Reviews

Night School: Legacy by C. J. Daugherty

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Atom, 2013. ISBN 9781907411229.
Well worth a read. Night School: Legacy, plunges the reader into a world of action and intrigue, at the centre of which is the Cimmeria Academy, a vast gothic mansion that no longer provides sanctuary and safety for its inhabitants, and indeed, seems to harbour nothing but secrets and mysteries.
In this, the second book of the Night School series, C. J. Daugherty wastes no time in immersing the reader in Allie Sheridan's life at the Academy, a co-educational boarding school that teaches far more than academic subjects.
Cimmeria Academy is an intimidating place, but it is the one place where Allie has felt a sense of belonging. Its old world traditions, its sense of entitlement and privilege, its unusual subjects, and the friends she makes make her determined to protect it.
Some of the school's traditions are based around nocturnal activities where night croquet, with glowing balls and racquets and night tennis, with a net made of fairy lights provide fun as well athletic training. But then there is the Night School - a society of elite students so secret that just talking about it can get a member expelled.
Able to be read as a stand-alone, Daugherty skillfully manages to supply enough of the back story, and information about the significant events in the first novel to enable the reader to understand that Allie's life is far more than it seems.
From a missing brother who she believes may now be the enemy, to a hithero unknown grandmother, to parents who have lied to her, to mentors and friends that she no longer completely trusts, Allie's life seems to controlled by forces that she must discover and understand, beginning with who her family really is and why the mysterious Nathaniel is trying to kill her.
Allie soon uncovers a huge conspiracy of which the Night School is only a small part. However, it is down to these students to ensure that the Cimmeria Academy and its inhabitants survive.
As Allie tries to find out the truth about what's going on at Cimmeria, she soon realises that her life and those of her friends, and the people she cares about is under threat. She must uncover the truth about who she really is and where she really belongs.
This novel is action packed, and full of danger, intrigue, excitement and romance.
Ros Lange

Tiger at the door by Lisa Regan

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Ill. by Kelly Caswell. Series: Wild Things. Bloomsbury, 2013. ISBN 9781 4081 7935 2.
(Age: 5+) Warmly recommended. Picture book. Animals. Zoos. This series called Wild Things, published in association with the London Zoo, has animals coming to stay at a family home. Through the pages, the animal is shown being accommodated within a house, with questions about its habitat, sleeping arrangements, food and activities given an airing as the question is always posed about how it would fit in. In funny double page spreads aimed at the very young, the answer is obviously 'not at all', but through this situation, the author is able to show children the animal's specific needs for survival.
Tiger at the door, for example has a tiger coming to stay. Each double page gives one of the tiger's needs and suggests how it could be met. On one page the tiger needs to be hidden as it likes to be camouflaged, and so the tiger is hiding behind a group of trees; its tail and eyes just visible. The following page talks about food, and shows a tiger reading a menu with large animals on it. Because the tiger is the biggest of cats, it needs a large animal to eat, so the suggestion is that you provide a buffalo for its meal. But because it likes its food rotten, it may be good to provide a pond where it can lay down some of its food for later. In this way, the information about the tiger is given in funny bites, with the conclusion that the tiger does not belong in the home. Two pages of information are given, followed by a glossary and a page about the zoos involved in this project, with the last page having the covers of the rest of the books in the series.
Others in this series concern the addition of a Monkey, Penguin, Lion, Giraffe, Hippo, Elephant and Emu, in the home.
Fran Knight

Ella and Olivia : Puppy Trouble by Yvette Poshoglian

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Ill. by Danielle McDonald. Scholastic Australia, 2013. ISBN 9781742836577.
The Ella and Olivia series has proven popular with younger girls as an introduction to chapter books. They reflect the issues and interests of girls in the 5-7 age group.
The main characters are Ella, who is in year 2 and Olivia her younger sister who has just begun school. The series follows their everyday adventures at school and at home.
Puppy Trouble follows their journey as the family adopts a new puppy, from choosing him at the pet shop to the realisation that as cute as the puppy is there is a whole new level of the responsibility that comes with pet ownership. Bob, the pup, is not as easy to look after as the girls think. Typically he wrecks havoc in the house and runs away as they take him for a walk.
Written in the present tense, the larger font size is supportive of the early independent reader. Whilst the chapters are of a reasonable length the line drawings and embellishments as well as wide paragraph spacing make the pages of text look less daunting.
Ella and Olivia books are a good follow on for those girls who have read the Billie B Brown books and are looking for something else in a similar vein.
Sue Keane

