Reviews

Wolfborn by Sue Bursztynski

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Woolshed Press, 2010. ISBN 9781864718256.
(Age 11+) Recommended. When sixteen-year-old Etienne goes to Lucanne to train as a knight at the manor of Geraint, he encounters more than he has bargained for. Geraint, his master, is betrayed by enemies and disappears on the night of the Harvest Festival. It is up to Etienne and wise-woman, Sylvie, and her unusual daughter, Jeanne, to try and save his lord. But Etienne has a secret, he is bisclavret, a born werewolf, and must use all his powers to help those he loves.
The medieval world that Etienne belongs to has been described in vivid detail by the author. The transition in beliefs and customs from the old religion to the new is quite absorbing, as is the mystical otherworld of the gods. I loved the way the author was able to build a scenario where I was able to imagine werewolves as an unacknowledged part of the society of the times.
Etienne, too, is a beautifully developed character, whose growth and development kept me reading to the end. The love between Etienne and Jeanne is tested and Etienne has to make some very difficult decisions to ensure the safety of those he loves.
It is very refreshing to read a book that has a different take about werewolves. Wolfborn is based on a medieval romance and has all the overtones of a well researched, gripping historical novel. I was fascinated by the Afterword in which Bursztynski describes the source for the story. In the 12th century Marie de France wrote a collection of stories called the Breton Lais and Bursztynski has used one of these as the inspiration for her absorbing story.
More mature readers who like this story may wish to move onto The Moorehawke trilogy by Celine Kiernan.
Pat Pledger

Torment by Lauren Kate

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(Fallen, Book 2) Random House, 2010. ISBN 9780385618090.
(Age 14+) Luce has been separated from her beloved fallen angel, Daniel, and sent off to Shoreline, a select private school. It is here that the Nephilim, children of fallen angels and humans, are educated in a special program. Luce desperately misses Daniel, but as she begins to learn more about her powers, she feels that she hasn't been told everything that she needs to know. Is she really the love of Daniel's life through all eternity? When her life is threatened she must take risks to find out the truth.
Girls who enjoy the paranormal will enjoy the sequel to Fallen. Lauren Kate has provided an interesting setting at Shoreline, which is certainly a boarding school with a difference. Luce is determined about finding out what is going on. Even though she has been told not to leave the boundaries of the school, Luce leaves the school, putting herself in danger from the Outcasts. In an even more daring move Luce starts to learn about the Shadows that she has seen all her life and begins to use her gift to find out more about her past.
With an array of fascinating Nephilim, some danger, angst about whether Daniel is really her one true love, Kate has provided an engrossing sequel. However many questions are left unresolved and the cliffhanger ending will have readers clamouring for the next instalment in this fantasy romance.
Pat Pledger

Hand me down world by Lloyd Jones

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Text Publishing; Melbourne, 2010. ISBN 9781921656682.
(Year 11+) Lloyd Jones's last novel was Mister Pip, a winner of a number of prizes, in which the main character escapes the violent reality of life in Bougainville through the fiction of Charles Dickens, specifically Great Expectations. His new novel Hand me down world is about the difference between contemporary worlds, the world of the affluent traveled sophisticated European and the world of the colonized and the dispossessed. The main character, who is nameless and has nothing except a child, struggles from Tunisia to Berlin, all the time inhabiting the world of the 'illegal' immigrant, the outsider, the unregistered foreign national. The story starts in a resort hotel in Africa. From the first the reader sees her, and the African staff, trained to be self-effacing, to have no personal wishes or desires, to leave their personal stories very definitely behind and simply to serve others. Europeans travel to Africa, to sunbake, to swim, to fornicate. The woman, later known as Ines, continues to serve even as she discovers wishes and needs of her own, and as she develops her own subversive life. She becomes a woman rather than a servant and in due course a mother who, when she loses her child through betrayal, learns how to use others to feed her needs. 'Africa' now struggles to Europe, almost drowns, walks, climbs, starves, and meets with incidental kindness, accidents and cruelty. On the journey she meets a cross-section of European life, for example Italian partisans, the snail collector, a truck driver, a movie researcher, a performer of Rilke's poetry and a police inspector. The existence of the other world, the hand me down world, is made explicit in Berlin, where the displaced climb through the divide of a wall to a squat that harbours whole families as well as individuals who have little. Ines is a beautiful and charismatic woman, it seems, despite having little language, and this helps her in many situations, except for when she is employed by a blind man who she robs in her desperation to find her child.
The story is told through the eyes of those who come into contact with her, whether fleetingly or constantly, and is reconstructed by a police inspector who becomes involved with her situation and intervenes on her behalf. This dedication is quite hard to believe; more disappointingly, the voices of all the characters, including Ines herself when she speaks, all sound the same, quite detached, which is reasonable perhaps as they are giving testimony of a kind, but sadly lacking in individuality. However, this is an easy-to-read novel that captures the plight of the 'illegal' immigrant in a thought provoking and sensitive way.
Jenny Hamilton

