Reviews

Horizon by Alyson Noel

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Soul seekers series, bk 4. Macmillan, 2013. ISBN 9781447206842.
(Age: Older teens) Horizon by Alyson Noel is an adrenaline pumped book about a girl named Daire Santos. Daire isn't your average teen, she is the last in a long line of seekers, a person tasked with keeping the different worlds at peace. This job is made all the more difficult when the evil Richter family are dead set on ending the world as well as when Dace's - Daire's fated partner as well as a Richter twin - soul is tainted with a bit of his brother's darkness. This brings him closer and closer to his demonic side and his demon filled family that he has hated for a long time. Surrounded by her friends and family, Daire Santos fights to save her one true love, her home and the worlds she is in charge of from the Richters.
Horizon, much like the previous books in the series, is a fantastic, breathtaking, action-packed novel that makes you think of thousands of questions that you want to find the answer to. This book and its inspiring writing style keeps you stuck to the pages and wanting to know more as the story blooms around the main characters. Due to violent, romantic and emotionally traumatic themes, I think this book is better suited to older teens because they might have a better grasp on the mindset of the characters. An interesting writing style that is unique and leaves you wanting more, Horizon is a must have on your mystery and action bookshelf.
Sarah Filkin (Student)

The twelve days of Christmas, ill. by Karen Erasmus

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Hachette, 2013. ISBN 9780734414922.
(Age: 4+) Christmas, Picture book. Anyone wanting the music and words to the old carol, will find this to their liking. The soft watercolour images which accompany the text include an array of children in modern clothes, many in school uniform, from a variety of backgrounds. The two introductory children on the front cover are on each page, as the number of animals and people swell, from a partridge in a pear tree to twelve drummers drumming.
As with the original carol, counting is an integral part of the rhyme, adding a new number of animals and people as the song goes along, reinforcing the number as each line is sung.
I have seen few examples of this old carol being published more recently for a younger generation, so it is timely. Younger readers will know the tune and easily pick up the words as they sing along. The simple one line melody at the end of the book can be easily picked out on a piano for a beginner giving the tune to the children.
Included in the book is a double page of illustrations for the students, I was surprised that it did not follow the one to twelve idea of the original carol, so ensuring that children would be able to use this as an aid to learning to count.
But all in all, a useful book to have in the classroom for that time of the year, to learn an older carol, unlike the ones heard in the supermarket and department store.
Fran Knight

Dark satanic mills by Marcus Sedgwick and Julian Sedgwick

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Ill. by John Higgins and Marc Olivent. Walker, 2013. ISBN 9781406329889.
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Graphic novel, Future, Fundamentalism, Dystopian novel. With the hymn, Jerusalem, sparked by the title, a trip to Google to find the whole poem by William Blake is the first step in reading this dark treatise about a near future London, where religious fanatics are taking over areas north of the city. A strong dystopian theme runs through with illustrations showing a near destroyed city, water lapping over Trafalgar Square, the water level so high that the Portrait Gallery is now a ferry stop. Shown with its bombed buildings and impassable streets, the city shadows the images we see on nightly TV of war ravaged cities in the Middle East, and when Christy is out after curfew, she falls foul of the fanatics trying to exert their power over the population.
So she must run for her life. Implicated now in a murder, she tries to seek shelter from people she knows, but her presence imperils them all.
This is a breathless read, stirred on by the black and white illustrations, often using close up drawings to sharpen the impact of the horror she sees. The readers will follow Christy's fight eagerly, watching as gangs of bullies from the True Church intimidate and beat up those who question. The parallels to today's society are obvious, as Fundamentalists strike at the seat of power, gaining credibility and prestige amongst those opting for a safer future.
The road north brings Christy and now, Alex, into Birmingham with its gangs of thugs, the Anti-Sci, feeding people's fears, burning as witches the non believers, chaining men to ricks in the blighted wilderness, heralding miracles to gain power. It is grim stuff, but an enthralling read with many parallels to the recent growth of fundamentalist groups within our societies. Readers will love the illustrative techniques of the two illustrators, Higgins and Olivent, as they portray a society's upheaval with panache.
Fran Knight

