Reviews

Old hat by Emily Gravett

cover image Two Hoots Books (Macmillan), 2018. ISBN 9781447274001
(Ages: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Hats, Appearance, Confidence, Fashion. Harbet had a hat that he loved. It was knitted for him by his grandmother and he always wore it. That is until his friends laughed, telling him it was an old hat. He set about to find a new hat, one like the ones his friends were wearing. He bought on and paraded it. It had all the features necessary for a new hat: but it became rather bedraggled and old. His friends by then had changed their old hats for the new look, and laughed at Harbet in his old hat. He went out and bought a new one. But still they laughed. He camped outside the hat shop making sure that he was first in line for the latest hat in fashion, but still he was laughed at.
By now readers will have understood what the book is about and sympathise with Harbet on his quest to be 'with it' and fashionable. They will laugh out loud at the pile of hats that he has tried without success.
And the ending will make them laugh out loud even more, as Harbet reveals why he wears a hat in the first place, now setting a trend that his friends cannot follow. The simple lesson of being yourself, will not be lost on the readers as they will come across examples every day of peers trying to conform with the latest fashion, be it in clothing, the latest phone or film, language, car or holiday.
And the expression 'old hat' could be a useful lesson in sayings and idioms for a class.
I love the illustrations depicting Harbet's whimsical look as he tries to please his friends, not himself, or the references to hats in the pages, or the different hats shown. Each page has a different image to pore over. I love the references to Grandma's hat on several pages, the endpapers showing an array of hats and the last page which uses the story to promote another of Gravett's books.
Fran Knight

Mirror Mirror by Cara Delevigne (with Rowan Coleman)

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Trapeze, 2017. ISBN 9781409172758
(Age: 16+) Highly recommended. Red, Naomi, Leo and Rose are four misfits who become the closest of friends upon the formation of their band, Mirror Mirror. Band rehearsal is an escape for all four, giving them momentary freedom for the hardships they face in their regular lives. Red has an alcoholic mother and often absent father, Leo's criminal brother encourages him to follow in his footsteps, Rose uses alcohol and boys to numb her painful past and Naomi runs away from home to finally be free. Just as the band are coming to terms with their group-identity and feel as close as a family, Naomi goes missing and subsequently turns up half dead in the Thames. The police believe that she did this to herself but Red begins to find clues suggesting that things are not as they seem. The trio decide that they must take matters into their own hands to truly find out what happened to Naomi.
A tale of determination, mystery and friendship in the face of adversity, this novel reminds its reader that they are stronger than they know and can make a difference in this world. In her debut novel, Delevigne presents realistic characters, deep emotional twists and an all-around inspiring story. Through Red, the reader is brought on a journey of self-discovery while learning some powerful messages along the way. A beautiful yet sorrowful story that truly captures the turbulence that is our teenage years.
Daniella Chiarolli

Fart monster and me : The new school by Tim Miller and Matt Stanton

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ABC Books, 2018. ISBN 9780733338939
This book is about Ben and Fart monster going to a new school called Stone Beach Primary.
I thought this book was funny because it's all about farts. The two main characters were Ben And Fart Monster, they do everything together. At Stone Beach Primary Fart Monster will only eat baked beans, cabbage or fried eggs which always makes him fart. I wonder if he will fart in Ben's new classroom?
I give it 5 out of 5 because it is a funny book.
Aston (aged 8)

The art of taxidermy by Sharon Kernot

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Text, Melbourne, 2018. ISBN 9781925603743
(Age: Middle secondary) Highly recommended. Aged eleven, Lotte falls in love with death. She admires the beauty of a dead gecko, and keeps it. She and her soulmate Annie find beauty and death linked as they ramble through the country surrounding their home. Lotte soon has a collection of bones, skins and feathers in her bedroom. Her father is tolerant but her aunt, their housekeeper, is appalled by the smell and the unusual nature of the hobby. As the novel progresses the reader learns that death has laid a heavy hand on the family, and that Lotte's interest in death is about preserving both memories and objects. Lotte's mother died some time ago after the birth of a stillborn child. Lotte's grandmother is still mourning the loss of her German-born husband after his internment during the war in the Loveday camp. There is another grave in the cemetery, that of Annie, who the reader learns died aged six in a local dam. Lotte's father has preserved his wife's clothes just as they were and Lottie's imagined adventures with Annie are an attempt to keep her memory alive. Lotte's concerned relatives give her a kitten and a camera as distractions. Lotte's love for the kitten is a life-affirming emotion; her love for the camera is both life-affirming and an expression of her need to preserve what she has. The time comes for her to make choices about a career, but her aunt is appalled by her interest in taxidermy and suggests that being a teacher or nurse would be more suitable. However, Lotte's father takes her to a museum where a taxidermist explains his art. Lotte is more firmly intrigued and convinced that this will be her career. She believes that taxidermy is a celebration of life and a preservation of beauty.
This is a simply written verse novel which covers many issues without seeming didactic. The attitudes to emigre Germans during World War II, the difficulties of the Stolen Generation and beliefs about the role of women in society are minor themes while the main one is the effect of death and grief. The story evolves quite dramatically and holds the reader's attention. The poems are easily read and the descriptions of the natural world are evocative, the writer having a keen eye for details of shape and colour.
The novel is highly recommended for Middle School readers.
Jenny Hamilton

