The Lorien Legacies series. Penguin, 2011.
(Age 13+) The Power of Six follows quickly on from the
popularity of the first book of this series, I am Number Four
and the subsequent late 2010 release of the Hollywood film version.
This novel continues following the destruction of the Paradise school,
when John, Sam and Number Six are labelled wanted 'International
Terrorists' and are forced to flee the small the American town. This
means John is forced to leave his human girlfriend Sarah and thus
positions the story with an ongoing subject of John continuously
missing Sarah balanced with an emerging physical attraction to Six. The
Power of Six simultaneously follows the one of the other nine
Gardes from the planet of invaded Lorien, Seven, also known by her
adopted name on earth, Marina. Unlike John (or Number Four) Seven went
to Spain when they arrived on earth and was living in St Teresa
orphanage and convent with her guardian (known as Cepan) Adelina.
Marina's Cepan has failed to train her in the skills that would later
require in fighting the enemy Mogadorians because she was influenced
and distracted by her new devotion to the church and God. As a
consequence, Marina (Number Seven) is forced to discover her new
special powers (called Legacies) by herself, which for her includes the
ability to heal others. John, Six and Seven soon discover that their
connection to each other occurs in the context of their special chests,
the contents of which are further revealed throughout the book.
Unfortunately for these three Gardes, the Mogadorians have also gained
access to these chests and have using the powers contain within these
chests to hunt down and destroy the remaining members of Lorien on
earth. The Power of Six has certainly plenty of action, plots
and sub-plots to keep readers engrossed. The themes of lust, loyalty
and love that permeate both John's and Marina's stories make this
popular novel slightly more than just an entertaining fantasy fiction
novel. The Power of Six film version would soon be anticipated
by fans of this series.
Adam Fitzgerald
Darkness Falls by Mia James
Orion, 2011.
Age 14+) (Darkness Falls is the second book in the Ravenwood
Vampires series and
picks up several months from the first book which revealed that a large
percentage of students at the exclusive Ravenwood School are in fact
vampires. April is recovering from a shocking attack from a fellow
student and the horrific death of her father.
Although I haven't had a chance to read the first book in the series I
was able to piece together the story line. April the main
character is a very complex individual whose story draws the reader in
- I could barely put the book down wanting to know what was going to
happen next. In some parts of the book April is your typical teenager
and yet in others she shows maturity beyond her years. She is coming to
terms with the fact that her Mother may be dating again so soon after
the death of her beloved Father. She is trying to get her head around
the fact the she is Fury and if this fact is discovered by the vampires
at Ravenwood her life won't be worth living and that she has given her
vampire boyfriend a virus that is killing him.
The story takes the readers on a twisting mysterious journey that keeps
them guessing at all times. Just when you think that you have the story
line figured out another unexpected situation pops up. It not only
looks at April's adjustment to what she really is but it delves deeper
in the dynamics of all of her relationships. Although it has
similarities to other books in this popular genre, it offers unique
qualities that make it ever so appealing. The creepy atmosphere of the
Highgate Cemetery and the unseen forces watching April's every move
make it more than a creepy romance. I also liked the fact that it was
set in Britain. I would thoroughly recommend this book to older teenage
readers and I eagerly await the third in the series.
Elaine Grottick
Beat the band by Don Calame
Candlewick Press, 2010. ISBN 9780763656638.
(Age: 15+) Sophomore year is all about scoring gorgeous girls and
Cooper Redmond is up for the challenge. Along with his mates Matt and
Sean, Coop is feeling awesomely optimistic until his health teacher
pairs him with 'Hot Dog' Helen to prepare a class presentation. She is
the school pariah and bottom of the popularity stakes. Cooper
can't believe his reputation is going to be shattered before he has a
chance to impress Prudence, Kelly and all the other hot babes. He has
to put as much distance between him and Helen as possible and entering
the Battle of The Bands competition might just be the way to salvage
his street cred. The only problem is that he and his mates suck when it
comes to performance.
A sequel to the very popular Swim The Fly, this novel is both hilarious
and entertaining. Readers will identify with Cooper and his dilemma of
choosing between popularity versus integrity.
The energy he expends attempting to sabotage his partnership with Helen
are innovative and excrutiating in equal measure. There are
lessons to be learned and a moral to the story. Although this novel is
probably aimed primarily at boys, it is an enjoyable read for all.
Tina Cain
The Christmas Book by Dick Bruna
Hardie Grant Egmont, 2011. ISBN 9781921288814.
This is my all-time favourite Christmas book sparking one of the most
enduring activities that I did with the re-telling of the Christmas
story. This
re-issue of the 1964 original by Dick Bruna (of Miffy fame) tells the
story in a
simple, uncomplicated way that ensures children learn about the events
that
underpin this important celebration and help them understand that there
is more
to it than a fat man in a red suit and bulging stockings.
