Reviews

Zoo house by Heath McKenzie

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Scholastic, 2018. ISBN 9781742767628
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Zoos, Animals, Housework, Humour. When Oscar gets out of bed in the morning, he steps upon a snake. Undeterred he goes to the loo where he finds a gorilla or two, but on the stairs is a pair of brown bears. In the kitchen he finds baboons and chimps, while the bathroom is crammed with an elephant, rhinoceros and hippopotamus. What is going on, children will ask, but turning the page the reader will find a frazzled mum trying to keep the housework up to scratch with all these visitors.
McKenzie presents a dilemma in this uproariously funny verse story of how a house becomes a zoo, and how mum tries to turn things around so that everyone helps with the chores. She calls a halt to doing all the work herself, and writes up a chart with everyone's name on it and the chore they must do. Each animal is quite prepared to help, but the results are not quite what everyone expected.
Children will laugh out loud at the things the animals do in the house and their attempts at doing housework. Small moments of humour abound an readers will love following the antics of each, watching how the other children and dad behave along the way. Among the funny digitally executed illustrations, full of movement and humour, eager readers will find eleven koalas hidden within the pages.
All children will have great fun with this book, recognising the various animals and their incarnation within the pages, predicting the rhyme on each page, following the antics of each animal and checking out all the chores that are needed to keep a house going. The funny illustrations beg to be pored over and some readers may try their own hand at drawing an animal in the McKenzie style. I loved the endpapers with their paw prints, adding another level of research for readers, working out which print belongs to which animal.
Fran Knight

Zoom by Sha'an D'Anthes

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Lothian Children's Books, 2018. ISBN 9780734417633
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Planets, Solar system, STEM, Astronomy. For an introduction to the planets in our solar system and the order in which they appear from the sun, this is a wonderful book. With clear, bright and inviting illustrations bound to entice the youngest reader, the text tells us of Scout a young inventor, explorer and dreamer. Each day he thinks about things and builds his space ship, ready to be launched in his back yard. In space he visits each of the planets in our Solar System in turn, naming them and showing some of their details. Each of the planets is likened to an animal encouraging the smaller reader to associate that planet with something known and in reading this book, learn the order of the planets. So the first planet, Mercury, the smallest of the planets is fashioned as a small teddy bear lying on a rug, the second, Venus is shaped like a kangaroo, and shown to be a very bright planet.
The third rock from the sun, Earth, is given the shape of a large bear, tickled by people walking across her belly. Earth is followed by little red Mars, a fox smiling at the passing astronaut. Then a whale, the mighty Jupiter, and Saturn, an elephant girdled by its rings, followed by Uranus, a green crocodile and finally Neptune, a blue tiger, the last of the planets. With a flurry of noises and lights, Scout realises that he is running out of fuel. He puts out a call for help and gets a response from the tiny frozen dwarf planet, Pluto, but before anything can happen, Pluto sneezes and Scout lands in his own backyard. Scout the adventurer has had a very busy day.
This joyous book will give younger readers a basic understanding of where the planets of our Solar System sit in relation with each others, and give them a little information about each planet through Scout's adventure.
Independent author/illustrator Sha'an has produced a stunning read aloud book which will find a place in school libraries, homes and classrooms. Eager readers will see the link between the planets and Scout's mobile above his bed, reflecting the animals shown as each planet.
Fran Knight

Riding a donkey backwards retold by Sean Taylor and Khayaal Theatre

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Ill. by Shirin Adl. Otter-Barry, 2018. ISBN 9781910959305
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Read a loud, Myths and legends, Middle Eastern stories, Trickster. Uqman Ali and Eleanor Martin set up the Khataal Theatre, devoted to performing the poetry, stories and tales from Muslim culture, many of which feature Mulla Nasruddin, a trickster whose stories figure in the myths and legends of countries from Asia to Turkey. Some of Mulla Nasruddin's tales are brought together in this book, retold by Sean Taylor and illustrated by Shirin Adl, stunningly reflecting her Iranian background. Reading these stories is an absolute treat, learning why Nasruddin sleeps in his bed in the thieves' house after his goods were stolen, or why he rides his donkey backwards, or what 'the other side' means to someone already on the other side. Beguiling, full of humour, wisdom and jokes, while begging to be read out loud, children will love the use of language and the seeming simplicity of the tales as Nasruddin tells of incidents in his life. One very short tale tells of Nasruddin walking with his umbrella. When it begins to rain he opens it and sees it is broken. A young girl asks him why he brought it if it was broken. He replied was that he didn't think it would rain.
Another story details Nasruddin's early days at school where he fell asleep when he was supposed to be drawing. When the teacher woke him and asked him to come to the front of the class and show his drawing, he only had a blank piece of paper, but he used this to explain that it is a donkey eating grass. Scoffing, the teacher was then told, that the donkey ate the grass and when it was all gone, it left.
Teamed with vibrant, energetic illustrations reflecting the Iranian motif, they are filled with detail and delight for young readers to absorb. An introduction gives readers background to the stories across the Muslin world, and a glossary at the end will help explain some of the unfamiliar words. A worthwhile addition to any school library wanting a range of stories from across cultures and religions.
Fran Knight

