Reviews

Splinter the silence by Val McDermid

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Little, Brown, 2015. ISBN 9781408706893
(Age: secondary to adult) Highly recommended. Crime fiction, Stalking, Trolls. This latest crime story involving Dr Tony Hill and Carol Jordan has both of them in limbo. Carol has resigned from the police, distancing herself from friends, particularly Tony, drinking heavily and rebuffing overtures of friendship. One night she drives home only to be stopped by the police and arrested for drink driving. With no one else to turn to she rings Tony to take her home. He insists on staying the night and taking her problem in hand; a hostile Carol wakes the next morning to find he has emptied all her bottles of booze. His determination to stop her drinking is paramount.
Meanwhile, she has been touted as the head of a new department in the north to coordinate major crimes, but this arrest causes problems for the hierarchy. But when Tony senses something is not quite right in a suicide report he convinces Carol and her new team about the veracity of his suppositions and together they work on using digital footprints to find the killer.
Again a wonderfully engrossing story, the characters are multi layered and impel us to watch their movements against the backdrop of women's rights, trolling and cyber bullying. McDermid takes us into the brain of this man, warped by experience and environment to see women as not really knowing what they should be, making his killings look like suicides to wake them up to the reality of being a wife and mother staying at home.
And McDermid introduces a moral uncertainty which is just as engrossing as the crime story, with Carol's drink driving charge being dropped. And with Tony moving into Carol's finished barn, the next installment of their relationship could be even more prickly.
This is a great read, showing how impossible it is to hide in this cyber world, how even the most meticulous planning can come unstuck, and how things that have happened in the past can have unexpected repercussions.
Fran Knight

The Taming of the Queen by Philippa Gregory

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Simon & Schuster, 2015. ISBN 9781471132988
(Age: Adult) Recommended. Philippa Gregory's love of history underpins The Taming of the Queen. Kateryn Parr was the last of King Henry VIII's six wives: portrayed in this narrative as passionate, intelligent, devout and independent, she was once named Regent during King Henry's absence in France. Philippa Gregory's gripping perspective honours Kateryn's importance as a reformer, and vividly suggests the minutia of her daily life at court, once she accepted King Henry VIII's command that she marry him.
This intimate portrait of Kateryn's life as wife to the King of England examines the bond that developed between them, and how she brought together a family that would see Henry reunited with his children. During her marriage to King Henry, Kateryn simultaneously immersed herself in her study, writing and reformation activities. However, in the darker, final days of Henry's life, the focus of this novel shifts to the ever-growing dangers faced by Kateryn as he turned his dangerous attention upon her, and her reformation work. Although The Taming of the Queen is a work of historical fiction, Gregory has created a believable interpretation of the inner workings of this royal marriage; of Henry's court with all its loyalties, rivalries and scheming; of naval battles, and the intrigues of Kateryn's relationship with Thomas Seymour.
In her concluding summary, this accomplished author comments that the days surrounding Kateryn's arrival at court were 'alive with debate about the Bible: English or Latin, about the Mass: bread or flesh, about the Church: reformist or papist.' Recognising her as the first woman to publish in English using her own name, Philippa Gregory's narrative pays homage to this woman 'who dared to write original material in English.' Kateryn published three books that still survive today. The Taming of the Queen is an entertaining and historically exciting perspective on this protestant woman's life. It is recommended for adults interested in this period of Tudor history.
Colleen Tuovinen

Pockety: the tortoise who lived as she pleased by Florence Seyvos

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Ill. by Claude Ponti. Pushkin Press, 2014. ISBN 9781782690252
(Age: Newly independent readers) Pockety is a tiny tortoise who leaves home at a very young age to live like a grown up. She meets Thumb who has also left home to live like a grown up and they build a hut together so they can. But one day, Thumb is killed by a stone and although Pockety laughs at first, when she realises she has lost her dear friend for good, she is devastated. And so her grieving begins.
This is a quaint story translated from the French original Pochee, which traces Pockety's grieving process which is very similar to that of a human. She's in denial, angry, bereft, wanting company and wanting to be alone. It's sensitive and gentle and the reader's emotions follow Pockety's journey hoping she will eventually find peace and comfort.
This is a gentle, sensitive story that will appeal to newly independent readers who are looking for something a little bit different. Pushkin developed this series so they could bring the stories of the world to young children in the hope they will open new doors and gateways to a whole new world of stories. Pockety is an excellent example of the success of their goal.
Barbara Braxton

