Reviews

Flora's war by Pamela Rushby

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Ford St, 2013. ISBN 978 1 921445 98 1.
(Age: 11+) Highly recommended. World War One. Egypt. ANZAC. It is excavation season along the Nile. The team from the USA, headed by Dr Travers, accompanied by his wife and daughter, Gwen has arrived, meeting their Australian friend, Mr Wentworth with his daughter Flora, now his assistant. Both girls are sixteen, and the first few months of Cairo are a heady mix of dressmakers, balls, dinner engagements, learning to drive the new motorcar. But war is approaching. Other excavation teams have not come this year, it is 1914, and men have been called to serve elsewhere.
The girls are asked to volunteer for the recreation hut established by Lady Bellamy, and become involved with talking to the soldiers, particularly the Australians, from the huge camp near the Sphinx. They write letters for the men, visit them in hospital where they languish with malaria and measles, take groups to the excavations. Moving their accommodation when their hotel is taken to be a hospital is the first sign that something more significant is about to happen. Their quiet existence is over. It is April 1915.
Rushby builds the setting meticulously. The girls are proud of themselves as modern and forward thinking at a time when most girls of their age and class would have been heavily chaperoned and headed for marriage with someone known to the family. Egypt is a living entity in the book, the detail of the excavations and the Ancient Kingdoms a constant backdrop to the unfolding tale of this little appreciated aspect of the Gallipoli story.
The details of the war will readily hold the readers' attention. We are plunged like Gwen and Flora into the worst imaginable results of the Gallipoli campaign. The girls are asked to drive the wounded to the various hospitals in Cairo, seeing for themselves the pitiable end point of the doomed invasion of the Dardanelles.
The ease with which Rushby introduces her themes is astonishing. The girls' innocence is sorely tested and their work during the Gallipoli campaign an underrepresented one. I am in awe of the amount of information skillfully woven into the story, and the presentation of a group of women we hear little of.
Fran Knight

Time for bed, Fred! by Yasmein Ismail

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Bloomsbury, 2013. ISBN 9781408837016.
(Age: 4+) Warmly recommended. Picture book. Bedtime. Fred will do anything to avoid going to bed. He can be found hiding in a tree or the long grass. He even takes to hiding in a water can. But when he tries to hide in a dirty puddle, then he must come inside and be washed and dried. Even then, he runs outside and hides. Once he is brought back, tired, then he wants a story to be read to him, and succeeds in trying out all the other beds in the house before finally settling on his own where he dreams of the story he has heard.
A funny and involving look at bedtime and what it means for animals and by comparison, children, this will create lots of laughter in the home and classroom, as children recognise all the attempts they make in avoiding bed. But realising that bed is inevitable, bring along a book, just like Fred, to be read to them as a prelude to actually going to bed.
The infectious illustrations, rendered in washes of water colour, will evoke laughter from those reading the book, or having the book read to them. The impressions of Fred with a few seemingly simple daubs of black and grey is just wonderful, and I loved particularly the illustrations of him hiding in the flower garden and rushing down the stairs, two of the many endearing and evocative drawings.
Fran Knight

Transcendence by C. J. Omololu

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Bloomsbury, 2013. ISBN: 9781408836910.
(Age: 13+) Nicole fears she is losing her mind. Everywhere she goes, anything she touches, triggers vivid images and scenes of a past time, she has no idea about, and in places she has never lived.
When Nicole travels with her family on a holiday to London she meets Griffon, a teenage boy who is the same as Nicole; he also sees visions of the past. Little does Nicole know that what she sees are actually her past lives she has lived.
The first time that Griffon touches Nicole, he instantly knows that she is very special, he knows that she has visions of lives she has already lived. Together Nicole and Griffon piece clues together to discover a secret that could very well ruin their chances of having a future together.
C.J. Omololu's novel Transcendence is the first novel in this series and is soon to be followed by Intuition. The novel Transcendence is set in 2011-2012, with short bursts from Nicole and Griffon's past lives.
The characters in Transcendence do act and feel like real people would. As the story progresses many of the characters do change, some grow wiser and find their abilities, whilst others become cold hearted and do not care about others and only wish to care about themselves.
Transcendence centres on the theme of reincarnation, it is also an expressive thriller with a pair of star-crossed lovers in the center of the story. With the gripping story and the ever growing romance between Nicole and Griffon this novel is absolutely stunning and is very engaging.
I would recommend this novel to teenagers 13 and older.
Emily Madden (Student)

