Reviews

Bloomsbury Discovery series

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Space ill. by Andy Rowland. ISBN 9781408194621.
My body ill. by Joelle Dreidemy. ISBN 9781408194638.
(Age: 5+) Recommended, Space, Body, Flap book, Non Fiction. Two new books from Bloomsbury in the Discovery series will find a ready audience amongst younger children, be they in a kindergarten, junior primary school or at home. Lift the flap books are so inviting that readers will not be able to keep their hands of these books. Just as well they are sturdily made, with a strong hardcover and thick, almost cardboard pages, and even the flaps have been given an inner strength to make the book last much longer than many books of this ilk.
Inside information is presented in small bites while time lines, chronologies and lists abound, to invite and entreat the reader. At the end of each book is a page of facts and a glossary. An easily read contents page at the start directs readers to a chapter which they may be searching for.
All in all these are a sound pair of books about subjects children are interested in and give a basic knowledge which will whet their appetites.
Space begins with a time line, starting at 14 billion years ago and winding through all the significant space events until now. This is followed by 'How space works' with a flow chart giving the life of a star, then the Solar System is outlined in spectacular colour while the following double page on Our Home Planet. Next comes 'Exploring Space 'with a range of space vehicles, and a fascinating double page on Living in space. A last double page showing the night sky for norther hemisphere livers completes this valuable book.
My Body begins with a time line starting at 4.5 billion years ago and going through all the sequences until man first walked on the earth about 3 million years ago, to now. Over the page is an outline of a boy showing all the body parts and lift up flaps about each section, then over the page presents information about bones, joints and muscles, followed by the digestive system, the senses, the brain and lastly breathing. Again a valuable book which could be well used in the classroom or at home, teaching young children the fundamentals of our body and how it works.
Fran Knight

Little Meerkat by Aleesah Darlison

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Ill. by Shannon Melville. Wombat Books, 2014. ISBN 9781921632822.
(Age: Pre-school - 6) Recommended. Little Meerkat did not like cuddles. In fact he thought that he was a heroic hunter and should be out hunting with the older animals, slinking through the grass and evading capture. Of course he is safe when his large extended family is there to protect him when he makes his dangerous and adventurous forays outside the burrow.
Darlison has chosen the meerkat, such a cute animal that people are fascinated with, to show the reader the dangers of being too adventurous. Young readers will be able to identify with Little Meerkat as he pursues his craving for independence, and will be able to come up with occasions in their own lives when they are too young or inexperienced to be able to do what their older siblings or the adults in their lives can do.
Shannon Melville's illustrations are wonderful, and really extend the appeal of the picture book. The pictures of the wide-eyed, cute meerkats, the little puffs of dust as the meerkats race to rescue Little Meerkat, and the enormous feathers of the eagle as it tries to pounce on Little Meerkat are very attractive and are sure to gain the attention of the reader.
This is a humorous story that parents and teachers could use to show that some things can be dangerous. Most of all it is a fun story to read.
Pat Pledger

The Race by Susannah McFarlane

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Ill. by Dyani Stagg. E J Spy School series. Scholastic Australia, 2014. ISBN 9781921931536.
(Age: 5-7) The EJ 12 series has been popular with girls seeking a heroine in the centre of the action, especially with her spy gadgets and international adventures. The new series E J Spy School is an off shoot of this series, much like the Zac Power: Spy Camp has the Zac Power: Test Drive series to complement it.
Designed to appeal to the 5-7 year olds E J Spy school introduces a young Emma Jacks during her training days. As EJ10 she is learning to be a spy, enjoying the thrill of arriving at SHINE, the spy agency, via the last cubicle in the girl's toilet and bursting to share with her friends but keeping her activities secret.
The Race has EJ proving her fitness and bravery as she completes the obstacle training course in a race against the clock. We share her anxiety on the rope bridge and her confidence on the plank as she recognises she has completed the same activity at gym. Her dilemma as time runs short is whether she can rescue a duckling and still finish the course in the allotted time.
The easy to read text interspersed with drawings which focus generally on showing EJ's emotions or effort, make the book another in the growing list of chapter books suitable for young independent readers.
Sue Keane