The illustrations are typically Bruna with simple lines and colour
blocks that have a character all of their own. There were few children
in my 35-year career who were not exposed to this book and it's great
to know that it
is on the market again. If it is not in your collection, it should be.
I'm
looking forward to sharing this with Miss 5 on Christmas Eve.
Barbara Braxton
The Summer Gang by Cornelia Funke
The first CHIX adventure. Chicken House, 2011. ISBN 9781904442868. $16.
166 pages.
(Age 10+) Best friends Charlie, Hannah, Izzie and Xa form a secret
girl's club (CHIX) to seek adventure and have fun. They have to deal
with rivalry from an all boys gang and some family dramas. The story
ends with us wondering about a family secret so readers will be keen to
find the next in the series on the shelves.
Cornelia Funke is a best selling German author and with her blend of
warmth and humour in writing about children's lives it is easy to see
why. This series will be popular with girls looking for an easy to read
series with engaging characters. The publishers have chosen wisely with
an eye catching cover.
Chris Lloyd
Angel Creek by Sally Rippin
Text Publishing, 2011. ISBN 978 1 921758 05 8.
(Ages: 11+) Fantasy. The idea of a guardian angel is given a tweak in
this fascinating story from Sally Rippin. Jelly (a nick name for
Angelica) and her two cousins, Gino and Pik, find a small angel in the
creek nearby her house, a a place they are told not to visit following
the drowning of a young boy several years before. The angel is
distressed and clutches Jelly in alarm, so they take it to somewhere
safe where they can feed it and help it regain its strength. It is
Christmas and Gino's family has come to stay with Jelly and her parents
and their grandmother who lives in a flat at the back of the house.
When her grandmother has a heart scare, the house is disrupted, the
parents keeping vigil at the hospital while the children are left,
under the eyes of a neighbour, but with more freedom than is normal.
So the story pans out, the children helping the angel, Jelly feeling
more and more uncomfortable about why the angel is here, no-one knowing
for sure whether Grandma will return from hospital. Getting to the
angel in the shed at the local school, closed for the summer, means
avoiding the bullies who try and take advantage of them. One boy
however, stands out from the crowd and helps Jelly unexpectedly at the
end. A story of Jelly's growing up, of taking a stand and finding
friendship both with her cousin and the boy who helps her, promising to
be a friend when she attends high school the following year, the story
has aspects which will surprise the reader, involved in the fascinating
story of Jelly and her brush with an angel.
Fran Knight
A straight line to my heart by Bill Condon
Allen and Unwin. 2011. ISBN 978 174237 730 8.
Some might consider it presumptuous for a grown man to write in the
persona of a seventeen year old girl, however Bill Condon tells this
gentle, affirming story with credibility. Tiffany is an endearing
character who would have been an orphan, had she not grown up in the
sleepy country town of Gungee Creek with Reggie, his late wife and his
step-son Bull. In the narrative's setting, Reggie's advanced years see
him regarded as a much loved grandfather, whilst Bull's role is the
gruff but kindly father figure, complete with 'Dad jokes' and constant
concern for Tiff's welfare.
Whilst she is a happy young woman with a mature attitude to life,
Tiffany is still susceptible to its vagaries and difficult episodes.
These include her best friend's pending move interstate, undertaking
work experience with the local paper, illness within the family and the
arrival of a real, live young man in Davey, the first boy to be
interested in her!
Tiffany hopes to be a reporter and soon discovers that her sense of
humor, clever way with words and assumptions about motives need
refining for her to succeed. Her kind heart and healthy perspective on
life need no adjustment at all however.
Condon's characters are likeable and authentic. It is gratifying to see
that those with whom Tiffany interacts on other levels, such as Bull's
girlfriend Zoe, her best friend Kayla, news reporters Joan and 'The
shark' all demonstrate a desire to see her succeed and be happy. This
is refreshing in modern literature which often obscures reality by the
over representation of exploitative, threatening or sinister characters.
This is a simple story with few extremely dramatic elements. As a
snapshot of a short period in an average teenager's life, this is
believable and the creation of an engaging, interesting story within
these limits is a credit to the author.
Rob Welsh
A bush Christmas by C. J. Dennis
Ill. by Dee Huxley. Black Dog Books, 2011 ISBN 9781 742032 07 8.
(Ages 4+) Recommended. Picture book. The C. J. Dennis poem, A bush
Christmas (1931) is given a new outing in this beautifully illustrated
production from black dog books, now an imprint of Walker Books
Australia. With warmth and verve, Dennis has his family visited by an
old loner from a shack near Woollybutt. Rogan comes to spend Christmas
Day with them each year, drinking with dad, eating mum's generous
helpings of
turkey and pudding, then entertaining the children with stories of
Christmas in England, where the snow and ice contrast vividly with the
extreme temperatures of an Australian Christmas.
