Penguin Random House Australia, 2017. ISBN 9780143781578
(Age: 14+) Highly recommended. Themes: Student exchanges. Mental
disorders. Assisted living. Munro Maddux has been having problems
ever since the death of his sister Evie. He constantly hears a voice
that he calls the Coyote, which is always negative and nasty and he
is so affected by grief that he refuses to go to school. However
when a student exchange to Australia is offered he decides to go and
finds a welcoming family in Brisbane. His new school has a
compulsory volunteer program and at Fair Go, an assisted living
residence, Munro finds that the voice is silenced.
There are many heart breaking moments and flashes of humour as Munro
settles into a new school, helped by Rowan his new Australian friend
and son of his exchange family, and his friend back in Canada. Munro
has to constantly struggle against the voice of Coyote, his chest
pains and his anger and the only place he finds peace is at Fair Go.
This is a wonderful story that delves deeply into the effects of
grief as well as giving a warm insight into an assisted living
program. The team of residents at Fair Go, Bernie, Florence, Blake
and Dale, refugee Shah and Iggy, design a Straya Tour to show Munro
the sights and the reader is taken on a journey around Brisbane as
well as gaining insights into the characters and strengths of the
team. Munro too, begins to discover that he has things to offer as a
volunteer and his aim to become better seems possible. A glimpse of
Perry from Are you
seeing me? will also please readers who enjoyed that book and
there is an unexpected twist towards the conclusion of the book that
draws together many threads of the book.
Groth has given the reader a warm and memorable story that will stay
in the memory for a long time. The themes of coming of age, assisted
living and mental health make this an excellent book for a class novel
or literature circle book.
Pat Pledger
Kid Normal by Greg James and Chris Smith
Bloomsbury, 2017. ISBN 9781408884539
(Age: 10+) Kid normal is the first book in a series by Greg
James and Chris Smith. The story follows lead character Murph Cooper
through the frightening task of moving house, leaving friends and
changing schools part way through the term. When all the closest
schools are full, Murph ends up in the unlikely situation of being a
regular kid in a school for super heroes!
Every child who has gone through this will be able to sympathise
with him and I think this will help them to believe in the character
and in the story.
Murph joins a gang of kids called 'The Super Zeroes' who are those
without superpowers and therefore unlike everyone else.
Unfortunately they get picked on by the kids with superpowers - but
this gives them the desire to fight back and use what they know to
fight the bad guy Nektar.
This is a really funny book with quirky, silly illustrations that
will appeal to most people who have a sense of humour. The book is
however too long in my opinion. At 384 pages long, there are parts
of the story that are too drawn out and this makes it inaccessible
for readers who are not particularly confident or intimidated by the
look of a very thick novel. It is not difficult to read but I think
younger readers will potentially drift away half way through the
book due to its length. In saying that - this book is written to be
read out loud! A class of children will giggle and laugh all the way
through if the teacher (or parent) read this book with voices,
movement and flair.
I really enjoyed the messages that came with this story, and think
they are a great conversation starter for children around 8 years
old and above. There are undertones of school hierarchy, and of
course good versus evil, but also that everyone is special in their
own way and that superpowers are not necessary to win the fight
against evil villains!
Suitable for children from 8 years old but more so for 10+ due to
the book length. Also for lovers of David Walliams and David
Wallace.
Lauren Fountain
Soda Pop by Barbro Lindgren
Gecko Press, 2017. ISBN 9781776570119
(Age: 9+) A faint hum begins and a cloud of smoke slowly advances
from the horizon. The hum turns to howling and growling as it comes
closer. Then a huge swarm of tigers arrives - through the garden,
squeezing into the barn, diving into the swimming pool.
Soda Pop loves bright orange clothes and wears a tea cosy on his
head. He has brought up his son Mazarin on sweet buns and love.
Grandfather Dartanyong emerges from his woodshed every morning with
a new identity, and Great-grandfather thinks he is a cuckoo. Their
peaceful existence is shattered when the group of hot dog eating
tigers decides to move into the barn and owls that live in the barn
start sleeping in the mail box causing Dartanjong problems.
The story is set in a very unusual world. The characters lead a
carefree life in a non-judgemental world where anything can happen.
The usual rules do not apply in this story full of nonsense. The
illustrations by Lisen Adbage add another dimension to the
characters.