Cress by Marissa Meyer

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Lunar chronicles, Bk 3. Penguin, 2014. ISBN 9780141340159.
(Age 14+) Highly recommended. Science fiction. Fairy tales retold. Survival. Imagine that Rapunzel is trapped in a satellite, with no way out, and no way to cut her long hair. That is what has happened to Cress, who has been imprisoned on a satellite since she was a child, spying for the Lunar Queen, Levana. She has exceptional skills as a hacker and has been told to find Cinder and Captain Thorne, who are accompanied by Scarlet and Wolf. In a daring bid to rescue Cress, Cinder and her crew's plans go astray and the group is separated.
The Lunar Chronicles, first Cinder, then Scarlet and now Cress, are a highly imaginative and compelling set of books that combine all the ingredients to make readers want to finish them in a hurry. Cress is no exception: it has a heroine that the reader will want to embrace as she awkwardly tries to work out the real world after her incarceration and comes to grips with her infatuation with the handsome and cunning Thorne. The action is nonstop as Cinder and her company attempt to rescue Cress and evade the lunar queen, who will stop at nothing to gain control of Earth through her machinations to marry Emperor Kai.
Humorous and witty dialogue lifts the tension and believable characters that involve the reader make this a most enjoyable read. Meyer has brought together many of the strands of the series as she describes how Kai is being manipulated, the terrible use of technology on children and the horror of what it is like to live under the rule of Queen Levana.
This is one of the best series that I have read and it comes highly recommended for its originality, strong female characters who are happy to play with technology and wonderful world building. I can't wait for the next in the series.
Pat Pledger

Monkey and Me by David Gilman

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Puffin, 2014. ISBN 9780143308232.
(Age: All) Thoroughly recommended. This wonderful, heart-warming story of a young boy who befriends a very nervous, bewildered, but highly intelligent chimpanzee, is one of the most enjoyable children's books I have read. Patient leukaemia suffer, philosophical nine-year-old Beanie, is quite desperate to 'prove' himself, to be accepted as a full member into his older brother's gang.
Desperate to save the Sweet Dreams Sweet Factory (that makes his favourite sweets) from demolition, he dangles a banner from a fourth floor fire escape and narrowly escapes falling as the structure pulls away from the wall. Gifted with a wacky sense of humour, Beanie's good-natured dad, rescues the boy, without reproof.
Exploring the haunted house Black Gate with the gang, Beanie becomes lost and after being terrified out of his wits, encounters the hungry chimpanzee who he names Malcolm, in the overgrown greenhouse. Beanie quickly wins the chimp's trust, bringing him food and reading to him. He realises, to his astonishment, that Malcolm can 'sign' certain messages. Not understanding sign language, the lad has to engage (with a dubious promise of full gang membership) the help of deaf girl Tracy.
She is able to interpret the chimpanzee's signing and Beanie is overwhelmed when told Malcolm signs that he loves the boy.
However, baddies Potato Face and Comb Head are out to capture the chimp and Beanie must save his little friend, especially as the Police and RSPCA are also searching for the animal.
With his brother's help, Beanie brings Malcolm home overnight, with disastrous results. Ever resourceful, Beanie conceals the chimp in the Postie Bag on his father's bike. A crazy ride ensues until the pair hide out in a trucking yard and stow away clandestinely in a King of the Road cab, travelling some distance, completely unbeknown to the driver.
A Roadhouse CCTV is their undoing, the truck is halted and the weary pair removed from their hiding place. Beanie is relieved to learn that clever Malcolm is taking part in a Research Programme in Animal Communication and is in fact well looked after.
Written entirely in the first person, Monkey and Me is hilarious, thought-provoking, droll and I thoroughly recommend it for children of any age.
Joan Kerr-Smith

