if . . . he carries an umbrella, too?"  "Is a lion still a lion if he rings the doorbell, greets you politely and asks you to dance? As the children find out," YES, A LION IS A LION IS A LION!", so you should tell him to SHOOO!"
The heavy use of capitalisation, italics and punctuation (if you are not a fan of exclamation marks steer clear!) assist in making this a dramatic, theatrical read-aloud. Dunbar's black line illustrations are fabulous, especially the larger than life lion and his expressive face. There is a touch of The Tiger Who Came to Tea here but with an interesting point of difference with the children deciding that no, they would not allow the lion to come into their house - even if he does have a particularly well-groomed mane and impeccable table manners! The tiger who came to tea doesn't decide to eat children for dessert though either.
There is an old proverb that "A hog in a silk waistcoat is still a hog" and this is the simple message conveyed here. Perhaps there is even a little bit of a wolf in sheep's clothing about this well-dressed, pompous lion.
This is great fun for both the reader and the audience, who are directly addressed ("So please remember, A LION IS ALWAYS A LION!").
This is a winning picture book to share with children of all ages.
Nicole Nelson

The rains by Gregg Hurwitz

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Penguin, 2016, ISBN 9780765382672
Last chance. ISBN 9780765382696
(Age: 13+) Themes: Adventure, Invasion, Post apocalypse, Survival, Aliens, Zombies. This pair of novels pack a lot into their nearly 400 pages as Chance Rain, his brother Patrick and best friend, Alexandra, residents of the quiet community of Creek's Cause, fight for their lives against infected adults, while others hide in the local high school. This sci-fi young adult novel sets a tale of alien invasion of unrelenting pace. Chance and Patrick Rain are the heroes of this weird and unlikely story of the take over and destruction of not only their town but all of human kind.
The strange events begin with a meteorite shower which brings strange plant life which grows quickly and then dies, sending their spores into the world. Events then take a dreadful turn, when the adults change horribly into zombie like creatures intent on capturing the children of the town for goodness knows what purpose.
Chance and Patrick pit their resources and nerve against overwhelming odds and somehow prevail. They have to fight, not only the 'hosts' the adults have become, but also some of their peer group who disagree about the actions they should follow. They also discover with the aid of Dr Chattergee, the only adult unaffected by the spores, that at their 18th birthday they will also become infected.
Hurwitz delivers a frightening scenario that many young adult readers will find gripping, tense and thrilling. However I found the episodes of fighting off yet more hordes of hosts distracted from the narrative and tended to layer too many unbelievable acts of survival, heroism and mayhem.
There is a follow up novel, Last Chance, where our hero will have even more weight loaded on to his adolescent shoulders, because he and Patrick carry the genes for immunity, indeed they are the only ones in the whole wide world. I just couldn't bring myself to read it!
Mark Knight