This is a classic Swedish tale that was first written in 1970 and
has only recently been translated to English. It has been so popular
in Sweden that it has been made into a stop-motion animation series,
a cartoon, a play, an opera and a comic. Suitable for children 9 and
up.
Kathryn Schumacher
DK Find Out! series
DK Publishing, 2017.
Decades ago DK Publishing revolutionised the presentation of non
fiction to young readers with bright photographs, information in
manageable, well-labelled chunks and the clever use of white space
so that the reader was not overwhelmed. Their Eyewitness
series became a staple of primary school library collections.
Now they have a launched a new series, DK
Find Out! for the younger reader, using their familiar format
but adding many more features so the newly independent reader can
access information at their level.
Beginning with a durable paperback cover which folds out to be a
quiz with answers and essential information relevant to the topic
such as areas of study, a timeline or a phylogenetic tree, it then
offers a page where the reader can jot down the things they have
already identified that they want to find out thus supporting the
inquiry method of investigation from the get-go. Then, as is
customary with DK books, there is the usual contents, glossary and
index pages which encourage and enable young readers to use the
clues to get to what they want and in between are double-page
spreads of basic information and glossy photographs and diagrams,
all clearly labelled. So as well as being an ideal way of exploring
print to find information they also serve as a model for students to
present their findings if their searches have been assignment based
rather than just curiosity.
To top it there is an easy-to-navigate website that offers more
information and activities as well as support for teachers and
parents. Like the books it is also a teaching tool for helping young
children learn to use a website for information, one designed for
their level and more authoritative and targeted than Wikipedia.
Despite the misguided opinion of some, there is a lot of research
and reasons that primary school libraries, particularly, need to
have a robust, attractive, up-to-date non fiction collection and
this new series demonstrates the value of not only catering to those
who prefer to read non fiction but also those wanting to find out
more NOW! As well, the series is attractively priced so that parents
can purchase individual volumes to accompany particular interests or
investigations that their child is pursuing.
Miss 6 is fascinated with the human body and snaffled my review copy
as soon as she saw it, not only asking and answering questions for
herself but also learning vital lessons about using such resources.
Now she is exploring those for information as often as those for her
imagination. It won't be hard to fill her Christmas stocking!
Barbara Braxton
Wreck by Fleur Ferris
Random House Australia, 2017. ISBN 9780143784319
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended, Shipwrecks, Sibling rivalry, Crime,
Survival. When eighteen year old Tamara leaves her holiday work at
the local paper, ready for uni the next day, she finds her house
torn apart by someone's manic search. But grabbed and threatened by
a man asking about a note, she escapes and runs for her life, only
to be grabbed by another who kidnaps her. Returning to the office
for the note, they stumble onto the bodies of the two men she worked
with, and her kidnapper Zel, steals her away in his car. There she
hears a story about the note she found, a note in a bottle from
Zel's cousin, Christian, stranded on a beach after the family's
yacht sank five years ago. His step brother, Knox, is after them,
and will stop at nothing to remain head of the family business and
married to Christian's ex fiancee, Portia. Wreck is a page turner of a thriller, a crime story which
forces the reader to be suspicious about everything anyone says,
deciding for themselves who is speaking the truth and who is lying.
The opening sequence of the storm is breathtaking and will ensure
readers keep going with this fast paced story.
When Tamara meets Knox at the police station where she has told her
story, she becomes convinced of his duplicity, but his words create
lingering doubts over Zel's sanity. The police and the Chisel family
are all convinced that Knox is the sane one, with Zel a dangerous
killer on the run. Tamara gets to Sydney to try and speak to
Christian's parents, aware of the power that Knox has, having some
police in his sway.
The readers like her will be constantly looking over their
shoulders, not sure of where the next attack on her credibility will
come from, aware that people in the past have been killed to keep
the notes from Christian being made public.
A climactic scene on the island ends with more deaths and Zel having
to fly a helicopter back to Australia after only four trips on a
simulator, only one of which was successful.
The author of two other crime thrillers for young adults, Risk
and Black, Fleur Ferris is an ex police officer, using her
expertise to ground her novels with a concrete base founded on
knowledge and experience. Wreck is a great escapist read for a wintry afternoon by the
fire, and I also loved Risk, detailing the ease with which
girls can be seduced over the internet, and look forward to more by
this author.
