Reviews

The moon and more by Sarah Dessen

cover image

Penguin, 2013.
(Age: 14+) Recommended. Luke and Emaline have been together all through high school and Emaline knows that not only is Luke gorgeous, he is kind as well. But when Theo arrives in town with a documentary film maker, she starts to wonder if Luke is the perfect boyfriend. Theo is different and sophisticated and understands just how smart Emaline is. Her absentee father too believes that Emaline should have a larger life than Colby, a seaside town, offers. However she is deeply attached to her mother, stepfather and sisters and somehow must find a balance between the familiar and the inevitable change that going away to college will bring.
Dessen consistently writes stories that are appealing and interesting to read but which explore issues that are very important to her teen protagonists and to her teen readers. In The moon and more Emaline is trying to work out who is the perfect boyfriend - someone that she has known forever, or someone who has seen and done much more than she has. She also has to come to terms with the behaviour of her absentee father, who promised to finance her to a prestigious university but changed his mind without telling her why. Emaline is clever and astute but she has a lot of issues to work through as she uses her organisational skills in the family business.
A keen exploration of the family ties that keep people together, whether it is overbearing siblings or a loving mother and the messy nastiness of divorce and its effects on children provide the background to Emaline's coming of age against a background of small town politics and employment.
Dessen's characters are wholly believable, each with strengths and weaknesses. Her descriptions of Emaline's father and his awful behaviour paint a picture of a man who can only communicate through emails. Her little half brother Benji comes alive on the page, and her best friends, Morris and Daisy are wonderful characters. Theo has moments of real empathy and others of being crass and unfeeling. However it is Emaline's voice that come through really strongly and kept me engrossed in this story set in one summer.
Pat Pledger

Clementine Rose and the perfect present by Jacqueline Harvey

cover image

Random House, 2013. ISBN 9781742755458
Recommended. Children's fiction. Fresh and original. Clementine Rose is a 7 year old girl and is extremely curious about everything. So when an immense tent appears in her backyard she just has to know why it is there. When she finds out that there is going to be a wedding, Clemmie is thrilled because a wedding is just the thing her mother needs to help pay for a much needed roof for their house. She wants to help the workers but she is not allowed, so she goes and watches them, she even sings to them! But amidst the excitement, her Uncle Digby falls ill and an invitation goes astray. To everyone's horror (especially Clemmie's), Aunt Violet is left in charge. All the presents gave Clemmie an idea, but will she find the perfect present in time?
Clementine Rose and the Perfect Present is a finely written story. Jacqueline Harvey's fable illustrates Clementine and her pet pig Lavender as two lively friends always on the lookout for mysteries. Clemmie's Aunt Violet does not approve of such excitement, but when Uncle Digby falls ill and an invitation goes astray Aunt Violet simply gives in and lets Clemmie figure out the puzzling mystery. Over all I think that Clementine Rose and the Perfect Present is a fantastic story and every school in South Australia should have a copy of this book in their library.
Amelie Meinel (student)

Destroying the joint edited by Jane Caro

cover image

UQP, 2013. ISBN: 978 0 7022 4990 7. Paperback, 295 pps. RRP: $29.95
Highly recommended. Jane Caro has gathered a thought-provoking assembly of Australian women's responses to Alan Jones's comment on August 31, 2012 that 'women are destroying the joint'. The collection consists of essays, analysis, social comment, memoir and fiction combined with a healthy dose of humour.
Carmen Lawrence takes issue with destruction of the environment, arguing that it is fair to file responsibility with the 'privileged, powerful, Western white males' who across history have made crucial economic and societal management decisions.
Entertaining and engaging examples includes Jenna Price highlighting that Destroy the Joint put feminism on the front page, Catherine Fox protesting against the paucity of women in executive roles and Wendy Harmer's short and scathing description of how women are excluded from the radio industry joint. Other contributors present the perspectives of a teenage girl, parenting in a patriarchal society, and a nine year old trying to understand the abortion debate.
Covering double standards, oppression, a letter to a feminist (from a man who knows better) and the misogyny debate with the sombre words of Penny Wong, 'my realisation yet again that we still have so much more to do', this book provides much socio-political commentary for Women's Studies students to discuss and analyse. Highly recommended.
Cate Telfer