What the raven saw by Samantha-Ellen Bound

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Woolshed Press, 2013. ISBN 9781742757353.
(Age: 11+) Highly recommended. Death. Humour. Animals. With a sense that he is better than the others around him, the raven sits on his perch in the crumbling belltower, watching all that happens to both human and animal alike beneath him. He loves his time with the priest, a man who sees him in some divine light, and who plays the organ singing with the raven. He sees the warden pilfer money from the collection plate, and worries about the deception of the kindly priest. He avoids the smelly pigeon with its rank sense of taste and recycled words, and keeps away from the weatherhen convinced that she watches where he hides his treasure.
Watching the funeral of a young boy, he is surprised by the sullen sister who refuses to participate, running off into the churchyard. He sees her again, this time at her brother's grave, bringing along a croissant with her tears. Shortly after the ghost of the dead boy, Todd, asks him for help. He wants his sister to know that his death is not her fault.
The grumpy raven refuses to help as he does not want to talk to humans, but gradually he is drawn into their grief, the girl who thinks she has caused her brother's death, the boy who cannot rest until she knows he does not hold her responsible.
Told from the raven's perspective, the tale of the acceptance of death by the two children is extraordinary. The judgmental raven is a perfect narrator and learns that there is more to life than his sparkly collection and snide remarks.
Fran Knight

The Accident by Kate Hendrick

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Text, 2013. ISBN: 9 781921 922855.
(Age: Teenagers) Highly recommended. The Accident is a story about three teenagers and how their lives were affected by a single event, the car crash which killed Robbie Starke. Sarah is devastated by the loss of her brother; she blames herself for the accident. Will is isolated and alone, his family is a mess and he doesn't know what to do. Eliat is a rebellious foster child who can't do anything right, she hides in a shallow night life taking all that she has for granted and putting her daughter second to her own vanity. One night changes it all. Sarah needs peace, Will needs his family and Eliat needs direction.
Told the different perspectives of three characters the novel shows how something as tragic as a car accident can change lives in a positive way. Filled with relatable characters and incredible detail this novel is not just the portrayal of one journey of self discovery but three. I would highly recommend this novel for adolescents as the author's expressiveness as well as her ability to tell these stories in such a way makes it a powerful novel. This book should be read by teenagers to give them a sense of the impact which their actions could have on other people's lives.
Kate Hendrick's debut novel is an extraordinary take on a tragic event. Her unusual style of story-telling adds to the novel's appeal and she is set to excel in her writing career if her future works maintain the same standard. I look forward to reading her future novels.
Kayla Gaskell (Student)

On the day you were born by Margaret Wild

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Ill. by Ron Brooks. Allen and Unwin, 2013. ISBN 9781 74114 754 4.
(Age: 3+) Highly recommended. Picture book. Family. Childhood.
Each page begins with the lines,
'My daddy said:
On the day you were born',
and then follows several lines about where the child's father takes him, with pride and love, to show him to his new environment. He is taken to see the night creatures, the bat, the owl and the mouse, all of whom woke and poke their heads out of the sleeping holes to welcome the new child. They then follow the bees taking in the smell of honey. Later the ducks are seen as mother duck swims back to rescue a duckling which has strayed. A tree is viewed: an old gnarled tree where the child's parents first met. Animals are viewed, a feather falls on the child's hand, a berry tasted. Father takes his baby back home where mother waits and the three become the world, safe and sound together.
The tenderness of the text in exploring all the things a child becomes part of as it develops is intoxicating. Every sense is mentioned: sound, taste, hearing, sight and feeling, as the child tastes the berry, hears the sound of the duck, feels the feather, watches the things his father points out, and later tells the reader what father said, all alluding to the nurturing nature of the family and its responsibilities in bringing up a child.
Ron Brooks' illustrations extend the text with imagination and verve. Younger readers will love to look at the variety of landscapes he paints, searching for the things mentioned in the text as well as taking time to look at all that environments so gloriously illustrated.
A delightful book to read aloud and share with young children at home or in a classroom, where discussion is sure to involve remembrances of early childhood and the comforting love of the family.
Fran Knight