Fran Knight
My life as a hashtag by Gabrielle Williams
Allen and Unwin, 2017. ISBN 9781760113681
(Age: 13+) Highly recommended. Mobile phones, Social media,
Depression. Gabrielle Williams writes her stories with an air of
authority, getting into the mind set of teens perfectly, reflecting
their language and mores with alacrity, acting as a mirror to their
deeds. In this cautionary tale, we follow the exploits of MC and her
friends as they dip in and out of each others' lives, sharing,
confiding, using social media with skill. But there are hiccups in
their world. MC lusts after Jed, Anouk's boyfriend, and one night at
the pool, they skinny dip. MC and Anouk joke about, while Jed
hesitates. Eventually Anouk walks away but not before MC and Jed
jump in together, leaving her out of the equation. As a result,
Anouk snubs MC and does not include her in the round of invites to
her party. MC vents on her phone, but it is so embedded no one will
ever see it. But they do.
All mobile phone users will recognise the ease with which each of
the characters in the story use their phones, and be unsurprised
when a series of events happen which cause MC's data to be broadcast
to all her friends. The results are devastating.
The cautionary tale hits home as private thoughts go viral, MC is
ostracised by one and all, and slips into depression.
With her parents' marriage breakup there seems to be no one to talk
to, she is alone.
Rejection means no one speaks to her, phone calls are left
unanswered, parents call for her suspension and then expulsion from
school. At home she just wants to hide from everyone, and takes out
her frustration on her separated parents. Surprisingly, her father's
new girlfriends is supportive and tries to include her in their
lives, but she is unreceptive, but a premature birth helps to bind
them together.
This is a wholly believable scenario, one which parents and teachers
warn of every day, with many sad stories aired in the media. This
cautionary tale ends a little more happily that Kate McCaffrey's
recent tale Saving Jazz, but both books serve offer a
realistic look at the lives of young people today.
Fran Knight
The traitor and the thief by Gareth Ward
Walker Books, 2017. ISBN 9781925381504
(Ages: 11+) Highly recommended. Steampunk genre. Spies.
Friendship. Steampunk isn't for everyone, but this wonderful book is
worth reading as a first foray into this inventive and curious
genre. It is a genre worth exploring as a world of mechanical parts,
devices and steam propulsion replaces things we know well and
creates an historical twist of ingenuity and imagination, with a
layer of grime, grease and steam.
Amongst this ingenious backdrop, Gareth Ward has created a spy novel
involving young teen participants who are selected for their unusual
talents, with the addition of treachery and villainy that rivals the
magical world of Harry Potter (although in a much shorter book!).
This counter-espionage training is set within the steam and
mechanical driven world that exists prior to a major war, but with
an innovative overdrive. Everything about the setting is not real,
and yet it is draws heavily on the world of espionage and
circumstances leading up to a real major conflict set in Europe. The
fun of this book is that many real events are referenced in a veiled
and twisted way, names are perverted and warped with meaning
dripping from the choices, and there is excitement, secrecy and
manoeuvring befitting a good spy novel. The central character, Sin,
comes from an Oliver Twist, Dickensian-street urchin and thieving
background, but he bears a mysterious history that makes him a
suitable candidate for the Covert Operations Group (COG). His fellow
candidates in the COG training school, Zonda and Velvet, are at odds,
and trust is difficult to place confidently. In addition, which of
the directors of the establishment is hiding secrets and who is to
be feared? With word play and inventiveness dripping in
'spendiferosity' from the pages there is a sense of fun woven into
this book, as well as the tension of a good spy novel. I loved every
moment of this book, and will be sure to recommend it to both male
and female readers. With predominantly spy drama, military-style
training and impossible 'special-effects', it will appeal to
action-lovers, but there is also a hint of the teen-relationship and
coming-of-age personal discovery that will endear the characters to
readers.
NB: A sequel is being written!
Carolyn Hull
Pip and Houdini by J. C. Jones
Allen and Unwin, 2017. ISBN 9781760296056
(Age: 8-11) Highly recommended. Missing persons. Runaways. Dogs.
Adventure stories. Resilience. J. C. Jones' popular Run,
Pip, run introduced us to the feisty young Pip Sullivan
whose search for her birth mother Cass motivates her every move. She
only has one clue to her past life, an old postcard from Byron Bay.
