Reviews

Black cockatoo by Carl Merrison and Hakea Hustler

cover image

Magabala Books, 2018. ISBN 9781925360707.
(Age: 10+) Highly recommended. Themes: Aboriginal themes, Kimberley, Cockatoos, Rite of passage, Growing up. When thirteen year old Mia rescues a black cockatoo injured by her brother's slingshot, she is at a loss to stand up to him. But determined to help the wounded bird, her totem, a dirrarn, she hides it in her room and goes to a neighbour's house to borrow a birdcage. She puts this in a safe place in her back yard and feeds and waters it. But she must still protect it from her brother and his friends, a group of young teens distancing themselves from the family.
But as the story unfolds Mia develops some strength of purpose, wanting to protect the bird and see it fly, and aware all the time that she must defend it against her brother which goes against the customs of her community where she must defer to him.
She develops skills through the stories told by her family, her mother, grandmother and aunts who come to the house, and one night dreams of flying. She realises that she must let the bird free to live again, just as she must learn to be strong.
I loved this little book, redolent of customs and way of life of people living in the Kimberley. In the background we see the way the family helps all of its members, and when the teenage boys are becoming too cheeky, they are taken off by the older men to become men in the bush. Incidental stories around the kitchen table tell of the stolen generations, of land taken away, of families disjointed, but overwhelmingly the spirit is of the future, of strength of purpose, of families being together and of finding your voice.
The illustrations by David Leffler add a wonderful layer of interest and appeal, and the glossary at the end of the book is most useful. Teacher's notes are available.
Fran Knight

A Darkest Minds collection: Through the dark by Alexandra Bracken

cover image

HarperCollins 2019. ISBN 9781460756447.
(Age: 15+) Highly recommended. Consisting of three novellas, Through the dark, portrays the world of Darkest Minds by focusing on a set of fringe characters including Zu, Sam, Lucas, and Mia.
In time follows a would-be skip-tracer as he searches for his first 'freak'. Stumbling into a trap set by other bounty-hunters, he comes across Zu, a mute girl whose expressions more than make up for her lack of speech. She's a yellow - dangerous but not as dangerous as a red. To qualify as a skip-tracer and claim her bounty he needs to reach a collection point, however, he's not a skip tracer yet and how can he be sure that this 'thing' isn't human?
Sparks rise follows Sam's imprisonment at Thurmond. As a green she has a certain amount of freedom, her memory hasn't manifested as a direct threat but that doesn't mean her independent streak is hidden. Targeted by a PSF it is only chance that reunites her with her childhood best friend, Lucas, a red who happened to resist their training. Lucas is looking for his sister but with Sam in Thurmond, his plans must adapt.
Beyond the night follows Sam and Mia as they face one of the biggest challenges of their lives. Lucas gave everything for them and now it is time to reward that sacrifice. Could they save Lucas from the limbo his life is held in?
Interrogating the system and the aftermath of Darkest Minds, Through the dark is a very down-to-earth portrayal of dystopia. Without sugar-coating outcomes, this collection presents realistic and torturous endings. Bracken's characterisation is impressive, presenting believable characters in bizarre dystopian situations. I would highly recommend to fans of the series and fans of the dystopian genre.
Kayla Gaskell

A Darkest Minds collection: Through the dark by Alexandra Bracken

cover image

HarperCollins 2019. ISBN 9781460756447.
(Age: 15+) Highly recommended. Consisting of three novellas, Through the dark, portrays the world of Darkest Minds by focusing on a set of fringe characters including Zu, Sam, Lucas, and Mia.
In time follows a would-be skip-tracer as he searches for his first 'freak'. Stumbling into a trap set by other bounty-hunters, he comes across Zu, a mute girl whose expressions more than make up for her lack of speech. She's a yellow - dangerous but not as dangerous as a red. To qualify as a skip-tracer and claim her bounty he needs to reach a collection point, however, he's not a skip tracer yet and how can he be sure that this 'thing' isn't human?
Sparks rise follows Sam's imprisonment at Thurmond. As a green she has a certain amount of freedom, her memory hasn't manifested as a direct threat but that doesn't mean her independent streak is hidden. Targeted by a PSF it is only chance that reunites her with her childhood best friend, Lucas, a red who happened to resist their training. Lucas is looking for his sister but with Sam in Thurmond, his plans must adapt.
Beyond the night follows Sam and Mia as they face one of the biggest challenges of their lives. Lucas gave everything for them and now it is time to reward that sacrifice. Could they save Lucas from the limbo his life is held in?
Interrogating the system and the aftermath of Darkest Minds, Through the dark is a very down-to-earth portrayal of dystopia. Without sugar-coating outcomes, this collection presents realistic and torturous endings. Bracken's characterisation is impressive, presenting believable characters in bizarre dystopian situations. I would highly recommend to fans of the series and fans of the dystopian genre.
Kayla Gaskell