Web of Deceit by Katherine Howell

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Pan Macmillan, 2013. ISBN  9781742610306
(Age: Senior secondary to adult) Crime. Paramedics Jane and Alex have encountered all kinds of situations in their work and are skilled at making quick assessments. When they are called to a single vehicle accident where the driver is terrified of leaving his car, they assume he is delusional. He keeps insisting that someone is out to get him. They take him to a nearby hospital in the hope that he will receive a psychiatric evaluation. A few hours later he is found dead under a train. It might look like suicide but Jane is troubled by his earlier behaviour.
Detective Ella Marconi is allocated to investigate the case but she is hampered by her budget obsessed boss, lies and subterfuge. It would be simple to write the death off as a suicide but when the victim's boss tries to kill himself after being interviewed, detective Marconi's curiosity is piqued. The sudden disappearance of a witness further complicates the matter. She doesn't like taking shortcuts and is determined to unearth the truth, even if it means going behind her boss sometimes.
Howell is skilled at developing multiple story lines and weaving them together in a credible manner. In her personal life Jane is quietly thrilled to have a promising love interest while single father Alex is struggling with a recalcitrant teenage daughter. Detective Marconi is in the unenviable position of being romantically attracted to a doctor despite being responsible for having his father jailed for murder. When a woman is beaten and left for dead in Jane's garden and Alex's daughter goes missing the private lives of these characters intersect in a tense and thrilling conclusion.
This well written book is guaranteed to satisfy lovers of crime fiction.
Tina Cain

This is me: Ian Thorpe the Autobiography by Ian Thorpe

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Simon and Schuster, 2012. ISBN 9781471101229.
Recommended. I picked up this book fully believing that all you had to do to swim fast was to move your arms really fast. I put down the book knowing a lot more than I bargained for.
WOW, is the best word to describe this book. I've always approached autobiographies hesitantly, but WOW every time I have a break I have to give myself a minute to remember that I'm not Ian Thorpe, but only a girl who struggles to swim. The book is written that well. Also some of the things that are written in this book are breathtaking. For example, when the plane crashes into the Empire State Building! I felt gobsmacked and had a heavy heart for the rest of the day. The amazing reason I felt that way was because I had previously heard about the tragedy, so it was no surprise, but I didn't realise the negativity the journalists portrayed. I hope that at least one journalist reads this book and walks away with second thoughts about the way they approach celebrities with their prying questions.
Rating: 4 stars
I recommend this book without a doubt. I now have an open mind about autobiographies and am looking forward to reading another one . . .
Lilly S. (Student

Chinese Whispers by Christine Harris

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Raven Lucas. Omnibus, 2013. ISBN 978-1-86291-929-7. 184 pages; p/b; rrp $14.99
(Age: 12+) Recommended. Chinese Whispers written by Christine Harris is a great conclusion to her Raven Lucas series. This award-winning author has a unique ability to engage the reader until the final page.
Although I have not read the earlier books from this series, I was hooked from its opening paragraph. Not only is Christine Harris's plot intriguing, her exotic panorama stretches from Australia to Malaysia, and her characters are lively and entrancing. The opening chapter is dramatic, and straight away captures the reader's attention. Harris punctuates her chapters with evocative phrases such as 'sirens punch the air'. Her novel is underpinned with great dialogue and bantering teenage humour that brings her characters to life.
Raven Lucas is a switched-on fourteen-year-old who is still searching for her missing father, and nothing will stop her until she finds him. As she prepares to travel to Malaysia with her closest friends Sarah and Jessica, she cannot imagine the adventure ahead: discovery of a murder in a Malaysian market, swimming with sea-going monitor lizards, and much more.
Raven hasn't been to Malaysia before, and her mother who is still recovering from a poorly disposition, does not want her travelling alone. She sends her housekeeper along as chaperone, but the question is, can she be trusted?
Reading the first two books from the Raven Lucas series prior to reading Chinese Whispers, will enable the reader to become fully acquainted with the variety of characters and their activities that make up this series. This book will appeal to middle-upper primary girls who seek adventure and mystery, and will provide a sense of the exotic for girls who one day would like to travel.
I recommend Chinese Whispers for inclusion in school libraries, and indeed for the home library of young girls aged 12+. Great value for money.
Colleen Tuovinen