The day war came by Nicola Davies

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Ill. by Rebecca Cobb. Walker Books, 2018. ISBN 9781406376326
(Age: all) Highly recommended. Themes; War, Refugees, Displacement, Children in war, Education. The things we take for granted are all turned upside down in this picture book showing one child's torment as she loses everything she holds dear, to war. We expect to be safe, to be housed and fed, to have access to clean water and food, and be able to go to school. But when war comes, imposing its mayhem on a small town where the children are at school, and the parents at home or at work, everything that is known and accepted is no longer the same. The town is razed to the ground, noise and dust and debris separates the girl from her peers and family, and without possessions or friends, she must follow others as they head to a place of safety. Finding a town she is shunned by the occupants. War has got to them too.  Finding a school, she asks to be let in, but war has taken hold there too, and she is rejected, the teacher saying there is no chair for her to sit on.
This heart breaking story will resonate with children when they see how so simple an excuse can be given for the child not being accepted. It symbolises the plight of refugees the world over, being rejected, or left in detention camps, allowed to live out their lives without hope. And with echoes of the 'no room at the inn' story, this is a book that will engender much discussion in the classroom.
The beautiful illustrations will haunt the reader, the wide open expressions of the children, the devastated village contrasting so explicitly with the colour and uninterrupted life of the unscathed town, the symbol of the chair. The story offers hope after the children bring along chairs for the refugee children to sit upon and the stunning endpapers begin with a double page of empty chairs, and at the end all of them filled with children, safe and learning.
An end page tells the background of the story, initiated by the UK rejection of 3,000 unaccompanied refugee children in 2016, and hearing a tale of a child being refused entry to a school because there was no chair for her. Now chairs appear online supporting refugee children and their right to education.
This is a memorable and moving book. Classroom ideas are available.
Fran Knight

Is it a mermaid? by Candy Gourlay

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Ill. by Francesca Chessa. Otto-Barry Books, 2018. ISBN 9781910959121
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Mermaids, Dugongs, Philippines, Conservation, Environment, Ocean. This environmentally aware, laugh out loud story with its perky illustrations will be a treat for younger readers having it read out loud to them, or newly confident readers wanting to share in the humour for themselves. Two friends, Beni and Bel find a dugong on the shore. near their home in the Philippines. She tells them that she is a mermaid, and tries to show the pair her attributes.
Her features and appalling singing do not convince Belnju but Bel is entranced. Younger readers will love the tension between these two friends as they attempt to convince each other about the animal, drawing confidence about supporting their own opinions while listening to another's.
The dugong may be clumsy on land, but once the trio dives into the water, they see another side to this animal, as she weaves and dives around the seaweeds and animals that live beneath the surface of the water.
It is a delight to see a book about the Philippines, a setting rarely seen, and concerning an animal that is not often shown in picture books, but is endangered around the world as its seagrass food source is destroyed and the animal is battered by sea vessels. More information about this animals, related to the elephant, is given at the end of the book, intriguing readers once again, and encouraging them to follow up the weblink given.
The jaunty sun filled illustrations reflect the lifestyle of the children living in such a beautiful environment.
Fran Knight