Lick by Matthew Van Fleet

cover image

Simon & Schuster, 2013. IS 9781471116254.
(Age 2-5) Recommended. Board book. Read aloud. Matthew Van Fleet has created a fun interactive book that is perfect for young children. All sorts of tongues and what they can do are explored in this very sturdy board book that is sure to please toddlers and amuse the adult who is reading to them.
Starting with the front cover, the book grabs the interest of the child with its easy-to-grip pull tab that has a bear with a pink tongue enthusiastically licking honey. From then on there are tactile experiences like a scratchy tiger tongue and a sticky frog tongue, as well as more pull tabs, culminating in a final one where a baby tiger's tongue makes a razz with an accompanying sound.
The language is great to read aloud, with lots of alliteration and humour interspersed throughout:
'Daddy tongue tickles,
Teasing tongue Nyah!'.
Cartoon like characters, coloured in warm tones, have a range of funny expressions that will delight the child who likes to examine details as well as manipulate tabs. Not only will young children experience the senses of taste and feel when reading this book they will also learn about the very different tongues that animals have.
Pat Pledger

The fearsome, frightening, ferocious box by Frances Watts and David Legge

cover image

ABC Books, 2013. ISBN 9780733328916.
(Age: 4+) Warmly recommended. Picture book. Humour. Poetry. A box falls fromm a truck and is left on the roadside, where a variety of animals comes and inspects the box, saying that they would look inside. But as each animal comes by, bragging that they will not be frightened, they are. First a monkey looks inside and hears the thing inside moan and tell a little tale of its life. The following double page shows the area in which it lives, and the reader is invited to search for the six things hidden on the two pages. Then a crocodile happens along and he hears the thing inside groan with a similar poem over the page inviting the reader to find the six things hidden this time in an arctic landscape. And on it goes, each animal being scared off by the thing inside and the reader invited to find six things in a different environment, until finally the lid of the box is lifted.
This fun involving story, with things for the reader to do on each page, will entertain those who pick up the book. Legge has successfully shown each animal in distress as it peers inside and the environments shown with their hidden animals will entice younger readers to be involved.
Fran Knight

Big Nate flips out by Lincoln Peirce

cover image

Harper Collins, 2013. ISBN 9780007478279.
(Ages: 10+) Highly recommended. Big Nate flips out is a funny, comic-style novel featuring two friends, Nate and Francis. It includes text and comics to tell the story and is funny and engaging. Reminiscent of the popular Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Nate tells his story with a lot of humour and the author uses descriptive language to help engage the reader. I would highly recommend it for boys aged 10+.
Nate and Francis take over the Yearbook Committee and as usual, Nate, the messy one, gets his best mate, Francis, the organised one, in trouble. Nate has lost the camera? Nate needs to fix it and to fix it he needs to change. How? With hypnotism of course! Nate becomes a tidy freak overnight while another friend investigates the missing camera. But, is being neat all the time going to help him get his friendship with Francis back on track? Who knew being so neat could be so boring!
Kylie Kempster

Too many elephants in this house by Ursula Dubosarsky

cover image

Ill. by Andrew Joyner. Penguin, 2012. ISBN 9780670075461
(Age: 4+) Warmly recommended. Picture book. Humour. Problem solving. Eric has simply too many elephants in his house. There are some in the kitchen, some in the hallway, the bathroom and his bedroom. He plays hide and seek with them, the one in the bathroom helps him brush his teeth at night, and the one in the kitchen is an excellent toast maker. One night Mum tells him that there are too many elephants in this house and that they must go. So Eric has the problem of moving his friends out of the house, and he tries a few different methods to do just that.
The joyous illustrations will make readers smile as they recognise the friendship between Eric and his playmates. The elephants peering out of the windows on the cover are enough to entice any reader to open the book and look inside, and then the parade of elephants will keep their interest as Eric's problem is finally solved.
The idea of imaginary friends will take hold of the readers as they recognise the ideas behind the story and puzzle with Eric on just how to consolidate the elephants in the house. His neat solution will appeal to the readers. A great book to read aloud, I would imagine that some teachers and parents will be able to use the idea to begin discussions with their charges about imaginary friends.
Fran Knight