Behind Enemy Lines by Jennifer A. Nielsen

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Infinity Ring bk 6. Scholastic, 2013. ISBN 9780545387019.
The Infinity Ring series continues, with this 6th book, to encourage primary students to enjoy a variety of adventures and learn something about world history as they follow Dak, Sera and Riq through time. The mission of these Hystorians is to fix the errors in history which have allowed SQ to take over, leading to the cataclysm which is engulfing their world of the future.
The book opens with its usual bump as the three heroes land in Aberdeen, Scotland during World War 11 in the middle of a German bombing raid. Unfortunately their local contact and SQuare, the device which advises them, are victims of the bombs. Sera and Dak return to their own time, thanks to the Infinity Ring to pick up a new SQuare only to be almost captured by Tilda, an ambitious and ruthless leader of SQ. In their haste to escape Tilda unfortunately returns to 1943 with them.
Their mission to ensure the Allies win the war involves helping the British convince the Germans that they are to invade Greece rather than the heavily guarded Sicily in what was known as Operation Mincemeat. For the first time the trio split up. Dak heads to Berlin and finds work as a kitchen hand in the German headquarters. Sera lands in Spain in time to help convince local spies that the secret documents the dead Major Martin is carrying are the real deal. Riq stays in London as a contact but is soon captured by Tilda who is determined to own the Infinity Ring and ensure the only winners are the SQ.
Fortunately the mission is successful and Tilda's efforts are largely disrupted.
Whilst I learnt something about this little known segment of war history, though it was the basis of the movie The Man Who Never Was, I felt that there were elements throughout the story which had me questioning the characters, plot and ultimately the writer. Whilst that might be an adult's view point it is the first book in this series that has left me feeling disappointed and not looking forward to continuing the adventure.
Sue Keane

EJ Spy School - The Test by Susannah McFarlane

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EJ Spy School series. Lemonfizz Media, 2014. ISBN 9781921931529.
EJ Spy School - The Test is a short novel style book aimed at girls aged 7+. It uses large text and black and white images making it ideal for the reader who isn't quite ready for larger novels but wants more independence and 'grown up' books. Children will relate well to the theme - worrying about a test - and it would also link with the Child Protection Curriculum and the experience of changing or mixed feelings.
The main character is Emma and she loves school but not tests. Who knew, however, that a test could lead to something even more exciting - 'Spy School'.
The easy to read, quick moving story keeps the reader engaged and creates a strong female role model for young girls.
Kylie Kempster

10 Smiley Crocs by Ed Allen

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Scholastic, 2014. ISBN 9781742836355.
10 Smiley Crocs incorporates rhyme, counting and great illustrations to engage readers of all ages. Sing along to the tune of 10 Green Bottle as children count backwards from 10. Young children will enjoy counting the crocs on each page and discussing the rhyming words.
It would be a great book for developing observation skills and memory skills. It will be a good read out loud book and older children could use it as a model to create their own number rhymes.
Kylie Kempster

Pirouette by Robyn Bavati

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Penguin Books, 2014. ISBN 9780143569374.
Well recommended for Middle secondary. A fascinating insight into the world of twins, one who loves ballet and wants to dance as a career, the other, a beautifully talented ballet dancer who doesn't want to dance but has a prestigious place at a dance academy. Simone and Hannah were born in Brazil where their parents died in a car crash. Their Mother danced with the Paris Opera and thanks to a caring nurse, who couldn't bear to see them separated over continents swapped one baby and so they were both adopted and sent to Australia. There they lead very different lives and when they finally meet by chance at 'Candance' for a holiday ballet school they agree to swap roles. Complications arise as they both like different boys who find their behaviour unsettling and confusing. The teachers too, observe the differences but stay silent to the girls. The dialogue between the girls is intimate and well- drawn. They send away for their DNA and are delighted to find the positive result. Their individual characters are very different but also very engaging. The final outcome is cleverly contrived and very happily resolved. The final chapter brings the story to a complete conclusion back in Brazil. It's a very engaging novel with family relationships strong and supportive. A delightful book for those who love ballet and developing relationships with boys, family and friends. Ballet terms are used throughout so there is an authenticity about the text.
Sue Nosworthy

