Reviews

The Graveyard Book volume 1 by Neil Gaiman

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Graphic adaptation by P. Craig Russell. Ill. by Kevin Nowlan, P. Craig Russell, Tony Harris, Scott Hampton, Galen Showman, Jill Thompson, Stephen B. Scott. Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN: 9781408858998.
This graphic version of the very popular Graveyard Book covers the first half of the story with different illustrators for each chapter. The story opens with the murder of a family in their home by a mysterious intruder. The sole survivor, the youngest child, wanders out of the house and into a nearby graveyard where the resident ghosts take him in and name him Nobody, Bod for short. They keep him safe with the help of Silas, who inhabits the space between life and death and can bring the boy food from the outside world. Bod explores his world within the graveyard and has adventures involving Ghouls, ancient Sleers and a young witch but in the background there is always the sinister 'Jack' whose task of annihilating the family is unfinished. The story has adapted very well to a graphic novel format as each chapter finds the boy two years older and the episodic adventures are complete in themselves. The dramatic supernatural beings lend themselves to vivid images and the graveyard environment is well imagined and consistent. Fans of Manga will find the supernatural beings owe something to this style, especially the Indigo Man, and the different graphic styles add another dimension to the story. Sometimes the text on dark backgrounds and near the book's gutter is hard to read but it is mostly clear and easy to follow. Fans of Neil Gaiman's work will not be disappointed and this graphic adaptation will make the story accessible to a wide audience.
Sue Speck

The sequin star by Belinda Murrell

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Random House Australia, 2014. ISBN 9780857982056.
(Age: 12+) Recommended. Belinda Murrell is an accomplished Australian writer of teen fiction and the Lulu Bell series for younger readers. The Sequin Star is one of several stories that she has written that involve a journey back in time for the young heroine.
In The Sequin Star Claire, while clasping her grandmother's small brooch, is catapulted back to 1932. Stranded in a place and time that is unfamiliar to her, Claire takes on a job with the Sterling Brothers Circus and befriends young performers Rosina and Jem. Even though she is desperate to find a way to return to her own time, Claire is fascinated by the people she meets and thoroughly enjoys being part of the circus family. As it becomes obvious that a young man, Kit Hunter, is besotted with Rosina, Claire watches on with apprehension. After all, Kit Hunter is destined to become her grandfather and she worries that Rosina may become more than a friend to Kit.
Kit is the son of a very wealthy businessman in Sydney and young Rosina is quite flattered by the attention. Kit invites the trio to the opening of the newly constructed Sydney Harbour bridge and then later to a ball at his family home. When Kit disappears in mysterious circumstances and a ransom note is discovered, Claire, Rosina and Jem become desperately worried and frantically try to find him.
Time travel always makes for a fascinating storyline and when Belinda skillfully adds the dimension of actual historical events, she delivers a truly wonderful story. Her depiction of Australia during the Great Depression years is illuminating as she portrays the extent of poverty experienced by many families. The young reader, as well as Claire, also learns of Australia's brush with communism and the formation of the New Guard by Colonel Eric Campbell. This is a great read for those young girls who still want to believe in magic!
Lyn Poole

Billy is a dragon series by Nick Falk

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Ill. by Tony Flowers. Random House Australia Children's, 2014.
Billy is a Dragon: Shadow Shifter. ISBN: ISBN 9780857983152.
Billy is a Dragon: Eaten Alive. ISBN: 9780857983176.
Billy is back with two more exciting adventures for newly independent readers. When Billy was bitten by a lizard at his local petshop something totally weird happened. Billy became a were-dragon! At times just a normal boy and at other times - look out! A real fire breathing dragon able to take on all comers.
Billy's third adventure, Shape Shifter, sees his annoying teenage sister kidnapped by werewolves. Their leader's evil plan is to seize Billy's powers but with the help of his assorted, somewhat odd, were-friends - Benny the were-hamster, a couple of were-chickens - and of course, his best friend, Jeannie - Billy is ready to rescue Becky. He knows he can trounce that arch-enemy, Scratchhook, the Shadow Shifter and makes no apologies for singed fur.
In the fourth exciting story, Uncle Chunk comes to visit- which is really strange because Billy's family has not seen him for years. So why is he suddenly reappearing and why is that he seems to know all about Billy's secret? To add to all this, the nasty Miss Hicks (yet another werewolf) is back at school, Scratchhook is still pursuing Billy and it's getting more and more difficult to know exactly who to trust. Billy discovers that his family are just as much his real support as his were-friends and when Dad refuses to be bullied by Uncle Chunk any longer and Billy's dragonish secret is revealed to his parents, he knows that he can do anything.
There is certainly a very obvious talking point in these about not judging by looks alone, as well as that our parents love us even if we are were-dragons, which teachers could explore after a read-aloud.
Lots of illustrations and funky fonts especially for onomatopoeia, good sized text and plenty of action, these are two more great stories for both boys and girls from about 6 and up to add to your shelves.
Visit the author and illustrator webpages and read excerpts here at Random House.
Sue Warren