Forest born by Shannon Hale

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(The Books of Bayern). Bloomsbury, 2010. ISBN 9781408808610.
(Age 12+ ) Recommended. Fantasy. Growing up in the Forest, Rin has always found solace in the trees, until one day they seem to reject her and the calmness that they have given her disappears. She tries to be a good girl, becoming her mother's shadow and imitating her mannerisms and actions but she is very unhappy. When an opportunity comes for her to go to the City with her brother and Dasha, she takes it, hoping that she will find inner peace there. However, there is danger in this world and she finds herself with the Fire sisters, Isi, Enna and Dasha, fighting to save the kingdom from an evil people-speaker, who holds enthralled all who hear her voice.
Newbery Honor-winning author Shannon Hale has written an appealing fantasy with fairy tale overtones. Rin's ability to talk to trees is quite fascinating as is her large family and the shadow like place in it that she has selected for herself. I enjoyed following her coming of age and her gradual realisation that although she is a people-speaker who can manipulate others through her words, she can use her power for good rather than evil. Her development from a shy young girl who imitates others to a strong young woman who helps to save the Kingdom is fascinating. Hale sends a strong message to young girls to be careful of the people-speaker who can win over hearts and minds but may not be ethical.
Equally enjoyable are the action packed scenes as the group of young women travel in their quest to find who is terrorising the villages and using fire speakers to harm the people. Hale has a deft hand with dialogue and the funny comments and repartee from her brother Razo and the Fire sisters add a touch of humour to the story.
Rich in characterisation and description, Hale has created a book that has unexpected plots turns and strong friendships. This finely realised world, inhabited by resolute young women, will appeal to girls who enjoyed the Alanna series by Tamora Pierce.
Forest Born is the fourth in The Books of Bayern series, following The goose girl, Enna burning and River secrets. This was the first book that I had read in the series and found that it worked very well as a stand-alone story, with sufficient background information and character development for me to appreciate the setting and people.
Pat Pledger

White cat by Holly Black

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Curse Workers, Bk 1. Orion, 2010. ISBN 9780575096714.
(Age 14+) Recommended for lovers of paranormal stories. Cassel is cursed. He remembers his sly grin of glee at the scene of the murder of his friend Lila. His family believes that he is a murderer as well as not having the ability to work magic, which is a disaster in a family of curse workers. After fighting very hard to look normal and fit into his school, he is discovered on its steep roof, after a sleepwalking incident. And things get worse after that. Terrifying nightmares about a white cat that wants to tell him something and the disturbing behaviour of his two brothers make him feel paranoid. To discover the mysterious secrets that surround him, Cassel has to outwit the con men.
Black has created an absorbing world, where workers of magic con the populace or work for the heads of the mobs. This world is very different from that in her darker faerie books, Tithe and Ironside, but is equally as compelling. The reader is gradually introduced to this dark and dangerous world when Cassel begins to believe that he may be at the centre of a big con, and begins to work a con of his own.
Told in the first person by Cassel, who is an unreliable narrator, as he is never sure just what is happening to him, I was carried along by the force of his personality. Cassel longs to be normal, and has spent 3 years at his boarding school, being pleasant and trying to fit in. As the plot develops, Cassel has to take control of what is happening to him and he plans the ultimate con, using the skills that his mother, who has been jailed for conning a wealthy man, has taught him. On his journey, he discovers much about the importance of family and friends and the consequences of his actions and those of his family. I enjoyed the way that Black vividly described all her characters, with their strengths and flaws.
With a believable world peopled with good and evil, a touch of romance, a surprise ending and some fascinating magic, White cat is sure to appeal.
Pat Pledger