The poison boy by Fletcher Moss

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Chicken House, 2013. ISBN 9781908435446.
(Age: 11+) Highly recommended. Winner of the 2012 Times Children's Fiction Award. Historical fantasy. Poisons. Dalton Fly is a poison boy, a boy who tastes the food of the rich to make sure that it is safe. When his friend Bennie Jinks dies while tasting, Dalton makes a lucky escape and decides to find answers about why his friend died. With the help of a rich girl, Scarlet Dropmore, and his friend Sal Sleepwell, he sets out on a dangerous adventure to find the poisoners and rescue his city. At the same time he must solve the mystery of the buckle box that was found with him when he was discovered as a baby in a wine barrel.
The setting of a medieval/Renaissance like city called Highlions where poison is used by the rich aristocracy to murder unwanted heirs and while boys like Dalton and Sal live in grimy poverty sets the scene for this exciting adventure. The use of poison is graphically described and the reader gets a really good idea of their awful effects and their antidotes. Dalton has been trained as a taster and can overcome some of the effects of poison but his fight with two poisonings were heart stopping.
While the ruthless poisoners struggle to control the city state by poisoning the heirs to dead Duke, Dalton and his band follow a map that highlights the next heir to be poisoned and have many adventures on the way. Not only is the setting superb, the characters shine out. Dalton is a courageous boy whose leadership skills grow as the story develops. Scarlet and Luke are unusual and feisty heroines and Dalton's friends, Sal and Francis Eyesdown are stalwart and clever allies.
Moss has made clever use of a language that the poison boys use to make his dialogue memorable and giving the characters a vivid feel. A glossary at the back gives definitions of words like 'chinkers', meaning 'coins', or 'ghosted', meaning 'died' and the humour of some of the sayings like 'Wet yourself' (for get stuffed) will sure to appeal to the reader.
This was a really exciting and original adventure story that was engrossing right from the start and happily the conclusion promises another book to follow. It is sure to appeal to both boys and girls and reluctant readers could find the adventure and poisons enticing enough to try. Teacher's notes are available.
Pat Pledger

Shhh! Don't wake the royal baby! by Martha Mumford

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Ill. by Ada Grey. Bloomsbury, 2013. ISBN 9781408844632.
(Age: 4+) Warmly recommended. Picture book. Babies. Royalty. What a hoot! A royal family, looking very like Liz and Phil, with William and Kate all try in vain to get the new baby to sleep. Humour abounds as they try lots of different methods in getting the child to sleep, with each resulting in a very much awake baby. Finally the queen has had enough and treks off to her helicopter where she hopes the babe will sleep. But it does not, so with a Geronimo, she jumps out of the helicopter, a la OO7, leaping towards the landing spot near Buckingham Palace. And the baby falls asleep. All is well until a King (!) looking very Phil like, loudly congratulates his wife and wakes the baby. On it goes, all in the palace exhorted to be quiet, even the corgis, of which there are many.
Lots of fun will be had with this book. Discussions will centre around the monarchy and of course, William and Kate's new child and its place in the inheritance of the line, but also about the changes a baby causes in any household, and ways to get it to sleep, and how the family copes with a new member. A warm hearted well illustrated book with lots of laughs to be found in the drawings. Watch out for those floating corgis.
Fran Knight

The Heaven I swallowed by Rachel Hennessy

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Wakefield Press, 2013. ISBN 9781862549487.
Recommended. The main character of this novel is Grace Smith, a seemingly widowed and devout member of a Catholic parish, who decides to take in a twelve-year-old aboriginal orphan named Mary. Grace's ostensible aim is to train and educate Mary, so that she would overcome 'the disadvantages of what she was, while never .(.forgetting).. exactly what she was'.  This sentence captures precisely Grace's attitude. To be black, to be aboriginal was shameful in her eyes and those of the white community.  However, Grace herself has lived a life of loss and abandonment. As a child she experienced cruelty and neglect in a Catholic orphanage. Moments of religious ecstasy and a vision of the Madonna did not compensate for the lack of loving kindness. As an adult she was a failure as a teacher, her baby was stillborn and her husband Fred, rather than being dead, has abandoned her for a Japanese woman in Japan. Grace's insecurities mean that she is not strong enough to ensure that Mary is educated as she should be, and instead she trains Mary as a domestic servant. Grace begins to love her, and recognizes her own childhood reactions to cruelty in Mary.  She is appalled to learn that Mary's mother is alive and longing to see her daughter. Ashamed but fearful of her own loss Grace does not tell Mary.  However, Mary finds out and runs away, leaving Grace deserted again.  Meanwhile Fred encounters racism in Japan, where his child is looked down upon by the Japanese. Penniless he is forced to return to Australia and by chance encounters Grace. Given the chance to love again Grace accepts it, but continues to look for Mary. The casual racist cruelties that are dealt to Mary by all the white community are well captured, but the characterization of Grace depicts a nuanced view of the situation while not excusing it. The use of the first person narrative is skilled as the reader clearly understands Grace's motives, and understands Mary better than she does. All the characterizations are strong and the claustropbobic atmosphere of the widows' circle in the parish is particularly believable.  The style is assured and the reader is skilfully drawn into the story. The book is recommended for all ages.
Jenny Hamilton