Dearest by Alethea Kontis

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Woodcutter Sisters bk 3. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015. ISBN 9780544074071
(Age: 12+) Recommended. Fairy tales retold. The third in the Woodcutter Sisters series, following Enchanted and Hero is a delightful retelling primarily of The wild swans, but with some other fairy tales incorporated into the tale. This is Friday's story, the loving and giving child of the old rhyme:
Monday's child is fair of face,
Tuesday's child is full of grace,
Wednesday's child is full of woe,
Thursday's child has far to go,
Friday's child is loving and giving,
Saturday's child works hard for a living,
But the child who is born on the Sabbath Day
Is blithe and bonny and good and gay.

After a huge ocean has devastated the kingdom, Friday is working with refugee children at her sister's palace. She stumbles across seven sleeping brothers in a tower and when she lays eyes on Tristan, knows that he is her true love. But the brothers have been cursed - each day they turn into swans.
What is so good about this series is the fact that the book is a companion volume. The reader does not have to have read, or even remember, the other books, to fully enjoy this one. Friday lives up to her description of being loving and giving, helping the homeless, working out ways to feed many people and giving each child a sense of worth. However she is also very clever and she manages to work out a way around the curse, using excellent problem solving skills and organising everyone to help out.
This is a very rewarding series to read. The heroines are all intelligent and capable and the fairy tale roots are woven so cleverly that they bring a fresh outlook to a familiar story. Dearest has an engrossing narrative and an enticing romance. It is sure to appeal to anyone who enjoys the retelling of fairy tales.
Pat Pledger

The iron claw by Paul Collins and Sean McMullen

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Ford Street, 2015. ISBN 9781925000948
(Ages: 10+) Fantasy. This easy to read fantasy series again begins where the previous book, Dragonfall Mountain, left off. There is no recapping of the story to detract from the action which makes the series highly attractive to those students who are keen to get on with the story or devour a series by borrowing the books in order with no break.
The dragon Stormvaud returns to Dragonfall Mountain where King Lavarran and his Army have been waiting guarded by the other dragons, bringing the bodies of two palace guards which demonstrate that forbidden magic is being practised in the city. To avert complete disaster Latzar reveals himself to the dragons as a secret agent and Velza as the Iron Claw investigating Calbaras her father and perpetrator of the magic.
Meanwhile Dantar and Marko are lost in the sewers where they meet Merikus a talking rat who they enlist to guide them through the sewers to the docks. The repartee between Dantar and Merkius provides for some light hearted relief as their situation becomes more threatening, especially when they meet what appears to be Dantar's identical twin Avantar. But is he really a human or another example of Calbaras's magic.
Both Velza and Dantar find themselves in precarious positions again, locked in prison as Velza continues to seek out her father and Dantar and companions escape to Merk only to be set upon by thieves and arrested.
The plot continues to twist and turn as Calbaras evades capture and plots to become a Dark Hand and as powerful as the dragons while the dragons call a council meeting to try to solve the mystery of the dragon chick they sense. Short chapters which alternate between following Velza and Dantar and occasionally the Dragons, keep the readers on their toes and make for a fast read.
Sue Keane