Rise: the Sam Thaiday story by Sam Thaiday with James Colley

cover image

Penguin Random House, 2019. ISBN 9780143790419.
(Age: 11+) Recommended. Sam Thaiday's autobiography will be a favourite from middle school to lower secondary, given his own popularity and the popularity of the Brisbane Bronco's in the NRL. There are a few surprises, beginning with the fact that Thaiday was actually born in Sydney!
Whilst basically a travelogue of match highlights during his 16 year career in the Broncos and in representational footy, it shouldn't be the only source chosen if needing material for a biography assignment. Rightly or wrongly, there are apparently no negatives about the NRL, referees, coaches, players, fans or the media in Sam's fairytale. However, aimed at younger readers, that isn't surprising.
Thaiday does push the message that hard work will be rewarded and is proud of his long term contributions to both State of Origin and international football teams. He is very much a team player and does not count himself among the NRL greats, Lockyer, Smith and Thurston, whom he rates as the legends of his era.
While he is clearly remorseful, it is a shame that he supplies no context for one 'storm cloud' in 2017, nor mentions being officially stripped of an ambassadorship for indigenous health. Without a little backstory regarding 'a community' he offended, followed by platitudes about thinking first, acknowledging hurt and doing your best to make it right, we can't share this life lesson meaningfully. While Thaiday need not have divulged the contents of an offensive joke told on national television, he could have stated that he told a racist joke and this misjudgement cost him a new opportunity and the respect of the community - at least temporarily. Ironically, humour is his strength. His self-depreciating recounts add to our enjoyment of the book. Thaiday's first Origin try is typical of this endearing Queensland Rugby League identity:
Now, looking back, you'd think that a lot of the credit for this one should probably go to Johnathan Thurston. He was the one who met the opposition fullback as he was returning a kick into his corner. He was the one who stripped the ball like a pickpocket and put it onto my chest with five metres to run and daylight between me and the posts. But really, it was my idea to run those five metres and score, so we both deserve credit, I reckon.
No school library in the Eastern states would be complete without this paperback autobiography complete with glossy photos and a Fast Facts section.
Deborah Robins

Emily Green's garden by Penny Harrison

cover image

Ill. by Megan Forward. New Frontier Publishing, 2019. ISBN 9781925594249.
(Age: 4+) Recommended. Themes: Gardens. City life. Neighbours. Emily Green lives in a perfectly neat and tidy home, where her parents scrub and polish, dust and clean. Everyone joins in cleaning the house from top to toe, not a speck out of place. But one day Emily spies a green shoot in the pavement outside and this sparks an idea within her. She collects books from the library, reading up on plants. She carefully lifts the little seedling from the pavement and puts it into a pot and takes it indoors to her perfectly neat house. Her parents are delighted, and she sews more seeds and plants in the back garden, as well as tending to the pot plants inside.
But it becomes messy, there are plants all over the place and dirt on the floor, the neighbours complain about the worms and insects they find in their homes. Emily's parents decide that the plants must go, but in looking out of the window, Emily has an idea.
A gentle story of life in the inner city, where people are so obsessed with work and the cleanliness of their homes that they forget about neighbourliness and plant life. Emily helps bring the neighbours together in this charming tale of getting your hands dirty.
The watercolour illustrations reveal a cheeky young girl going along with her parents' conformity until she discovers a little of the outside world in a small shoot finding its way through the pavement. As the story progresses she loses her neat frock and tidy hair, becoming a messy individual with overalls, and boots and wild hair, holding gardening equipment and surrounded by plants. I love the contrasting views of Emily's street at the beginning and end of the book, inviting kids to comment and look at ways of greening their communities wherever they are.
Fran Knight

