Reviews

Nomax by Shannon Horsfall

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Angus and Robertson, 2017. ISBN 9781460753927
(Age: 3+) Recommended. Dogs. Pets. Names. A delightfully funny picture book in which the text belies the image given on each page will have readers laughing out loud as the dog chews its way through things he shouldn't, steals sausages from the butcher or tries to help dad by bringing his slippers but resulting in moving the standard lamp closer to his chair with predictable results.
The dog is thrilled that his dad calls him by name, Nomax, each time he does something incredibly helpful, but readers will see the underlying humour as Nomax's antics get him into trouble each time. Running down the hill while on the lead sees dad call out Nomax, digging the roses in the garden sees his name called out again, washing his socks or tidying the office gets an instant response of his name being called. The gentle humour will appeal to younger readers, whether this is read out loud or read alone. If read in a group I can see children calling out to say what Nomax has done, thrilling at the unexpected results of his helpfulness. And turning the last page will bring gales of laughter as they realise why he is called Nomax.
Horsfall's illustrations are deliciously witty with the funniest expressions on the dog's face being shown with just the slightest of changes in his mouth and eyes. Things hanging from his mouth belie his perception that he is doing the right thing, and will elicit laughter from the readers.
Fran Knight

Under the same sky by Mojgan Shamsalipoor, Milad Jafari and James Knight

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Hachette, 2017. ISBN 9780733637827
(Age: 15+) At a time when more than 20 million refugees seek shelter in countries which wrestle with questions regarding asylum, this story simply tells of the lives and experience of Mojgan Shamsalipoor and Milad Jafari, two young people from Iran.
Mojgan's background was one of financial hardship, with her single mother struggling to provide for the family and often having to depend upon the charity of relatives to access accommodation. It would appear that desperation drove her to remarry, hoping to create a more stable life and home for Mojgan, her sister and brothers. Sadly, the situation became nightmarish for Mojgan and her mother when her brutal and violent stepfather commenced beatings and sexual assault before arranging a marriage to a man old enough to be her grandfather. Trapped by oppressive Sharia law which offered no escape and administrative corruption which enabled and supported the stepfather, Mojgan and her brother Hossein undertook the perilous journey to escape Iran.
Also growing up in Iran, Milad experienced a more secure life in a family provided for by his father who worked hard and enjoyed financial success. Life became dangerous for this family however as Milad came under police scrutiny for producing forbidden Hip Hop music and other family members became imperilled from simply knowing people who had been arrested and subsequently murdered for political reasons.
The tension and fear experienced by these young people fleeing an oppressive regime, risking their lives to the hands of people smugglers and enduring a frightening, arduous journey by boat is difficult to adequately express. Similarly the anxiety produced by protracted detention, the seemingly endless asylum application process and fear of terrible consequences if rejected and returned to Iran is impossible to summarise.
Meeting in Australia, Milad and Mojgan fall in love and marry, however their newfound joy turns to stress and fear when asylum is refused for Mojgan and she is pressured to return to Iran.
Recent events have prompted renewed consideration of Australia's asylum policy in relation to Moslem refugees by politicians, media commentators and the general public. Evident in this book was the fact that life for asylum seekers fleeing oppression is miserable and this is removed from any ideological debate concerning whether Australia ought or ought not accept Moslem refugees.
What affected me most powerfully was a sense of fury and despair that the world's refugee problem is principally caused by political and / or religious lunacy which foments oppression and violence. Whilst this continues, millions of innocents will continue to be driven from their homes where they might otherwise have stayed to live productive and happy lives.
Rob Welsh

Double take! a new look at opposites by Susan Hood

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Ill. by Jay Fleck. Walker Studio, 2015. ISBN 9781406377293
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Opposites. Perspective. Points of view. More than a look at opposites, this interesting picture book is also a challenge for the reader to ponder and delve into what an opposite really means and to think about different points of view. Hood has written an engaging, thought provoking text in rhyme, looking not just at what a simple opposite can mean but how it relates to who wants to know and the perspective of the person asking:
Who knows what's BIG
    unless there's SMALL?
Does SHORT mean a thing
    except next to TALL?

The illustrations done in a retro style by Jay Fleck are evocative and add much to the text. The one on the back of the book with the blurb was particularly engaging showing a tall flower in a small pot with a bird looking at it and a short flower in a big pot with a mouse looking at it. Another that caught my eye was the elephant lifting a large weight that contrasted with the boy trying to lift a small one:
Who's STRONG
    and who's WEAK
is hardly perplexing

Then the reader turns the page to see a double page spread with a giant whale and the text:
But STRONG can look WEAK
    when a new champ is flexing.