The happiness box by Mark Greenwood

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Ill. Andrew MacLean, Walker Books, 2018. ISBN 9781925081381
(Ages: 6+) Highly Recommended. Themes: War. Prisoners of war. Children in war. World War Two. Changi Prison (Singapore). Sgt Griffiths (Griff) was a prisoner of war, detained by the Japanese for three years in Selarang Barracks and then the notorious Changi Prison on Singapore Island, the aftermath of a terrible defeat for the Australian Imperial Force in 1942.
Here he watched the children and women of Singapore marched into the prison and as Christmas approached he wondered what sort of Christmas these children would have. He and other prisoners than used every scrap they could find to make presents for the children, and Griff began to write a story, one that encapsulated hope and happiness. The story revolved around three animals and another of his peers, Captain Greener, illustrated the book. But when it was inspected by the Japanese General, he rejected it saying it held secret messages. It was to be destroyed. Another of the prisoners took it to get rid of it, instead burying it and at the end of the war it was dug up, a little worse for wear, but impressive in its hope for peace and happiness for the imprisoned children.
It was published in 1947 and again in 1991, the original now held at the State Library of New South Wales, where it was part of a touring exhibition in 2007.
Greenwood's story of this book is inspirational, showing the survival mechanisms of people entrapped by war. Despite their appalling situation, the men were involved in helping the children of the camp, offering them solace and hope in the midst of unimaginable suffering and despair. That the book survived is another story that resonates hope, and it has become an icon in its own right.
MacLean's pen and watercolour illustrations rely on a palette of browns and greys, ochres and greens to reflect the sombre, dreary nature of everyday life in the prison. There is no variance, no colour, no hope, except for the toys being made and the colours used to illustrate the book. The contrast is outstanding and underscores the belief that life will go on, that colour will return.
Behind the story of the book, readers will see the life led by the POW's and the women and children within these walls. MacLeans' illustrations realistically evoke the times with drawings of the men lying on their bamboo bunks, or watching over the walls towards the barracks, or being taken away to assured death working on the Burma Railway. Biographies of the author and the illustrator of The happiness box are given at the end, alongside a brief history of the book itself, and a bibliography encouraging readers to further research the story.
This book offers a fresh approach for classes to look at Australia's involvement in World War Two and the affects of war on children.
Fran Knight

Secret Seven: Mystery of the skull by Pamela Butchart

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Hachette, 2018. ISBN 9781444941531
(Age: 7+) "When Peter discovers an old skull hidden in his bedroom, it's time for an urgent meeting of the Secret Seven. Setting off to investigate, the friends see a gigantic hole in the grounds of a local hotel. Could there be any connection between the two strange events? The Secret Seven are determined to solve the mystery. It's time to look behind the green door of the Secret Seven's shed again." (Publisher)
I was so excited to be given this book to review - a much loved author and series from my childhood! Pamela Butchart does not disappoint with her take on the series and I am sure a whole new generation will discover them. Surprisingly the series is set in the same world and time as the original but it has intertwined new mysteries. The addition of the illustrations by the very talented Tony Ross will be sure to please the reader. Of course things such as sandwiches, cake and midnight adventures feature heavily throughout the book and it took me right back to my childhood. The book does not feel the least bit dated in our modern world and I was impressed to see that the author stuck to the 50s and 60s - the time of the original series. Fans of Enid Blyton, mystery, adventure and stepping back in time will love this book. Ages 7 and up will rediscover or discover their own love of a truly classic series. The new cover will ensure it attracts the attention of a new generation.
Kathryn Schumacher