Muhammad Ali by Isabel Sanchez Vegara

cover image

Ill. by Brosmind. Frances Lincoln Children's Books, 2018. ISBN 9781786037336.
(Age: 5+) Recommended. Themes: Muhammad Ali. Boxing. Ambition. One of a series called Little people, big dreams this little book about Muhammad Ali will intrigue younger readers to find out more about this man. The series aims to show that great scientists, thinkers, artists, designers and sports people all began as a child with a dream. And Muhammad was no different. Born in Kentucky in 1942, he began fighting when his new bike was stolen and the police officer invited him to join his boxing classes suggesting that he needed to be able to box if he wished to deal with the thief. Beginning his training at 12 years old, by 18 he won the gold medal in the light heavyweight division at the Rome Olympics. From there he won major events but when conscripted to go to Vietnam, he refused and was banned from boxing for three years. Returning he kept winning and was the first man to win the heavyweight belt three times. He was involved in many charities, taking seriously the Islamic duty of charity, and fought for the end of racial discrimination.
Told in brief pared back sentences, the factual information will impel readers to look further, wanting to find out more about this man who had such an impact upon the twentieth century as a boxer, black activist, philanthropist and sportsman. His sayings have become part of our language and his images are recognised the world over.
Accompanying the brief text are similarly simplified images showing the young Cassius Clay and his family, his training and winning the gold medal, on to his conversion to Islam, awards he won and charitable work pursued in the latter years of his life. The illustrations clearly show his strength as a boxer and latterly his physical deterioration, raising awareness amongst the readers of brain damage that result from concussion. The last two pages of the book give a complete list of all the books in this series, while the pages before give a written account of his life.
Fran Knight

You make me happy by Smriti Prasadam-Halls

cover image

Ill. by Alison Brown. Bloomsbury, 2019. ISBN 9781408878958.
(Age: 3-5) Themes: Happiness. Wellbeing. Friendship.
You make me happy, you make me new.
Together there's NOTHING that we cannot do.

Fox and Porcupine celebrate their friendship and happiness in this joyful rhyming picture book. They love dancing and singing in the grassy forest meadow, splashing in the cool stream watching the blue birds in flight. Fox surprises his friend with a birthday cake on a sunshiny day. Finding fun in the simple things, Porcupine decorates his quills with leaves and flowers while his buddy wears twig and flower antlers. As the seasons pass, as night-time turns to day, we see the friends exploring their environment and sharing in simple pleasures.
Smriti Prasadam-Halls' simple rhymes capture the fun and joy, the simple pleasures these two friends experience. 'You make me happy' is the echoing refrain, she uses relatable settings, and upbeat phrases to describe Fox and Porcupine's experiences.
Alison Brown's whimsical pictures are filled with colour and light. She captures the characters' feelings, and their joy dancing, climbing trees, holding hands, hugging and playing in autumn leaves.
The author promotes emotional wellbeing and encourages healthy minds and bodies in this gentle picture book, just right for sharing with a young family or kindergarten children.
Rhyllis Bignell