Pip's moved into a new foster home with the Brownings who are
planning to adopt her, but trouble seems to follow her at every
turn. She has a short fuse and does not tolerate classmates who blab
her past secrets at school. After hitting Spiro on the nose, Pip is
banned from the class trip to see the African dinosaur at the
museum. With her faithful dog Houdini and a little luck, Pip's
decisions land her in more trouble. How can one ten-year-old girl
who is 'as skinny as a piece of string' become a runaway again and
set off on a lengthy journey to northern New South Wales? Escape
artist Houdini joins her for this difficult and challenging trip,
filled with danger and excitement.
Happenstance plays a major role in Pip and Houdini's trip. First
they fall asleep in the back of an old van that is heading in the
right direction, north on the motorway. After a fiery accident and a
daring rescue of the trapped driver, the two travellers walk, catch
buses and meet up with a cast of interesting characters along the
way. Money is scarce and so is food and shelter, but Pip's bravery,
resilience and dogged determination drive her forward.
When she meets Frankie a homeless busker, the pace picks up and they
stay just ahead of the authorities who are searching for the runaway
girl. Pip stands up for her new friend, even washing the dishes at a
cafe as payment for Frankie's stolen hamburger. The adventure
continues with lucky escapes, train rides, a journey on an old
bicycle left on the footpath and Houdini's capture by the
dogcatcher.
With a shark sighting, a surfer with a tattoo of an octopus wearing
a top hat and a strangely recognisable old house, Pip's emotional
journey draws to a close. J C Jones Pip and Houdini is a
heart-warming story of one girl's courage and determination to find
her own family.
Rhyllis Bignell
This savage song by Victoria Schwab
Monsters of Verity book 1. Titan Books, 2016. ISBN
9781785652745
(Age: 14+) Recommended. 2017 Locus Awards nominee. Dystopian
fiction. In a world that has been invaded by monsters, Kate Harker
and August Flynn find themselves together on the run. There are
three types of monsters: Malchai who drink blood and are made when
there is a murder, Corsai who eat flesh and bones and are formed
from violence and Sunai who feed on the souls of sinners and are
formed from a major catastrophe like a school bombing. August Flynn
is a Sunai, but longs to be less of a monster. His adopted father,
Henry Flynn, runs one side of Verity, while Kate Harker's father
runs the other side. However the truce that Flynn and Harker had
made is beginning to come apart at the seams and August is sent to
spy on Kate in an effort to find out what is going on.
The setting of Verity and the formation of monsters from evil acts
is quite original and made reading This savage song quite
different. Kate's feisty nature and need to please her crime boss
father contrasted with August's attempts to be less monster-like.
When they both are attacked at their school, they have to rely on
each other to work out what is happening and to escape the attempts
to kill them. Although there are slight hints at a Romeo and Juliet
type of relationship, this is minor to the plot, which is action
driven, while posing questions about morality and ethics.
There are some very thrilling and frightening scenes as the monsters
chase Kate and August through the underground tunnels and Schwab
manages to surprise with some unexpected twists and turns. The
conclusion is satisfying but leaves plenty of opportunity for
expansion in Our dark duet, the second in the series, which
is on my to-read list.
This was a compulsive read with unique characters and magic. Readers
who enjoy Holly Black's books will want to read this one.
Pat Pledger
Bitter enemies by R. A. Spratt
Friday Barnes series, book 7. Penguin Random House, 2017.
ISBN 9780143784197
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Beginning of term at Highcrest Academy
has never been so dreary and desolate. Melanie and Ian are both
depressed and missing their quirky best friend, Friday, who has been
whisked off to Switzerland to be with her family and attend Europe's
most elite school. Adding to their misery, the start of term
assembly sees the announcement of the school's anniversary
celebrations and the return of four previous headmasters. Good
grief! Surely one headmaster is enough for any mortal?
However, they have not reckoned on the surprise return of the
school's most dedicated nerdy sleuth who appears dramatically at the
doors of the assembly hall ready to deal with anything that might
just foul up the anniversary celebrations. And just as well, the
students have been warned to be on their best behaviour but
apparently no one told the former headmasters the same thing. You
have no idea how much havoc can be created by embittered former
educators - wait, perhaps you do! As usual, Friday is on hand to
solve the mysteries, explain the inexplicable and generally get
everyone out of trouble although not without finding herself in a
pickle at the same time.