The use of different styles of print to highlight the point being made also adds to the fun of the book and would lead to easy emphasis when reading aloud.
This would be a very useful book to have in the classroom, and its easy rhythm and fun illustrations will engage both readers and listeners.
Pat Pledger

Chook Doolan : Let's do Diwali by James Roy

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Ill. by Lucinda Gifford. Walker Books, 2017. ISBN 9781925381597
(Age: 5-8) Recommended. Chook's real name is Simon Doolan and in each of the easy to read Chook Doolan novels, Chook has a different adventure to share with the reader. In this book, he befriends Praj and together they research Diwali as a part of the 'Festivals' topic in their classroom.
Luckily, Praj and his family have invited Chook to join them celebrating their own Diwali. He is nervous because he is not sure he will know what to do and is hesitant of crowds. As Chook says I'm just someone who's scared of things. He wants to be braver and does attend Diwali even though he has reservations. Chook gets to experience the clothing, food and music of India.
These small novels give students an interesting storyline in an easy to read format. The font is large and the pages are interspersed with Lucinda Gifford's appealing illustrations. There are 8 chapters so students can experience a novel format.
These books are very appealing to the emergent independent reader. They are similar in difficulty and look to the Billie B Brown novels by Sally Rippin. Students love to read all the books in Rippin's series and I feel confident that this will also be true for the Chook Doolan books. I am pleased there is another series that is matched to the reading ability of the younger students. James Roy is an accomplished author and his books can still tell a good tale within the bounds of a limited vocabulary.
Jane Moore

Nanna's button tin by Dianne Wolfer and Heather Potter

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Walker Books, 2017. ISBN 9781922077677
Highly recommended. This book brought back memories of my childhood and spending time going through my Gran's buttons. I highly recommend this book.
This story is well written telling the story of each of the buttons they find in their search for the perfect button for teddy.
It is a story of memories and how little things can bring big memories.
A perfect story for a grandma to share with her grandchildren.
Karen Colliver

Our race for reconciliation by Anita Heiss

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Scholastic, 2017. ISBN 9781760276119
(Age: 13+) Recommended. Aboriginal themes, Cathy Freeman, Athletics, Reconciliation. The story of one family and its journey to Sydney for the People's Walk for Reconciliation across Sydney Harbour Bridge in 2000 is the basis for this evocative tale reflecting the solidarity shown on that day and on Sorry Days since, as all Australians recognise the past and look forward to a future together.
Mel's family lives ten hours drive from Sydney at Ipswich, but makes the journey along with their gran and grandpa who are part of the Stolen Generations, to join the march. We hear of Mel at school where the teacher explains why people are calling for an apology, we see the family in the car when mum talks about how her mother was treated, the family singing along with Archie Roach's CD, and we see the letters written by the class to their heroes, in Mel's case, Cathy Freeman, with outstanding results.
Mel's family has Aboriginal heritage so readers will see a family just like their own, with its dreams and aspirations, everyday concerns and problems, showcasing a background which does reflect some differences. The explanation mum makes of her mother's childhood will fill in gaps for many of our readers. Sorry Day and Reconciliation are given a face with the emphasis on Mel's family and how things in the past have affected them.
In the lead up to the Sydney Olympic Games, Mel is very excited about Cathy Freeman's event, and we see Cathy from Mel's perspective, a hero above all others.
Heiss uses the class as a platform for debate, offering negative views of Aboriginal people, Sorry Day and Stolen Generations to be mouthed by one of their classmates. George's opinions give the teacher and Mel and her brother as well as others in the class, the opportunity to repudiate the negative things said, so informing the reader.
The book ends with the Olympic Games and Freeman's stunning victory with all of Australia proud of her efforts. Even George concedes he may have been wrong and when Mel's brother extends the hand of friendship, he accepts.
Trying to instill information about a particular topic is always fraught in historical novels, and although the story is slow at the start, the sensitive handling of the family and the impact of the treatment of their forebears, shines through. This book will inform younger readers and be useful as a read a loud in classes grappling with Reconciliation.
Fran Knight