Every word by Ellie Marney

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Allen & Unwin, 2014. ISBN 9781743316511.
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Crime, Thriller, Melbourne, London, Sherlock Holmes. When Rachel Watts hears her boyfriend, Mycroft has boarded a plane for London, accompanying the forensic investigator, Dr Walsh, she is devastated. She knows that he has been distracted by the news of a recent carjacking in London, where the conservator at the Bodlean Library in Oxford has been killed, but she has no idea how much this has absorbed him until Angela tells her he has gone. She is gutted. If he had told her they were over as a couple, she could have accepted this and then helped him through the investigation, but just to jet off leaves her distraught. She decides to go with Alicia to London and without much ado, books a ticket, grabs her backpack and goes. She has never been on a plane before and no one knows she it coming to London, let alone leaving Melbourne.
As with the first in this series, Every breath, the pace is non stop, the characters credible and well formed, the plot sparkling and the story inventive. That it gives a nod to the Sherlock Holmes mysteries gives another level of entertainment in this wholly satisfying mystery.
But in London, a copy of the First Folio of Shakespeare's plays has been stolen and the murder of the conservator is part of the plot, so the brains of Mycroft and Watts are stretched as they help the investigative team and Dr Walsh, and with the added level of the death seven years before of Mycroft's parents in a similar way, the thriller moves along very quickly. Being kidnapped by the Colonel means torture to get to the bottom of the hereabouts of the Folio, but the plucky duo survive all means of extracting information, eventually turning the tables on their kidnappers with deadly results.
This is a heart stopping read, and entwined with unrequited love, a sexual longing which is never quite realised, the book will be a hit.
Fran Knight

Are you seeing me? by Darren Groth

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Woolshed Press, 2014. ISBN 978857984739
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Disability. Cancer. Twins. Journeys. Canada. Using their inheritance for a trip to Vancouver with her twin brother, Justine opens her father's diary to read on the plane. Her brother is in his seat on the other side of the aisle, and as she reads, we hear of the moments that built up in their parent's lives, causing her mother to leave when they were five.
From the opening pages we see for ourselves the strain of caring for Perry, his inability to get past the security gates, his carrying a seismic monitor everywhere, his awkwardness with people. Justine has a patter which she trots out to new people about Perry, and even Perry reprises it on occasion to explain his behaviour.
On their trip, the big questions eat away at them both. Their father had investigated sheltered accommodation for Perry before he died, and Perry feels that he must be able to give Justine her own life, and wants her to tell him she will cope without him. Justine on the other hand thinks Perry wants to be independent, but neither can be truly honest about how they feel.
Perry's literal view of life is sometimes very funny, often poignant, and sometimes hits a cord with people he is dealing with.
I reread the sequences at the security gates at the airport and the boat trip on the lake to further understand Perry and his view of the world. He eventually plans to disappear for a while, which from his perspective, will scare Justine for a while, but make her realise that she can live without him and that he can cope on his own.
When they meet their mother in Seattle, tension builds. An earthquake lands Justine in hospital, and events move along quickly as Perry's ability to cope with this situation saves her life.
I loved this tale of the journey taken by these two marvellous characters. Perry is never given a label, he is as he is, and his part of the story is a knockout. The book is divided into several sections, three from Perry's point of view, three from Justine's and all interspersed with dad's diary. Justine's boyfriend, Marc, is concerned about their trip and causes Justine's anger to boil over, while her mother too gives an edge to Justine's feelings. Through it all is the love shared by the twins, forced to look out for each other by their mother's desertion and later, their father's death.
This would be a great class set for middle secondary kids. Extensive teacher notes can be found at the publisher's website.
Fran Knight