The Gateway by Cerberus Jones

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The Midnight Mercenary bk 3. Hardie Grant Egmont, 2015. ISBN 9781760120306
(Ages 8+) Science Fiction. The Gateway is a hotel with a difference as the family who purchase it discover in the first of the series. Written by a trio of writers this is the third book to explore the interaction between The Gateway's human inhabitants and the intergalactic travellers who pass through the hotel.
A raging storm and a power failure make for a dramatic opening to this episode and an opportunity for Charlie to create mischief. The arrival of Tom announcing the imminent arrival of twenty children from the alien world creates some turmoil but not as much as his information that another unannounced visitor had arrived, the feared Krskn and that he had already captured Scott, the father, who was endeavouring to fix the fuses. Krskn is contracted to capture one of the alien children but is keen to take back and sell a variety of subjects including Mum, Charlie and Grawk Amelia's pet.
The arrival of two groups of Scouts, one group human and the other aliens in disguise, the anticipation of a Keeper arriving to protect the alien children from Krskn, and the continuously disappearing adults, creates suspense reminiscent of a horror movie especially as the action all takes place in the dark or semi-dark.
It is up to Charlie and Amelia to save the day and for the family to reassure both the human and alien visitors when the new day dawns.
Having not read the previous books in the series it was easy to catch up with the characters and their relationships as the story continued.
Sue Keane

The savage shore by Graham Seal

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Allen & Unwin, 2015. ISBN 9781760111076
(Age: secondary to adult) Highly recommended. History, Early exploration of Australia, Spice trade. The role of the VOC (Dutch East Indies Company) in mapping Australia in the seventeenth century is vividly brought to life in this highly readable book about the exploration of Australia. Finding a sea route to the Spice Islands (East Indies, today's Indonesia) meant huge profits could be made by this Amsterdam company in bringing spices back to Europe. But they wanted more: to keep profits up, they needed more resources and more markets, (doesn't that sound familiar!) and so mariners were told to watch out for possibilities when they landed on unknown shores. This resolve coincided with a new faster route being discovered by Brouwer in 1611. He travelled east from Cape Town, instead of hugging the African coast, using the Roaring Forties to travel across the Indian Ocean and turning north to Batavia when the distance appeared right. Without any accurate means of telling where they were on the ocean (the discovery of longitude was still a hundred years away) many ships hit the Western Australian coast, some disastrously, but took their charts with them to head office when rescued. So pieces of the Australian coastline were uncovered and mapped throughout this century but kept close by VOC hesitant to allow others this information lest they cash in the lucrative trade that may transpire. Names like Batavia and Tasman spring readily to mind when thinking about this early exploration, and Seal gives a full account of both these stories, but includes others less known. In the eighteenth century, the fortunes of the VOC were in decline and a more scientific appraisal of the Southland was undertaken by both the French and British. Stories of Cook, Baudin and Flinders stand out as they mapped and explored possibilities of the new country.
I loved reading this history giving a fascinating account of the attempts to discover the Southland, the activities by the VOC and the many stories of survival by seamen. Half remembered stories are fleshed out as the cartographers pieced together the coastline, and secondary students and adults alike will find this book adds to their knowledge of our early history. A number of recently published books add to the interest given by this book, Batavia (Peter Fitzsimmons, Heinemann, 2011) gives an impressive account of that chilling chapter in Australia's history as does My father's islands (Christobel Mattingley, NLA, 2012) giving a fictional account of Abel Tasman and his importance to Australia's exploration for younger readers.
I did rankle somewhat at the myth that school children are taught that Cook discovered Australia, knowing that the texts I read and used certainly belie this. But a good story always needs a little spice and this book certainly gives the reader that.
Stories of being marooned on this uninviting land, of murder and betrayal, of incredible courage and fortitude, of Aboriginal stories about contact held my attention. A comprehensive index, glossary and bibliography serve the book and its readers well.
This is a substantial addition to any school, class or home library. And a marvellous companion to the recent exhibition at the Art Gallery of South Australia: Treasure Ships, art in the age of spices.
Fran Knight

