Reviews

We're going on an egg hunt by Laura Hughes

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Bloomsbury, 2016. ISBN: 9781408873861
(Age: 2+) Recommended. Paperback with flaps to lift. Themes: Easter, Poetry, Rhymes.
We're going on an egg hunt.
We're going to find them all.
We're REALLY excited.
Hooray for Easter Day!

Laura Hughes's lively Easter picture book is based on the traditional rhyme 'We're going on a bear hunt.' Four young rabbits start out with their wheelbarrow on the search for ten hidden eggs. The farm setting provides plenty of tricky obstacles, through the sheep enclosure, in the chicken coop, passed the busy bee hives, even at the duck pond there are eggs to collect. The eggs are hidden under logs, flowers, bulrushes and even the milk churn. Each brightly coloured egg is collected in the wheelbarrow, their baskets, buckets and a butterfly net, until they find the biggest egg of all. Hiding behind this flap is a surprise - the big bad wolf. The bunnies hurry and scurry back through the ducks, bees, chicks and lambs dropping some Easter eggs along the way. Of course, they arrive safely back at their house just in time to enjoy the chocolatey treat. Even Mr. Wolf enjoys Easter, munching on the eggs dropped in haste.
This engaging story is just right for sharing with youngsters this is an exciting read-aloud story, with counting, familiar things to find and animals to name. The pastel, watercolour wash backgrounds, rustic settings and charming animal characters make this an entertaining picture book.
Rhyllis Bignell

Zoo Zoom by Candace Ryan

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Ill. by Macky Pamintuan. Bloomsbury, 2015. ISBN 9781619633575
(Age: 3+) The animals are off in a rocket to the moon, the monkey, puffin, cockatoo, even the buffalo are ready for a big adventure. The rhyming text questions which tasks need to be undertaken to launch the rocket - using the keys, gear and dials. As the animals are strapped in, even the kiwi, the hippo notices the sleeping rhino has caused a major problem.
Manny Pamintuan's vibrant and lively computer generated scenes filled with the more unusual zoo animals carry the story.
Rhyllis Bignell

The sidekicks by Will Kostakis

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Penguin, 2016. ISBN 9780143309031
(Age: 14+) Highly recommended. Death, School, Same sex relationships, Friendship. When Isaac is killed, his three friends, Ryan, Miles and Harley find that with him gone, their relationship has no substance. They were Isaac's sidekicks and each must now work out their future without him. This riveting book is divided into three as each of the boys explains what Isaac and the group means to them.
The first section narrated by Ryan, shows the school machinery being put into place; grief counsellors called in, the school counsellor hovering, staff ready for the students' reactions, the principal handling the year eleven cohort at an assembly after Isaac's death. Excruciatingly real, the observation of the teachers including Ryan's mother, a staff member at the Catholic College Ryan attends is mesmerising.
But Ryan is bereft for another reason that no one else knows. Isaac was the one person who knows he is gay, the one he could rely upon to talk to, to discuss his latest love.
But after the assembly, Miles takes Ryan to Isaac's locker, asking him to get a bolt cutter. Opening the locker, Ryan sees that the red purse Miles desperately wants is full of fifty dollar notes. Money Isaac and Miles made by selling essays: another secret.
The first part, Swimmer, leaves the reader with a mass of questions around Isaac's death and Ryan's hesitant steps to coming out. Time moves slowly in the second part, Rebel, told by Harley as we are taken into his world, one that is surmounted with the footage he has taken of his three companions, footage which Ryan watches, looking for hints about what he may have revealed about himself and the Isaac he didn't know. But through his conversations we see more of what happened to Isaac before he died, and see Harley run away to his father's house out of the city leaving behind the many questions he may be asked. He supplied the drugs that night and when Isaac's mother asks him to gather some of the friends together to talk to her, he is very much afraid.
Miles is the focus of the third section, Nerd, as he continues the questions about how close he was to Isaac. He is peeved that the article in the newspaper did not mention him, and talks of Isaac as the film maker in the group. Miles retrieves the footage of the film made in the pervious year by the four, and rewinds the out takes, looking for clues about their relationship.
This is a very involved story, the plot line developing around the three sections from the three points of view makes fantastic reading as questions are posed and then partly answered as we read. All the time Isaac's voice looms large, and the reader sees all their stories dovetail together satisfactorily as they all realise how much they mean to each other, as each has done something for the other, something only a friend would do.
This is a masterful tale of coming of age with three young men at once horrified at their friend's death but also searching for who they are. The design of the plot and the up to the minute language are sure to appeal to a young adult audience.
Fran Knight