Migration by Mike Unwin

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Ill. by Jenni Desmond. Bloomsbury, 2018. ISBN 9781408889916
(Age: all) Highly recommended. Non fiction. Theme: Animal migration. With bold illustrations that sweep across the double pages, readers will thrill at the stories of the animals that migrate across this planet and the risks they take travelling over inhospitable snow and ice, or seas or mountains.
From the better known, turtles that return to the place of their birth to lay eggs, the emperor penguin, the African elephants in their annual trek for water, the albatross, to the less well known, the globe skimmer dragonfly or the hummingbird, the pages offer a brief summary of the animal and its journey accompanied by an illustrations that begs to be closely scrutinised.
Readers will love the detail, the great white shark that travels 10,000 kilometres to feed on seal, the monarch butterflies that travel in their millions from USA and even Canada to Mexico, a distance of some 5,000 kilometres, to roost and lay their eggs.
The hummingbird travels 800 kilometres from Central to Northern America, but travels over the Gulf of Mexico, a bird the weight of a sugar lump!
While many are large animals, the elephant, emperor penguin, whales and sharks, caribou and wildebeest, many are smaller fish, salmon for example, while some are smaller birds, hummingbird and crane, and two are insects. This is a magical book to dip in to, to savour and reread, to learn about the sweep of the animal kingdom and marvel at the astonishing stories presented.
Fran Knight

Colin the Chameleon by Rachel Quarry

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Starfish Bay, 2018. ISBN 9781760360474
(Ages: 3-6) Themes: Chameleons, Problem solving. Rachel Quarry's "Colin the Chameleon" is a delightful picture book that follows the journey of a young lizard whose unique colouration first hinders then helps with his survival and his family.
Colin the chameleon has bright red skin which stands out from the green and brown forest foliage. He has a problem blending in because he can't change colour like his brothers and sisters. They all scurry about catching insects, concerned for their own safety, while leaving Colin to fend for himself. Camouflage is a key element for the chameleons' survival. Poor Colin, he just escapes from an eagle's talons and from the jaws of a large menacing snake. There's one very dangerous part of the forest the road where vehicles drive by leaving their tyre prints. Across on the other side are plenty of juicy, tasty insects. Luckily Colin's bright colouring helps him boldly stand out from the sandy track, the traffic stops to let him scurry across. Soon his brothers and sisters realise that being unique, standing out from the crowd is a very useful quality.
Quarry's simple descriptive and alliterative text is engagingly complimented by her ink, print and collage illustrations. She capture Colin's story using natural forest colours that contrast with his bold red and spotted lizard's skin. Wordless pages move the story forward, capturing the menacing snake and the camouflaged siblings. Sharing "Colin the Chameleon" with preschool and junior primary students provides for dialogue on wellbeing, accepting one another's abilities and as an introduction to animal report writing.
Rhyllis Bignell

The things we can't undo by Gabrielle Reid

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Ford Street, 2018. ISBN 9781925736045
(Age: 15+) Highly recommended. Perception or reality? Is there a difference? We don't see things the same way on a clear day. Imagine first time lovers, slipping into a dark bedroom at a party - immature, shy, uncertain and unfortunately intoxicated. They have been secretly dating for a year, wondering what the other expects and under pressure from their peers at the party and popular culture in general.
Sam and Dylan are two star-crossed lovers in Year 11 moving clumsily together, toward a perceived rite of passage. Dylan senses mere consensual trepidation. Sam senses coercion but is unwilling to reject the boy she loves. Later, when Sam confides her regrets or perhaps her exploitation, to her best friend Taylor, Taylor begins a crusade to exact revenge on Sam's behalf. Sam's secret romance risks being exposed to Sam's parents, who have forbidden her to date whilst still at school.
The decisions and assumptions made on that fateful night and beyond, send Sam spiralling beyond the everyday depression caused by her parents' demanding academic and musical expectations.
One of the most compelling YA novels of 2018, themes of sexual violence and suicide may affect access, but The things we can't undo is a praiseworthy cautionary tale for both sexes. Just as John Larkin's The pause so successfully prepares teens for the terrible but temporary depression following the loss of first love, this novel is almost a survival checklist for 'losing one's virginity'.
Diary entries, letters and social media threads add to both reader engagement and the comprehension of polar viewpoints - not least the problematic self-righteousness of social media. Without these texts, we would only have Dylan's perspective.
The #MeToo phenomenon echoes as well in Australian suburbia as it does in the forests of Fredrik Backman's YA novel, Beartown. Gabrielle Reid proves she is easily as perceptive as writers like Backman and Joyce Carol Oats, when it comes to encapsulating the subtle contradictions of human sexuality, whether within a culture, a gender or within a single mind.
Deborah Robins