Plenty by Ananda Braxton-Smith

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Black Dog Books, 2014. ISBN 9781742032429.
(Age: 8-12) Recommended. Journeys. Moving house. Refugees. When ten year old Maddy is told by her parents that they are moving to the small country town called Plenty because her grandmother is becoming less able to cope by herself, she is furious. Her best friend, Sophie-Rose and she have always done everything together, even sharing their birthdays every year in their back yard, sleeping in a tent and watching the stars.
Maddy knows stories about the stars, the Greek names for some of the constellations and Aboriginal stories about the movement of the stars.
But leaving Melbourne is not what she expected, and her behaviour over the next little while reflects that. But as she comes to know her grandmother better, and goes out into the scrub with her looking at the native orchids which grandma and her friends propagate and plant, she develops more understanding about her parents' decision. At school she meets Grace a refugee from Sudan, learning her story of moving. And she hears her grandmother's story, of being forced out of their home in Cyprus, of moving to Australia, and comes to realise that her mother's odd behaviour has been shaped by her own trauma at being forced to move...
This is a many-layered story of refugees, of finding a place to call home, a place of safety. Through the stories Maddy hears, she is better able to accept her change and dislocation, as well as learn more about her own family.
Fran Knight

Warrior heroes: The viking's revenge by Benjamin Hulme-Cross

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Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN 9781472904492.
Recommended.(Age 10+ for good readers; or 13+ for those who struggle to read. Will be enjoyed by male readers, does not patronise young readers.) Vikings. Quest fiction. Adventure. Historical fiction. Time travel.
This is the first book I have read in the Warrior heroes series, and I can see that they will be immediately enjoyed by male readers (as an easy read) and could easily be promoted to young male readers who would normally avoid reading or who struggle with reading. The two main characters are time travellers who are tasked with the restoration of problems of long-dead warriors from various cultural backgrounds by the ghost of their great-grandfather. The haunting of the Warrior Museum by these trapped ghost warriors creates the impetus for the time travel adventures. Fortunately one of the brothers was an avid keeper of information on the warriors which aids them in their own survival as they travel to lands far removed from their own modern existence. His brother is more prone to action first and thinking later, a trait which gets them both into trouble.
This book is set during the time of the Vikings and involves the restoration of a mighty fighting sword lost by the Viking ghost warrior. The author throws the reader immediately into the action after the brief introduction. The two young adventurers end up captured and then in conflict, rewriting history and rescuing a community with sword, axe and bow and arrow fights. The fights are integral to an understanding of the Viking culture as well as being appealing to a masculine readership! Also valuable to the reader are the notes, from the younger of the time travellers that were taken during his discussions with his great-grandfather and his visits to the Warrior Museum. This information about the Vikings is integral to understanding the background to the warriors and their life and adds a great non-fiction interlude to the drama of the quest.
Carolyn Hull

Construction by Sally Sutton

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Ill. by Brian Lovelock. Walker Books Australia, 2014. ISBN 9781922077301
Young readers will love this onomatopoeic picture book that takes them on a journey filled with construction as a library is being built. From the award-winning duo Sally Sutton and Brian Lovelock, this book is filled with bold visuals and rhyming text. If children love anything to do with machinery and tools, then they are sure to be interested in this book. The book ends with facts about construction machinery and tools to introduce readers to non-fiction features of texts. A great book to read aloud; the sound words will entice young readers to join in.
Stephanie Bell

Oi frog! by Kes Gray

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Ill. by Jim Field. Hachette, 2014. ISBN 9781444910865.
(Age: 4+) Recommended. Picture book. Rhyming words. Animals. Idioms. 'The cat sat on the mat' is a very familiar refrain, and in this book, Kes Gray takes that wellknown phrase a little further, applying a rhyming word to a multitude of animals, in response to a frog not wanting to sit on a log because it is splintery. The frog challenges the cat about each animal including lions, goats, weasels, moles and gorillas. Each line is hilariously reflected in the wittily detailed illustrations by Jim Field. Watch out for the gloriously unhappy gorilla on a pillar, or the wonderful gathering of foxes sitting on boxes, and the large family of gophers sitting on a sofa, while the stork on a fork, the understandably unsafe looking seal on a wheel and the full mouthed ape sitting on grapes all add to the humour of the story.
The endpapers add more fun as Field has given the reader an array of zany frogs to look at.
A fun way to look at rhyming words and add to the presence of poetry in the home or classroom, as well as just a very funny book to share and read out loud.
Fran Knight