Singing my sister down and other stories by Margo Lanagan

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Allen and Unwin, 2017. ISBN 9781760295134
(Age: 14+) Recommended. The first line of this book reads 'We all went down to the tar pit, with mats to spread our weight', and from there I was hauntingly hooked. The first story Singing my sister down was my favourite, as the depiction of Ik's tar-pit death was so beautifully written; dark and emotional; and I could almost see the scene in front of me.
The following 12 stories continue with dark depictions of rituals, violence or gender and all have a deep seeded theme of death. Some of them I found quite confronting, as Margo Lanagan writes in a way that brought visual representation easily, and evoked strong emotion or loyalty towards the characters. She also brings in familiar concepts to keep readers hooked as in A good heart which deals with life's 'what ifs' or Winkie where a mother's intuition is highlighted.
In many of the stories you can also find links to popular fairytales, such as Not all ogre which shares similarities with Sleeping Beauty and the slightly disturbing Winkie with a fair resemblance to the song Wee Willy Winky who runs through the town in his night gown, just as in the story.
Many readers may not usually like short fiction, but they should at least give this book a try. Each story has depth and can leave you confronted, surprised or intrigued.
This strange yet compelling group of stories is targeted to those in the young adult age group, and I feel best suited to readers from at least 14 years of age due to the complex set of themes and topics brought forward in this book. Some of the stories are slow to start, however persistence is often rewarded. These stories may also lead to interesting dinner table conversation!
Lauren Fountain

The girl guide by Marawa Ibrahim

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Frances Lincoln Children's Books, 2017. ISBN 9781847809483
(Age: 10-15) Highly recommended. Star rating: 5/5. This is the book I wish my mum put on my bedside table instead of 'Where did I come from?'!!
Growing up is a tough gig, especially in a society where advertisement and media plays a huge role (unconsciously or not) in providing education to women around our bodies, growing up and the portrayal of what is normal. What Marawa Ibrahim has done with this book has taken ALL the things that happen to girls growing up and written down what really happens. From periods, hormones and bras to embarrassing moments, friendships and just being yourself, it is all in there.
One of the things I really enjoyed about this guide is that each of the 50 lessons are shown in a very light-hearted easy to read way, however you also get the sense that these experiences really were her own and that made me feel more comfortable in my own personal experience. I feel that this will transfer well to the younger female reader who reads this book either at the start of or throughout their journey with their changing body.
Marawa tells us about her inner most embarrassing moments, and then how she got over them. You get the pros and cons of the various types of hair removal and the benefit of stretching and meditation - there really is something for everyone.
The blurb states that The girl guide is "packed with practical advice, this book is a stylish agony Aunt for any 10 year old girl" and I feel that this is 100% true. It answers all the questions you want to ask your mum or friends but are too shy or embarrassed to, and does so in a way that any 10-15 year old girl would completely understand.
Lauren Fountain

Too many friends by Kathryn Apel

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UQP, 2017. ISBN 9780702259760
(Age: 7-10) Recommended. Tahnee has the problem of having too many friends. Everyone wants her to be their work partner in class and playmate in the yard. Tahnee accepts everyone but she especially targets the new girl Lucy who is quiet and withdrawn. Her efforts to include Lucy alienate Tahnee's best friend Roxie. How can you be friends with everyone all of the time?
Tahnee is in year 2 and her close family support her friendly attitude but it is Tahnee who has to find her own answers to solving her friendship problems.
The issues of friendships and bullying are common in school and many students will identify with similar problems, being excluded from the group, convincing others not to be your friend and put down comments and looks. Choosing who you work and play with is fraught with friendship issues, even for someone as kind and inclusive as Tahnee.
Kathryn has dealt with similar problems in her novel Bully on the Bus where 7 year old Leroy struggles with the bully that makes his life so unpleasant.
Kathryn Apel lets her protagonists work through their problems and after listening to advice they find their own answers. Tahnee's solution is both inventive and kind and a positive role model for students who are reading the book.
This novel would be a great read aloud and discussion point for classes. Apel's prose flows beautifully and being written in first person, strongly conveys Tahnee's feelings and concerns.
The front cover is simply decorated and the bunting theme and paper cut outs continue into the book to highlight the beginning of each chapter.
I would recommend this book to 7 to 10 year olds.
A book trailer is available.
Jane Moore

Welcome home, Harley by Jess Black

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Little Paws series. Ill. by Gabriel Evans, Random House Australia, 2017.
ISBN 9780143781776
(Age: 6-8) Recommended. Themes: Guide dogs - training, Puppies, Family life. Guide Dogs Australia rely on the help of hundreds of puppy raisers each year, these families take an eight week old puppy into their homes and train them up, preparing them for a life as a service dog. Each litter of puppies is named for the same letter of the alphabet. The sale of each of these Little Paws series' books helps raise awareness and finances to support this important cause.
Nine-year-old Lexie and seven-year-old Tom Walker can't contain their excitement when their parents agree to become a puppy raising family. Brett the officer in charge is there to talk the family through the special concerns, issues and important job of helping Harley the eight-week-old Labrador pup become a confident young dog. However, this puppy is a bundle of energetic and mischievous fun. The Walker family haven't had a puppy before and Harley is good at chewing the children's toys, destroying the bathroom where she sleeps and causing beanbag explosions.
With Brett's assistance, instructions from the Guide Dog Training Manual, Mum and Dad's help and with Lexie's family planner, Harley learns the skills needed ready for her new role.
Jess Black's easy to read chapter book includes facts about the Guide Dogs Australia organisation and fun information about raising a service dog. This is a fun story for pet lovers who are beginning to read chapter books. This is complemented by Gabriel Evans' line drawings of Harley and the Walker family.
Rhyllis Bignell