Secret world of butterflies by Courtney Sina Meredith

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Ill. by Giselle Clarkson. Allen and Unwin, 2018. ISBN 9781760633608
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Butterflies. Nature. Environment. Published to coincide with the exhibition 'Secret World of Butterflies' at the Auckland War Memorial Museum (June 2018-May 2019) this stunning book full of colour and information is enough to make people want to pack their bags and fly over the ditch if not already there to take in the delights that this exhibition must display.
Told in rhyming couplets, by Auckland poet, Courtney Sina Meredith, information about butterflies is there on every page to read and absorb. From large to small, from flying high to flying closer to the ground, from how they see, to how we see them, to what they eat and how they sleep, all is given in rhyming lines that beg to be read out loud, and invite the readers to predict what word will rhyme.
The stunning illustrations are luminous across each page, with detailed drawings of these insects, drawn with accuracy and interest sure to grab the attention of all who open the book. Wellington based freelance illustrator, Giselle, produces a monthly comic as well as illustrating various books and magazines.
I loved the way some pages replicated the display of butterflies in an exhibition, spaced out on a board for everyone to see, while others had full page spreads illustrating a scene in the natural world, with others set in the built environment. I loved the pages showing the camouflage used by some of these insects to stay alive and I loved reading all the information given on the last three pages.
This is a wholly fascinating book, sure to please younger readers with an inquisitive eye and those who want to know more about butterflies. Many will adore the little known facts presented: butterflies drink crocodile tears or butterflies taste with their feet, but all will look at the butterflies they see with renewed interest after absorbing this book.
Fran Knight

The Bad Guys: Episode 7: Do-you-think-he-saurus?! by Aaron Blabey

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The Bad Guys book 7, Scholastic, 2018. ISBN 9781760279493
(Age: 6+) Highly recommended. Do-you-think-he-saurus?! will need no promotion to fans of the Bad Guys as they time travel through space, landing on the exact spot they wanted, but at the wrong time - 65 million years in the past.
Readers will cheer as the Bad Guys face a fierce dinosaur while they try to repair their time machine and get back to earth in time to save it from the evil alien.
Even though this book follows on from The Bad Guys: Episode 6, new readers to the series will quickly catch onto the characters and the plot and they will be swept along laughing out loud at the antics of the dinosaur and the Bad Guys. Blabey also has a little fun looking at the qualities of leadership that will fascinate kids and the drawings of the characters are a joy to examine.
To add to the reader's enjoyment is a pilot episode, "The glamorous life of Dr Rupert Marmalade", at the back of the book and adults and kids alike will have a laugh at the take-off of reality shows and the huge ego of Dr Marmalade.
This is a series that will give any readers a lift as they laugh along with Blabey's fabulous sense of humour and hilarious drawings.
Pat Pledger

Dogasaurus by Lucinda Gifford

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Scholastic, 2018. ISBN 9781743810712
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. In Dogasaurus, Molly finds an egg in The Mysterious Ancient Forest next to her home. Molly is like any curious child and takes the egg home. It hatches and now Molly has a new pet. It is small and cute but Molly's new pet is a dinosaur. What will happen as Rex the dinosaur - who acts like a dog - grows and grows? Molly and Rex play games, he helps with the chickens and he herds the animals. Rex might be gigantic and he might make a lot of mess but Molly loves him. One day, Molly finds Rex staring at The Mysterious Ancient Forest. They hear roaring from inside the forest. Is the forest where Rex truly belongs?
Dogasaurus is a beautiful story about a friendship between a girl and her pet. The illustrations are gorgeous and colourful. They help tell the story and would be great prompts for oral retelling in the classroom. This story is also fun and the pictures portray that. Dogasaurus is also a great story to help us say goodbye to those we love. It is highly recommended for bedtime reading with readers under 7 and for independent readers aged 7+. Dinosaur fans as well as readers who love a good story about friendship will enjoy this book.
Kylie Kempster

Jacob's toys: The big backyard adventure! by Claudia Woods

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Harbour Publishing, 2018. ISBN 9781922134943
First to flee were Ted and Dupree, then Tessa Turtle, Poncho and Mousy Dundee. Not far behind was the smallest of all, the teeny tiny reindeer that Jacob called Paul. Jacob tells his mother that he is too old for soft toys and he wants to give them away. His mother washes them and hangs them on the line to dry. But wild weather sets the toys free and sends them on an exciting adventure across the garden.
What will become of the toys? Will they make it to their new home safely? Will Jacob realise he will never be too old for his soft toy friends? (Publisher)
This book has very interesting illustrations. They are a mixture of real images and collage. The text is well written and the rhyming will be a winner with children from an early age. I can see them joining in or predicting the rhyming. Friendship and loyalty are interwoven through the storyline and the look and find challenge at the end of the book is a welcome addition.
Kathryn Schumacher