Razorhurst by Justine Larbalestier

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Allen & Unwin, 2014. ISBN 9781743319437.
(Age: 14+) Highly recommended. Sydney 1932. Crime. Ghosts. Gangs. Prostitution. Hungry, homeless Kelpie believes the ghost, Tommy, when he tells her that there are apples inside the room in the old boarding house. But breaking in, she finds a recently killed man, Jimmy, blood everywhere, his girlfriend standing by his bed, a card in her hand. Hearing the police hammering at the door, the pair take off, ending up sheltering under the bed at Darcy's house, with Jimmy's ghost in tow.
So begins this amazing story, set in the Darlinghurst, Surry Hills area of Sydney in 1932, a time when gangs used razors to maim and kill their enemies. Chromo Dymphna was Jimmy's girlfriend and is known by one and all as the Angel of Death, as her boyfriends never seem to live long. But Jimmy's death is different. People think that the killer is after Dymphna too, and with Kelpie involved, the two must join forces to survive.
Dymphna wants to protect Kelpie, not realising that streetwise fifteen year old Kelpie is close to her own age, but seeing in her a child like her own dead sisters who she was unable to protect from their murderous father.
They are told to go and see Glory, Dymphna's boss, the woman who runs one of the two main gangs. Kelpie is torn, Jimmy's ghost keeps telling her not to go there but she feels drawn to Dymphna. Standing in front of Glory, Kelpie can see there are hidden meanings in the conversation between the two women, and wonders what will happen next. It is a day unlike any other.
The evocation of the streets of Sydney in 1932 is deft, with its prostitution, power lust and gangs all forming the background of this engrossing tale of one day in the lives of these two young women.
The characters of Dymphna and Kelpie are marvellously drawn, both doing whatever they can to survive in this seedy world. Layers of interest will spellbind the readers, keeping them wondering how the two will survive, but also how the gangs will work out their differences, how the ghosts will impact on the women's lives, how the young Kelpie will avoid the profession which has entrapped Dymphna.
Based on meticulous research of this crime ridden time in Sydney's history, Larbalestier has sprinkled her writing with idiomatic terms from the era, giving the reader cause to stop and reflect on language and its meanings.
The crime scenes are bloody and indiscriminate, the chase scenes breathless, the tension heart stopping. I enjoyed every word.
Fran Knight

My dog doesn't like me by Elizabeth Fensham

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University of Queensland Press, 2014. ISBN 9780702250170.
(Ages: 8+) Recommended. Dogs. Pets. Responsibility. Eric's dog does not like him, and he wants to do something about it. He feels rejected by the pet given to him by his family when he was eight, and since then the dog, Ugly, loves his Mum and Dad, and his grandfather even his sister, Gretchen. But not Eric, and as the tale unfolds, it becomes obvious why the dog does not like him. Many people give advice on how he should be treating the dog, but he pays little attention, preferring to blame the others in his family for his problem.
This is a wry tale, watching Eric make many attempts at getting Ugly to like him, from changing his name, to drawing up a questionnaire at school, to gathering other people's opinions of the problem, while all through the solution to the readers is obvious.
Eric's grandfather talks to Eric one day about the possibility of giving Ugly to a family which can really look after him, and this spurs Eric into action. His grandfather calls in a friend who trains dogs and the lessons she gives Eric change Eric and Ugly for the better, all the while, Eric realising that he is the problem not the dog.
For younger readers, the lessons about dog training spill over into Eric's life as he takes on more responsibility in the house where everyone is busy.
Fran Knight

Outside by Libby Hathorn

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Ill. by Ritva Voutila. Little Hare, 2014. ISBN 9781921894688.
(Age: 3 to adult) Recommended. Picture book. Gardens. Exploration. Imagination.
Moving from couplets to stanzas, using half rhymes and full rhyming words, Hathorn gives the reader, child and adult alike a series of entrancing words, designed to beguile the reader into the summer scenes in a garden where two children play. The beckoning refrain,
'under fluttery leaves
in the magical breeze
in the summery sun
outside'
appears on most pages, giving a compact image to the reader as they read. The words beckon the reader and the children, as we see them experiencing different aspects of the garden: the cat on the stairs, the chime bells up high, the tickly green grass, with descriptive phrases added to the refrain. They explore and wonder at the magical experiences in the garden.
Eventually the smell of dinner lures them inside, and the garden is there for tomorrow.
If the words dazzle and beguile, the digitally produced illustrations mesmerize, filling each page with colour, the eyes taking in every detail.
Reminiscent of the scrap book days of yore, where children collected sheets of cut outs and stuck them into a book, the doll-like features of the children and the mother peer out. They are surrounded by a myriad of detail, some looking like wallpaper some like rug designs, adding to the feeling of nostalgia.
Children will pore over the pages, reading the words aloud, gaining an impression of the world outside where no electronic device can be seen. For classes, this book is a fascinating introduction to the ideas of a garden or outside space.
Fran Knight

