Reviews

Prince of shadows : a novel of Romeo and Juliet by Rachel Caine

cover image

Penguin, 2014. ISBN 9781743482988.
(Age: 14+) Recommended. Rachel Caine, author of the bestselling Morganville Vampires series brings her formidable creative talent in this retelling of Romeo and Juliet basing it on characters and events surrounding the ill-fated pair. Benvolio Montague, Romeo's cousin, is the Prince of Shadows, a thief who risks everything when he decides to steal from the House of Capulet. There he meets the calm and beautiful Rosaline, who is destined for the convent. From then on events overtake him as the House of Montague and the House of Capulet continue their feud.
Caine's authentic blend of the familiar drama with the introduction of other characters and events flesh out the story for the reader. This combination gives the reader an insight into the characters and motivations of the people in Shakespeare's play and provide a wonderful story for the reader.
Benvolio is an intriguing main character who is known as the greatest thief in Verona, stealing from the rich. He knows that he might die on the streets fighting for his house, but knows too that is what happens in the world he lives in. The women in the story are depicted as strong characters, although they too are bound by the strictures of their society. Rosaline is a wonderful young woman, tranquil and sensible, and the love between her and Benvolio will thrill the reader. There are still the familiar characters from the play. Tybalt doesn't improve in this retelling and Mercutio is given a secret love that could prove disastrous in the eyes of society.
Caine has created a rich backdrop to the story of Romeo and Juliet that is sure to please those who are familiar with the play and delight any reader who is not.
Pat Pledger

Jasper Zammit Soccer Legend by Deborah Abela and Johnny Warren

cover image

Random House, 2014. ISBN 9780857983206.
With a partnership between Deborah Abela who brings her fabulous storytelling skills and former Socceroo captain Johnny Warren who brings his in-depth knowledge of soccer, readers are treated to a series of stories about kids who love their soccer and their team the Rovers but each has obstacles to overcome and issues to deal with.
In The Game of Life Jasper Zammit is a soccer legend - in his own head. Whole stadiums cheer as he bends balls and scores magic goals. When Lil joins the Rovers Under-11s, Jasper finds someone as obsessed with soccer as he is. But Lil's dad is the reason Jasper's dad lost his job. Can they be friends?
The focus of The Striker is Aamir who can't speak English, but who is a brilliant soccer player for the Rovers. The trouble is, Eastville Kings star player Badger can't resist badgering his opponent to put them off their game. Now his target is Aamir. Who will be sent off the field with a red card?
The third book in the collection is The Finals. In this, the Rovers get a new coach just before the finals. But winning is all he cares about, and playing soccer isn't as fun anymore. Lil's big brother devises a plan to get the Rovers back on track. Can he save them? Time is running out and he's their only hope.
Interspersed throughout the chapters, are anecdotes and advice from Johnny Warren that will help the soccer reader improve their game. There is also a glossary at the end of the first book which not only explains soccer terms but also tips on how to perfect them.
Soccer fans, both boys and girls, will be wanting to read this as their dreams, like Jasper's, about being an Australian soccer superstar are fuelled by the World Cup inspiring them to work just the little bit harder.
For those wanting to read the novel aloud as the World Cup progresses and support it with activities, here are some links which may be useful:
World Cup for Kids Activity Village
World Cup Teaching Ideas
Information Collection
Flags and Activities
World Cup for Kids on Pinterest
Barbara Braxton

Maxx Rumble Soccer Knockout by Michael Wagner

cover image

Black Dog Books, 2014. ISBN 9781922244802.
Highly recommended for boys aged 7+. Maxx Rumble Soccer Knockout is a great story for independent readers moving into their first novels. The soccer theme and Terry Denton illustrations will keep them engaged, the descriptions and events are funny and the text is large and easy to read. The chapters are short, quick moving and full of action.
The main character, Maxx, and his brother Rexx are involved in a soccer competition. Their team, the Saints, is up against the Crawlies and with names like Einstein, Freud and Newton you know the Crawlies are smart. Are the Saints smart enough to beat them? When Rexx gets a ball in the face and a pelican seems to be the Crawlies goal keeper, all seems lost! Maxx tries an inspirational speech but maybe Rexx's idea will help them win.
Kylie Kempster