The house on the mountain by Ella Holcombe

cover image

Ill. by David Cox. Allen and Unwin, 2019. ISBN: 9781760636968.
(Age: all) Highly recommended. Themes: Fire, Disaster. A family living at the top of the mountain swelters under the heat of summer. Mum closes the windows and pulls the curtains across but outside is just the same as inside. The fan blows hot air around, but during the night with the radio turned up, the phone rings and Mum says they must all get out, a fire is coming.
The year is 2009 and the place is near Kinglake in Victoria, the scene of one of the worst fires in Australia, killing 173 people, along with thousands of hectares of farms as well as towns, pets and livestock. The day is now known as Black Saturday and Ella Holcombe's parents were killed in that fire.
Presenting a picture book about the fire and its devastation, Holcombe sidesteps the tragedy of her family's loss instead making her story about a family which survives, revealing the same heartache and loss that she suffered but within the scope of a picture book. In this way she makes her story universal, able to be discussed by younger readers  who will glean lessons from that fires, and recognise strategies they can use. McLean's images swirl around the family, intensifying the feeling of destruction that fire brings. Overwhelming heat, relentless wind, and darkness envelop the family as it flees the fire, learning several days later that their house is gone.
They get to the community centre in their local town, there to be safe, and eventually go to live with their gran who lives at the base of the mountain, until it is safe to return to their house block. There they set up two caravans determined to rebuild, and watch in awe as the bush regrows and friends come to help.
A story of confidence in the future, of survival, of rebuilding and regrowth, the story does not dwell on loss, but it is in the background with some children not returning, of photos of those who died in the school hallways, and homes and animals destroyed.
MacLean's atmospheric illustrations reflect the awe filled nightmare of those days, the blacked out sun, needing the car lights on going down the mountain, the black outlines of the trees, the smoke and flames, all drawn with a still, hazy fuzziness. He perfectly captures the fear of groups of people, the family, their longing to get back, and those who offer support.
It is ten years since this appalling fire, and children will rad the book with a heightened knowledge that fire is an ever present danger, its prevalence increasing through climate change, and be aware that plans must be in place for people to remain safe. An opportunity is here for adults to rehearse their fire plan with children, and bring their attention to strategies to keep them safe, while reading a story which shows the devastation fire brings and the long slow process of rebirth and recovery.
Fran Knight

Zelda Stitch: Term two: too much witch by Nicki Greenberg

cover image

Zelda Stitch. Allen and Unwin, 2017. ISBN: 9781760523671.
(Age: Year 3 - Year 6) Recommended. Zelda Stitch started her career as a primary school teacher in the first of this series: Cursed first term of Zelda Stitch : bad teacher, worse witch (2017). This is another fast paced and fun story told in the first person, as we follow Zelda's ups and downs. We see the world through her eyes and make the same assumptions as she does about what is happening magically in the school but all is not as it seems. She must keep her secret hidden of course, and only just manages this in the first book, but in the second, she finds there is a young, insecure witchling hiding within her class, and must protect her from the vice principal on the prowl. A coming camp means more pressure for our hero, and her cat Barnaby does not makes things easier.
The pages are peppered with Nicki's quirky black and white illustrations. The bright cover appeals with the harassed looking Zelda and grumpy Barnaby staring out at the reader, suggesting things are not going very well at all!
Recommended to primary school students, years 3 to 6, who will watch out for new stories in this series eagerly.
Fran Knight

We eat bananas by Katie Abey

cover image

Bloomsbury, 2019. ISBN: 9781408899212.
(Age: 2-5) Recommended. Themes: Eating, Fruit and Vegetables, Food. Flamboyant graphic designer, author and illustrator Katie Abey returns with her animal menagerie to champion an array of food from bananas, to pancakes, pasta and peas, beans and greens. She asks her young readers to explore each page, finding foods they like to eat and having fun with the crazy animals' antics.
Over twelve colourful spreads, each animal is observed having heaps of fun, the koala in the wheelchair enjoys banana muffins, green smoothies and broccoli soup. Baby elephant squirts pumpkin soup on snake, while on another page alligator bounces up on the trampoline feeding the giraffe in scarves spoonfuls of tomato soup. Delicious food is cooked and eaten in a variety of colourful places, creatively worn as shoes or clothes, there's even a llama dressed as a lemon! The mandrill's brightly coloured butt stands out, as he twirls his spaghetti and jumps out of a bright coloured birthday cake.
Toddlers and pre-schoolers will enjoy exploring each page, chatting about their favourite foods and following different animals' food choices and actions throughout. Watch out for the cheeky monkey who stands out from the crowd. How many ice-creams, who has pooed, who's skipping with spaghetti? There's so much to investigate! With speech bubbles filled with questions and fun comments, text placed all around the illustrations and a bold array of brightly coloured animals We eat bananas is an amusing picture book to share. Diet, nutrition and tools like the traffic light system of healthy eating can be linked to the sharing Abey's story with kindergarten, childcare and preschool children.
Rhyllis Bignell