This way up by Kylie Dunstan

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Windy Hollow Books, 2013. ISBN 9781922081223.
(Age: 5+) Picture book, Moving home. Moving can be a tricky issue in some families, and those adults wrapped up in the concerns, may have little time for a younger child feeling left out. This charming picture book deals with a young girl moving house, returning home after some absence. She is encouraged to sort out her cardboard boxes, but finds it overwhelming. The surroundings are similar and bring back fond memories, but everything seems so much smaller. Mum seems to whizz around the house with piles of stuff, sometimes dropping some in Grace's room with an encouraging 'why don't you find a home for all of this stuff?' But Grace finds it hard to work out which was important and prefers to hide in one of the empty cardboard boxes in her room. That is until Grandma arrives. Then Grace knows what is most important, and when other families arrive the next day for a celebration, she feels at last that she is home.
This is a warm story about one child feeling sad at leaving and yet wanting to be part of her old house. Her mother is encouraging and supportive as she too must find a space for all the things in boxes. When familiar people arrive, it is only then that everyone feels settled.
Fran Knight

Paper Clips, an anthology of short stories about coming of age in Australia, edited by Yasar Duyal

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Cambridge University Press, 2013. ISBN 9781107614208.
(Age: 11+) Short Stories, Coming of age. Stories by kids written for kids in middle school is a request I keep hearing, so a book of short stories by Australian youth should be just the ticket. This compilation of stories from kids mainly in private schools sorted into groups such as Adaptation, Childhood, Identity, Love and a Sunburnt Country, with lengthy discussion notes at the end for teachers to use in class could be useful as a text.
Some of the stories are wondrous, inviting, playful and inventive, but many read like lectures or essays on the topic, 'what does it mean to be Australian', with several of the short stories even starting with that phrase.
Standouts include Stories of our suitcase by Karen Huong, Evacuation by Ryan Harris, My own little Ponting by Milan Kantor, Home by Catriona Cowie, It will all be worth it by Annie Rocasek, and Darkness by Hugh Offor. These seemed to have original ideas, were told from experience and used humour.
The layout and design of the book does not invite the reader into the stories, it is so obviously a class text, that teachers may choose this for their class. Other books of short stories which have been recently published include, Hatched: Celebrating 20 years of the Tim Winton Award for young writers (Fremantle Press, 2013), Short and scary, a whole lot of creepy stories and other chilling stuff, edited by Karen Tayleur (black dog books, 2010) Trust Me Too, edited by Paul Collins (Ford St, 2012) and its prequel,Trust Me edited by Pail Collins (Ford St, 2011), Things a map won't show You, stories from Australia and Beyond, edited by Susan La Marca and Pam McIntyre (Penguin, 2012). For a teacher using short stories in the classroom, then a selection of those above including the recent Paper Clips could be advantageous, giving the teacher and student a range of stories to choose from.  
Fran Knight

Mystic by Alyson Noel

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The Soul Seekers bk 3. Macmillan Children's Books, 2013. ISBN: 9781447206835.
(Age: Teens) Recommended. Daire Santos is not your average girl, she is a seeker. One of many in a long ancestral line in the small town of Enchantment, Daire with the added wisdom of her grandmother Paloma and the Elders as well as her unique collection of friends fight the evil family that rules the town. They are the Richters, a family full of demon transforming men and women with the spirit animal, sneaky coyote. When a previously foretold prophecy is changed, the effects have a significant effect on Daire and her friends as well as her fated partner Dace. As a result Daire meets a new person from the elusive Upperworld but is he a friend or an ally? Did the change in the prophecy happen for a good reason?
Mystic by Alyson Noel is a fast paced novel that is packed full of mystery and action as the plot is revealed piece by piece and the reader remains as in the dark as the main characters throughout the winding and twisting plot. Mystic is the third book in the breathtaking Soul Seeker Series of four (Fated, Echo, Mystic and Horizon). This book is a definite recommendation for any teen who likes magic, mystery and action but it is greatly recommended that this series be read from the first unlike some books in a series that you can pick up and read regardless. This is a must have and a brilliantly entertaining read.
Sarah Filkin

