Reviews

Mum goes to work by Libby Gleeson

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Ill. by Leila Rudge. Walker, 2015. ISBN 9781921529825 (Age: 3-6) Highly recommended. Subjects: Mothers, Women's Occupations, Family Life, Work life. It 's early morning. Everyone is arriving at the centre. The childcare centre is a noisy, bustling place as the children are dropped off and Mums are farewelled. Libby Gleeson's new picture book is a warm and inviting story, showing the variety of roles and jobs mothers do while their children are cared for during the day. Often children know their father's occupation, but what about their mothers? While Nadia's mother is busy studying architecture, attending classes, reading in the library and building model homes, her daughter Nadia is painting her a picture and building a large city with her friend Jack. Each of the mother's work and activities correlates to her daughter or son's activities - Max's mother is a nurse and Max dresses up in pyjamas covered in bone designs and tucks the toys into bed. Rosie and Jack's Mum works at home caring for the new baby, her day is shown in small scenes, bathing, bottle feeding, sorting laundry and cleaning while the baby sleeps. At childcare Rosie, Jack and Nadia wash all the dolls and teddies, then empty out the baby bath and make a mud pie. Time for lunch and small snapshots of the children and mothers are illustrated without text, they are enjoying the fruit, having a picnic, using the microwave or feeding a dinosaur these provide opportunities for shared engagement with the reader or class. Libby Gleeson's picture book looks at a variety of jobs women undertake. It is a wonderful story to read aloud at a childcare centre, preschool or kindergarten, it may help those children who suffer from anxiety about Mum leaving them or coming back for them. When the youngsters are playing, they show they know just what their mother's do, who they work with and where they work. The choice of cream coloured backgrounds and use of mixed media, watercolours, coloured pencils and collage by Leila Rudge makes this a visually engaging story. A great addition for library shelves and family collections, a celebration of mothers and their careers. Rhyllis Bignell

Golden Boys by Sonya Hartnett

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Penguin, 2014. ISBN 9781926428611 Recommended for Adults, not a Young Adult novel. Themes: Family dysfunction; Poverty; Child abuse; Friendship; Bullying; Class issues. Note: Language issues - swearing. A story set in a working class suburb and populated with dysfunctional characters. Into this world, with the pain of working poverty, family violence, abuse by neglect and children who seek small glimmers of hope or love, comes a family who don't seem to fit. The father is a professional, and seems too good to be true and his two sons, Colt and Bastian, are strangely disconnected to their new world. The family has wealth and toys and are showered with everything that could possibly buy friendship. However, even here there is dysfunction, loss and pain. The story is told via the stories of the young children and there is a naivety and confusion as they connect to one another. Freya, the only female character whose internal dialogue we are permitted to hear, is initially attracted to the eldest son, Colt, and yet his father becomes the one to whom she can unburden herself as she begins to lose faith in her own family. Her younger brothers are also attracted to the family and its collection of boy's toys. The local bully and another neglected child also become tangled within the web, and as an adult reader we become increasingly concerned for the welfare of all the children. Hartnett plots this tale so subtly, that initially it reads as a coming of age tale, with young characters revealing their growing maturity and criticisms of the adult world in which they live. However the underlying and creeping pain insidiously drifts through the story and we become increasingly uncomfortable as we realise that the children are all at risk and we are powerless to help. This is an adult novel as the issues of abuse and paedophilic grooming are not targeted to a young audience - however it is not a graphic telling. This is a tragedy, and every child seems to lose, and every adult relationship is flawed and sad. Caroline Hull

Cold, cold heart by Tami Hoag

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Orion Books, 2015. ISBN 9781409151951 (Age: secondary to adult) Highly recommended, Post Traumatic Shock Disorder, Brain injury, Crime. When Dana Nolan returns to the small rural town where she was brought up, she becomes embroiled in the increased media attention of the disappearance of her best friend at school, Casey Grant. Dana was a media presenter before being kidnapped and raped by a serial killer, and now all she wants to do is recover from this ordeal as best she can. But her physical injuries include brain damage and she must learn to think, speak and act without fumbling. Her journey to this end makes fascinating reading as she relearns to say words that are common, to put her thoughts in some order, and survive the attentions of well meaning relatives and friends. She is made of stern stuff, after all she escaped her would be killer where many did not. But back home, the media scrutiny of her friend's unproven death begins to involve her and she uses her investigative skills to begin researching what happened that day. She pieces together media reports, asks questions, talks to police who did the original investigations, eventually meeting up with a young man form her class at school, John Williams, a boy from a different social group, but one who dated Casey and was strongly implicated in her disappearance. He too has a brain injury, acquired when serving in Afghanistan, and now lives at home, despite the animosity between him and his father. The contrast between the two protagonists is rivetting as both are bound in some way by Casey's presumed death, as well as the effects of their not dissimilar brain injuries. The story is tightly plotted as the many characters add further layers of involvement and understanding, and when truths begin to emerge, truths that have been hidden all these years, only then can the events of that night be truly understood. I enjoyed this book particularly because of the presentation on post traumatic shock syndrome and the effect of brain injuries with the two major characters. Fran Knight