Edge of the world by Ian Trevaskis

cover image

Ill. by Wayne Harris. Walker Books, 2012. ISBN 9781921150210.
(Age: 7+) Recommended. Life and loss. Death. Memory. Remembrance. Sea. In the winter when snow and ice pile up around the harbour, and the men cannot go out fishing, most mend their nets, and talk of narrow escapes, all except Toby McPhee who is alone with his memories and cannot smile. Even when the ice melts and the men go out on their boats once again, still nobody smiles, thinking of what might happen before they return. The women sit in groups knitting, the children go to school unsmiling, at the village at the edge of the world.
Toby McPhee weighs anchor and goes out as well, but pulling in his nets, he captures colour. The first colour he brings home is giallo (yellow) and he brings the sun's golden rays back to the forbidding town, then he brings gremisi (crimson) and this colour too returns to the village. Each time he goes out, he pulls in another pot of colour, until he has all the colours he needs to paint a memorial to his lost family and so brings colour back to the town at the edge of the world. Once his memorial is complete he can at last smile. This is a sad tale of grief and loss, made real for Toby McPhee, but always in the hearts of the villagers, knowing their menfolk are out on the cold grey seas for days on end. The incredible illustrations reflect the feeling of time standing still until the men return, of a stillness amongst the villagers, knowing that what happened to families in the past may happen to their loved ones. I felt like I was holding my breath looking at the illustrations, waiting for something to happen to the village men out on the seas, so real is their representation.
Children will be drawn into the tale of Toby McPhee and the village, talking about what may have happened to his family, of what the men do for a living, of how cold it is. They will be drawn in by the fabulous use of words describing the village's position the edge of the world, and wonder at the illustrations so deftly making the words real.
Fran Knight

Elegy by Amanda Hocking

cover image

Tor, 2013. ISBN: 9781447205753.
Elegy by Amanda Hocking is the latest and most likely the last instalment in the Watersong series. The novel is written with a certain poise and delicacy that makes the characters come to life in the readers mind, making the reader become involved and apart of the chaotic lives of Gemma, Harper and their friends. With chapters going between differing character's points of view, the reader gains a great spread of understanding about the happenings in Elegy and feels involved in plans and the share of information. Alleviating the mermaid-like images and sweet, gentle notions of the mythical and beautiful creature the Siren, Hocking puts in place the characteristics of underlying power and drive. Laced with magical abilities and talents, the reader becomes intrigued at every sign of a Siren transformation at the already tense kinship between Gemma and Penn and the actions of ravenous and power hungry Liv, a newly turned siren. With the essential themes of mystery, action and romance, it's hard not to be swept away by the classically written and emotional relationships found between both Gemma and Alex and Harper and Daniel. Even eccentric Marcy finds the opportunity for some companionship while they all try to translate and ancient scroll that may hold the secret to getting rid of domineering Penn, wild Liv and inert Thea, breaking the curse on Gemma once and for all.
With the beauty and suspense expressed throughout this novel, the reader will have no choice but to remain entranced and wanting more.
Sarah Filkin

Flower Power by Yvette Poshoglian

cover image

Ella and Olivia series. Scholastic Australia, 2014. ISBN 9781743620533.
Recommended for 5-6 year old girls. Ella and Olivia are sisters and best friends. Ella is seven years old and Olivia is five-and-a-half years old, they live with their mum, dad, brother Max and puppy Bob. At school, both girls enjoy gardening lessons and planting in the vegetable beds. Ella and her family decide to build a garden bed in the backyard. Olivia wants to grow flowers but Ella only wants to plant vegetables. Ella's bossiness and Olivia's jealousy result in the garden not being looked after and Olivia learns about the consequences of not watering the garden. Responsibility, sharing and caring are themes in this junior novel.
This popular series by Yvette Poshoglian is written for young girls who are beginning to read chapter books. They are written in a simple, engaging way with relatable characters. The extremely large font and line drawings add to the fun of the story.
Rhyllis Bignell