City of Ghosts by Victoria Schwab

cover image

Cassidy Blake book 1. Scholastic, 2018. ISBN: 9781407192765.
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Themes: Ghosts, Paranormal, Edinburgh (Scotland). Goodreads Choice Award Nominee for Middle Grade and Children's (2018), 2019 Best Fiction for Young Adults, 2019 Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers. When Cassidy Blake's parents go to Edinburgh for their TV show about ghosts, Cass and her best friend Jacob, who really is a ghost, go along too. Arriving there Cass finds that she is surrounded by ghosts and Lara, a girl who can also see them, tells her that her mission is to send them beyond the Veil, the land of ghosts who haven't moved on. This seems like a good idea when the Red Raven starts haunting her, trying to take away her life force.
City of ghosts has all the ingredients for a thrilling, quick read: there are ghosts aplenty, the setting is the magical Edinburgh, and Cass, ably helped by Jacob, is a courageous and daring girl. Readers will love the tour of Edinburgh, the old Castle which is haunted by ghosts of soldiers and children, Greyfriars graveyard where a little dog is buried, and old streets and shops where ghosts hang out.
The plot is fast paced and the suspense will keep the reader enthralled as Cass fights for her life in the Scottish graveyard. Her relationship with Jacob will also intrigue and the reader is left with questions about the Veil and their role there, and will want to pick up further books in the series.
Pat Pledger

On the come up by Angie Thomas

cover image

Walker Books, 2019. ISBN 9781406372168
(Age: 14+) Highly recommended. 'I might have to kill someone tonight'. This is the startling first line of Thomas's novel, but the 'killing' isn't what it sounds like. Bri is a high school student who is finding it hard to sit through school when all she wants to do is write and perform rap poetry, and she has her sights set on wiping out her competitors in the rap contest held in the local Boxing Ring. Her father was the famous rapper Lawless, murdered outside their home when she was only a four years old. Bri is all set to continue in his path.
The setting is a black ghetto in the U.S., where gangs roam and the police target black kids. Bri's mother is a recovered drug addict who wants her daughter to break free, go to college and make a better future. But Bri has her heart set on being a rap star, and maybe her drug-dealing Aunt Pooh or her father's ex-manager, Supreme, will help her get there.
The novel is written in Bri's voice, and whilst the slang may at first be unfamiliar and off-putting to a non-American reader, the reader is gradually drawn into Bri's world and the language becomes very real and natural. The author, Angie Thomas, is herself a former teen rapper, and the world she describes sounds authentic, written from her experience.
Bri's natural talent and determination seem to be leading her to success, but hand in hand with that comes controversy and danger. The perils of social media have also to be navigated. Bri finds herself having to make decisions without anyone to really guide her. Although the world of gangsters, drugs and rap contests might be foreign, Bri's struggles to find the right path through it all, and find her true values, makes a story most teenagers could readily identify with.
I found it to be an engrossing story and I came away with a new appreciation of the complexity of improvised rap poetry. This book, set in the U.S., would make an interesting comparison with Limelight by Solli Raphael (2018), which describes an Australian teenage slam poet, and his messages of social equality and self-empowerment.
Helen Eddy

The case of the peculiar pink fan by Nancy Springer

cover image

An Enola Holmes mystery book 4. Allen and Unwin, 2019. ISBN 9781760637408.
(Age: 12+) Recommended. Themes: Detectives. Mysteries. 19th century England. Brothers and sisters. Fourteen-year-old Enola Holmes lives in Victorian London, following in her famous brother Sherlock's footsteps as a detective. Her mother has gone away to live with the Romani people, leaving her daughter in the care of her oldest brother Mycroft Holmes. Helped by funds secreted throughout the city by her mother, she is able to finance her independent life, rent several flats, purchase a variety of disguises and develop her abilities and skills to deal with all classes of Victorian society. There is a poignancy and sadness at times, as Enola (alone backwards) desperately tries to stay in touch with her mother via messages in one of the London papers.
In The case of the peculiar pink fan Enola is resting in the new public building, the ladies' lavatory, hiding from her eldest brother and guardian Mycroft Holmes who wants to send her to boarding school. She encounters an old friend the Honourable Cecily Alistair, whose companions are keeping her under unusually tight reins. Enola's disguised in a scholarly outfit, but Cecily recognises her and she communicates a message using the secret language of fans. Cecily leaves behind this pink paper fan when roughly escorted away by her captors.
Enola's nearly seen by Mycroft as she leaves the ladies' lavatory and she finds herself on a difficult path, rushing about London, meeting an eccentric cast of characters and searching for poor Cecily who is being forced into an unwilling arrangement. Cecily's mother provides many helpful clues, as Enola dressed as a reporter, views her pink afternoon tea setting with its fans, special crockery and festive decorations. Fleet of foot, able to climb fences and trees, escape quickly and blend in at an orphanage are skills Enola engages in, in this fourth novel in the series. She even assists her brother Sherlock in escaping from the villains, as he too has been asked to find the missing heiress.
Nancy Springer's detective novels are exciting; there are extremely dangerous investigations, plenty of mysteries to solve and an array of villainous characters. She shares insights into the lifestyles of both rich and poor, into Victorian architecture, food and clothing. The Enola Holmes mystery stories are captivating and exciting to read and have been re-released as movie tie-ins.
Rhyllis Bignell