Bogtrotter by Margaret Wild

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Ill. by Judith Rossell. Walker Books, 2015. ISBN 9781921977558
(Age: Junior primary) Loneliness, Change, Horizons. Bogtrotter does the same thing every day. He wakes, runs over, around and up and down the bog all day then goes back to his cave. The next day is the same and the one after that. Sometimes he feels lonely and sometimes he wishes for change, but he still does the same thing everyday. One day he meets a frog who asks him why he does this, and this impels Bogtrotter to pick a flower. This small event initiates a change in his behaviour. The next day he talks to a family of muskrats, the next day he swings from a tree, and after that he picks enough flowers to make a chain. He does a variety of different things he has not done before, but still feels lonely. Frog passes by and suggests that he might try outside the bog, and with that, Bogtrotter takes off and goes off into a whole new world outside his bog. The last page will draw suggestions from the children about what the Bogtrotter finds over the wall, and perhaps suggest new things they could do as well.
This is a charming, gentle story about change and trying something different, about taking a risk, about doing something unfamiliar. The beautiful gentle watercolours suit the story admirably, softening the edges of Bogtrotter and his world, the bog. The Bogtrotter's environment is charmingly displayed. Children will not help but see the implications in this story about trying something new, and be impelled themselves to add something new to their day.
Fran Knight

Cherry blossom dreams by Gwyneth Rees

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Bloomsbury, 2015. ISBN 9781408852637
(Age: 11-13) Themes: Family relationships; Grief and depression; Friendship; Coming-of-age. In Cherry Blossom Dreams a soon-to-be teenager narrates a family tale with complications. Sasha and her twin Sean are dealing with a potential new Step-dad who also happens to be an admired teacher at their school. Their mother's previous relationship following their Dad's death was a disaster, and now it seems that there is the potential for more pain and hurt. Not least, because the teacher knows how to discipline them. To add to this family drama are friendship and trust issues, the beginning of the flutters of romantic interest for Sasha, a forbidden party and a missing snake. Their grandmother's role as rescuer during times of crisis is bitter-sweet and the mystery surrounding the magician grandfather who died before they were born comes with a twist. All of this is connected to a large home called Blossom House, that Sasha and Sean's mother is trying to sell, and the children are using as a secret haven to escape the stresses of life.
This is a fairly standard family drama and teenage-coming of age story with multiple plot twists, but it is quite enjoyable and is likely to appeal to 11-13 year old girls.
Carolyn Hull

Ducks to water by Brett Avison

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Ill. by Janine Dawson. Five Mile Press, 2015. ISBN 9781760066062
(Age: All) Highly recommended. Bryn loves visiting Mum & Ted's farm, but this time there's a problem! The pond is dry, the big pipe is blocked with mud . . . how to unblock it and fill up the waterhole?
Meanwhile, Oscar the dog, is surprised when a nest of duck eggs begins to hatch. As Ken comes to the rescue with his mighty crane, jiggling the pipe to empty out the stuck mud, Oscar becomes 'Mum' to the ducklings.
When the pond fills . . . it's time for a SWIM for people AND ducks. Then Bryn discovers that the clever ducks have learnt a new game!
Bouncing along in a romping rhyme, this engaging story with comical illustrations is thoroughly entertaining.
A delightful story, amusingly illustrated, I highly recommend it for all children.
J. Kerr-Smith