Mr Birdsnest and the house next door by Julia Donaldson

cover image

Scholastic Australia, 2013. Paperback 74 p. ISBN: 9781742837109
(Age: 5-8) Highly recommended for lower school children, both boys and girls. UK Children's Laureate and author of the much-loved The Gruffalo, Julia Donaldson has produced a terrific read for the newly independent readers of around 5-8 years. When Elmo and his sister have to move house because Granny is moving in with them, they really want their parents to buy the 'jungle house' with its wild overgrown garden, lion door knocker, monkey patterned wallpaper and resident big black spider. But sadly their parents choose the much less exciting neighbouring place, which Elmo calls the 'flowerpot' house. The children look longingly over the fence at the far more desirable next door residence until the temptation becomes too much and they begin playing in the wild back garden - after all, the house is still empty and nobody cares. When they find a rusty old key in the yard, Elmo and his sister are elated to find it opens the back door of the jungle house and they can roam to their hearts' content, pretending the house is their very own. But oh oh, when Mr Birdsnest decides to buy their house, they are discovered and banished to their own pristine and boring home - until Granny needs rescuing and they discover that perhaps having a neighbour in the jungle house isn't so bad after all.
Younger readers growing in their confidence will love this story with its fast pace and short chapters. Hannah Shaw's amusing illustrations break up the text to present an easy-to-read layout.
Sue Warren

Word Hunters: The Curious Dictionary by Nick Earls and Terry Whidborne

cover image

UQP, August 2012. ISBN: 978 0 7022 4945 7. Paperback, 240 pp. RRP: $14.95
Highly recommended for readers 10 and up who relish a well-paced exciting story. As a long time fan of Nick Earls' works (often laughing helplessly when reading them), and a total word nerd, I was eager to read the first instalment of the Word Hunters series - a collaboration between Nick and Terry Whidborne.
Al and Lexie are twins from Fig Tree Pocket in Brisbane and as different as twins could possibly be. Al is a history 'freak' as described by his sister Lexie, who apparently acquires all her knowledge from reality tv shows. When Al's pet rat escapes in the school library and scoots into a hole in the wall amidst the 'out of bounds' renovations, Al retrieves him but also finds a very strange, very old book called Walker & Fuller's Curious Dictionary.
Much to the twins' surprise, and indeed dismay, the book mysteriously and magically transports them back in time where they find themselves dressed in period clothing in 19th century Menlo Park, New Jersey - in close proximity to Thomas Edison's laboratory. It becomes apparent to the twins that they are firstly on the trail of the history of the word 'hello' and their quest leads them in turn to a 19th century whaling ship, the Battle of Hastings, the library at Alexandria and more. From tracing the stable lineage of one of the oldest words in the world to learning about the origins of family names, the twins realise they must work together to survive all manner of sometimes dangerous situations.
Along the way the twins are introduced some very strange characters, particularly Caractacus, and come to realise that they are not the only 'word hunters'. Could the mysterious disappearance of their grandfather somehow be connected with word hunting? Who are the 'H' characters who have left their initials carved throughout time, along with tantalising anachronistic clues.
This adventure mystery is lively, funny and enlightening and Terry Whidborne's steampunk-ish illustrations wonderfully match the style and pace of the story. Etymology has never been so much fun!
The second in the series The Lost Hunters is now out and the third in the series War of the Word Hunters is on its way.
Sue Warren