Leo da Vinci vs the Ice Cream Domination League by Michael Pryor

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Ill. by Jules Faber. Random House, 2015. ISBN 9780857988379
Even though he is just 10 years old, Leo da Vinci is an inventor, artist, genius and founder of Fixit International Inc. dedicated to saving the world from super villains in cahoots with his friend Mina and sidekicks Isaac the robot and Ragnar the talking pig. No matter where or when, he is always sketching new inventions from the most ordinary objects and collecting the most amazing array of everyday stuff in his top-secret shed where he put his theories into practice. So when the Ice Cream Domination League move in, determined to control all the ice cream in the world for themselves by stealing ice cream trucks and blowing up factories, Leo has a new problem to solve and a new enemy to face.
This is a new series aimed at younger independent readers who are looking for a lovable hero written by an author who admits that it is "a very silly book." " Leo da Vinci vs the Ice-Cream Domination League is a very silly book - and it was a lot of fun to write. I've always liked the idea of the young inventor, working away to create amazing contraptions. And I've always liked the idea of young inventors saving the world. Oh, and I've always liked the idea of talking pigs, too. Throw all these things in together, add some extra silliness, and you have the start of Leo da Vinci's adventures." Yet for all the 'silliness' of the plot, nevertheless this is a well-written story as Pryor is a master storyteller for adults and young adults having been nominated several times for an Aurealis Award for science fiction, fantasy and horror writers. Larger font, shorter chapters and clever illustrations will draw in readers who will then look forward to the next in the series Leo da Vinci vs the Furniture Overlord to be published early in 2016.
Barbara Braxton

Frankie and Finn by Klay and Mark Lamprell

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Ill. by Lucinda Gifford. Lothian, 2015. ISBN 9780734416186
(Ages: 4-7) Frankie and his family have just moved into a new house. It looks dark and scary. Finn the fish does not really like his home in the pond. It is dark and scary. When Frankie reaches his hand into the murky pond for his ball, Finn thinks the five-head monster with no eyes or mouth is going to squish him and his family. However, when the water clears and Frankie and Finn meet, both of their lives become brighter.
The story highlights how even though the unknown might look dark and scary, a closer look can prove you wrong. It has potential for discussing change, and how things that look different are not always so terrible. The best feature of this book is how the story tells the perspective of both Frankie and Finn and highlights the similarities between the two families. The illustrations are also great in portraying the perspective of Finn the fish's family from under the water.
Nicole Nelson

The mice and the shoemaker by Gabriel Evans

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Five Mile Press, 2015. ISBN 9781760064273
(Ages: 4-8) This is a reimagined version of the classic Christmas tale The elves and the shoemaker and promotes the joy of giving rather than receiving. This is a nostalgic book - it is clearly set in the 'olden days' with clothing and house furnishings all reminiscent of a bygone era. Even the language is old-fashioned and English (As the snow fell outside they huddled around a blazing fire, sang Christmas carols, ate roasted rosehips and drank mulled mulberry juice). The tale, though retold, retains its English heritage with a wintry Christmas setting. The illustrations themselves are dull and grainy. All these things contribute to making the book look and feel 'old'. While some children may get lost within the long narrative or be dissatisfied with the illustrations (they are a very different style to most modern picture books), many will adore the magic, enchanted nature of the tale. The illustrations are wonderfully detailed and there are magnificent pop-ups and flaps that children will delight in. The story itself follows the mouse family, the Whiskers, as they move out of their flooded house and in with their Grandpa, beneath the floorboards of a shoemaker's store. To repay the shoemaker's kindness the family create the finest shoes in the land for the elderly man and his wife to sell. In return, the shoemaker and his wife make the mice new clothes and shoes. This is a heart-warming tale about rediscovering the meaning of Christmas gifts; it seems a timely reminder for a generation of children who see Christmas primarily as a time for receiving. Overall, this is a heart-warming tale that will not suit every child, but will be cherished by many.
Nicole Nelson