A countess below stairs by Eva Ibbotson

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Speak, 2007. ISBN 9780142408650
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Romance. Feel good book. The Russian aristocracy have been forced to flee abroad by the Russian Revolution. Anna Grazinsky, a young countess, has been left penniless and decides that she can no longer live with her English governess Miss Pinfold and takes a job as a domestic servant in the household of the Westerholme family. Rupert, the Earl of Westerholme, has recently become engaged to a beautiful heiress and his country house must be made fitting for the new bride. Anna, armed only with The domestic servant's compendium by Selina Strickland, arrives at Mersham where she tries to hide her identity while falling in love with Mersham and the earl.
Anna is perhaps Ibbotson's most memorable heroine. She is that rare person who has a natural goodness that wealth and gifts couldn't spoil. Wherever she goes, her joy and ability to really see and enjoy what is around her, spreads to those she comes in contact with and enhances their lives. Rupert, too, is a memorable character. Wounded in the war, he has been nursed back to health by Muriel, a wealthy VAD, who on the surface is beautiful and generous. However as Rupert gets to know her in his own home, her belief in eugenics leads her to treat badly those loved members of the community around her who are not perfect. Rupert is an honourable man and is torn between doing what he considers is his duty and his growing love for the strange Russian girl who is acting as a maid.
Minor characters are beautifully portrayed and the reader becomes caught up in their lives as well as learning much about their environment. Ollie is the brave little girl who lives nearby and who has struggled with a damaged leg and Ibbotson tugs at the heartstrings of her reader as she is chosen to become a bridesmaid. Mrs Park the cook brings wonderful delicacies to the table and Mr Proom the butler is a wily and canny man who has a vital role to play in the story. The life of the Russian emigres as they struggle against poverty and bias is also vividly described and adds detail and interest to the story.
Eva Ibbotson has written a beautiful, intelligent romance that is perfect for the reader who enjoy books by Georgette Heyer or who wants a feel good, comfort book that challenges thinking and enlivens understanding of how vividly language can be used. First published as an adult book, other romances by Ibbotson have also been re-issued for the teen market and titles include A song for summer, A company of swans, The reluctant heiress and The morning gift.
Pat Pledger

Billie's great desert adventure by Sally Rippin

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Ill. by Alisa Coburn. Billie's Super Dooper Adventures series. Hardie Grant Egmont, 2015. ISBN 9781760124434
(Age: 5-7) Recommended for fans of the Billie B series and as an introduction to the characters for younger children. In this picture book Billie is having a rainy day at kindergarten. Even though Billie has her duck boots on it is too wet to play outside so she makes herself a cave in the cushions and when her friend Jack comes along they go off on a wonderful adventure, finding a treasure cave and being chased by forty thieves with swords.
This would be a great read aloud for young children and a stirring book for those who are just becoming independent readers but who still like a picture book to read. Billie and Jack have an exciting time finding treasure, learning a magic word to open a stone wall and flying off on a magic carpet, while finding a way to stop the thieves from chasing them. After reading the book, an adult could then go on to read the original Ali Barber and the forty thieves classic and discuss how the author has used this as a basis for Billie's great desert adventure.
The illustrations by Coburn, with the vivid expressive faces on Billie and Jack and the forty thieves, complement the story. Children will enjoy noticing small details like duck heads on an umbrella and how the children's clothes change when they go into the cave and will recognise many familiar things in the kindergarten.
This is a lovely celebration of the power of the imagination and the way that stories can stimulate children's play.
Pat Pledger

Ben by Jack Townend

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V&A Publishing, 2015. ISBN 9781851778287
Jenny the jeep by Jack Townend
V&A Publishing, 2015. ISBN 9781851778294
(Age: junior primary) Recommended. Steamroller. Loneliness. War in England. Design. Ben the steamroller works well with his supervisor, Mr Dodie. He flattens the new roads in the town and works very hard. He is proud of the work that he does. Each night when he is shut away in his shed, tears fall as he is lonely there by himself. One day Mr Dodie tells him that he is to flatten the new road out of the town between this town and the next town, Wibsey. He is very excited.
On the road he works hard, but the same thing happens, at night, he is still alone.
One day he spies some smoke over the next hill, and is excited to find it belongs to the Wibsey steamroller, Matilda.
They are so happy to see each other that they decide to run off together and they do, finding a forest where they stay the night. But the next morning their supervisors find them and prepare to take them back. Ben is adamant that they will not work unless they are together, so a solution is found to their problem.
The second of the two Townend books, Jenny the jeep is set very firmly in wartime England, with pictures of jeeps and ship building, factories working hard, and many soldiers crossing the pages. Jenny is pink and stands out from the monochrome colours of the rest of the group, and attracts derision because of it. But her time comes around when she saves the day. After the war she is sold off and she ends her days as a useful part of society partly because of her colour.
Both stories are delightful and the illustrations will fascinate younger children as well as those interested in historical design.
Townend was an illustrator and art lecturer who published picture books in the 1940's. His books are held in the Victoria and Albert Museum and are republished here for a new generation of readers. The stories are delightful and the illustrations are charming, reflecting the style of the middle of the twentieth century. For those who wish to present a range of styles of story and illustration then these are perfect, and read on their own, will entreat new readers just as they did in 1944.
Fran Knight