The Cartographer by Peter Twohig

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Fourth Estate, 2012. ISBN 9780732293161.
(Age: Senior secondary - adult) Highly recommended. The Cartographer is a grimly joyous account of a young boy who lives in a tough Melbourne suburb in the 1950s. His identical twin, Tom, has recently died. Tom was 'bold as brass'; our unnamed protagonist is 'sharp as a tack'. Now he is trying to be both boys, adopting Tom's mannerisms until he is disappearing himself. The boy's perspective is innocent, yet knowing. He is tinged with pain and the ugliness of the world; witnessing murder, rape and kidnapping, but still hopeful. His original voice is a tour de force.
He seems to be dealing with his grief and trying to find meaning by mapping his shady neighbourhood; beginning with the streets and buildings - outside and then progressing inside to hear secrets, and into the railway tunnels and drains. The comic drawings on the cover signify his role as an urban superhero-explorer. He views the horrible things that happen to him as tests. The Mapping Manual which he has found helps him feel that he can create a world of maps 'in which I could walk around in without getting frightened half to death every five minutes. It was almost as if I was protected by a secret identity . . . My thought was to harness the power I had been using to using to turn myself into Tom to instead turn myself into a brand-new super identity, far more powerful than both of us together . . . 'the cartographer' '.
Although from the adult list and with corresponding content, the boy's quest for understanding and survival, the book's principle that life is to be explored, and the gripping, accessible style and superhero metaphors, make The Cartographer an appealing and alternative read for mature secondary students.
Joy Lawn

Divide and Conquer by Carrie Ryan

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Infinity Ring, book 2. Scholastic, 2012. ISBN 9780545386975.
Recommended. Book two of the Infinity Ring series though written by a different author begins exactly where book one left off. Well the same spot in Paris only in the year 885 not 1792, and after the Infinity Ring had once again saved the main characters Sera, Dak and Riq.
Children, already hooked by the Infinity Ring series and its related internet game, will find this adventure in history hard to resist. Those new to the adventures of the young time travellers will soon be bought up to speed as Sera and Dak reflect on the events which bought them to ancient Paris.
We are immediately involved in the action as the Vikings lay siege to the city with our heroes inside as they attempt to work out what break in history they have been sent to repair. Sera and Riq after are left with the Franks defending the Ile de la Cite whilst Dak, who wanders off caught up in the joy of looking at real Viking ships, is caught while inspecting one of the longboats along the Seine, and become standard bearer for the invaders.
As with the previous story there is an Hystorian, Bill, to help them in their quest and they also need to defeat The Time Warden, Gorm, a member of the SQ, the organisation determined to ensure history favours its quest for power.
The author of this story introduces an element of young love between Sera and the young Hystorian. That and the friendship and between Dak and Rollo, are a relief from all the fighting and politics and enable us to see the main characters developing. The question of how their presence is affecting the ones they meet as they travel through time is raised by Sera.
After inadvertently taking Rollo's dog Vigi with them when they travelled through time, they choose to go back to 911 and the Battle of Chartres and meet again with the Rollo and Bill who has joined with him.
The final paragraph tantalises us with enough information to look forward to the next book. More adventures in the quest to defeat the SQ and change their stream of history as well as finding Dak's parents.
Sue Keane

Words get knotted by Pippa Sweeney

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Bloomsbury, 2012. Unpaged. Hardback picture book.
Suitable for ages 6+. The subject of this book is dyslexia, which is defined as 'a difficulty with words'. The author, Pippa Sweeney wrote this book to help children, their families and friends to better understand the condition. She has dyslexia herself, as does her elder daughter, and she tells us about the hereditary links in this condition.
The stage for this tale is set by using the analogy of words and writing being like wool and knitting. When you have dyslexia your words get knotted just like wool can become knotted. The analogy contributes to the lovely quirky feel about this book.
There are naive, colour illustrations predominantly created with wool, which give the illustrations a collage effect. They tie in beautifully with the analogy described above and the 'knotted' title. The design and format have been well thought out and the pages are never crowded.
In the back of the book there is Further information (via websites) and About the author. Also included are Ten tips for parents, which focus on making learning as active as possible eg No. 5 'Make cakes and cookies with your child' (weighing ingredients, placing them in separate containers, providing simple instructions to read together with your child), which sounds like fun.
The author also gives many suggestions to teachers for ways to help children with dyslexia eg colour tints to help reading, computer games, tape record your stories. Children are advised not to worry 'if you write something differntly each time, diferently each time, differently each time.' They are encouraged to ask for help from family members and teachers, who can explain to them what is happening.
M. E. Strickland