Datsunland by Stephen Orr

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Wakefield Press, 2017. ISBN 9781743054758
(Age: Year 12-Adult) Recommended. Short stories. This extraordinary collection of short stories, written by David Orr, is powerful as both story about, and analysis of, Australian life over the years since European settlement. Orr depicts, in vivid and often painful detail, the struggle for individuals and families trying to cope with life, revealing the emotional responses to death, divorce, inter-racial tension and disillusionment. He centres his vignettes on the essential qualities of being human, particularly focusing on the generosity, love, respect and loyalty that are at the basis of being human. So, contrasting both kindness and nastiness, loyalty and deception, in his various characters, he lays before us the reasons why, being lost, lonely, discriminated against, disillusioned or angry, they are angry, hurtful or evil, and why they may have barely managed to survive in difficult times over the centuries in the city, the small country towns or the suburbs of rural and urban South Australia.
His sometimes interwoven stories reflect the issues from the times of the early settlers to the modern world, focused on both children and adults. We are drawn deftly into the worlds of the characters in their experiences of unhappy marriages, of family disintegration and separation, of unexpected and sometimes violent death, of the after-effects of terrible childhoods, of war, and of the impact of religious rules and disharmony. A religious institution features more than once, in different stories of the lives of those dedicated to education, particularly that of a Catholic religious brother who has cared for, and lived with, a disabled woman who has no family. Carefully, secretly never revealing her presence to anyone, he supports her totally yet suffers terrible guilt for this choice. Orr positions us to see him as he sees himself, as flawed and disloyal to his religious vows yet correspondingly as a loving, devoted, caring man. Other stories plunge us into lost, sad lives of characters who are barely able to survive, or of those who struggle, separated and lonely. Deliberately unsettling us, he disrupts our ideas of what is good, and we are disturbed by his vivid depictions of the sorrows, the terribly unhappy lives and the sometimes utterly tragic circumstances of his characters.
Orr's writing is wonderfully rich in detail, his stories utterly captivating, dramatic and disturbing, memorable for his vivid language, his construction of time and place, and for the vivid reality of the human condition. In his characters that are chillingly real, sometimes good and sometimes utterly awful, sometimes strong and often weak, in his eloquent, vivid and often heart-rending stories, in his disturbingly accurate depiction of time and place, he constructs worlds that are richly evocative of both the past and present. In his interweaving of threads, his appallingly sad stories captivate us, compelling us to read on, to respond to the revelation of chillingly painful truths, as he details the acts and thoughts of the disillusioned and the abused, of the actions of both the good and evil characters, leaving us with a disturbing sense of how little control we have of our lives.
Elizabeth Bondar

Goodly and Grave: in a bad case of kidnap by Justine Windsor

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HarperCollins, 2017. ISBN 9780008183530
(Ages: 10+) Highly recommended. Magicians. Kidnapping. London. Nineteenth century. The Penny Dreadful is full of the stories of missing children in London, with dire predictions of what has happened to them. Lucy Goodly meets her match at the card table at one of London's seamier gambling establishments, when she is beaten by someone with better skills at cheating. So convinced that she would win, she set herself against the dastardly Lord Grave, and in losing must return with him to Grave Hall and be his boot boy. Here she finds strange things happening, the cook is a bearded man dressed in women's clothing, she overhears people speaking of the missing children, she goes into a room where she meets a talking raven. Lucy must use her wits if she is to help solve the puzzle of Grave Hall, rescue the children, release those entrapped by magic, and get back to her own family.
Her suspicions of Lord Grave and all the others in his employ cause Lucy to take the magic route offered by the raven and she lands in the castle of Amethyst, Grave's enemy. But here too, she comes to disbelieve what she is being told, and seeing the woman collect the tears of the children, realises that something is very wrong.
A heart thumping thriller of a story, Lucy lurches from one grave situation to another, often accompanied by other children, all trying to deflect the lies they are being told. But who can be trusted? Twists occur on every page, but Lucy's tenacity shines through. Readers will love the humour as well as the plethora of strange beings, working with Lucy to try and find out what is really happening to the children kidnapped from the streets of London. And for those completely enraptured with the situation Windsor presents, the second in the series will follow soon.
Fran Knight