The fierce country by Stephen Orr

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Wakefield Press, 2018. ISBN 9781743055748
(Age: 14+) Recommended. True stories.
Forget the spiders, snakes and crocodiles, the true danger of Australia is its fierce heart, the harsh country that has continually challenged those who dare venture here. Stephen Orr's collection of stories are all true, some will be familiar to readers from past newspaper reports, others less known or forgotten, from the 1830s to the present day. He calls it Australia's unsettled heart, evoking not just the scarcity of people but also the sense of unease, and of something disturbed, beginning with the intrusion of white settlers and explorers, intent on conquering the land and dispersing the Aboriginal people. He tells of the black line in Tasmania, the Myall Creek massacre in New South Wales and the resistance of Jandamarra in the Kimberleys. But the stories reveal not just a frontier conflict with the people, it is a conflict with the land itself. People venture into a land that they have no understanding of, no appreciation of its power - so there are the stories of men, women, children and families who perish in the desert - the Calvert expedition of the 1890s, Lasseter in the 1930s, Nicholas Bannon in 1959, the Page family on the Birdsville Track in 1963, the jackeroos Simon Amos and James Annetts in 1986, Austrian tourist Caroline Grossmueller in 1998, and so on.
And then there are the stories of the murderers and felons who roam the interior - the stories of the Gatton murders, the Murchison murders, the disappearance of Peter Falconio, the murder of Imran Zilic. Australian cinema has drawn on this horror with films such as 'Wake in Fright', 'Picnic at Hanging Rock', and 'Wolf Creek'.
As Stephen Orr says, these are just a few of the stories, there are hundreds more. He writes
"...the legacy of the last 200 years will be hard to shake. We are still tempted to see our country as some sort of marauding monster... Then there is the realisation we are the aliens...
The Fierce Country holds no malice, but neither pity. It just sits, and bakes, and waits. We do the rest. We provoke it... Misunderstand it... Resent it..."
I recommend this book for students of Australian history, for readers of non-fiction, for readers of murder and mystery stories, for anyone who just enjoys a good collection of short stories.
Helen Eddy

Alpha pups! and Pup and down by Sophie Beer

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Little Hare Books, 2018, ISBN 9781760501952, 9781760501808
(Ages: 2+) Themes: Dogs. Dog Breeds. Opposites. Sophie Beer's fun board books focus on all things canine. With a bright bold palette, her lively puppy characters and everyday settings are just right to share with toddlers and pre-schoolers.
Alpha pups stretches the imagination with a dog breed for every letter of the alphabet from Afghan Hound to Zuchon. She includes everything from the unusual breeds - the Xoloitzcuintli - Mexican Hairless Dog to the more familiar Pug and Fox Terrier. Each puppy is dressed to impress and the additional props also start with the same letter, there's the Border Collie in a baseball shirt with his bat and ball and the Irish Wolfhound emerging from his icy igloo. The bold backgrounds and anthropomorphic characters flying kites, dancing, even riding scooters, add to enjoyment.
Pup and down introduces the concept of opposites with a puppy focus. While grandma is helped by her slow-walking dog, a young skateboarder zooms past with her dog balanced on her foot - fast and slow. Over and under go the two dogs that have stolen sausages from the butcher's shop, At the groomer's one dog has a curly do while the others had her hair straightened and her toe nails polished. At the library, there's a stereotypical shushing librarian silencing the loud dog while another reads quietly in the arm chair.
Sophie Beer's quirky digital illustrations are delightful, these puppy board books are bold and bright and lots of fun to share with youngsters.
Rhyllis Bignell

The hunter, and other stories of men by David Cohen

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Transit Lounge, 2018. ISBN 9781925760064. Short stories.
(Age: Adult) Ibis have so flourished on a building site that they have become like a plague, causing problems for the project. Henrik the site manager aka 'the hunter' has to come up with a solution. After spending all day, every day, watching the birds, wearing a gas mask, Henrik has the answer... at least for the time being.
'The Hunter' is the first in this collection of stories about men, and if one were to attribute a theme to the collection, it could be one of the intricacies of thought in pursuing a problem until its resolution (or non-resolution) - all sorts of problems and strange situations, from the mysterious deliveries to the archivist, the woodcutter posing in the forest, the recalcitrant recycler, the traveller with Jerusalem Syndrome, the man always in the same bus seat, the pioneering cabin builder. Cohen creates many bizarre situations for us to consider - with a curious intellectual detachment. It is perhaps only in the story of the archivist that emotion finds a brief moment, as we gradually discover the dilemma of the female delivery person. Women, and emotion, generally do not have a large role in Cohen's stories; they are, after all, 'stories of men'.
Helen Eddy