Sarah plain and tall by Patricia MacLachlan

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HarperTrophy, 2004. ISBN 978 0 06 440205 7.
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Early novel. American history. Step parents. One of the useful things about AbeBooks and other such companies, is being able to find and buy a book that was a favourite years ago and reread it. So it is with Sarah plain and tall. Recently reading Norah's chicks by Patricia MacLachlan, I remembered another of her books that I read many years ago and loved. I found it had been reprinted and was able to get a secondhand copy published in 2004 for $5. This wonderful story, so well told, concerns a man and his two young children living on a farm out west, after his wife has died. The background of the farm work that he does is a subtle part of the writing, and we see that he has little spare time. He needs someone to look after the house and the children, and so advertises for a wife. An answer comes from Sarah, who lives near the sea. The correspondence is shared between the small family until she agrees to come and stay with them for a month.
During that month, the plain and tall Sarah endears herself to the man and his children, while overcoming some of her grief at not being near the sea, and she agrees to stay to be married.
This Newbery Award winner is wonderful, the story inviting and enveloping, the feelings of each of the four so well portrayed that we see each of their fears and understand them. That a young woman can travel into an unknown place with the possibility of marriage astounds me and I have a profound admiration of the courage of those who did so. First published in 1985, Sarah plain and tall has lost none of its freshness and appeal.
Fran Knight

Dog on Log by Tania Ingram and Kat Chadwick

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Omnibus Books, 2013. ISBN 9781862919648.
Dog on log is a delightfully simple rhyming picture book. An assortment of characters including a dog, frog, hog, cat and rat are gathered outdoors for a birthday party. The reader finds them in a variety of situations, such as 'Frog on dog and dog on log. Dog and frog near hog in bog.' The dialogue is accompanied by beautiful illustrations containing plenty of interesting details to share with young children. Here is a rat peeping out of a log, there sits a basket of party hats and a frog holding a balloon. Nearby, a hog lies contentedly in the water, a bottle of sunscreen close at hand. The party becomes a little more chaotic as more guests arrive and the rat tries to steal the cat's cake. Ultimately they all end up in the bog.
This book is a pleasurable and entertaining read and worthy addition to any pre schooler's library.
Tina Cain

Destiny Rising by L. J. Smith

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The Vampire Diaries: The Hunters Vol. 3. Harper Teen, 2012. ISBN 9780062119605.
Elena has had to face many forces over the years. Now she is learning about her destiny as a Guardian. Elena has chosen Stefan, leaving Damon dark and extremely unpredictable. Elena tries to save Damon's soul while being with Stefan. Even though she is with Stefan she is still trying to figure out where her heart lies. Klaus has been resurrected and will stop at nothing until he destroys Elena - including those around her. While learning about her destiny as a Guardian, a protector of Earth, she uncovers that to defeat Klaus she must sacrifice someone close to her
The title Destiny Rising is well suited for the book and helps the reader picture what the novel may be about. The plot followed the same line but new problems kept arriving. The novel had me hanging onto the pages. The novel is exiting with tons of tension in the pages as I kept reading and I wanted to know how it ended.
Cecilia Richards (Student)

Planet of the Lawn Gnomes by R. L. Stine

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Goosebumps Most Wanted. Scholastic, 2013. ISBN 9780545417983.
The Goosebumps series has been popular over a long period of time and I know many boys who have been turned on to reading through the work of R.L. Stine.
The lawn gnomes on the cover are enough to make the faint hearted reader turn away, and the lovers of horror fiction delighted. The opening chapter reinforces the impression that this is for horror lovers only as the author introduces the story.
Jay the main character tells the story from his perspective. He claims he is not bad despite having 'been in some pretty bad trouble'. He and his family have moved from another town recently and we become aware that it is because of the trouble Jay has caused. New neighbour, Mr McClatchy, is now the focus for Jay's pranks, but the presence of several garden gnomes spooks him.
These are not little gnomes, being almost as tall as 12 year old Jay, and seem to move about at will, and are everywhere. There is also the quagmire at the end of the street containing quicksand and enormous, blind, Buzzard Hawks flying about. The Buzzard Hawks are large enough to carry away the family golden Labrador Mr Phineas. With these problems and the fact that no one seems keen to tell Jay what is going on, leads to a very confused main character, and reader.
Unfortunately I wasn't a fan of the series in the 90's and despite the many titles now in circulation, this new Most Wanted title hasn't changed my opinion. I found the main character Jay hard to sympathise with and understand, and even at the end was left feeling bemused.
For true fans it undoubtedly will be a hit, but sadly, I have yet to be converted.
Sue Keane