Bella and the wandering house by Meg McKinlay

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Ill. by Nicholas Schafer. Fremantle Press, 2015. ISBN 9781925162301
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Humour, Moving house, Grandparents. Bella steps off her verandah one morning just as she has always done, but this morning, unlike every other morning, she steps onto her mother's violets. The path is not in its usual place. Curious. She speaks to her grandfather about it and in his sea salt wisdom tells her to watch the stars as they will always tell her where she is. Each day she wakes and the house has moved again, not only a few paces further along but once to a lake, then to a dam.
Bella comes to see the legs the house grows in its attempts to find a suitable resting place, and when her parents tell her the house will be cut in half and transported back to where they came from, she develops an idea. After all her grandfather was a boatbuilder and has put a porthole in her bedroom window made from the last boat he built, complete with the board with the name of his last boat, so she realises what the house is looking for. All ends happily and Bella has learnt a lot about her grandfather, his boats, the difference between a house and a home, and living where you need to live.
This is a delightful story for all ages, full of wisdom and humour and displaying a delightful relationship between a girl and her grandfather. And all is wonderful illustrated giving a Magic Pudding effect to the house and its running away legs.
Fran Knight

And Tango makes three by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell

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Ill. by Henry Cole. Simon and Schuster, 2015. ISBN 9781481448840
(Age: 3 - adult) Highly recommended. Animals, Chinstrap penguins, Family, New York. This tenth anniversary edition deserves a place in every library. The true story of two male penguins in the Central Park Zoo in New York is enough to bring tears to the eyes in its affirmation of what makes a family and what constitutes love.
The two penguins did everything together after meeting in 1998, so much so that when the female penguins formed partnerships with the males and made nests of stones ready for their eggs, Roy and Silo did too. They even found a stone to put in their nest to sit on and hatch like all the others. But it did not hatch.
The keeper, Mr Gramzay noticed that another pair had laid two eggs, and knowing that they were never able to raise more than one chick, moved one egg to the nest of Roy and Silo. They did everything the other penguins did: they sat on the egg, moving it to keep it warm, they slept on the egg, changing places when they needed to, until finally the egg hatched. And it was named Tango.
The trio became a most loved family amongst the penguin colony at Central Park Zoo, Silo and Roy teaching their chick to dive and swim, snuggle into their warmth at night and sing for its food.
This life affirming book confirms the place of family and the love that brings two together to make a family. Children need to see their own family make up in the books they read, and this goes a long way towards redressing the dearth of such books in the past.
An afterword of this anniversary edition tells us of the history of this book since it was first published. It makes salutary reading that in this age of Western freedoms, authorities seek to restrict some voices. The work of the parents in Singapore in stopping this book being pulped is wonderful and needs greater publicity, happening so recently (2014) A post script from the two authors telling us that they now have a daughter is a joyous end to a wonderful read.
Fran Knight

The emperor of any place by Tim Wynne-Jones

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Candlewick, 2015. ISBN 9780763669737
(Age: Older teens) During the Second World War, Oshiro, a wounded Japanese soldier finds himself on a small and remote Pacific island, after having escaped by raft from the Island of Tinian where U.S. forces were crushing all resistance. Gradually he recovers and lives a peaceful existence, living off the land and utilising a range of supplies from debris washed ashore following battles at sea.
The soldier's simple quest to survive the war and return alive to his beloved new wife is threatened when he discovers a recently crashed American transport aircraft loaded with rifles and ammunition, in the island's interior. Evidence reveals that one of the crew has survived in a seriously injured state but has escaped to an unknown hiding place. Fearing discovery by the enemy soldier, Oshiro carefully searches the island for him and a series of bizarre events lead to his capturing Derwood, the American. Language difficulties limit the pair's communication but in time, both come to understand that it is simply impossible for Oshiro to confine Derwood as a prisoner and the pair live an agreeable and cooperative existence on the island, posing no threat to one another and further, coming to depend on each other for survival.
Fifty years later, Evan, a Canadian teenager is distraught when his father, whom he loves dearly, dies unexpectedly from a heart attack. Evan's ninety year old Grandfather arrives to tend to his son's and Evan's legal affairs. Evan has never met Griff, a Marine veteran from World War II and fears him, based upon warnings and tales from his own father who fled from Griff and ceased all contact with him as soon as he was old enough.
At this time, Evan discovers a manuscript detailing the wartime experiences of Oshiro and Derwood among his father's effects and learns that Griff (somehow a part of the events), is doing his best to suppress publication of the story. Despite his age, Griff intimidates Evan who struggles with his rigid military ways and threatening behaviour.
The mystery of what happened to Oshiro and Derwood, and their connection with Griff is gradually uncovered by Evan and enables an intriguing plot to develop. Much of the wartime narrative however involves supernatural beings which play a significant role in the events on the island. Aside from the notion of ghosts representing souls yet to be born into the physical world, the supernatural elements seemed out of place and I couldn't help thinking that the tale suffered for their inclusion.
Rob Welsh
Editor's note: This book was on YALSA's 2016 Best Fiction for Young Adults, is one of School Library Journal's Best Books 2015, and is on Horn Books Fanfare list.