Old and new characters make their appearances and really you have to
love Mrs Cannon, the world's laziest English teacher - I wonder what
might happen if I tried that approach? These are such fun to read
and Friday's idiosyncrasies are so goofy as to be endearing. The
solid friendships are a great feature of this series, proving you
don't need to be pattern made to fit in. There is also the pathos as
we find out more about Friday's ghastly family and oh oh, the
shocker at the end - what will happen to Friday when... Oops,
never mind, you'll find out.
These are always high in demand in my library and I know the readers
are waiting on this new one impatiently.
Highly recommended for readers from around 8 years upwards.
Sue Warren
Grandma forgets by Paul Russell
Ill. by Nicky Johnston. EK, 2017. ISBN 9781925335477
Picture book. 'My grandmother forgets who I am. Every time we meet,
it likes meeting someone new...
Even though Grandma can't remember us, we have so many memories of
her.'
There are the sausages as big as elephant's legs that she served for
Sunday lunch; going to the beach; snuggled in together with a
hot-water bottle and a blanket watching the nighttime storms split
the sky... The little girl and her dad have memories galore that
they share with her in her new home with the painted garden and
people who remember for her.
Young children encountering older relatives who are succumbing to
the challenges of the ageing process are becoming more common as
generations live longer than ever, and so stories that help them
deal with what can be a confronting situation are always welcome.
This is a gentle comforting story about the enduring love between
the generations, although if Grandma is 80 as her birthday cake
shows there seems to be a skipped generation in the chain. My own
grandchildren would appear to be about the age of the children in
the story and they faced this situation with their
great-grandmothers, not their grandmas. We are only in our 60s!
Nevertheless, this is an uplifting story that shows how children
embrace the changing circumstances, accepting the changes and the
challenges and working with them, rather than taking them as a
personal rejection. There are adults who could learn from this
unconditional love that children display and how they adapt so they
almost become the adult themselves. And while there are old memories
to recall, there are always new ones to make.
The soft palette and lines chosen by the illustrator portray the
beautiful memories perfectly and the love between them all just
oozes from the page setting up the perfect opportunity to let the
children tell and draw their own stories of their own special
moments with their grandparents, perhaps cementing them even more
firmly.
A family story that provides lots of comfort.
Barbara Braxton
A cardboard palace by Allayne L. Webster
Midnight Sun Publishing, 2017. ISBN 9781925227253
(Age: 10-14) Highly recommended. Themes: Poverty, Refugees, Child
Labour, Survival. Allayne Webster's A Cardboard Palace is a
powerful story giving a voice to the plight of Romany children taken
from their parents and forced to work as pickpockets and thieves in
Paris. Jorge lives in No Man's Land a shantytown with ramshackle
huts made from scavenged materials. It is a life of desperation and
poverty. His controller Bill forces his gang of six girls and four
boys to steal from the tourists and locals, at ATMs, in the Louvre,
and on the Metro Stations. The children are quick-witted, cunning
and fast, taught the tricks of the trade by the villainous Bill.
Jorge is torn between obeying this man and trying to protect his
friends. There is a moral dilemma and he wants his voice to be
heard. While Abel keeps some of the money he steals to buy food,
Jorge keeps nothing for himself. Camp life is confronting, a sick
child disappears, trafficked children are locked up and
twelve-year-old girls sold as child brides to older men. Their
parents keen to receive the dowry money.
When Jorge scavenges in a dumpster behind a cafe, he meets Sticky
Ricky an Australian chef who befriends him, feeds him leftovers and
takes up the fight to free these children from the gang. There are
tense scenes as the special taskforce moves in to evacuate the
children and the Catacombs setting where friends save the day. A Cardboard Palace is a modern Oliver Twist story, where one
boy's courage, resilience and determination shine through. Allayne
Webster's Parisienne setting shows a different reality, one of
poverty and hardship. The light and shade of the narrative, the
emotional resonance of Jorge's voice and her honesty in portraying
these deeper issues, make this a novel suited to more mature
readers. In Year 7 and 8 students engaging with this literary text,
can discuss the ethical dilemmas presented and the interpersonal
relationships of the characters. (ACARA)
Rhyllis Bignell
Where is Grandma? by Peter Schossow
Gecko Press (NZ), 2017. ISBN 9781776571543
(Age: 5+) Highly recommended. Hospitals, Humour, Grandparents. This
beautifully evocative picture book about a child trying to find his
grandmother in a large busy hospital, is not only a wonderful tale
of discovery, but it tells readers why a hospital exists and shows
the range of people, staff and procedures that a hospital contains.