The case of the bizarre bouquets by Nancy Springer

cover image

An Enola Holmes mystery book 3. Allen and Unwin, 2019. ISBN 9781760637415.
(Age: 12+) Recommended. Themes: Detectives. Mysteries. 19th century England. Brothers and sisters. Nancy Springer's Enola Holmes mysteries blend personalities from Arthur Conan Doyle's detective novels, with wonderful new characters, intriguing settings and thrilling plots. Enola Holmes is a feisty, independent teenager whose sharp observations, ability to think quickly and act in a manner suited to different social situations, makes her the perfect person to take on these missing person cases.
In The case of the bizarre bouquets Enola reads the news that Doctor John Watson, Sherlock's assistant, is missing. Enola's brothers have observed her previous disguises, so she decides to beautify herself with a blonde wig and frilly dress. Her beauty regime and cumbersome clothing prove challenging when chasing Watson's foes.
To gather insight into the disappearance, she calls upon Dr Watson's wife, pretending to be a former patient. Here she observes a strange bouquet made with poppies, asparagus, hawthorn and bindweed (convolvulus). Enola is skilled in understanding the language of flowers, their special meanings and also has a broad botanical knowledge. With this knowledge she discovers a message connected to the doctor's disappearance. Throughout this increasingly dangerous investigation, Enola is forced to flee over London rooftops, confront a fierce watchdog and help her brother Sherlock escape. She even risks her life by entering the insane asylum as a patient to find where Watson is being held.
Nancy Springer's Enola Holmes mystery series carry the reader into Victorian life, exploring the changing roles of women in society, how the upper classes live and the poor live a hand to mouth existence in the roughest areas of the city. A thoroughly enjoyable read for fans of Sherlock Holmes, historical fiction and detective novels.
Rhyllis Bignell

Lola Dutch, when I grow up by Kenneth and Sarah Jane Wright

cover image

Bloomsbury, 2019. ISBN 9781681195544.
(Age: 4-7) Recommended. Themes: Girls. Imagination. Careers. Animals. Lola Dutch is an energetic, imaginative, tutu wearing young girl whose life is one big adventure. Her best friend Bear is always there for her, supporting all her new ideas. Gator, Crane and Pig willingly assist with Lola's creative schemes. In Lola Dutch, when I grow up she is a tour de force, a whirlwind focussed on her future careers, pondering her potential vocations. Marching into this delightful story, she leads the parade in a cow-girl outfit, followed by a postie-swan, doctor pig and a gator king.
What will Lola be when she grows up? Lola declares this conundrum to be an emergency, so all her friends gather in Bear's book-lined den. Here a special volume catches her eye 'Opera through the ages', yes, she wants to be an opera singer destined for the stage. Everyone helps, building the stage, writing the music and designing an exquisite costume for Lola's first and only performance. Once she's achieved her first goal, she quickly moves on to the next career, as an inspirational inventor working through the stages from research through trial and error to building a wondrous flying machine. Not satisfied with this achievement, Lola's creativity blossoms as she plants a beautiful garden with Bear, Gator, Pig and Crane. Will that be enough for this inspired miss?
Sarah Jane Wright's whimsical gouache and watercolour paintings add stylishness; they burst boldly and energetically across the pages. Working collaboratively with her husband Kenneth, they have created a beautifully descriptive, inspirational story that will raise wonder and joy in the young reader. Paper dolls are included on the jacket reminiscent of the times past.
Lola Dutch, when I grow up is a wonderful read aloud providing opportunities and stepping stones for Science, Technology and Art.
Rhyllis Bignell