This story overflows with Australian charm, family togetherness at this
time of the year, welcoming a neighbour into their home and having fun
with their guest. All the while Mum is in the background doing the hard
slog of cooking, serving then clearing up. Dee Huxley wickedly shows
the disparity between the eaters and the worker in his lovely portrayal
of Mum, red faced and wild haired, wondering about the pile of washing
up at the end of the day. Read out loud, read together as a small group
or just read alone, this is a lovely poem, with surprising rhymes,
redolent of times past, but underlining the important and unwavering
values of Christmas. This is a delightful production and makes a
welcome change from the plethora of bland Christmas books I have read
over the past months.
Fran Knight
Grace at Christmas by Mary Hoffman
Frances Lincoln Children's Books, 2011. ISBN 9781847801470
(Ages 4+) Highly recommended. Gently told by Mary Hoffman, and
beautifully illustrated in watercolour by Cornelius van Wright and
Ying-Hwa Hu, Grace at Christmas will delight all young children.
It is the story of Grace, a young girl who loves Christmas Day even
better than her own birthday. She loves going to Church on Christmas
Day with her Ma and Nana, and loves acting out the Christmas story. She
just loves everything about Christmas Day.
When she discovers she is to share her favourite day with strangers,
she is upset, and grumbles to her friends at school. She even phones
her daddy, who lives in Africa, and hopes he will understand her
dilemma. When he tells her she must make her guests welcome, Grace
cannot help wishing it was her daddy who would be sharing Christmas
with her.
However, after Savannah arrives, and Grace discovers that Savannah is
lonely, the two become friends, and together they perform the nativity
story for the grown-ups.
This lovely book will make an excellent school library or class
resource. It tells the Christmas story, but equally it highlights the
importance of friendship, and introduces the topic of separation with
sensitivity.
Mary Hoffman is a prolific children's author, having written over 90
books ranging from picture books to novels. I recommend it most highly.
Colleen Tuovinen
Taken Away by Celine Kiernan
Allen and Unwin, 2011. p/b. ISBN 9781742377520.
(Ages 14+) Celine Kiernan's mastery of imagery and ability to enthrall,
will keep the young adult spellbound in her new novel Taken Away;
added
to this mix, is an edgy and faintly disturbing tale of 'Loss.
Theft. A
Haunting.'
Sixteen-year-old twin brothers, Patrick and Dom, live a normal family
life, that is, until the fire. What follows will surprise - Dom is
overtaken by a ghost. This is a story of Patrick's desperate race to
save Dom from 'the grey' before he is lost to his family forever. It is
no coincidence that the twins save an old man from drowning in the
ocean, and Patrick comes to the horrible realisation that his brother
is possessed by another man's soul.
It is impossible not to feel the chilling cold of the haunted or the
indescribable grief of the twins drawing apart as Dom's painful removal
from the present becomes more certain. Wartime battle scenes ramp up
the tension as the novel approaches its climax.
Although there is minimal swearing in the opening pages, this does not
underpin the character of the novel. Kiernan sweeps the reader along,
weaving the 'other world' into this novel with ease; the novel slips
between dimensions in a truly believable manner. With 255 pages, it is
an ideal length to hold the interest of secondary readers age 14+.
I really enjoyed this book and would recommend it as being suitable for
placing on school library bookshelves. It is a well-crafted
introduction to a darker genre of fantasy prose.
Colleen Tuovinen
The Outcasts by John Flanangan
Brotherband Series Bk. 1. Random House, 2011. ISBN
978-1-74166-449-2.
(Age 10+) Highly recommended. As a fan of John Flanagan's Ranger's
Apprentice series, I was looking forward to the first of the new
spin off series, Brotherband . Would the world of the
Viking-like Skandians be as gripping as the stories of Ranger Will and
his friends? The Outcasts did not disappoint. Of course the reader of the Ranger's
Apprentice will remember the Skandians, but the focus is on a new
character, young Hal who doesn't fit the warrior image and uses his
mind to invent and create rather than use the brute strength of the
other boys.
Hal is at the age of becoming a warrior and with other boys must be
selected into a team or brotherband as part of his training. The boys
must endure 3 months of weapon training, battle tactics and seamanship.
Hal reluctantly becomes the leader of one of the three teams and his
group the 'Herons' are the outcasts, the unwanted, hence the title of
the book. It is a great honour to be the winning team and the boys
fiercely compete to earn points. Can the outnumbered and unlikely
'Herons' ever have a chance of winning?