Hunted by Gabrielle Lord

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Conspiracy 365: Black Ops. Scholastic, 2013. ISBN 9781742835198.
(Age: 10+) Crime. Thriller. Mystery. Young Adults. The second book in the Black Ops Trilogy hits the ground running as Cal narrowly escapes detection in Damien Thoroughgood's office. He's on a mission to find the truth behind the disappearance of missing girl Sophie and the suspicious activities of youth retreat leader Damien on Shadow Island. The pressure is on. He has 60 days to solve the mystery and it's crucial his 'double-act' cover as his twin brother Ryan isn't blown. With barely a moment to catch his breath, Cal is weaving through underground tunnels, driving mining machinery and venturing through a laboratory filled with strange potions, clues and robotic contraptions. Never far away, are the robotic spythons, watching every move he makes. But the sinister rumblings of the Island volcano create an even greater urgency for Cal to complete the mission.
With several books of action-packed fodder for young adults under her belt, Lord has truly mastered the formula for engaging young readers. The language is not overly technical, making it an easy read for 10-12 year olds. The power of the first person narrative will channel the adolescent psyche to Cal's quests and struggles in a hostile world.
Any negatives? With barely time to make my second cup of coffee, the book finishes abruptly amidst a scene of chaos. I wanted more - a little extra substance to sustain me until the next instalment. I guess I'll have to wait patiently - ready to tousle with all the other young readers out there when Combat is released, the last book in Black Ops trilogy. It can't come quick enough.
Michelle Hunt

Lilli and Shadow in Trouble by Laura and Sabrina Dudgeon

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Ill. by Tracey Gibbs and Sally Morgan. Waarda Series. Fremantle Press, 2013 ISBN 9781922089359.
Recommended for Year 3. This is story set in the north of Western Australia where Lilli is spending the school holidays with her Grandmother. Lilli is looking forward to leaving the city and being with her extended family in her home country and being reunited with Shadow. Shadow lived in the Mango tree at the bottom of the garden, but his home had been taken over by someone called Glog. Glog had been evicted from his home in a mangrove tree which had been cut down to make room for a jetty. The story tells how Lilli and Nan solve the problem.
Rhoda Jenkin

Raven flight by Juliet Marillier

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Shadowfell bk 2. Pan Macmillan, 2013. ISBN 9781742612249.
(Age 13+) Recommended. The second in the Shadowfell series follows the story of Neryn, who has finally joined the rebel group at Shadowfell and must find the Guardians of Alban who will train her as a Caller. The Guardians have hidden themselves away from human eyes and prove difficult to convince to aid her. Accompanied by the tough soldier and guard, Tali, Neryn journeys across the land in search of them. Meanwhile Flint has returned to the king's service and must play out his dangerous role as double agent.
Raven Flight is a really strong second book in the series. It concentrates on the characters of Neryn and Tali, two very different women, who are both strong and steadfast in different ways. Quiet Neryn is not a soldier but under Tali's guidance, she becomes strong enough physically to undertake the dangerous journey and grows in self knowledge on the way. Tali is tough and outspoken and keeps her emotions hidden. Much of the interest in the book is the contrast between the two women and their growing friendship and the way that they are loyal to each other and the cause. Flint's dangerous role in the evil king's court also provides some heart stopping moments and empathy for the dilemmas that he finds himself having to contend with. War inevitably means death and Marillier doesn't flinch away from that either.
This is high fantasy, with a setting of dangerous terrain and abounding with mythical creatures, powerful Guardians and stalwart humans. The cliff hanger at the end of the story will ensure that readers pick up the next in the series.
Marillier is a favourite author of mine and this is another with signature wonderful settings, loyal young women coming to terms with themselves and their powers and action enough to keep the reader interested. Shadowfell and Raven Flight are both exceptionally good books that are sure to garner a following.
Pat Pledger