Duck, duck, goose! ill. by Michaela Blassnig

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Lothian, 2015. ISBN 9780734416315
(Ages: 3-6) Very simple text is combined with vibrant, action-packed illustrations in this story inspired by the children's game duck, duck, goose. As two ducks venture further out into the river they encounter an incredible cast of characters, from frogs doing kung-fu to a ghost shooting boo and a hippo getting a shampoo. The repeated rhyme continues through the whole book, with the last word or phrase changing each time, 'Duck, duck, boo! Duck, duck, pirate crew. Duck, duck, shampoo.' The group grows bigger and bigger with each page, and the book ends with them all looking at the reader, 'Duck, duck, you!'.
In this simple, but humourous picture book, young children will enjoy the strange characters the ducks meet along the way and will be able to join in with the repetitive, predictive text.
Nicole Nelson

Way Down Dark by J P Smythe

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Hodder & Stoughton, 2015. ISBN: 9781444796322
(Age: 15+) Highly recommended. The blurb to this first book in a trilogy boasts 'This is a hell where no one can hide'.
This dystopian novel really does take you way down dark. It really is hell. Chan, the narrator, was born on Australia. She is seventeen, strong, clever and courageous. The world of Australia is cutthroat and savage. Australia is a ship that has left Earth and inhabitants are waiting to arrive on a new safe planet. The leaving of Australia happened many generations ago and society has split into the Pale Women, the Bells, Shopkeepers and the Lows. Families are terrorised by the Lows and life is only possible for those who can stand up for themselves.
This book has many strong female characters who are well respected and portray the strong maternal theme that runs through this book. Agatha looms large in this book and she is integral to the character of Chan. Importantly in this novel there is little attention given to the looks of the female characters and this give greater depth to the story.
Many of the characters are violent and the chaotic scenes in the book are described so well it is easy to imagine being there.
'There's One Truth on Australia. You Fight or You Die'
This fast paced novel has a twist near the end that leaves the reader reaching for that second book. Where is it?
Linda Guthrie

Billie's wild jungle adventure by Sally Rippin

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Ill. by Alisa Coburn. Billie's Super Dooper Adventures series. Hardie Grant Egmont, 2015. ISBN 9781760124441
(Age: 4-6) Highly recommended. Themes: Friendship, Imagination, Kindergarten, Jungle Animals. Sally Rippin's new series takes her fun-loving character Billie B Brown and explores her younger years. In this picture book Billie can't wait to go to Kinder, find her friend Jack and engage in some imaginative play. Jack and Billie swing happily on the tyre hung in the mulberry tree. They soon pretend they are deep in the jungle with pink-and-purple pythons hiding in the jungle-juice trees. They are having so much fun, until Billie accidentally picks up a python. The young jungle explorer has a brilliant idea and she is freed from the python's grip. With a ride on the back of a friendly tiger, they return just in time for a fruit snack.
Alisa Coburn's illustrations are reminiscent of those from The Little Golden Books; there's so much activity and interest to engage the young reader and class. The softly coloured pages in pastel greens and pinks show the inquisitive children drawn with monkey bodies and little ears enjoying the jungle setting.
With PACA - Play as a Creative Activity and the Nature Play's focus in preschools and kindergartens, Billie's Wild Jungle Adventure encourages imagination, creativity, risk taking, discovery and exploration in a safe setting.
Rhyllis Bignell