Things my Pa told me by Anthony Bertini

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Ill. by Jonathan Bentley. Little Hare, 2018. ISBN 9781760501426
(Ages: 3+) Highly recommended. Themes: Fathers and sons, Fathers' Day, Generations. An inviting stroll through an Italian village and surrounding countryside sees three generations walking and sharing stories. At first the lad can fit into a box, but soon he will have two front teeth and grow into the shoes he now wears that are so big and clumsy. He is afraid of the dark and doesn't like to hear dogs growl, but he is undaunted by the rain and everyone likes him.
Gently they tell the boy about what will happen when he is older, how being small is only a tiny part of his life, but all he learns then will carry with him into adulthood.
Each double page sees a wise word passed on. On one page the two older men are having a disagreement, but they counsel for anger to be quickly gone. On another page, the small boy is snuggling into his father's shoulder, surrounded by many large people, and he is told that soon he will be just as big.
The softly evocative illustrations by Bentley, now a Brisbane based illustrator and cartoonist, reveal the love between the men in the family. Generations of men pass on wisdom all the while watching over the lad seeing how he develops and grows, guiding him to develop the traits he will need as an older man.
Pages of pencil and watercolour illustrations show the boy trying different things, some dangerous, but always with his father and grandfather nearby. The last few pages remind us that time is fleeting as the men become older and eventually disappear from the boy's life. With their wisdom to guide him, he has no fear oft he future as they are always in his heart.
With Fathers' Day coming up, this is a beautiful evocation of the place a father has in a boy's upbringing, and readers will enjoy talking of the role of their father in their family.
Fran Knight

Grandpa's space adventure by Paul Newman

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Ill. by Tom Jellett. Puffin Books, 2018. ISBN 9780143785569
(Ages: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Humour, Space, Camping, Fear of the dark. Following the warm hearted tale, "Grandpa's big adventure" (2016) comes another just as funny, warm and encompassing when his grandson reveals a secret, that he is afraid of the dark Taking this in his stride, Grandpa tells him that the dark allows them to see all the wonders of space and relates the story of when he went up into space, building a space ship in the back yard. He tells of all the things he did in space: looking at the dog star, throwing a stick for Rover but it didn't come back, avoiding the restaurant on the moon because of its lack of atmosphere and walking in space. Each story is full of humour and factual information which kids will love, initiating questions about space: was Rover the first dog in space, who first walked on the moon, as well as questions about the stars and planets. There are allusions to things the audience will know: the story of the cow that jumped over the moon, UFO's, floating in space and what to wear in space. And it will intrigue and delight, and kids will love the boy's losing his fear of the dark through Grandpa's marvellous story. Camping out doors with Grandpa is inventive and comforting and the readers will laugh out loud as Jellett's wonderful illustrations showing the range of things Grandpa did in space, along with his wise dog, Rover, and I can see lots of classes making the boy's space helmet after they read this book.
Fran Knight

My old man he played rugby by Peter Millett

cover image Ill. Jenny Cooper, sung by Jay Laga'Aia. Scholastic, 2018. ISBN 9781775435280
(Ages: 4+) Recommended. Themes: Song, Rugby, Sing a long, Rhyme, Fathers and sons. I cannot get the tune of 'This old man' out of my head after reading and then listening to the CD inside the front cover of this the latest offering from Scholastic of a parody of a well known tune. It is most infectious, and the rhymes are easily predicted, which is a plus for younger readers and listeners.
The boys, lined up at the edge of the football oval, watch their fathers, of all shapes and sizes and varying degrees of skill, tackle the important game of rugby. Each page depicts a different skill: a scrum, throwing, tackling, catching, diving, kicking between the sticks, and all the grunt between of heaving, tackling the other team and then of getting hurt and being stretchered off the field. Each stanza regales the audience with a fun-filled look at the skills required by the game, making light of the older men playing in the team as they spar with each other in a good-humoured way.
For readers new to the game, the words illuminate the practices required by this brand of football and for those already knowing the game, this provides a light-hearted look at what they hold dear.
The wonderful illustrations shine a light on the skills required to participate in this game, and add a light-hearted look at these older men as their pants are pulled down, their pants rip with the strain, they puff and pant, and glow very red as they play.
Whatever they do, of course, is worth cheering by their appreciative sons, turning the usual story on its head, as many books are about parents watching their children. A wonderfully positive look at fathers and sons leading up to Fathers' Day in September.
Fran Knight