Winger by Andrew Smith

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Simon & Schuster, 2013. ISBN: 9781442444928.
Winger is the most honest and raw book I have read in a while. Set in an elite boarding school, the novel takes the reader inside the mind of a teenage boy, (which is undoubtedly a scary place to be,) but does so with an honesty and vulnerability that is absolutely endearing.
Ryan Dean West is intelligent, young for his grade, part of the rugby team, and stuck in 'Opportunity Hall,' the residence of boys who are being punished for various school misdemeanours. He's also in love with his best friend Annie.
Winger is written as a running commentary of Ryan Dean's life; his thoughts, his insecurities, his fantasies and his battle to find his identity, manhood and self-respect in the chaotic and tumultuous time that is adolescence and high school.
The novel is written in very colloquial style, with copious run-on sentences, intermittent drawings and cartoons and language that makes us privy to Ryan Dean's innermost thoughts. It's an easy read, without being simplistic. As a character Ryan Dean (Winger) West is multi-faceted, honest and very well constructed. It is unlikely that there would be any young man who could not find some common ground with him.
Chapters are short, but powerful. I found the first quarter a bit slow, but it soon picked up pace, and by the end I couldn't put it down. The novel deals with love, identity, bullying, sexuality and relationships, and works to expose the honest truth that even the toughest and most popular people have their inner insecurities.
The plot is engaging and often surprising, and puts the reader through a full range of emotions from laughter, to grief, understanding to disbelief.
While I was disappointed with the frequency of coarse language and sexual/fantasy references, this may well be the type of book that could change a young man's life, offering him hope, guidance and the sense that he is not alone in his struggles. I would recommend this, in particular, for boys who are struggling with various aspects of life and also those who are struggling to engage with other novels.
Sarah Rose
Editor's note: Winger was on Publisher Weekly Best Books 2013 and YALSA Top Ten Best Fiction for Young Adults 2014

Marmaduke the very different dragon by Rachel Valentine

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Ill. by Ed Eaves. Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN 9781408836781.
(Age: 6+) Dragons, Humour, Difference, Being yourself, Friendship. Marmaduke with his orange body and sticky out scales is very different from the smooth skinned, purple dragons usually seen in the kingdom where every princess has a dragon as a minder. Marmaduke longs for a princess of his own, but is rejected because he will not open his wings to fly.
But far away a row of pretty princesses, all with neat hair and pretty dresses, sitting tidily, look upon Princess Meg with some disdain. She is so different, hair a mess, clothes dirty, and certainly not attuned to sitting neatly. None of the dragons want to protect her, but not minding a bit she goes into the forest where she runs into the sad dragon, Marmaduke. They join forces, Marmaduke finally having to open and show his wings to fly her home.
A neat resolution brings both their problems to an ending suitable for both who wish to remain different and be themselves, not what the others want them to be. In a classroom, this book will not only serve as a humorous book to read aloud, but could be the springboard to discussions about being yourself.
Fran Knight

Sports Carnival by Yvette Poshoglian

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Ill. by Danielle McDonald. Ella and Olivia series. Scholastic Australia, 2014. ISBN 9781743620526.
(Age: 5-7) Sports Carnival is the latest addition to the growing list of titles in the Ella and Olivia series which is squarely aimed at 5-7 year old girls moving into chapter books and independent reading. The larger font and short simple sentences support the reader whilst the line drawings and embellishments as well as the lacy page borders add interest to and break up the written text.
Sports Carnival centres on that yearly school event, Sports Day. The winning team will spend a day at Slip and Slide Water Park so sisters Ella and Olivia are in training to be sports champions. The whole family, including the dog join in by supporting the purple team and training with the girls after school.
The Saturday of the Sports Carnival arrives with the school oval awash with streamers, banners and stalls, running tracks and a winner's podium all set up. They all participate in different events contributing to the team score but the final event of the day, the Tug-of-war will decide the winning team.
In a departure from the expected happy ending, the purple team comes second so there is disappointment and no trip to the Water Park for Ella and Olivia. Dad, however, comes up with a clever plan and the family enjoy their own day of fun.
This book could serve as a way to introduce juniors to a tabloid sports day and the concept that you do not have to win to enjoy a reward for effort.
Sue Keane