Meet Banjo Paterson by Kristin Weidenbach and James Gulliver Hancock

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Random House Australia Children's, 2015. ISBN 9780857980083
The picture book series of Meet... has been extraordinarily successful in bringing the biographies of outstanding Australians to younger readers. Taking simple information and presenting it in a very accessible text accompanied by illustrations has opened up a whole new experience for younger students, giving them all a very clear picture of salient points about each subject's life and times.
The latest offering in the series examines the life of arguably our most famous poet, A. B. Paterson, better known to all as Banjo, beginning with his early life growing up in the countryside near Yass and through to his working in the 'big city' where his longing for the outback evidenced itself in his bush ballads.
Banjo's acclaim as a bush poet was swift and universal - loved by both city dwellers and country folk alike. Lines from various poems are cleverly quoted to highlight certain events and highlights and Hancock's illustrations in tones that reflect that landscape offer a visual exploration of others. Readers could certainly try to identify each poem from its given illustrative clue.
Of course, perhaps the most familiar composition for the intended readership is 'Waltzing Matilda' which receives its due attention and offers a wonderful opportunity to explore the vocabulary of this famous poem in detail. There is much in here to enrich a teaching program - comparisons of town/country life in Banjo's time and in the present day, entertainments and hobbies of the past, landscapes and so much more. Here the provided teaching notes will be a terrific bonus.
As with previous titles in the series a double page spread at the end contains a timeline of The Banjo's life and given his involvement with WWI this could be a timely chance to introduce younger students to the man whose work is loved by so many generations of Australians.
Sue Warren

Thank you: Cheeky monkey manners by Lisa Kerr

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Five Mile Press, 2015. ISBN 9781760067212
(Age: 1-3) Manners. This is a short board book suited for under 3 year olds to teach the simple courtesy of saying 'Thank you'. The cheeky monkey does not realise that the 'magic words' that his Grandma needs, and that he is sent to seek are the simple words, 'Thank you'. The illustrations are quirky and cute in this ten page narrative.
Carolyn Hull

Wendy and the wallpaper cat by Jason Hook

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Ill. by Ilaria Demonti. Bloomsbury, 2015. ISBN 9781851778300
(Age: Junior primary) Highly recommended. Art and design. Sleeping. Bedtime. Grandparents. When Wendy cannot sleep, her parents decide to take her to see Grandpa Walter. She has never visited his house before, and cannot help but notice that his suit is the same design as his garden. When she climbs the stairs she notices the rose wallpaper, and when she looks closely at one of the roses, finds she can smell it. Grandpa offers her one of the bedrooms. She goes into one and the wallpaper is of the sea and shells, and touching it she finds sand in her hand. The next bedroom has luminous fruit trees on the wall, and when she touches the paper, an orange falls into her hand. But the third bedroom has wallpaper covered in scenes and characters from nursery rhymes, and she decides that this is the bedroom she wants. That night after reading her book of nursery rhymes, she settles down to sleep. During the night she follows the blue cat as it plays its fiddle between the trees, she follows him across the sea shore, and into the garden full of red roses and then dances the whole night long. The next morning she wakes, telling Grandpa that she danced the whole night long, and returns to her own house to find that the same wallpaper has been put into her room, so now everyone can get a good night's sleep.
This is a beautiful picture book which uses the wallpapers designed by Walter Crane in the nineteenth century to carry its story of getting to sleep. The girl finds that the stories from the nursery rhyme wallpaper flow through her dreams enabling her to sleep easily. Mark Twain used this wallpaper in his children's nursery, and the history at the end of the book shows how popular Crane's work was. Crane illustrated many books, including the works of the Grimm Brothers and his work is deposited in the Victoria and Albert Museum which published this book. Demonti has used his work as a basis for her own stylish pictures of Wendy and her family, making the whole memorable. Children will pore over this book, finding all sorts of things in the illustrations, talking about how they get to sleep and discussing the nursery rhymes presented in Crane's wallpaper.
Fran Knight