Dance, Bilby, dance by Tricia Oktober

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Ford Street, 2016. ISBN 9781925272130
Baby Bilby would love to dance. Everything around him seems to do so, even the ants on the swirling leaves and the bush litter swept up in the willy-willies. Even Bilby's shadow dances. Will he be able to, too? He's doing quite well and delighting in the shapes his shadow makes until a big scary shadow looms over him.
On the surface this is a most charming story beautifully illustrated by one of my favourite illustrators, perfect for preschool with its simple text, colour and movement. But it has the potential to be so much more if the reader starts to explore the concepts of movement, wind patterns and shadows and how they change. The ending also offers scope for discussion.
One of the reasons I love Oktober's illustrations is her eye for detail and these are no exception. Bilby is very appealing yet very realistic while the meticulous detail of the contents of the willy-willy contrast perfectly with the ballet shoes on the emus!
Can't wait to share this with Miss Nearly 5.
Barbara Braxton

Fire touched by Patricia Briggs

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Mercy Thompson bk 9. Little Brown, 2016. ISBN 9780356507040
(Age: Adult) Recommended. Paranormal. Good versus evil. The 9th in the Mercy Thompson series, finds shapeshifter Mercy and her werewolf partner Adam and his pack, fighting a ferocious troll. Then they find themselves with a human child, Aidan, who had been stolen long ago by the fae and who can control fire, not always in the safest way. Defying both the fae and their own kind, Mercy and Adam decide to protect him no matter the cost.
I am a fan of the Mercy Thompson series and eagerly await each new novel in this and the related Alpha and Omega series. Patricia Briggs is a master in the art of portraying believable and likeable characters, putting them into tense situations where they have to make hard decisions about good and evil. There is depth to all the characters and this makes the book a very enjoyable read. Mercy's problems with some of the members of the pack not wanting her to be Adam's mate feature strongly in this novel and family and pack life are highlighted. Mercy is strong and level headed through it all, not only fabulous in her action scenes but also in her personal life.
In Fire touched, Mercy is not prepared to see a young boy taken again by the fae and is determined to give him shelter and Adam and his pack are around to give strong back-up. This results in the fae giving chase and all are involved in some exciting and thrilling events including evading a volcano troll and a trip to the fae land of Underhill. Events show that if they are not careful there could be a war where humans would suffer greatly and Mercy is instrumental in trying to avoid this.
Each book in the series is self contained. It certainly helps to have read the books in order, to see character development, but the reader is not left on a cliff-hanger. There is however, plenty of scope for future developments, especially with the status of the werewolf pack. I suspect this series is one that older teens will be seeking at their local libraries.
Pat Pledger

Top dog by Rod Clement

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Angus and Robertson, 2016. ISBN 9780732298753
(Age: 4+) Recommended. Dogs. Cities. Business life. Samson is an extraordinary dog. He can not only talk and walk on his hind legs, and dress in a suit, but holds down the CEO position at a major company in the city. Each morning he is chauffeured to work, where he is greeted by his staff and given a cup of coffee. He and his staff work very hard; he loves to chew things over, and throw ideas around. His well trained staff bring his paper in each morning and sit when he says to sit.
Readers will have a great time comparing his life with that of their dog or cat, seeing the slant Clement puts on his extraordinary poodle. They will laugh out loud as he turns things on their head, showing the actions usually shown by an owner to his dog, used by the dog to his staff: a pat on the head, a tickle on the tummy, a bone given as a treat. All lampoon the things dogs get up to in the family home, but here we are in a city office tower. The play on words will intrigue and delight readers, and get them looking at some of the idioms, such as, 'chew things over' or 'throw ideas around'. Samson's office looks out from a great height over the city, giving views of the harbour and city buildings. But he does insist that his staff stay behind to do extra work, and fetch for him, while sometimes they need to beg him for a favour.
Clement's lovely water colour and pen and ink illustrations will delight the reader, the soft watercolour presenting an adorable dog, one that the readers will take to their hearts. This book will encourage a closer look at some of the words and expressions used in relation to the children's pets.
Fran Knight