Funny kid for president by Matt Stanton

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ABC Book, 2017. ISBN 9780733335976
(Age: 8-11) Funny kid for president is the hilarious junior novel from the popular author illustrator team of Matt and Beck Stanton. Their extremely popular picture books include This is a ball and Did you take the B from my -ook? In the style of Diary of a wimpy kid and Tom Gates, Max Walburt, funny kid, class clown and Redhill Middle School student, introduces us to the ups and downs of his life.
Who pooped in Mr Armstrong's storeroom? His teacher is a volcano waiting to erupt and Max is singled out as the culprit. Even though Max has not pooped since Monday, he has to clean up the mess. After school, Max and Hugo, his second best friend, plot a super-massively-red-faced-embarrassing revenge for Mr Armstrong. This plan leads them into all sorts of trouble, as disaster follows them and so does a stalker duck. Abby Purcell overhears the friends plotting and dobs to the teacher.
Principal Sniggles becomes involved in the altercation between Max and his teacher and suddenly their class is involved in electing a class president. With Hugo as his political manager and someone sabotaging the other candidates' campaign, does Max have any chance of winning?
This is a funny junior novel, filled with comical close-ups of Max's emotional outbursts and plenty of gross situations including the great library vomit-apocalypse.
Rhyllis Bignell

May Tang: a new Australian by Katrina Beikoff

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Scholastic, 2017. ISBN 9781742990743
(Age: 10+) Recommended. China, Tiananmen Square, History. When the Tiananmen Square incident occurred in 1989, those looking for change in China were dismayed. None more so than May's family, living in Shanghai with their son studying in Australia. May's mother had been sent from university to work as a labourer on a rice farm during the infamous Cultural Revolution, and she and her husband want a different life for their children. They make the heart breaking decision to send May and her mother to Australia to join their son, applying for protection because, as an activist, he cannot return home. May's life is turned inside out as she must leave her father and her friends, her grandfather and his singing bird to go somewhere totally alien.
The first part of the book gives a strong background for the story. Readers will sympathise with the decision made by the parents in a time of uncertainty, and appreciate the Australian government's decision to allow families of Chinese students already here, to emigrate. They may also compare that government's decision with the decisions being made today about refugees risking all to get here. Our response to both groups is totally different.
The latter part of the book shows May's efforts to acclimatise to her new country. She has learnt English and must translate for her mother while their brother is away picking cherries to earn money to support them. She must go to school and here she comes up against mindless racism, telling her she needs to fit in to become a real Australian. Her mother gains employment packing at a local bakery and the baker, finding they are from Shanghai, gives her some pork bones to make him pork dumplings, a childhood memory of when he lived there.
An easy to read story, May is an endearing character whose tale will intrigue the readers, learning more of the reasons behind people's decisions to emigrate to Australia, in this excellent series, A New Australian. Their life in China is well captured and the reasons for the family's ill ease at staying in China explained well for middle school students. The book reflects the situation in Australia as well, with its suspicion of difference. This series portrays the reasons behind people's migration to Australia beautifully, engaging the most cynical of readers and broadening their vision of Australia's rich and varied heritage.
Fran Knight

Ava's spectacular spectacles by Alice Rex and Angela Perrini

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New Frontier, 2017. ISBN 978192059984
(Age 4-7) Highly recommended. Sight. Spectacles. Fairy tales. Ava sits at her desk in the classroom and can't see the board. She doesn't want to wear her glasses and keeps them in her bag. Then her sympathetic teacher tells her of the fairy tale characters who would have had much happier outcomes if only they had used their glasses to find their way.
The narrative is very clever and interesting. Children would respond to the authors using fairy tales to depict why wearing glasses would be very useful. The narrative would also help children who do not need glasses begin to understand why some people need them.
Bold illustrations make this story stand out. Keen readers will spot the glasses case in Ava's bag in the beginning of the book. They will also be able to follow the expressions on her face changing from miserable when she can't see the front of the classroom to a huge smiling face as she begins to read on the last page. I loved the picture of Humpty Dumpty wearing specs and not falling off the wall while on the opposite page are the guards who could have put him together again when they could see using their glasses. The picture of a gleeful Ava being little Miss Muffet with glasses to see the big spider and using her fly spray is very humorous.
This would be a lovely book to give a child who has just been given spectacles and is feeling worried about how friends will react and could also be used in the classroom when doing units of work on sight and seeing.
Pat Pledger