A girl is a half-formed thing by Eimear McBride

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Text Publishing, 2013. ISBN 9781922182234.
(Adult - Selected senior students) Reading Eimear McBride's debut novel requires energy and emotional strength but far from being difficult it seems to bypass intellect and speak directly to the reader's emotions like good poetry. Central to the story is the girl's relationship with her brother, the 'you' throughout the novel. Affected by a brain tumour, she wishes he could be normal and is protective and emotionally tied to him. At the same time she is deeply affected by her mother's lack of affection, her father's absence, poverty and the whole Irish catholic notion of guilt, sin and the need to be cleansed. An uncle seems to offer her the love she craves but guilt combined with her lack of self esteem leads to confronting sexual abuse, self-debasing behaviours and self harm. Not an easy book and there are strong sexual references, but for adults and maybe selected senior students, worth the effort.
Sue Speck

Man made boy by Jon Skovron

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Allen and Unwin, 2013. ISBN 9781743315132.
It is almost inevitable that as our world becomes increasingly dependent on technology, face-to-face communication will become less favourable. This prophecy is more relevant now than ever, as we constantly toil to advance ourselves in that field.
It is also inevitable that in some way teenagers will always feel the social pinch and emotional punch of adolescence - this inherent angst has been exhibited in all settings where associated hormones are present.
Both our increased reliance on plug-in tools and our collective experience of youthful trial-and-error, are themes prevalent in Jon Skovron's Man made boy, although in story and style they are much simpler.
From the circuit-board font on the cover and the very first paragraph, this work exudes a tech-savvy and highly contemporary style, obviously as a means of updating the literary source it references so heavily: Frankenstein.
In its time, Mary Shelley's seminal novel was tech-heavy - nuts and bolts, elaborate scientific structure and a re-animation technique powered by good old fashioned lightning.
Now, we have a cyberpunk influence, with computer-age language littering the text. Somewhat surprisingly, this does not overshadow a very traditional writing style, but instead complements it.
In terms of story, Man made boy concerns an aptly titled teenaged hermit named Boy, and chronicles his experiences forming his own personality and coming to terms with other relevant emotional hurdles. In addition, Frankenstein-esque deformities have created a low self-esteem situation for Boy, preventing him from real interaction and exiling him to behind a computer screen.
Skovron has intentionally stripped our endearing protagonist of a proper name to comment on the teenager's inherent need to categorize themself and construct their personal traits. He makes clever, humorous and insightful commentary on the epidemic of technologically adept and addicted youth, and the potential social problems which arise.
Aside from the thought-provoking content, the narrative is thrilling and charming (and of course, full of knowing nods in jest to classic horror literature.)
This is Frankenstein updated for a new audience - its themes of creation, identity, isolation and misunderstanding still intact.
Man made boy is full of heart - re-assembled, stitched together and calibrated with a micro-chip - but heart no less.
Henry Vaughan (Student)

My island homicide by Catherine Titasey

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University of Queensland Press, 2013. ISBN 9780702249716
(Age: 16-adult) Recommended.
With a play on the title of the Christine Anu song 'My island home', Titasey conjures up the image of an island paradise in the Torres Straits. And this is exactly what Senior-Sergeant Ebithea Dari-Jones hopes it to be - a break from the stresses of her mainland job in the Queensland Police Service and a broken relationship, and also a return to her roots - rediscovering her mother's origins on Thursday Island. She expects her new role as Officer-In-Charge on the island to be a relaxed and uncomplicated life in the tropics. But on her first day on the job, she finds more than she bargained for: tensions and superstitions, a missing person - suspected homicide... and an undercurrent of 'maydh', black magic.
There is lots to enjoy in this book. The character of Ebithea herself is a break from the traditional heroine mould - she is 6 feet tall with a few too many curves, and a liking for fast food. We can smile in recognition of the situation where she goes online to purchase sexy new underwear after meeting with attractive Islander fisherman Jonah, and the warm humour of the relationships with her mother and her work colleagues. The writing style is easy to read, the location and storyline are original and the mystery keeps you guessing until the end, - as Ebithea discovers that perhaps the lives of these island people are not as simple as first appears and there is much more to the missing person case than even she, with her astute detective skills, suspects. Readers will enjoy the unusual characters, the gradual realisation of the threat of 'maydh', and the twist of the plot that still makes sense and has a satisfying ending. This is a fresh new novel that leaves us hoping for another in this style from Titasey, winner of the 2012 Queensland Literary Awards - Best Emerging Author.
Helen Eddy