Unmasked: An inspirational story of triumph over adversity by Turia Pitt

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Random House, 2018. Young Adult edition. ISBN 9780143790396
(Age: Young adult) Highly recommended. Themes: Resilience, Adversity, Goal-setting, Physical injury. Turia Pitt tells her inspirational story for young adults. There is no doubt her account of surviving horrific burns and learning to live life with gratitude despite the horrors of her experience will be inspiring and challenging for young readers. The fierce competitive and dogged resilience that has always marked her life is really put to the test as she learns to put one foot in front of the other - either in recovery or on an ultra-marathon.  The love and support of her partner in life, Michael, is also a story of strong, masculine devotion that should be read by young men too. This is not just a story for girls. As difficult as the circumstances that Turia has faced, her advice for young readers is powerful and important, and because of her experience will echo through the emptiness of a self-centred culture.
Written mostly from Turia's perspective, she does however include the voices of family and friends whose lives were also impacted by the trauma of Turia's burns. Advice for surviving adversity and difficulties in life is also given, with her perspective adding power to these words.
Photo pages for reference are included in the centre of the book.
Carolyn Hull

Behold the beautiful dung beetle by Cheryl Bardoe

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Ill. by Alan Marks. Charlesbridge, 2018, ISBN 9781580895552
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. Themes: Dung beetles, Dung, Insects. All animals leave behind dung or faeces or poo (feces and poop in this book published in the USA) and it needs cleaning up. The dung beetle is onto the task almost immediately, sensing when some is dropped and flying to the poo within fifteen seconds of it hitting the ground. He needs to be fast, as many thousands of other dung beetles are on their way as well. Once there, different dung beetles do different things. Some bury it before others get there, some eat it, some make tunnels taking the poo down with them where one egg is left in each piece of dung, some roll the dung into a ball and roll it away to a place where it can be buried and used to incubate an egg.
The dung beetle therefore creates air pockets in the soil, aerating it, as well as fertilising it. And the dung provides food for the growing grub. No wonder the Ancient Egyptians saw them as symbols of life and its renewal, calling them scarabs.
This is a fascinating little book with illustrations that wonderfully complement the text, revealing exactly what the beetles look like, what they do and how they operate. The last two pages give information as text, with a glossary and bibliography.
This is an outstanding contribution to the area of simpler texts about our natural world, produced energetically for beginning readers. The idea of poo is a surefire winner, but the work of the dung beetle will hold their attention, prompting children to look more closely at the poo left around the place and be in awe of how it is removed by this marvelous insect.
Fran Knight

Ellie Engineer by Jackson Pearce

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Bloomsbury, 2018. ISBN 9781681195193
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. "Ellie is an engineer. With a tool belt strapped over her favorite skirt (who says you can't wear a dress and have two kinds of screwdrivers handy, just in case?), she invents and builds amazing creations in her backyard workshop. Together with her best friend Kit, Ellie can make anything. As Kit's birthday nears, Ellie doesn't know what gift to make until the girls overhear Kit's mom talking about her present - the dog Kit always wanted! Ellie plans to make an amazing doghouse, but her plans grow so elaborate that she has to enlist help from the neighbor boys and crafty girls, even though the two groups don't get along. Will Ellie be able to pull off her biggest project yet? Illustrated with Ellie's sketches and plans, and including backmasters with how-tos, this is full of engineering fun!" (Publisher)
I have had "Ellie Engineer" highly recommended to me and I was not disappointed. Ellie is a strong female character who enters a world normally dominated by boys. She has all the traits we are trying to foster in the youth of today - friendly, kind, creative and inventive. Ellie is the perfect mix - although she likes to wear dresses she also likes to be creative, inventive and wears a tool belt ensuring she is always prepared. She is a risk taker and fully understands that when you are inventing things failure is a common occurrence by one must display persistence and keep going. She ensures she keeps detailed notes and drawings documenting her journey which are cleverly interspersed throughout the book. I would recommend this book for students aged 8 and up. Themes touched on include STEM, friendship and gender stereotypes.
Kathryn Schumacher