Hide and seek with grandpa by Ed Allen

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Ill. by Nicky Johnston. Scholastic, 2018. ISBN 9781742765426
(Ages: 3+) Recommended. Themes: Grandparents, Family, Play, Lions. Younger readers will immensely enjoy spying out the little lion as it hides form Grandpa during their outing in the park. The two go for a picnic, Grandpa holding the littlest bear in his arms, while the older bear goes off to hide. Instructions are given to Grandpa to look up high, or down low, as the little bear hides in all sorts of places giving the reader a great deal of fun in finding its hiding place.
In the meantime, all sorts of activities are taking place in the park: some are practising their Tai Chi, others are playing on the equipment, some are eating (particularly the mouse and the line of ants), some are taking a photo, some flying a kite and some are in a parade, while they all seem to gravitate to the ice cream van to buy an ice cream.
This is a loving picture of children at play with their grandpa, covering a range of things children can do when out of doors, encouraging the readers to also participate in these activities, and also to look more closely at the charming illustrations to find what it there, and laugh out loud as the tables are turned on the last page.
Fran Knight

My Dad is a Robot by Matt Cosgrove

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Koala Books Scholastic, 2018. ISBN 9781742993256
(Ages: 3-6) Themes: Fathers, Robots. 'It's PRETTY FUN having a robot for a dad! Even if he's an older model.'
Matt Cosgrove's imaginative picture book "My Dad is a Robot" is jam-packed with dad jokes, robot comparisons and loads of humour. He draws and writes from his personal experiences of being a son and a father. Who doesn't want their dad to be a robot?
This is a top-secret story as the small boy takes us on his journey of discovery, firstly his dad's not the awesome futuristic type with laser eyes, jet-powered feet and retractable arms. His characteristics are quirkier, they belong to an older model, one that can robot dance, has X-ray vision and runs entirely on leftovers. This dad loves working in his 'Secret Headquarters for Engineering and Development - S.H.E.D. for short.
Of course, Cosgrove includes those classic dad responses to common questions and situations. 'Dad I'm hungry.' 'Nice to meet you, Hungry!' Each scene shows dad and son in a different place, wearing embarrassing bathers at the beach, dressed as a chauffeur and as a personal beanbag for his son to rest on. This dad loves to rest, his batteries often run low and he falls asleep on the couch. The son's unique solution is a solar-powered helmet made from everyday items, and dad's response is really funny!
"My Dad is a Robot" is a wonderful amusing picture book, just right for dad and grandpas to share with their families. Take time to look at each scene and situation both the dad, his son and their dog find themselves in, delight in the jokes and robot comparisons!
Rhyllis Bignell

The mulberry tree by Allison Rushby

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Walker Books, 2018. ISBN 9781760650202
(Age: 10+) Highly recommended. Themes: Supernatural, Friendship, Depression (mental health). When Immy (short for Imogen) and her family, dad, a doctor on sabbatical and mum a cardiologist working for a year at Cambridge, look for a place to live, they have fixed ideas. Wanting a thatched cottage within commuting distance of Cambridge and a garden proves hard to find, but driving past a place called Lavender Cottage, Immy calls the reluctant estate agent to stop, as the place seems to have all the right characteristics. Once inside, the garden with its huge old mulberry tree seems to call her, but when she arrives at school the Monday after they move in, she learns the stories of the place, that girls turning eleven are taken by the tree. As it is her eleventh birthday next month she is a little concerned, but the bullying by the trio of girls is put aside as she and another school newbie, Riley investigate the stories about the tree.
With her father's depression resulting from his perceived part in the death of two people back in Australia, Immy finds it hard to maintain patience with his illness. Her anger boils, and she realises that the tree too has issues and is angry, and she must find out why. Her eleventh birthday looms, with the family inviting friends along for a party in the garden. Many refuse the invitation, shocked at the family's refusal to believe the legend of the tree, but as Saturday looms, the readers' interest deepens.
I loved Rushby's "The turnkey" (2017) with its overlay of the supernatural seeming as natural as any life lived in a cemetery can be, and this book too with its nuance of being able to communicate with the tree and the disappearance of two girls, will hook readers into its world. Classroom ideas are available.
Fran Knight