Warrior heroes: The knight's enemies by Benjamin Hulme-Cross

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Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN 9781472904393
Recommended. (Age: 9+ readers, or as a book suited for struggling readers 13+). Medieval times. Adventure. Quest adventure. The main characters are not identified as being of any age, but one would assume they are young teens based on the skills in archery that they display, but they are always referred to as 'boys'.
In this series of books two boys, Arthur and Finn, are given the opportunity to release haunted warriors from the torment that they faced in their life, at the instruction of the boys' own great-grandfather, who is also a ghost! This essential information is given in a brief introduction to the rest of the narrative.
In The knight's enemies, Arthur and Finn are involved in changing the course of history in medieval times. The quest they are sent on involves rescuing the daughter of the Knight Warrior. He also appears in the story before his untimely passing and we read of Arthur and Finn's bravery as they are involved in fighting off the enemy attack on the castle and then thwarting the attempts of the unlikeable, traitorous young Knight who is ready to 'steal' the Knight Warrior's daughter and has plotted against the Warrior Knight.
This is an exciting and action-filled story suited to boys who enjoy armed conflict adventure stories. Older readers who struggle with reading could also enjoy this series because it is not complex, but is not unlike a John Flanagan quest adventure like The ranger's apprentice and Brotherband series, but much shorter and simpler. Included in the book is some background information (as notes taken by Finn from the Hall of Heroes Museum).
Carolyn Hull

Sylvia and Bird by Catherine Rayner

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Little Tiger Press, 2009 ISBN 9781845068578
(Age: 4-6) Recommended. Picture book. Friendship. The shimmer-shiny dragon called Sylvia is all alone. She cannot find any other dragons to be her friend. But one day, feeling very lonely she sees a bird on the branch beneath her. Bird was building a nest, so Sylvia helped. They became friends and spent all of their time together, doing things that friends do. But when Bird went away to join his other friends, the birds, for a chat, Sylvia was left all alone again. She thought to herself that perhaps there were dragons on the moon, so decided to fly there. Bird knew that Sylvia was unhappy so went with her on her flight to the moon, but it soon became obvious that Bird could not cope with the cold and height of their travel, so she plummeted back to earth, caught just in time by Sylvia.
And so they stayed on the ground, content with each other, friends for all their days.
This charming story, superbly illustrated by Rayner, with soft swathes of watercolour across the pages, will delight younger readers, and teachers will be able to use the book to discuss what being a friend means with the class.
Fran Knight

Apple and rain by Sarah Crossan

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Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN 9781408857717.
Recommended for readers 12+. Much was expected from this fresh and innovative novel. I felt a strong sense of enthusiasm to read this book and to be introduced to Crossan's writing whom I wasn't familiar with. When I came to the end of the story, my initial reaction was a feeling of relief as I had quickly grown tired of the storyline. Although once I thought more about the story, I realised that I expected too much from the young year eight old girl. Apple and rain does have the potential to grow into a well-liked coming of age story that could sit upon every thirteen year old's bookshelf.
The story is narrated by almost-teen Apple, whose first name is too hard to pronounce, and is unabashedly naive. Her tale begins when she recounts a night like no other on Christmas Eve when her mother leaves her safe haven and never returns. Despite the fact she absolutely hates the season, Apple foolishly hopes that her mother will one day return. Of course, it never happens so Apple is left celebrating the season with her Nana, father and her much hated stepmother.
Under the molly coddling and tough love of her Nana, Apple leads a sheltered life. So when she finally meets her mother after eleven years, she can't believe her luck. Despite her Nana's scepticism about her mum, Apple wants to spend as much time with her as possible and soon grows accustomed to her mother's wild lifestyle. When life at home with her Nana begins to fall apart, Apple decides to live with her mum and her not so perfect home. But when Apple finally recognises that her life isn't all that it seems to be and is slowly dwindling, it is only Apple's choice if she wants to fix it or not.
This sad yet hopeful story is one for the ages and is truly inspiring for young pre-teens who may be stuck in life. Apple is a young girl whom girls her age can relate to as she is willing to do whatever it takes to keep her mother happy. Apple goes from a life of being closely monitored by her grandmother to becoming an adult of the house and all the responsibilities it embraces. This is a tale that I would most definitely recommend to readers aged 12+ as it embraces unconditional love and the strength of a young girl willing to do whatever it takes to keep her family happy. A book similar to this is The first third by Will Kostakis and I recommend this book to any avid reader who wants more from this style of books.
Samantha May (Student)