The Abused Werewolf Rescue Group by Catherine Jinks

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Allen and Unwin, 2010. ISBN 9781742373638.
(Age 13+) Recommended. Toby Vandevelde is horrified to wake up in hospital with no memory of how he got there. When he is told that he was found in the dingo pen at Featherdale Park, he is even more terrified. After a priest and a strange looking guy show up telling him that he has a rare condition, he finds himself involved with an anaemic looking group of weirdos who inform him that he needs their help. And he certainly does - when he is kidnapped and imprisoned!
Told in the first person by Toby, the reader is taken on a thrilling ride when Toby is incarcerated in an underground prison and discovers another boy there. Together they go through many adventures in their bid for freedom. With evil kidnappers, underground goals, car chases, vampires biting people and shooting incidents, it is a thrill a minute once the chase is on.
Strong characterisation brings all the people alive, and I was enthralled with the development of Toby's understanding of his rare condition and his attempts to bring about a non-violent solution to his plight. The antics of his two companions, Fergus and Amin, provide many laughs in the book and Reuben plays a strong role, trying to convince Toby that he needs to be locked up once each month at the time of the full moon.
With a surfeit of werewolf books around, it is wonderful to find one that is totally absorbing, humorous and well written. The Abused Werewolf Rescue Group is a companion volume to The Reformed Vampire Support Group, but can be read alone. Fans of the first book will welcome the return of members of the vampire support group, and will love the addition of more werewolves to the mix. Boys will also identify with the pranks that Toby and his two friends get up to and should enjoy the action adventure. The introduction of a zombie at the conclusion of the book leaves an opening for another companion volume in the future.
Pat Pledger

Mice by Gordon Reece

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Allen and Unwin. 2010. ISBN 978 1742372338.
(Recommended) Shelley, a typical teenage girl is bullied at school. When things take a turn for the worst she winds up in hospital. After being discharged she is home schooled with private tutors in her new home, isolated in a remote area of the countryside. She lives with her mother and all their lives they have been like mice; hiding from trouble, never standing up for themselves. Until, Shelley's sixteenth birthday.
The plot of this book is not straight forward, it is so well formulated that it compels you to read on and never lets on to what is going to happen next. The plot is realistic and you could easily see how what happens could happen in real life. The characters are very real, as if you would expect to encounter someone like them in the course of your life. Shelley and her mum undergo a major change in their lives, as well as within themselves and grow to have the courage to face their fears.
The setting is outlined well and authentic in its detail. Set in England in the current era, Gordon Reece uses a style of writing that creates a great deal of imagery. When reading the book, it is as if you are watching movie. Written in the first person the reader has a great deal of empathy with Shelley and the predicament she finds herself in.
There are two themes to this book, firstly, bullying in school and how some schools hush up bullying or turn a blind eye so as not to tarnish the school's reputation. The second theme is more subtle. It is about sometimes things pile up inside until you can't take anymore, then you snap and are changed forever. Sometimes for better, sometimes for worse, even a bit of both.
The book is aimed at older adolescents but because of the serious nature of the themes adults will be able to relate to it too. Girls and boys could read it but it is not for everyone. I would recommend it to those who can view a text without getting nightmares and can understand what happens to the characters in a somewhat mature manner. Those who like the descriptive writing style of Christine Feehan and the way she creates imagery would enjoy this book. I strongly recommend it and would rate it 9/10 stars.
Amelia Kelly (year 11)

Pearlie the Cherry Blossom Fairy by Wendy Harmer

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Random House, 2010. ISBN: 978 1 74166 378 5.
When Pearlie the Park Fairy from Jubilee Park in Australia is named 'Fairy of the Year', she travels to visit all of the Park Fairies in the world and finally arrives at the Imperial Palace in Japan. Here she meets Akiko in the Park of the Imperial Palace. Here, Akiko teaches her some Japanese language and Pearlie receives an introduction to some traditional rites such as the tea ceremony and the foods and drinks associated with them. The cherry blossom festival brings many visitors to the park and Pearlie meets Yuki the mouse, busily stealing bits of food from the visitors to the Palace park. When a spring storm, complete with hailstones occurs, Pearlie is able to show how clever she can be as she tries to make things right for Akiko and Yuki.
As a cultural comparison, this title is a good way of introducing the reader to the differences in customs, language and life in another country. The themes of sharing, friendship, care and concern for others, as well as the importance of travel in broadening one's horizons are all included in this simple little book. Along with a simple story line and the bright and stylized illustrations, this book should hold much appeal to the beginning female reader.
Jo Schenkel