Chequered Lives by Iola Hack Mathews with Chris Durrant

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Wakefield Press, 2013. ISBN 9781743052587.
(Age: Adult - Senior secondary) Recommended reading. Chequered Lives is the engrossing biography of a pioneer Quaker family from England, who arrived in South Australia in 1837. Specifically, it tells the tale of John Barton Hack, his younger brother Stephen Hack and John Barton's wife Bbe Hack. However, it also tells some of the story of the Society of Friends (the Quakers) and of early South Australia. As such it's worth noting that the National Library of Australia has catalogued this book in South Australian history.
On arrival the Hack family quickly erected a small cottage by the lagoons at Glenelg beach before the city of Adelaide was created. Over time and from this simple beginning John Barton became a merchant who owned a 3000 acre estate in the Adelaide Hills, as well as ships, a whaling station and the first vineyard in South Australia. Stephen became a grazier and explorer. He was the first person to overland cattle from New South Wales to South Australia. Their business and grazing interests had many ups and downs and the title of this book Chequered lives represents these times very well.
The author, Iola Hack Mathews is John Barton's great, great-granddaughter. Much research has gone into uncovering her family's beginnings in South Australia. I particularly enjoyed the accounts of the development of Quakerism in England and South Australia, of which I knew very little.
This book is finely written with great detail but also lightly written in a style that is easy to read eg "Nick Vine Hall, the Australian genealogist, said that after sex, the number one area of research on the Internet was genealogy, 'and oddly enough the two are sort of related.' " p.8
Included are Sponsors and Acknowledgements with a clear explanation of the painstaking research process and in particular the use of primary sources; and a lengthy Introduction.
At the end of this history/biography is an Appendix with details of John Barton's 8 sons (his 6 daughters all died young) including Iola Hack Mathews' great-grandfather Theodore Hack and details of Stephen's 2 surviving children (his daughter died in infancy); Notes (chapter by chapter); and a comprehensive Index.
There are also photographs, artworks, a family tree, maps and diagrams.
The predominant audience for this book is adult, but it would be useful for Senior secondary students of Australian History and Religion Studies, as well as for Research Projects investigating genealogy topics.
Margaret Strickland

The Afghanistan pup by Mark Wilson

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Lothian, 2014. ISBN 9780734415325.
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Picture book, Afghanistan, Animals. When the pup is born in Afghanistan, it has no control over its welfare, so one day when its mother goes out in search of food, she never returns. The pup and his siblings must fend for themselves in this city under siege. Luckily for him a young girl finds him, emaciated and weak, and takes him home. She cares for him, leaving him in the corner of her room when she goes to school. One day she takes him too, and insurgents bomb the school, leaving the pup alone again. An Australian soldier helping to rebuild the school finds the pup and takes him home, caring for him. The pup goes with him as he works, but one day when the soldier goes out to battle, he does not return. The pup goes back to the school and is reunited with the girl.
This is a moving tribute to the strength and courage of the children of Afghanistan as they struggle on to school, despite the war which surrounds them. Girls particularly are not encouraged to be educated and so it is common for schools to be bombed, and sometimes the girls beaten or shot.
In this story we see the plight of the children at the school, desperate to receive an education despite what happens to them, the girl returning to the school when it is rebuilt by the Australians after she is released from hospital. The pup neatly connects the two, the brave girl and the courageous soldier, both fighting against ignorance.
Wilson's illustrations magnify the spare story, adding texture and layers with his line drawings, water colour images and copies of newspaper articles. The multi-media approach which has worked so well with his other books, Vietnam Diary, My Mother's eyes and Angel of Kokoda, works again, giving the younger reader a glimpse into the lives of children in Afghanistan, a little of the various work expected of soldiers, and the struggle they all have to stay alive.
Fran Knight

Boys don't knit by Tom Easton

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Hot Key Books, 2014. ISBN 9781471401473.
Highly recommended for early adolescents. This is an unexpected, (considering the title) quirky and cleverly contrived novel set in Ben's last year of secondary school in England. The inauspicious title draws the reader's curiosity for knitting is not commonly connected to boys. Written from Ben's viewpoint, his adolescent worries about girls, acceptability from mates, a crush on his English teacher and bullying are threaded through the storyline. Initially forced to do community service after a confrontation with a lollipop lady, (school crossing lady) Ben lands in the knitting class thinking that Miss Swallow (on whom he has a crush ) was taking the class. But he had that wrong. And so began a weekly saga of knitting lessons. Ben found he actually enjoyed creating patterns while talking to the rest of the group. Except for his Dad. How could he tell him when he was a staunch Chelsea soccer fan? Mum is a stage magician and travels but agrees to keep Ben's knitting a secret from Dad. So, what with his mates making clever puns on knitting, 'she certainly stitched you up' p228, he knits a sweater for Miss Swallow's soccer star boyfriend, wins the local then state championship amidst the bullying boys from his class who try to sabotage the meet. Dad and Mum turn up as well as the lollypop lady whom Ben has befriended.
Humour flows through the story with a young person's frustrations ever present. This is a wonderful example of turning adversity into a happy and positive experience along with lots of laughs and chuckles. The language is vibrant and expressive, belonging to a young person but with a maturity all can relate to. A most enjoyable read.
Sue Nosworthy