Kizmet and the Case of the Tassie Tiger by Frank Woodley

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Puffin Books, 2015. ISBN 9780143308546
(Age: Yr 2-4) "The creature's breathing was wet and crackly as it crept through the dark. The goat was standing very still. Actually, it was asleep. The creature's black shape leapt across the face of the full moon, crashing into the goat and digging its teeth into the victim's woolly shoulder. The force sent them both tumbling and bouncing down the grassy hill, splashing into the dam below. The shock of the cold water confused the predator and its jaws slackened, releasing its prey. A hoof kicked frantically, leading a painful blow on the monster's nose. The desperate goat, struggling to escape, became bogged in the sticky mud at the edge of the dam. The terrible creature rose onto its hind legs, its fangs dripping with spit."
So begins a new adventure and a new series for younger readers featuring Kizmet Papanicillo, her father Detective Spencer and Gretchen, a feisty currawong and the narrator of the story. Having just returned from solving a mystery in Scotland, they are immediately off to Tasmania where a mysterious creature is attacking and killing livestock. Could it be a Tasmanian Tiger, long thought to be extinct but rumoured to still exist in parts of the southern wilderness? Naturally, the team from IMPACT - International Mysteries, Puzzles and Crimes Taskforce - are called in but it is soon clear that even though her dad is officially the detective, it is Kizmet who is the chief crime-solver. From the moment he crash tackles a "Tasmanian Tiger", a dressed-up model promoting a soft drink, her dad proves to be more of a hindrance than a help. Working with an array of interesting characters including the lisping Dr Cecil Simpson, Kizmet needs to solve this mystery and her quick thinking and clever deductions expose the truth. Tasmania is not to become a tourist destination for those looking for this mysterious creature after all.
Younger readers who like a good meaty mystery with well-drawn characters and just the right amount of suspense will be drawn to this new series written by well-known comedian Frank Woodley. The prologue written in white text on a dark page sets the tone and the short chapters, quirky illustrations that break up the text, fast pace and humour will appeal to both boys and girls in the Year 2-4 audience and they will enjoy pitting their wits alongside Kizmet trying to solve the clues before she does. Finishing as it began with Kizmet already packing for the next case, Kizmet and the Case of the Smashed Violin is also now available.
Barbara Braxton

Lasseter's Gold by Warren Brown

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Hachette, 2015. ISBN 9780733631603
Like most Australians, I had heard of the legend of Lasseter's reef of gold, discovered in the late 1890's but never located again. What I wasn't aware of was the amazing expedition undertaken in 1930 in an attempt to rediscover what was believed to be a vast deposit worth countless millions of pounds. This is the story cleverly told by the well-known cartoonist Warren Brown.
Harold Lasseter claimed to have made this spectacular find by accident, having become hopelessly lost whilst trying to cross the Continent from Cairns to Kalgoorlie on horseback. Having lost his horses, and near death, he discovered the reef somewhere near the border of Western Australia and the Northern Territory in Central Australia. He stated that he took samples before staggering deliriously through the desert for days, finally being miraculously rescued by an Afghan camel driver.
In 1930 he approached the Australian Workers Union with a proposal to put together an expedition to find the reef. The subsequent gold fever and greedy scheming he stirred up created a wild commitment to his plan, based upon this outrageous tale, which seems incredible with the benefit of hindsight. Brown explains the various machinations which came together to fund and assemble a grossly unprepared and laughably disorganised expedition into some of the harshest terrain on earth - all based on fervent hope rather than a bushman's experience and common sense.
The author provides all the background to the gold legend, however the real story in this book is the expedition itself as the characters involved and their wild exploits are truly remarkable. The reader is captivated by descriptions of a group of men (some of whom intensely dislike each other), working together to force a heavy truck through murderously difficult mulga scrub and almost impassable and impossible sand dunes. The presence of aircraft, used for the first time in Australian geological surveying, gives another dimension. Like many thunderingly good stories, there is much mystery and speculation about what motivated some very strange characters to act in the duplicitous and irregular ways that they did whilst risking death over and over in the arid wilderness.
There are so many complexities to this tale that it could have become difficult to understand, yet the style and structure of the narrative is such that everything is explained in a manner which is meaningful and connected whilst the book reads like an exciting thriller. The many photographs of the events are amazing to see.
I really like that this author has dedicated so much time to researching and writing about this incredible expedition and the legend which started it all, yet he avoids claiming to have solved the riddle or having written the definitive version of events as many would have done in his place. Instead, the details are presented and some bewildering options are discussed, yet the legend is treated with a kind of respect that recognises that the exact truth will probably be never known and the reader is left with a definite sense of wonder that maybe there is some minute chance that the reef really did exist
This book will circulate like mad in public libraries, however I sadly believe that school students would fail to appreciate what they are missing in this marvellous story.
Rob Welsh