The monster within by Darrell Pitt

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A Jack Mason adventure Book 4. Text Publishing, 2015. ISBN 9781922182876
(Age: 9-12) Recommended. Victorian London. Steampunk Fiction. Detectives. Mysteries. Kaboom! The streets of London are filled with people shopping, walking and enjoying the first day of summer when an explosion rocks the streets. Panic ensues and Jack desperately searches for his friend Scarlet in the rubble of the haberdashery shop. News of other fatal bombings draws the detective team of Mr. Doyle and the teenagers Jack and Scarlet into another fast-paced adventure. Against the backdrop of Victorian London where women are fighting for their right to vote by marching through the city and starving for their beliefs, a monster is seen rising out of the sewers, terrorising the people of Whitechapel. Are these two mysteries linked? The skills, creative thinking and derring-do of the team is needed.
Mr. Doyle's quirky habits has him eating mouldy cheese from the depths of his pockets, and reminiscing about past adventures where three unusual objects helped him solve the mysteries. His apartment at 221 Bee Street is filled with a quirky assortment of objects and a home for Jack and Scarlet. Inspector Greystoke, Mrs. Dudley, leader of a peaceful suffragette group The Primrose Society, and her husband industrial chemist William Dudley plan the best way to stop The Valkyrie Circle, a terrorist organisation.
Before travelling to Spain, Jack and Scarlet set out to discover if the monster exists, and trouble awaits, with fights, confrontations, and Scarlet's consistent comparison to her favourite story heroine Brinkie Buckeridge ever present. They board 'The Lion's Mane' and travel across the skies to the Gaudi inspired city of Barcelona. Their hunt for the terrorists involves much danger, great risks and unfortunately Jack and Scarlet are captured.
Back in London, all the threads link together and conclude in a spectacular fashion.
This Jack Mason Adventure by Darrell Pitt is all that the fans expect and this time there's more detecting than technology and the teenagers are seen developing their skills, education and taking more risks.
Recommended for readers from 9-12.
Rhyllis Bignell

Our baby by Margaret Wild

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Ill. by Karen Blair. Working Title Press, 2015. ISBN 9781921504785
(Age: 0-4) Recommended. Babies (Human). Families. Siblings. Brothers and sisters. Our baby is an observance of families, all sorts, nuclear, with two mums or two dads and those that live together or live apart. The babies are the stars of this book, with Margaret Wild's simple descriptive text and Karen Blair's bonny babies exploring their world.
There are babies with milky mouths, little ears and snotty noses and bald heads just like Grandpa's. They have fun with so many activities, cycling in the baby seat with a leopard helmet, visiting cafes or crawling with their bottoms in the air. They enjoy life and bring a sense of wonder and love to their families and siblings.
Onesies of every colour and pattern clothe the youngsters, as they wibble-wobble in the bouncy swing, look at the world upside down or are wrapped up in a mess of toilet paper. Karen Blair's use of pen, ink and gouache brings a lightness to all of the baby activities. Each is fun to explore. There's the banana about to be thrown in the toilet, the dress-up page with a colander hat and teatowel cape; all enjoyable everyday experiences.
A delightful picture book for families to share.
Rhyllis Bignell

Clementine Rose and the movie magic by Jacqueline Harvey

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Random House Australia, 2015. ISBN 9780857985187
The avid Clementine Rose in your library crowd will eagerly pounce on No #9 in this sweet series. This latest adventure sees the beginning of next door neighbour Basil's film documentary about Penberthy House - of course, starring Clementine Rose! This excitement is tempered however by Lady Clarissa's worries about some strange occurrences at the quaint hotel which are exacerbated by the arrival of two unexpected guests - one hotel inspector and one very well groomed but snooty woman. Both have a pivotal role in the latest drama to occupy Clementine's family. With the hotel's future - indeed the very house's future - at stake, it's a lucky thing indeed when a very sneaky sabotage plot is revealed.
Parallel to these story threads is the promise of a budding romance as Basil's assistant Drew and his 7 year old son Will develop an immediate rapport with both Lady Clarissa and Clemmie. Now we all will be awaiting the next instalment very impatiently to see how this progresses!
Jacqueline Harvey continually strikes just the right note with her books for younger girls. The mix of adventure, mischief, humour and excitement has great appeal for the intended age group and each book contains much with which these readers can easily identify - even though they don't live in a big old house or own a teacup pig!
Find teaching notes or visit Jacqueline's website online.
Sue Warren