The boy at the top of the mountain by John Boyne

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Doubleday, 2015. ISBN 9780552573542
(Ages: 10+) Recommended. The Boy at the Top of the Mountain follows protagonist Pierrot, a young boy who is sent to live with his aunt Beatrix in Germany during World War II. Hailing from Paris and being only seven years old, Pierrot knows little to nothing about the Nazis, but this all changes once he discovers that his aunt is a servant for Adolf Hitler, and his new home is the Berghof. Pierrot is quickly taken under Hitler's guidance, and Pierrot must decide not only whether he agrees with Hitler's motives, but whether he is strong enough to reject them.
When Pierrot arrives at the Berghof, he is stripped of everything he has ever known. He is told not to think of his old life, of his best friend that he left behind . . . he is even stripped of his name. All that remains with him is a single storybook and his memories.
Boyne has weaved together a powerful, heartbreaking and disturbing tale. Reading about Pierrot as he is growing up under Hitler's watchful eye, reading about his confusion as he struggles to make friends because of where he resides, and reading about his eventual choosing of which side he is truly on is hard to read due to both his naivety and his age (Pierrot ages from 7-16 during the course of the novel).
The only faults of the novel were that it was hard to connect with Pierrot as he sometimes seemed distant from the reader. Often, his voice at seven sounded more like he was of age thirteen, and this made it hard to believe the story at some points.
Boyne took many risks with this novel, and they certainly paid off. Pierrot is not a particularly likeable character, but the reader is compelled to continue the book nonetheless. The Boy at the Top of the Mountain is no doubt a spectacular read for children aged 10 and above who are beginning to learn about world history.
Breanne Foster (Student)

I'll never let you go by Smriti Prasadam-Halls

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Ill. by Alison Brown. Bloomsbury, 2016. ISBN 9781408839010
(Age: 3+) Recommended. Bedtime, Love, Family. Reassurance comes with every page as the mother tells her offspring that she will always be there. In simple rhyming sentences, the message is clear: that no matter what happens the mother will be around. Turning the pages the young child will see a variety of animals in different settings with their babies. In one the pair of bears are on a swing, in another over the page, picking brambles. These are followed by a pair of dogs in a house where the pup has drawn on the walls with crayon, but the mother dog does not scold, simply tells the pup that he knows what to do. Over the page a mother crocodile watches as her baby has a small tantrum, but he is reassured that she will wait for him to finish. An excited kangaroo leaps around with Mum there by his side, while a mother koala brushes away her baby's tears. At the end each of the mothers and babies are shown together on one double page with the line of the title, 'I'll never let you go'. This is a wholly comforting story, one that will reassure younger readers that someone is there to watch over them no matter what they do.
The simple rhyming sentences will be easily repeated by the reader, and the illustrations of the animals and their environment will be recognised by many.
Fran Knight

Game on! 2016

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Scholastic, 2016. ISBN 9780545850315
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. Game On! 2016 is a book by gamers for gamers. This means it should be enjoyed by all gamers and is highly recommended for game fans aged 8+. Readers can find out the facts behind the most popular games, the top hoaxes and the coolest secrets. Read about MarioKart and how many were sold or how Al in Minecraft glitches sometimes (and why). Gamers can also read about the top 10 game bosses and the hardest achievements and trophies to win.
The book is bright and colourful, relying on the well-known game images and small segments of texts to engage its readers. Game On! can be read a few pages (or a topic) at a time and would be a great book for children to keep in their tray at school or to read in the car. Readers will need to be independent to read the text but they can also look at the images for enjoyment.
Kylie Kempster