To get to me by Eleanor Kerr

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Ill. by Judith Russell. Random House, 2013. ISBN 9781742758831.
(Age: 4+) Warmly recommended. Picture book. Travel. When Peter rings his friend Ahmed in North Africa to come to the zoo with him, readers will be surprised and entertained at the lengths to which Ahmed must go to to get to Australia. Friendship, travel, different countries around the world, differing modes of transport - all are given a very inviting airing in this highly coloured and decorative book.
Ahmed must first cross the desert to get to a bus, and what better form of transport, than a camel. From the camel he gets to a bus then a plane takes him to Australia, where he catches a train to Sydney Harbour, then a ferry to cross the harbour to get to Taronga Zoo. Transport is still an issue so a chairlift takes him to his friend, Peter.
In rhythmic lines, the different forms of transport are presented to the reader, making this an apt little book to introduce the topic in a junior classroom, or a book at home to talk about different countries in the world and different modes of transport and of course, a trip to the zoo. However it is used, it is a simple, endearing story which will appeal to younger readers and those reading it aloud as well.
Fran Knight

Lina at the games by Sally Rippin

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Our Australian Girl series. Penguin, 2013. ISBN 978 0 14 330702 0.
(Age: 10+) Recommended. Australian history. Olympic Games. Migrants. Lina, the daughter of Italian migrants who settled in Melbourne after World War Two, is aiming to be a journalist and so jumps at the chance to accompany the principal at her exclusive girls' school to the swimming. It is 1956 and the Olympic Games are in Melbourne, and as Lina holds Dawn Fraser in the highest esteem, she longs to see her swim. But at home, her brother comes home with a bloodied face, and Lina finds he is seeing an Australian girl, and her brother does not want her mixing with migrants. At school too, Lina finds that her friend, Sarah, derides her to others as a wog. As with the first two books in this excellent set of four, Lina is in an awkward position, keeping her home life separate from school and friends.
At the Olympics, hostility is brewing between some of the teams. Hungary has been invaded by Russia and so the water polo event between these two countries turns into a blood bath. A new friend that Lina meets on the tram, takes action and writes a letter, imploring them to do something about the closing ceremony to make the games truly peaceful.
All of this happens through Lina's eyes. We see the different people who inhabit her world, Sarah's racist father, the bodgies who hate the Italian migrants, the Chinese friend on the tram, the growing number of children at Lina's school from migrant backgrounds and over all, the Mother Superior at Lina's school, celebrating the diversity of her students.
This set of four books creates the new world of Australia after World War Two for today's students with easily absorbed historical detail. Lina's tale sits well against this background and readers will enjoy reading of her life during the Olympic Games.
Fran Knight

Gamer's rebellion by George Ivanoff

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Ford St., 2013. ISBN 978 1 921665 4.
(Age: 12+) Science fiction. With much awarded Michael Pryor saying 'this is the best computer game you will ever play. You play it by reading it', means this is a must read sci fi series.
Zyra and Tark are teenage thieves in a world created by the Designers. Everyone in this world struggles and fights to gain enough money to get a 'key', allowing them to escape their reality briefly and become avatars in Designer's Paradise. In their quest they encounter other characters and must figure out if they are to be trusted or defeated. Upon reaching Paradise however, Zyra and Tark discover something is wrong, and that their Suburban avatar existence is flawed. Eventually they are faced with the thought that their world may not be all it seems. (Donella Reaid, first book in the series, Gamer's quest, 2009)
But there has been a sequel, Gamer's challenge, and now Gamer's rebellion, following the activities of the pair, Tark and Zyra.
Now they have found their way out of the game and into the real world, nothing is what they expected it to be, and they must take the fight to the authorities all over again, but not only in the real world, but the gamer world as well.
I love the sci fi background of this book, and this the third in the series emulates the first two with fast paced action and twists to keep people enthralled. The story of the two main characters, kept me reading as they swayed from reality to the game and back again, still not knowing quite where they are or who to trust.
Fran Knight