Stories for boys

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Random House Australia Children's, 2013. ISBN 9780857980885. Ebook 9780857980861.
Stories for girls
Random House Australia Children's, 2013. ISBN 9780857980861. Ebook 9780857980878.
(Age: 6-8) Highly recommended. Two delightful collections of short stories aimed squarely at the 6-8 year olds. With many of Australia's leading authors on board including Tristan Bancks, Sophie Masson, Bill Condon, George Ivanoff, Janeen Brian, Martin Chatterton, Claire Saxby and Jacqueline Harvey, little people who are either newly independent readers or enjoy read-alouds will love these engaging stories. Some silly, some serious, some adventurous, some clever means something for everyone!
Stories for boys is illustrated by Tony Flowers, whose work will be known already by followers of the popular Saurus Street series while Stories for girls is illustrated by J. Yi who is particularly known for the Alice-Miranda series.
Over the weekend Miss Small (8) and I shared two of the stories from the Girls book and her facial expressions, comments and laughter affirmed that these will be a sure-fire hit with the smaller folk in your reading circles. Arabella Button, by Grace Atwood was particularly well received. After all, just the very image of a giraffe doing ballet was enough to set us both in the right frame of mind for a cosy happy snuggle before bedtime. We are both looking forward to the next weekend sleepover to continue working our way through the contents page.
For those familiar with the Stories for five, six, seven and eight year olds series, the style of these two collections will be very recognisable. Perfect for teachers wanting a quick story for a spare five minutes or parents needing that brief before bed just-one-more tale, both of these will appeal to the imaginations and humour of the age group.
Highly recommended, both for the readings levels and interests, of boys and girls from 6-8 years old
Sue Warren

Yoo hoo, ladybird! by Mem Fox

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Ill. by Laura Ljungkvist. Penguin Australia, 2013. ISBN 9780670077304.
(Age: 2-6) Highly recommended. This little ladybird loves to hide and finding just where she is hiding will delight young readers immensely. And older readers who adore great end papers will also love it!
Whether she is 'stuck on the stairs with a couple of bears' or 'outside the house with Chicken and Mouse' little people will have great fun searching for this happy little bug amid some gorgeously vibrant illustrations.
'I spy' for toddlers - with rhythmic rhyming text that is perfect as a read-aloud - highly recommended for small ones 2 years and up.
Sue Warren

Hard luck: Diary of a wimpy kid by Jeff Kinney

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Penguin Australia, 2013. ISBN 9780143308089.
(Age: 10+) Highly recommended. I have no doubt that there were some furtive sidelong glances from my fellow commuters on the train as I chuckled my way through the latest of the Diary of a wimpy kid books - Hard luck.
There is something about the hapless Greg Heffley that strikes a chord with thousands of fans, including me (perhaps because he sometimes puts me in mind of Frank Spencer, Some mothers do 'ave 'em).
In this latest episode from the continuing comedy that is Greg's life, our poor anti-hero finds himself without his lifelong friend Rowley because - shock! Rowley has a girlfriend with whom he is totally besotted. No one to carry his heavy bag of books, no one to give out dog poo warnings, no one to deflect the feral forest thugs and certainly no one to hang out with. Greg discovers that making new friends in middle school is a difficult if not impossible ask.
Fed up with what he sees as wrong decisions being made about his life and the subsequent disastrous consequences, Greg takes fate in a firm grip and starts placing all his choices with the answer given by a 'Magic 8' ball. Naturally, this does not go according to plan!
Amongst many hilarious scenes from the book, my undoubted favourite is Greg hiding out in his mother's wardrobe and uncovering a 'secret stash' hidden away - no, not what you might think at all! This carefully hoarded cache is a collection of parenting books, from which Greg recognises many techniques used by his mum along with multiples of his favourite toy - in case of disaster with the original (or is that no longer the original?).
This book is highly recommended for readers, both boys and girls, 10 and up - and as with all the Diary of a wimpy kid books, a great choice for reluctant readers.
Sue Warren