Low red moon by Ivy Devlin

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Bloomsbury, 2010. ISBN 9781599906188.
(Age 14+) Avery Hood is found, covered with blood, next to the bodies of her murdered parents. Distraught, she doesn't know who has killed her parents. She has blocked out all memories of what happened except for remembering seeing a flash of silver. Then she meets Ben, a gorgeous, mysterious boy, whose eyes flash with silver. When he reveals that he is a werewolf, Avery trusts him until another family is murdered. How can she find out whom brutally killed her parents? What can she do about the deep connection she has for Ben?
Avery, who goes to live with her grandmother, Renee, tells the story in the first person. Raised by her nature loving parents in a beautiful forest, she has been home-schooled until her senior years and loves the trees and quiet of her home. However the townspeople decide that her parents' house should be destroyed and she and her grandmother have to fight to keep the land from developers.
A paranormal romance that is sure to please young girls who liked Shiver by Maggie Stiefvater and the Twilight series, Low red moon is an exciting, easy to read mystery. The suspense is built up deftly and there are plenty of red herrings to put the reader off suspecting the murderer. Combined with the romance and lure of a beautiful werewolf, and some interesting red print and illustrations, this will be an undemanding, but very enjoyable, crowd pleaser.
Ivy Devlin is a pseudonym of Elizabeth Scott, who wrote the very dark Living dead girl.
Pat Pledger

I shall wear midnight by Terry Pratchett

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Doubleday, 2010. ISBN 978 0385617963.
(14+) Highly recommended. Tiffany Aching is a teenaged witch portrayed in this marvelous, uproariously funny story set in a fantasy world which bears a resemblance to Medieval England. Amidst the constant humour involving outrageous situations, brilliant puns and hilarious word mangling, some serious and touching issues are handled with genuine compassion by the author through his characters.
Importantly, Tiffany is a kindly creature with wholesome values who spends more time doing the largely unappreciated, hard graft of caring for the aged and sick, delivering babies and assisting the poor than casting spells. Whilst Pratchet uncompromisingly casts her as a witch, and has her riding broomsticks or practicing magic, he continuously emphasizes her kindness and righteousness. Evil is present within the story but Tiffany is the heroine, prepared to fight to the death if necessary in order to protect her friends and family in the village.
Tiffany is human, with natural feelings and vulnerabilities, however she has the gift of magic which has caused her to consciously follow a calling which necessitates much personal sacrifice and unending work. One cannot help comparing her with religious figures who deny themselves intimate relationships, wealth and comfort in their determination to improve the lives of others.
This is a harmless story. Quite reasonably witches and the black arts are concepts which are repugnant in Christian communities, however it is vital to appreciate that Tiffany is a 'good witch' who reviles evil and promotes universally worthy values.
Having said that, Tiffany is not perfect and is driven to distraction by the people for whom she cares and most of all by the insanely funny 'Feegles' - miniature Scotsmen and women who live underground and have appointed themselves her protectors.
The Feegles are exceedingly violent, destructive and intemperate but they are exceedingly brave and have hearts of gold, causing the reader to cheer for them frequently.
A range of realistic and a few extraordinary characters come together in common situations which sometimes evolve into the fantastic within this wonderful, well crafted story.
Rob Welsh

Madame Pamplemousse and the Time-travelling Cafe by Rupert Kingfisher

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Bloomsbury, 2010. ISBN 978 1408800539.
Recommended for independent readers but it could be read to younger readers as well.
Girls will love Madame Pamplemousse and the Time-travelling Cafe. It is a quick moving story, full of time-travelling adventures but it doesn't lack description.
We meet Madeleine, Monsieur Moutarde, Madame Pamplemousse and a very human-like cat, called Camembert. The story is set in Paris where a nasty government is in charge. They want to tear down the historic buildings and replace them with modern shopping centres.
Monsieur Moutarde has created a time-travelling machine, Madeleine is threatened with children's prison in the past and Madame Pamplemousse is in the past somewhere.
Can they collect some very special ingredients to help them save Paris in time?
Kylie Kempster

Mademoiselle Lisa by Delphine Perret

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Black dog books, 2010. ISBN 978 1742031620.
What if the Mona Lisa was sick of hanging around the gallery? What if she decided to do something else? Well, in Mademoiselle Lisa, you get to see just what the most famous painting in the world would get up to if given the chance!
Mademoiselle Lisa is a picture book, aimed at older students (middle primary and up) but will be enjoyed by many ages. Teachers could use it as an introduction to studying Leonardo da Vinci in Art or as a model to help children create their own picture book with them as the star. The book would look good on a coffee table and even if you have no interest in Art, you will enjoy the idea of being someone else, even if it is for just a day (or two).
Kylie Kempster