Interview with Angela Sunde by Fran Knight

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Adelaide, February 18, 2013.
Teacher's College in New Zealand in the 70's, like Australia, had a bond system.Those who were the recipients of education department bursaries for university degrees meant that once you completed your studies you were bound to the education facility for a number of years. Fortunately when Angela Sunde completed her training, teaching jobs in New Zealand were scarce, and so her bond was revoked, giving her the opportunity to apply for work in Australia. Another happy emigre was welcomed to our shores adding to our cultural achievements.
First work was in Melbourne, where temperatures range from 14C to 34C just in one day, as a secondary teacher of German. Angela was heavily involved in the Goethe Institute, winning a scholarship to Germany to work and study. Back in Australia, she and her husband decided to move to the Gold Coast after her mother and siblings moved there from New Zealand. Here she worked for several years, but having children meant reducing her time in schools, so she worked in primary schools for some years, developing an empathy and understanding of younger children and their reading needs.
But changes here, meant that she no longer felt happy, having to teach in two schools with reduced time given to languages, so she took a TAFE course in writing for children and has never looked back. Finding something you are passionate about is most gratifying and within this genre of children's literature, she was able to tap into her inner self and write.
Pond Magic, her first novel for upper primary students was published in 2010, and another in the same series, Aussie Chomps, was written but unfortunately missed the boat, that wonderful series having been shelved by Penguin.
In Pond Magic, 12 year old Lily notices that her face is changing colour. Later she notices that her feet are becoming webbed and now and again a croak emanates from her mouth and she wins the breast stroke race at the school swimming carnival by miles. What to do? When her family, the Padds, take on an exchange student from France, Lily finds a neat solution to her problem and all is resolved.
The light touch of Lily's story is part of its charm. The continuing puns on all things green, webby and French are pitched at just the right level of humour for this age group and I for one, reread the story hoping there would be a sequel.
Moving to the Gold Coast meant that Angela was also able to access the events aimed at helping emerging writers. She has been to the CYA Conferences in Brisbane each year since its inception six years ago, listening to the authors and publishers speak about their work, while having access to publishers and being able to pitch her own work. At these conferences many budding authors are able to get a publisher interested in their work, and see how their work sounds while talking to others. Through these conferences too, Angela has made some wonderful friends in the writing and illustrating world.
Awarded one of the 2013 May Gibbs Fellowships, Angela has been able to stay at the apartment in Norwood, meet fellow authors and illustrators in Adelaide, and meet some of the publishing world here. Working on her next book, The Blue Tutu, Angela was grateful to have spoken to Dyan Blacklock, allowing her to see her story from a different perspective and with renewed vigour.
Angela spends some of her time volunteering for organisations using illustrating as a forum. The event, One Word - One Day sees a group of illustrators given one word to use as the basis for an illustration during the day. The illustrations are taken to Sydney where they are auctioned and the money so raised goes to the Indigenous Literacy Foundation. This is backed by the Australian Society of Authors. She and the writers' group in the Gold Coast to which she belongs, Prana Writers, entered the 'Write a Book in a Day' competition recently. A hellish task, but Angela and her group won the day! (won National First Place in the open section and raised $980 for the Royal Children's Hospital in Brisbane)
I asked Angela about her blog, which can be found here, as it seems to me that many authors spend a lot of time on their blogs, possibly taking time away from writing. She agreed, but admitted that lately while in Adelaide, she had been posting a short piece each day on her blog, while she usually limits it to one post a month.
For more information about Angela Sunde see here and on the Puffin website.
Fran Knight

Pond Magic by Angela Sunde

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Puffin, 2010. ISBN 978 014330525.
(Ages: 10-12) Recommended. Another in the highly successful series, Aussie Chomps, this very funny story has poor Lily watching herself turn into a frog. At first she notices her skin is going green, then she embarrasses herself highly in the school bus with the most enormous burps, when changing for swimming, she suddenly notices the webbing between her feet, and to top it all off, she wins the race easily, using the fastest breaststroke anyone has ever seen. Combine all this with eruption on her face and a proclivity for flies, Lily's life is a mess.
Her mother, Mrs Padd, surprises her with a French exchange student, coming to stay and Lily is determined not to like him. But he speaks French. So when Mrs Swan next door confesses that is it her doing that is causing these momentous changes, Lily finds something on the web in French, needing his discretion to translate it and so get her life back to some sort of normalcy.
A great read with lots of puns and jokes around frogs and green things, this deceptively uncomplicated writing will engage the Aussie Chomps audience, looking for something with bite, a sound plot and amiable characters and yet still not too complex or overlong.
Fran Knight