There are many similarities between Hal and Will from The Ranger's
Apprentice. Both are small but clever and have a strong friendship
with a bigger, stronger boy. Will was taught by Halt who was a father
figure to him and Hal is mentored by Thorn, a gruff and one handed ex
warrior who has his own personal issues to deal with.
As the Skandians are a seafaring race there is a lot of discussion and
action around boats and sailing so I was thankful for the small
introduction on sailing terms at the beginning of the book.
I am looking forward to the next title as The Outcasts ends
with a new adventure.
Highly recommended for 10 years + and will be enjoyed by John Flanagan
fans.
A book
trailer is available for the Brotherband series.
Jane Moore
The ring of fire by Chris Bradford
Young Samurai series. Puffin, 2011. ISBN 978 0 141 33255 0.
(Ages 11+) Recommended. Chris Bradford's sixth in his Young Samurai
series sees Jack involved in another life and death struggle. Whilst
fleeing the Shogun's forces he battles against a harsh Japanese winter.
To survive he accepts a job to protect a poor village from the ravages
of a cruel, bloodthirsty bandit called Akuma. It's not until he reaches
the village that he finds just how poor it is and how powerful Akuma
and his band are. He is able to recruit help in the form of some old
friends. However the odds are still stacked heavily against them.
They have to not only turn the village into a defensible fortress, but
also turn the villagers into a reliable military unit. No easy job
especially as in Japan it was an offence for peasants to be armed. The
fact that Jack is a gaijin (an outsider) who poses as a Samurai is also
a problem, not only culturally, but the Shogun has also offered a
reward for him, which would be very tempting for poor villagers for
Jack's capture.
Bradford keeps the action moving and the reader's interest involved
with exciting battles and fights. I'm sure those who've read the other
books in the series will enjoy this one and be eager for the next
installment. 320p looks a lot, but the print is large and well spaced,
the chapters short and the end of the book gives details of the
characters's names and a glossary as well as the opening chapters for
the next installment, just in case you needed any enticement.
Mark Knight
The danger seed: A story from Karajarri Country by Liz Thompson
Pearson Australia, 2011. ISBN 978 1 4425 4694 3.
(Age: Junior primary to be read to; Upper Primary and lower secondary
for research). Well recommended. This book follows the pattern of
Djulpan and has all the positive features mentioned there. This
story is set 170km south of Broome in the Kimberley region of Western
Australia. Topics for discussion surround the 'government ration
days'. The story of the danger seed, a type of acacia, is important to
these people who believe that if one of the seeds is dropped the person
will be punished. In this book the children's colourful and
detailed paintings are large and often cover half the page. The soft
wash background adds to the beauty of the pages and the book.
Again, the voices of the children and elders, often different and
always personal, gives the reader a sense of authenticity. The
glossary and index are very helpful. This is another beautifully
presented book, delightful to read and to research.
Sue Nosworthy
Neville No-phone by Anna Branford and Kat Chadwick
Walker Books, 2011. ISBN 9781921529962.
(Ages 8+) Highly recommended. Neville is desperate to get himself a
mobile phone and enlists his friend Enzo on this quest. Their schemes
are extremely entertaining to read and every character in the novel is
engaging, including all the parents. I laughed aloud at least 5 times
and loved the descriptions of old technology such as cans and string. A
hilarious and clever story for individual reading or as a class read
aloud for Year 3 - 6 students. It will also be useful for the new
Australian Curriculum in English to cover communication outcomes as
well as to reinforce the theme of persistence in classrooms.
Chris Lloyd
Under Town by Charles Ogden
Edgar and Ellen series. Hodder Headline Australia. ISBN: 9780733618918.
(Age 10+) The twins Edgar and Ellen continue on their mischievous ways
in the town of Nod's Limbs when they attempt to stop the building of a
new hotel. Unfortunately for Edgar and Ellen however there is someone
else in town also planning the same thing, but with different motives.
Edgar and Ellen discover that someone, or something, in town when they
discover the bricks that that they had been collecting to brick-up the
school, thereby forcing its closure, have been stolen. Soon they
discover that not only have the bricks been stolen but so have their
plans to disrupt the town so much that they Mayor will be forced to
give in to their demands and halt the construction of the hotel. As a
result the twins go on a quest to seek their rival prankster, the
Mason, who has steadily become more infamous than themselves. Under
Town is a quirky and entertaining read that contains many unexpected
twists and unusual characters. The clever illustrations give readers
and sense of the slightly dark nature of the twins and the underground
places in which they conduct their roguish pranks. This series, of
which Under Town is the third book, would be recommended for
upper primary readers looking for an entertaining and humorous read.
Adam Fitzgerald