Quentin Blake's A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

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Ill. by Quentin Blake. HarperCollins, 2016. ISBN 9781843653035
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens is one of the most enduring Christmas stories of all time. It has been described as "the book that defines the Christmas spirit" as Ebenezer Scrooge, a mean-spirited miser, is visited by three ghosts one Christmas Eve. They show Scrooge the true value of Christmas: charity, good humour and love for his fellow man and turn his attitude around.
Since its publication in 1843, it has been available in many different editions and formats that it would seem superfluous for there to be yet another one. But - while this one is an unabridged version it has been illustrated by Quentin Blake and that is the special drawcard. When Miss 9 was here recently, she saw it in the pile and immediately recognised his unique style through her familiarity with the Roald Dahl stories she loves and sat down to read it, even though Christmas was well past.
Suddenly the story that I've had in a leather-bound, tissue-paper tome given to my grandmother over 100 years ago became accessible to this current generation of the family. When there were questions to be asked because at that stage she was unfamiliar with the England it was set in, we had fun exploring the answers and her reading repertoire expanded to historical fiction! Now, as her school studies open up the world of the England that spawned the First Fleet and Australia's early European settlers, she has a basic understanding that is making it all make so much more sense to her.
Last Christmas I was in a school library and I instituted the Christmas Countdown which involved a guest reader sharing a new Christmas-based book each day, an activity which proved to be a very popular lunchtime focus. But this version of this classic, read as a chapter or two a day, would prove a worthy alternative. Or you could suggest it to a teacher to share with their class on a similar basis.
Christmas is abound with stories to share but there is a reason that A Christmas Carol has stood the test of time. Well-written and now perfectly illustrated in a style that is familiar to many, there is a whole new generation able to appreciate it.
Barbara Braxton

Barney and the secret of the whales by Jackie French

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Harper Collins, 2016. ISBN 9780732299446
(Age: 9+) Highly recommended. Barney and the secret of the whales is set in 1791 when Australia was still a relatively new colony. In this story, readers will meet Barney. He arrived in the colony as the son of a convict who was then adopted by the minister and his family on his mother's death. A chance encounter with a whaling captain and the promise of riches, leads Barney to join the crew of the whaling ship and leave the security of the colony. Barney doesn't know what lies ahead but learns quickly thanks to being the youngest crew member and mistreated regularly by everyone. Life at sea is harsh. Barney's job is to sit at the top of the mast and look for whales. He sleeps, works, aches and misses home. After watching the death of his first whale, Barney realises that all the money in the world will not make him happy and the death of the whale is not what he wants to see or participate in. Will he last three years at sea? Can he survive the death of another whale?
Barney and the secret of the whales is a historical narrative aimed at readers aged 9+. Jackie French has created an engaging and descriptive insight to life, twisting fact and fiction. This would be an excellent class novel for year 4 and 5 History and is a great model for historical narratives. Highly recommended for all readers.
Kylie Kempster

The expatriates by Janice Y. K. Lee

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Little, Brown, 2016. ISBN 9781408706862
(Age: Adult - Mature YA readers) Recommended. Dislocation. Relationships. Hong Kong. Identity. Maternal role. Family. Like the central characters in this book, the reader becomes a traveller into another land as the author deftly deposits us in the experience of the contemporary expatriate living in Hong Kong as we eavesdrop on the internal dialogue and emotional state of three women. The main characters have left America and are in Hong Kong - for a time. This dislocation and temporary residence state impacts their relationships and their identity. For the married expat women this means an almost 1950s blissful experience of domestic and social life, with the added bonus of hired help, while their husbands climb the ladder of success. Margaret though suffers from a heart-breaking loss and grief response that impacts both her family and Mercy, a young Korean-American woman who has her own personal identity issues. Another of the women, Hilary, is saddened by the loss of identity and family because of infertility. In the unique social setting of the expatriate woman, this too brings amplified heartache.
The poignant journey of relationships that are put under pressure by isolation and also enriched by the expatriate experience is the basis of this intriguing and captivating narrative. It also highlights the bizarrely unique nature of cross-cultural experience from the perspective of the wealthy expats. The author manages to communicate the sense of loneliness and the false connectedness that occurs as people are enmeshed, for no other reason than that their journeys began from a similar first-world experience.
This book can be recommended for its ability to move the reader, and the gentle and yet profound way it deals with the emotional struggles of the main characters. Lee stirs empathy as we watch these women and get inside their skin to view a different world, forever changed by their expat experience. This is essentially an adult story, but mature Young Adult readers could also connect to the postgraduate world of work far from home. For anyone who has ever felt like they didn't belong, or has had to reimagine themselves in a new context, this story will resonate powerfully.
Carolyn Hull