Fire Lizard by Sandy Fussell

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Samurai Kids, Book 5. Walker Books, 2010. ISBN: 978 1 921529 46 7.
Recommended. As Sensei and the Little Cockroaches travel through Korea to the hidden valley of the Hwarang warriors to visit Sensei's teacher, Pak Cho, the group encounter some confrontations and, early on, meet with a powerful animal which leaves Yoshi with the mark of the Tiger. Hyo Moon, the governor, along with his group of corrupt lackeys, has been controlling and terrorizing the people of the villages of the Nine Valleys. The desperation of the people leads to Sensei and his band travelling to Daejeon City to visit the Governor and alert him to the situation. During the course of the story, the Kids again train in new fighting techniques, meet some characters who dislike them intensely, develop some useful alliances and Niya learns more about his teacher.
Despite having enjoyed the other books in this series, it is this title which has totally engrossed me from the opening page. Perhaps this is due to the fact that, as a reader, I now know the main characters so well that the additional characters can develop throughout the story and I can predict how the Kids will respond to them. Fussell has created a winning formula as she intersperses humour throughout this fusion of the Asian cultures, mythology and mysticism. Niya again narrates, despite the story being that of the group and not just of one character, and his perspective often gives insights into the characters of Sensei and the rest of the Kids. A recommended read!
Jo Schenkel

Beautiful creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl

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Penguin, 2010. ISBN 9780141326085.
Beautiful darkness. Penguin, 2010. ISBN 9780141326092.
(Age 13+) Recommended for lovers of paranormal romance. Ethan Wate lives in the Deep South town of Gatlin and he can't wait to leave it - until Lena Duchannes comes to town. Lena is surrounded by mystery. She lives with the town's recluse, Macon Ravenwood, in a sinister mansion, and seems to have strange powers. Ethan is convinced she is the source of his nightmares and the strange song about the sixteenth moon and the sixteenth year when the Book will take what has been promised. Beautiful darkness follows on after a cliff-hanger of an ending.
The series captured my attention from the beginning as it is told in the first person by Ethan Wate, rather than the main female character. Ethan is a typical teen who plays sport, gets on with his peers, but secretly reads books and dreams of a wider world. He has been touched by disaster, his mother dying in an accident and his father locking himself away in his study to mourn. Lena too is an interesting character, who longs to be accepted as normal in the school, but finds that her powers keep her an outcast at school.
The most enjoyable part of the books for me, was the description of small town life in America's south. I was fascinated by the descriptions of the American Civil war, the re-enactment of battles and most of all the way people lived in Gatlin. Ethan's aunts are described in a touching but humorous way, and Ammy, the Wate's housekeeper, who is obsessed with crosswords, is a joy to read about.
Needless to say, there is plenty of Gothic suspense and romance, and although both books are long (over 500 pages each), the action and the character development kept me reading to the end. Both books are sure to appeal to readers who enjoyed the Twilight series or Shiver by Maggie Stiefvater. References to To Kill a Mocking Bird and other literature abound and may lead readers to explore those books as well.
Pat Pledger

You are a star by Michael Parker and Judith Rossell

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ABC Books, 2010. ISBN 9780733325397.
(Age 4-8) Recommended. A young child takes a trip out of this world into the vast universe and learns how the stars and Earth was formed, as well as discovering that we are all made of stars.
A book that appeals to the imagination You are a star carries the reader on a flight of exploration into the stars. Although much of it is based on scientific fact, the text and illustrations give a wonderful insight into the life of stars, their vastness and their origins.
Both boys and girls will identify with the young child, who could be of either sex. Clad in pyjamas with a star on the front, the child is pictured pressing against a window looking at the night sky, and then is shown soaring through the night sky. The illustrations could be a stimulus for reader to wonder what it would be like to explore the universe and to enjoy the thought of being a star. The fascinating end papers show the mythological creatures that are associated with the stars, such as Taurus and Aries, and will appeal to older children.
The text is simple and would make a good bedtime story or one to read aloud. Containing joy and wonderment, this story is an original way of introducing children to space.
Pat Pledger