Henry becomes lost when he goes inside the huge place while his
nanny talks on the phone. He knocks on many doors, some of which he
opens to talk to the person inside. He talks to a heart surgeon,
sees a newborn baby, a woman with dementia, a man injured in a car
accident, the worker in the basement and finally the security
officer who takes him to Grandma's room.
Younger readers will want to see him reunited with Grandma as he
weaves his way through corridors and lifts and lunch rooms, the
maternity ward and surgery all on his own.
The gentle humour will appeal to a wide audience and many adults
reading will have a giggle at the literary references within the
text. First published in Germany with the title, Wo ist Oma,
the book has been republished by Gecko Press in New Zealand and
distributed by Scholastic.
The illustrations cover the double pages, showcasing large parts of
the hospital, the view from the outside, the view from the corridor
over an atrium, a few hints of the outside, the long corridors and
intimate rooms. On each page we see another aspect of the hospital
through Henry's eyes.
I love the range of people shown, from young to old, infirm and able
bodied, staff and patients, a range of ethnic variations, all
attesting to the diversity shown in our society and in particular,
Germany.
Funny incidents occur: meeting his classmate with a bean up her
nose, the woman in the lift thinking he is her son, George, the man
concerned about his friends waiting for him, seeing Mr Munchberger
surrounded by food. Henry decides that Grandma is in good hands
after finding out so much about the working day in a hospital, and
promises he will not get lost again.
At once a cautionary tale about running off from one's nanny, the
story exposes young readers to the working life of a hospital and
will encourage them to talk about going to these places with humour.
Fran Knight
Lintang and the Pirate Queen by Tamara Moss
Random House Australia, 2017. ISBN 9780143783435
(Age: 11+) Recommended. Lintang dreams of having adventures on
the high seas. When a deadly mythie attacks the same day the
infamous Captain Shafira visits her island, Lintang gets her chance,
defending her village with a bravery that earns her a place on the
pirate queen's ship. But they've barely left the island when Lintang
discovers her best friend, Bayani, has stowed away. Telling Captain
Shafira means betraying her friend, but keeping Bayani's secret
risks everything . . . including their lives.
This is a fantastic read with unexpected twists and turns and the
bravest pirate queen there ever was. This book combines a mythic
pirate adventure where we meet a variety of vastly different
characters who live in a fantasy world. Tamara Moss has done a
wonderful job of introducing us to the strong Lintang and equally
impressive Pirate Queen.
This book will quickly become popular with students from 11 and up.
It is a book full of determination, grit and challenges. Friendship
is a strong theme throughout the story and I predict it will
continue to develop as the series continues.
Kathryn Schumacher
Little Lunch: Triple the Laughs by Danny Katz
Ill. by Mitch Vane. Black Dog Books, 2017. ISBN 9781921977398
(Age: 6+) Themes: School stories; Friendship; Food; Dress-up Day;
Germs. Three stories, made into the successful ABC series Little
Lunch, highlight the antics of kids at school. Little Lunch,
or as some know it - 'Recess' - is a 15 minute interlude in every
child's life when good things and woeful things can happen! The
first story in this book tells the tale of the 'little, brown,
smelly-wrap things' that appear in the lunchbox when Yaya takes over
catering duties while Atticus' parents are away. In Atticus' mind,
this is a disaster of gargantuan proportions. The second tale is
based on the ubiquitous dress-up day, again another day in the
school year fraught with unintended disaster. The final story, The
Germblock reveals the problems associated with making a hasty
call on a germ-riddled moment.
Each of these short stories is delightful, funny and revealing of
the personalities of the school yard and the local customs or
problems that can develop in a school context. Obviously as this is
an enjoyable ABC television series, young readers will probably
already have come to know these quirky personalities, and the book
contains photographs of the young actors, as well as the eccentric
drawings by Mitch Vane.
Young readers aged 6+ will connect with this easy to read book, but
as the Television characters are in Year 6, older students will not
be embarrassed to have this book in their reading collection for
Silent Reading time (!), although it does take very little time to
read. However, this may make a good book for those who might
otherwise avoid reading.
Carolyn Hull