Saurus Street series by Nick Falk and Tony Flowers

cover image

Random House, 2013. pbk., ill., RRP $A12.95
Saurus Street 1: Tyrannosaurus in the Veggie Patch. ISBN 9781742756554.
Saurus Street 2: A Pterodactyl Stole My Homework, ISBN9781742756561.
Saurus Street 3: The Very Naughty Velociraptor,ISBN 9781742756578.
Saurus Street 4: An Allosaurus Ate My Uncle, ISBN 9781742756585.
(Age 5-70) Children love dinosaurs. The dinosaur collection was the largest of my nonfiction section when I was library-based, and it was the section most visited by my youngest readers. It took very few visits for them to know where it was and search it independently. A recent visit to the National Dinosaur Museum  with Miss 6 and 60 Year 1 classmates showed that the interest has not waned, (and the theft of one of the dinosaurs overnight just added to the excitement). They were able to get their tongues around all those names without a hitch - even the second-youngest little person in my life can point to a picture and say, T-Rex. Of course, this is not new - we know that students constantly ask for books about dinosaurs so to be able to offer them a whole series of them that not only satisfy their interests but also supports their developing reading skills is bliss-on-a-stick! This could be the trigger that moves the reluctant reader along to independence because they WANT to read the stories for themselves.
In the first book, Tyrannosaurus in the Veggie Patch, Jack wishes for his own dinosaur but you can imagine his surprise when a live one turns up in his vegetable patch! Much as he would like to keep it, this soon proves impossible so he and his friend Toby build a time machine to send it back to the Cretaceous period. Trouble is, they end up going too! And so the adventures start... In the other books in the series, Sam, Susie, Tom and Tam all have their very own encounters that would be the envy of the readers, as well as teaching them a little at the same time.
The humour is perfect for this age and speaks of an author that knows just what appeals. The format of these books is perfect for that 5-8 year old group with a large font which is interspersed with other interesting fonts that really help that inner voice develop expression and interest. Short sentences help carry the story along at a fast clip and the vocabulary is really well-chosen. The speech of the characters is age-appropriate but there are still technical words used as well as figurative language that will really appeal. The story is accompanied by engaging illustrations which contain a lot of movement and humour and really support the text - there has been a lot of thought put into their design and placement. Even though each book is over 100 pages long, the choice and balance of fonts, illustrations, and chapter lengths make them very accessible to their target age of K-3. I have three six-year-olds in my life and I know what is going to be the in-demand bedtime story when they come to stay these holidays.
Barbara Braxton

Between the lives by Jessica Shirvington

cover image

HarperCollins, 2013. ISBN 9780732296261
Every 24 hours, seventeen year old Sabine lives in either Wellesley, Massachusetts, or in Roxbury, Boston. How? She doesn't really know but it has been her reality for as long as she can remember.
In Wellesley she has two brothers whom she prefers to ignore while in Roxbury she has a little sister that she worships and who worships her in return. In Wellesley she has money, lots of it, and all that it can buy. In Roxbury she has attitude, her sister and little else other than parents who are determined that her life will be better, read wealthier, than theirs.
Between the Lives observes Sabine's overwhelming desire to live just one life, to be normal, as she is tired of ensuring that the Sabine of one life doesn't leak into the life of the other. Both of her lives are believable, her experiences those of a young woman trying to define who she is and where she belongs, never an easy task but, in Sabine's case, made doubly difficult.
In both lives Sabine yearns to live only one life and when she breaks her arm all sorts of possibilities arise. Sabine realises that she has a chance, or what she hopes is a chance, to determine her future, to actually choose one life to live. But which life? And if she is wrong what then?
Shirvington has created an interesting concept which she manages with adroitness as Sabine risks all. There is just enough detail to allow the reader to accept Sabine's two lives, her experiences in each, and her ultimate actions.
And yet would any of us be willing to sacrifice so much, to turn our backs on a life and everyone in it without a backward glance, without regrets? People from all walks of life do occasionally do this in a variety of ways. The one niggling concern is that Sabine's option shouldn't be seen as an option for those who read her story.
Ros Lange

Lightning Jack by Glenda Millard

cover image

Ill. by Patricia Mullins. Scholastic, 2012.ISBN 978 1 74169 391 1.
(Age: 7+) Highly recommended. Picture book. Poetry. Horses. Imagination. In rhyming stanzas the story is told of Lightning Jack, a magnificent black horse, a gallant, daring and brave horse, that Sam Tulley wants to ride.  He mounts the horse and uses him to round up the cattle, stampeding down the hillside, and seen by the overseer, he is offered five hundred steer if he will sell his horse. The offer is rejected as Sam tells him it is not his horse to sell, nor the man's to buy. Sam and his horse travel far and wide, surveying the countryside, being part of other stories, ones in which horses have a place. So he brings rain to the parched earth near a farmstead, leaps over Dead Man's Leap when an armour plated outlaw wants the horse, and rides with Phar Lap as he wins a race.
Each episode in Lightning Jack's life is magnificently visualised with Patricia Mullins' wonderful tissue paper images, using Japanese and Indian paper to create the most striking of illustrations. Sam is astride the horse as it rears across the pages, buffetting the cattle as he steers them from a stampede, flying out of the clouds as he brings rain, and winning with Phar Lap by his side.
Sam's imagination leaps as he rides his midnight horse, the repetition of the last line becoming a refrain through the text which is alive with imagery, alliteration, metaphor and simile, the richness of the text and the illustration complimenting each other to perfection.
This a wonderful book to share, reading it aloud, while the students repeat the refrain, a book to use to talk about imagination, or horses, or incidents in Australian history in which horses have played a part, and reading parts of The man from Snowy River for comparison. Students will love to look more closely at the illustrations and see how Mullins has created the image represented on the pages, perhaps trying the technique for themselves.
Fran Knight