Yikes, stinkysaurus! By Pamela Butchart and Sam Lloyd

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Bloomsbury, 2013. ISBN 9781408837078.
(Age: 3-6) Dinosaurs. Humour. Smells. Baths. Stinkysaurus is the scariest of all the dinosaurs because he doesn't take a bath and he scares away everyone with his awful smell. The other dinosaurs can smell him wherever he goes and he has no friends. When the dinosaurs decide that enough is enough and give him a bath Stinkysaurus finds that he now has friends to play with.
Young children will love the rhyme and alliteration in this story which is a good one to read aloud. The repetition of the words, 'Yikes, stinkysaurus!' provide an opportunity for children to leap in with a refrain and the potty humour is sure to be a big hit with the young set. Adult readers can make a plug for the joys of having a bath, but really the story is just a lot of fun.
Children who are obsessed with dinosaurs will be able to pick out the different types, even though they are coloured in very bright blues, oranges and pinks. Beginning readers would also be able to read along to the rhyme after they had heard the story a couple of times.
Sure to be a bedtime favourite with children who are obsessed with dinosaurs, this is a hilarious story that is likely to become a favourite.
Pat Pledger

Secret by Brigid Kemmerer

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Elemental, bk 4. Kensington Teen, ISBN 9780758294371.
(Age 14+) Recommended. Paranormal. Gay and lesbian themes. Nick Merrick's element is air, but it is not the elements that are worrying him. It is the real issues that he is facing at home. Should he open the envelopes to see if he has an offer from a college? How can he think of leaving town when the family business seems to be going under? Then there is Adam, Quinn's dance partner. How can he face his family with his secret?
Kemmerer has done it again in this story - an engrossing combination of real life issues and paranormal weather. Readers will be blown away by Nick's story. Nick's secret was revealed in a short novella, Breathless, and Secret expands on the story. Nick has never had any problems attracting girls, least of all Quinn, but when he meets Adam he goes through a struggle realising that he is gay and that he wants a relationship with Adam. However the dilemma of how to come out to his family, especially his twin Gabriel, is a fraught one for him. Kemmerer deals with this very sensitively and takes the reader through the emotions and fears that a gay boy must deal with. It is not at all an easy ride for Nick, who must decide that he is the most important person in his own life and that he can't always put other people first. Excellent writing makes Nick's fears and his brother's and Hunter's reactions realistic with each displaying strengths and weaknesses.
At the same time Kemmerer explores what it is like to be homeless for Quinn, when her mother and her older brother both let her down terribly. Quinn's problems are quite distressing for the reader and she too has to decide that she is a person worthy of respect and love. The introduction of Tyler as a character who may have a good side to him is thought provoking as Nick has to come to terms with what forgiveness means.
This book is a winner with its mix of real issues, the paranormal and Nick's air element showing its strength against danger. A fabulous conclusion has left me gasping for the next book in the series.
Pat Pledger

Kissed by the moon by Alison Lester

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Penguin, 2013. ISBN 9780670076758.
(Age: 3+) Highly recommended. Picture book. Influences. Growing up.
Opening a book by Alison Lester always thrills me. With her latest, Kissed by the moon, she is able to capture a parent's wish for their child to wonder at the world in which they have been born, to experience the community and the environment, to splash in the water, to experience the ocean, to hear the birds as they wake, to walk in the untamed forest. Each page opens the child's mind to the possibilities of what is around them, encouraging the parent to ensure that the child is exposed to all the good things of life. Lester's soft watercolours draw the eye to the detail of the images she draws, as well as creating soft love filled pages, underscored by the spare prose.
Each page shows a different environment and season, covering aspects of the Australian climate, be it snow, spring produce, a sunny beach or the falling leaves of autumn. Every picture is filled with the safe secure arms of a parent, guiding the child to experience its surroundings. The subtle subtext of caring for the environment is there, in lines which assume the rivers, fish and oceans will still be there, and the forests as wild.
Lester's talents with many different art forms along with her ability to encapsulate meaning in a brief smattering of words, is enough for anyone to gasp at the depth of her work, for parents to smile with recognition and children to read for themselves the wonder of childhood.
Fran Knight