An interview with Ian Trevaskis by Fran Knight

cover image

The Elevator Pitch: Ian Trevaskis is a children's author living in rural Victoria with some twenty books to his name, ranging from books for the very young to young adult adventure stories.
It intrigues me that many picture book authors and illustrators have a background in teaching, and Ian Trevaskis is no exception. For many years a primary teacher, he was put in charge of the library and began to see the paucity of content in books he was reading to the kids or putting on the shelves, and said, 'I can do better!'
When helping organise a writer's festival in the Albury Wodonga region of Victoria, he had Michael Dugan stay and in talking to him, was able to hone some of his skills in the writing of a story. Dugan's help was fortuitous and Ian was able to send off manuscripts to publishers, to test the water. And one publisher liked what was sent.
In 1990, Quincy was published by Scholastic, and since then he has put a number of picture books and several young adult novels into the mix. But as all children's authors know, publishing does not pay the rent, so teaching has continued, now as a relief teacher, with articles in many magazines, including those that deal with walking and cycling, along with articles in newspapers in Victoria and the ACT. Combined with the publication of short stories, anyone can see he is a very busy man.
A recipient of the May Gibbs Fellowship in South Australia, means living for a month in an apartment in Norwood writing unencumbered. Ian has spent some time visiting schools or talking to reviewers like Pat Pledger and me for Readplus.
I asked Ian about one of his books, Edge of the World, published in 2012 by Walker Books Australia, a book I love. The big ideas behind this book, of loss and grieving seems an amazing thing to have in a picture book, and he said that it was meant for older readers, something not made clear by book sellers. The idea for this book came when some friends visited and they talked about 'painting the town red'. He mused on this idiom for a while, drawing it out, adding the 'what if' to the musing, until he was able to write something down. Unlike many stories, this came quite quickly and he was able to write much of it over the following week. It is a spectacular book, full of layers of meaning and language that hits the heart, sumptuously illustrated and presented.
Pat Pledger asked him about his series of books, Hopscotch, which she read and reviewed several years ago. The series was envisaged as a trilogy with possibly more to be written, but after two successful books, Medusa Stone (2009) and Golden Scarab (2010), the publishers declined the third. Each is an adventure based on the myths of Greece and Egypt, set in those ancient realms. Ian planned to set the third in Rome and did the research for it. It would be wonderful to see it in print.
Asked about his work while at Norwood for the residency, Ian explained that he is writing a book set in the year of the Melbourne Olympics, 1956. With a background of sailing and mixed with a story of World War One, the book is coming along well.
Research plays a large part of some of his work, but Quincy, his first published story came out of an incident with his young son going to school. He was frightened by a dog he needed to walk past, and Ian gave him alternatives, and thinking about this came up with Quincy, which won a CBCA Notable award in 1991. Similarly others of his stories have risen out of the ordinary while books like the Hopscotch pair required a great deal of research.
Ian's book, The Postman's Race was awarded a Notable Book in the CBCA awards in 1992. He was awarded a Varuna Fellowship in 2006, and this year has the May Gibbs Fellowship in South Australia.
His website outlines his other books and gives information about him and his writing.
June 2014.

Chasing Stars by Helen Douglas

cover image

Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN: 9781408828700.
(Age: 13+) Chasing Stars, the sequel to After Eden, follows the story of Eden Anfield and Ryan Westland - her time travelling boyfriend. Picking up from where its predecessor left off, Eden is running for her life. Travis, her almost step-uncle and time-travelling peace keeper, is intent on terminating her life to protect the secrecy of Ryan's mission, however Ryan arrives and the tables turn. By doing so Ryan chooses Eden over his friends, his family and ultimately his life as he knows it. But his decision to leave it all behind for a life in the past isn't solely his responsibility. Another time traveller, Lauren, a mission cleaner, arrives to tie up loose ends and repatriate Travis' body. Confronted by the cleaner Ryan and Eden must make the decision between life in the future or a quick death in the past. Upon their entrance to 2123 Ryan is apprehended for the crime of stealing a time ship to return to Eden - no easy feat. Eden is issued with a resettlement package while she awaits the outcome of the trial and she must do all she can to get by in the future and save Ryan from a life-sentence to hard labour on the moon.
Helen Douglas captivates her audience with Chasing Stars with excellent imagery and a balance of the world we know and world as it could be with technological innovations in four dimensional time travel and rising sea levels. A sci-fi romance designed for teenage girls, this novel is a fairly straightforward read which I would recommend to fans of romance aged thirteen and up.
Kayla Gaskell (age eighteen)

The Hug by David Grossman

cover image

Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014. ISBN 9780715645871
Recommended for independent readers aged 10+. At first glance of the images, I imagined this to be a story about the loss of a child or parent - the images seemed sad and separate. However, The Hug shows the perspective of being alone because you are the only one in the world like you! It is written as a conversation between a mother and a son as they walk together. The young boy's thoughts of being alone in the world develop into how wonderful it is to be one of a kind while being part of a whole - part of a family, part of the world.
While The Hug is a children's picture book, the theme is quite mature and would be a great discussion starter in the classroom or between parent and child. Children could look at what makes them individuals as well as how they belong because of similarities. This book would be a great lead in to many topics from Child Protection and the right to be safe to using Venn diagrams to compare peers.
Kylie Kempster

Game Changer by Paul McNamee

cover image

Text Publishing, 2013. ISBN: 9781922147387.
(Age: Secondary) Genre: Autobiography. Theme: Tennis; Dedication; Perseverance; Professional Sport. For a Tennis lover, or for someone interested in Sport Management as a profession, this book makes an interesting read. It is an autobiography, so you cannot avoid the sense of this as a chronological unfolding of events and personal history, rather than a great work of literature. Despite this, it does give insights into the focus required to 'make it' as a professional tennis player and the world of Professional Tennis as an Australian participant.
Paul McNamee gives glimpses of his family background and early years and more detail of his rise to Wimbledon Doubles champion. The detail of his transformation into a Sports Event Management specialist after his playing career was also fascinating. The book does reveal details of the progress of a life lived in pursuit of a dream, but it is not overly emotionally charged. McNamee seems to hint that for him the skill of professional sport is to acknowledge and celebrate wins, but to move on quickly after losses. I would imagine that this book would appeal to a more masculine readership, and for those who appreciate Tennis history.
Carolyn Hull