Shahana by Roseanne Hawke

cover image

Allen & Unwin, 2013. ISBN: 9781743312469. 216pgs. (pbk.)
(Age 11+) Recommended. Shahana is the first title in the Through My Eyes series, a moving series of courage and hope that focuses on children living in conflict zones around the world. Thirteen-year-old orphan Shahana lives alone with her younger brother Tanveer in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, because the rest of her family have died as a result of the war over Kashmir. They live very close to the Line of Control, the border which divides war-torn Kashmir in two and has Pakistani and Indian soldiers each patrolling their side of the fence. Shahana and Tanveer see a boy lying unconscious near the border and when the boy finally gains consciousness, they ask the boy where he is from and Zahid says who will you tell? Will Shahana risk everything to help a boy from the other side of the border? He can't stay, but how can she send him away? They both need him, Shahana is not sure she can get through another winter without help and Tanveer looks up to Zahid as the brother he recently lost to this war.
A beautiful, easy to read and thought provoking story by South Australian author Roseanne Hawke the story aims to increase awareness of the devastating effects of war on children.The book includes a timeline outlining the conflict between India and Pakistan over Kashmir dating from 1947 through to 2012 and a glossary, both adding to the reading experience. Teacher notes are also available.
I would recommend this book for ages 11+.
Michelle Thomson

Jeremy by Chris Faille

cover image

Ill. by Danny Snell. Working Title Press, 2013. ISBN 978192150440. 2.
(Age: 4-6) Highly recommended. Picture book. Australian birds. Rescue. What a delight. I love the use of a kookaburra as the rescued bird and the Australian suburbs illustrated in all their glory on the second to last page as the bird finds its home.
Jeremy is a fledgling brought inside by the house cat. The tale proceeds as the boy cares for the bird, settling him on a hot water bottle, feeding him thorough an eye dropper, and later, insects form the garden. We watch the little bird grow, as its feathers fill out, its beak becomes larger and the bird practices flying. It sits in the garden watching the other birds, and each progression is marked, giving the readers a precise idea of just how quickly the little bird grows. Time passes until one day Jeremy flies off with the other kookaburras on the electricity lines nearby.
Based on a true story, the tale will remind its readers of others with a similar theme, Bob Graham's How to heal a broken wing for example, but this one uses a kookaburra which is not often seen in children/s books, and the tale could be used in discussion with children about rescuing animals, the life cycle of birds, how to raise a bird, the nature of cats and so on, the illustrations adding a humorous undertone to the whole. The picture of Jeremy sitting on its purple cushion on the bright green lounge chair is magnificent and will draw any reader in to open the book.
And the end papers are used to list a large number of facts about kookaburras which will further endear the readers to this Australian bird.
Fran Knight

Plague: a cross on the door by Ann Turnbull

cover image

Ill. by Akbar Ali. Bloomsbury, 2013. ISBN 978 1 4081 8687 9
(Age: 8+) Recommended. Historical novel. Plague. With younger children in mind, Ann Turnbull has turned her historical writing to a new group of readers. Illustrated by Akbar Ali, the drawings show some of the features of the times: half timbered housing, a warm kitchen, the doctor dressed as a beaked harbinger of death, the overcrowded cemetery, the cross on the door. In eighty pages, Turnbull gives an account of the plague in London in 1665, told through the eyes of young Sam, adopted by the shoemaker William Kemp, with an eye to become his apprentice. But William dies of the plague and the house shut up with Sam and his dog inside, only to be released after forty days have elapsed.
Through his story Turnbull gives the younger reader an overview of the plague and its effects on the crowded city. The reader hears of the symptoms, the home remedies, the laws imposed by the London borough, the Bill of Mortality and so on, giving a factual account of the plague within the thrilling story of survival. A sequel, The great fire: a city in flames is to follow. Stories of the plague and fire of London have always been very popular, and this book would sit well with the recent non fiction book, Plague unclassified: secrets of the great plague revealed (Nick Hunter, A&C Black).
Fran Knight