The ugg boot war by Kylie Fornasier

cover image

Ill. by Tom Jellett. Mates series. Omnibus, 2014. ISBN 9781862919990.
(Age: 6-9) Highly recommended. Humour, Ugg boots, Family.
Books in the Mates series never fail to please. They are all shorter novels with six short chapters, luminous illustrations and larger print for the newly arrived novel reader, with some of the possibly new words in a different font. All is engaging, interesting and enticing.
And ugg boots, what a gem of a story. Jake is so embarrassed by his father's determination to wear ugg boots whenever his feet are on the ground that he makes up his mind to rid the household of them. Then in six crisply told chapters we are taken in to Jake's attempts at doing just that. At first he hides them but to no avail, they are retrieved by the dog and then mum. Finally he puts them in the bin but is then so racked by guilt that he runs after the rubbish truck as it disappears around the next corner. All is not lost however and a neat resolution between father and son occurs.
A double page at the end gives a brief outline of the ugg boot history and for those who are unaware of this series, they are all listed at the end of the book.
An engaging plot, well written and joyously illustrated, this book will be rarely seen on the shelves. This is a series to watch out for, I love them all.
Fran Knight

Roses are Blue by Sally Murphy

cover image

Ill. by Gabriel Evans. Walker Books, 2014. ISBN 9781922244376.
Highly recommended for 7-10 years. Themes: family, change, accident, disability, resilience, friendship, care, compassion, empathy, hope, school.
I have not got used to my new mum.
Even though I love her
(I absolutely love her)

Sally Murphy's free verse novel is a poignant story of young Amber Rose and her new mum who has changed dramatically after an accident. The family has moved to a new house and new school and Aunty Fi now lives with them as Mum's carer. Each poem is told from Amber's point of view as she struggles with the changes at home, develops new friendships at school and expresses her feelings and emotions through painting. She misses her dancing, gardening, painting mother.
Each poem is carefully crafted, every word, line and verse carries the weight of Amber's feelings from highs to lows. With themes of resilience, acceptance, valuing family and friendship this novel is suitable for readers from 7 years of age. Gabriel Evans' line drawings add to the reader's understanding of Mum's disability and show Amber's journey.
Rhyllis Bignell

The Boy from Snowy River by Edwina Howard

cover image

Mates series. Omnibus Books, 2014. ISBN 9781862919976.
(Age: 9+) Highly recommended. Meet George Johnson of Mumblegum, a town in the middle of nowhere, Australia. He dreams of going to Big Spills Water World on the Gold Coast. This dream seems impossible until his gran shows him an up and coming event at the local festival - a horse race called The Stockman's Cup, being raced to remember The Man from Snowy River. Gran encourages George to enter with Bandicoot their pure mountain bred stockhorse. Is old Bandicoot a match for the other horses? Are George and Bandicoot brave enough to finish?
The Boy from Snowy River is a great Aussie story and it is descriptive and full of action. It is highly recommended for independent readers aged 9+ and is great for children moving into novels. The illustrators are bright and comical and the chapters move quickly. The descriptive language will keep the reader engaged and the twists in the story mean you never know what is going to happen next.
Kylie Kempster

Alien Escape by Geronimo Stilton

cover image

Spacemice bk 1. Scholastic, 2014. ISBN 9780545646505.
Recommended for 7-9 years of age. Geronimo Stiltonix's new frontier is space, he's a science fiction writer and captain of the spaceship Mouse Star 1 through the galaxy. Along for the ride are his friends and family Trap, Benjamin and his friend Bugsy Wugsy. His robot assistants add to the fun, the embarrassment of Assistatrix throwing him into the Wash-A-Mouse and antics on the flight deck. Unfortunately, his spacecraft is in urgent need of repair, the powerful batteries are about to explode and need an extremely rare element tetrastellium to power them. Alien encounters, Grandfather William's interference, a giant pink blob on the loose all make this another exciting adventure.
This popular series is a great for helping the young reader's confidence with all the expected font styles, sizes and colours, cheesy puns, colourful cartoon illustrations, maps, diagrams and character bios.
Rhyllis Bignell

Trucks by Anne Rockwell

cover image

Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN 9780802736420.
(Age: 5+) Trucks is a great picture book for any young boy (or girl) who likes trucks. The text is simple and descriptive and the pictures are colourful and fun. It is a board book which makes it great for little hands and means it should survive any rough play.
A great book for parents to read with their children aged 1 year + and for more independent readers aged 6+. Children can learn what different trucks do and how they help us. The detailed pictures will be great for talking to children about objects in their world.
Kylie Kempster