Reviews

Shadows by Paula Weston

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The Rephaim, book 1. Text Publishing, 2012. ISBN 97819219222503.
(Age 15+) Recommended as a light paranormal read. Gaby Winters is recuperating from a car crash that has killed her twin brother Jude. The beauty of Pandanus Beach has helped to heal her body but she is overwhelmed by the grief of her sibling's death and every night she has horrible nightmare of demons and hell-spawn. When Rafa comes to town she is must come to terms with the fact that because he has appeared in her nightmares there may be some truth to the claim that he knew her brother. What is the truth about the terrible dreams that she has about the Rephaim? Where has she come from and who can she trust?
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. What was particularly engaging was the combination of the realism of the setting contrasted with the paranormal aspects of the novel. Weston deftly described Pandanus Beach, the cafe where Gaby worked and the friends that she had begun to form relationships in such a way that a very clear picture emerged of what Gaby was like and where she lived. The contrast of the terror of the nightmares and the threat of the Rephaim seemed just as real as Gaby tries to navigate through her feelings of who is trustworthy and just what is happening around her.
There is plenty of action for fans who enjoy the fight between angels and demons, but it is the mystery about who Gaby is and what has happened to her brother Jude that most intrigued me. The characters were very well developed and Rafa is mysterious enough to make me want to read the next novel in the series to find out just where he stands in regard to Gaby and Jude.
This is certainly one of the better paranormal novels that has appeared recently and is sure to appeal to fans of this genre. Some violence and swearing make it more suitable for older teens. Overall a gripping and interesting read.
Pat Pledger

What's the time, Mr Wolf? by Debi Gliori

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Bloomsbury Books, 2012. ISBN 978 1 4088 1940 1
(Ages: 4+) Recommended. Picture book. Nursery rhymes. The well known refrain, What's the time, Mr Wolf? is on most pages in this engaging and colourful picture book, extolling many well known nursery rhymes, inviting readers to join in and then recognsie the characters and the rhymes that they know. Much fun will be had either in the classroom or at home, as children, teachers and parents try to find the many references given.
From being woken at 7 am by four and twenty blackbirds, asking the time, then hearing his neighbours in their straw, wood and stone houses slamming their doors on the way to work, or Red Riding Hood knocking on his door with the morning post, Mr Wolf is besieged by people asking the time or simply interrupting his day. Lots of references to time and the passing of time continue throughout the fun filled book until the last page when we find what Mr Wolf has been rushing to do.
The references to nursery rhymes in the text are paralleled in the illustrations encouraging children to find as many characters and situations that they know about. I can imagine many children will have a great time with this large picture book, full of detailed and colourful illustrations. This will be a book to share, and read over again, finding something new each time it is read.
Fran Knight

Life on the goldfields by Doug Bradby

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Black Dog Books, 2012. ISBN 978 1 742042 13 9.
(Ages: 9+) Recommended. Non Fiction. Australian History. Black Dog Books' series, Our Stories has produced some fascinating and most useful books for the home and classroom. Allied to the renewed interest in Australia's History, these books are concerned with Ned Kelly, the Kokoda Track, Burke and Wills and the latest, Life on the goldfields. Each of these books gives an overview of the topic to be spoken about and the double page on each of the sections is covered with information, pictures, photographs and maps makes it easier for the student to read. For this latest book, the recognized format has changed to make it more text based, rather than small bites of information. I found this an odd change, considering the different ways in which students now gather the information they need, but still interesting, and I am sure students will pick out the information they are searching for.
For the goldfields, we are firstly acquainted with the reason so many people wanted to leave England and why and how they did so. I was surprised to read that so many were literate, and intrigued with the facts given about the voyage to Australia. Chapters following include getting to the diggings, life on the diggings, the food and shelter, how women (diggeresses!) and children fared, the mining accidents and then finally a summary of what this event did for Australia. The photographs and drawings are interesting and some are new to me, while I longed for a map of the places mentioned.
At the back is a useful index, and glossary, and as with the others in this series, is a pleasure to dip into or use as a research tool.
Fran Knight

Marked by Denis Martin

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Walker Books, 2012. ISBN 978 1 9219 7754 1.
Cully is a newcomer to a small town in New Zealand. There he is attracted to and intrigued by a girl whom he would like to know better. He first sees her whilst he is waiting for the ferry and she has an argument with a man. Unsure whether to interfere he is saved from action by the arrival of the ferry. When he starts at his new school he sees the girl again but she is not inclined to be friendly. Eventually through a friend he gets to know Kat although she is still distant. What unfolds from there is an exciting thriller as Cully begins to learn more about Kat and become involved in the mystery that surrounds her.
There is a level of violence in the story that is in sharp contrast to the peaceful New Zealand countryside in which it is set. Tension increases as Cully attempts to find out more and he discovers that Kat is being watched by a group of ruthless and brutal people.
The story moves along and the body count rises as the author fills in more details and we learn the secrets surrounding Kat and her so called mother.
I think this fast paced exciting story will appeal to middle-upper secondary students who will find the action and hint of romance make a good combination with a satisfactory ending.
David Rayner

The Forsaken by Lisa M Stasse

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Orchard Books, 2012. ISBN: 9781408318805.
(Age: 14+) With an embedded sticker proclaiming, 'If you love The Hunger Games read this!', The Forsaken is very clear about its target audience.
We are in a future world where North America has joined with Canada and Mexico to form a United Northern Alliance (UNA) ruled by a benevolent dictator, Minister Harka. The action soon kicks in; we are given a brief glimpse of a controlling society before being told that once a year, young people of 16 are given a test. If they fail they are relocated to an island, ostensibly a gaol, called Prison Island Alpha. In only a couple more pages our seemingly placid and cooperative protagonist is whisked off to the prison and must survive by her wits alone.
Alenna is a thoughtful narrator. We have access to her every doubt, suspicion, and triumph. It sometimes seemed too much was being explained, analysed, and explored. The plot could have been tighter, although I appreciate some teenagers enjoy extra details and more explanation .
Mysteries are set in place, enemies and friends abound, and the reckless but undeniably attractive Liam seems to have a connection with Alenna she finds hard to resist. Many of the secondary characters struggle to develop authentically. Gadya, the girl who saves and befriends Alenna, is a moody thing - often in turns angry, snarky, then friendly, and of course jealous of the growing friendship between Alenna and Liam. Stasse has no qualms about killing off characters we've come to know, which is meant to make Alenna's situation more dangerous and tense, but ends up seeming unnecessarily violent. Kids appear and disappear, motives are muddled and unresolved, and the big reveal is less than impressive.
The Forsaken sets itself up for a sequel, maybe even more. I'm not sure who will read it. It's a little too cerebral for action fans, and a little too action packed for romance fans. I'm not sure it knows what it wants to be. Themes include resistance movements, dystopian governments, and orphans.
Trisha Buckley

Silhouette by Thalia Kalkipsakis

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Hardie Grant Egmont, 2012. ISBN 9781921759659.
Scarlett Stirling loves the strict regime of the dance classes at the National Academy of Performing Arts. And she doesn't mind the blisters and sweat. When she auditions for a part in a music video  she thinks that she wouldn't get the part.  Scarlett ends up with a part in the video, and when she meets charismatic musician, Moss, her life changes. Scarlett is torn between her world with Moss and her world with all her commitments. Trying to make the two worlds as one while blow up, so which world will she try and keep alive? Will it be Moss she chooses or her love as a dancer?
Silhouette bleeds an insight into the life as a dancer and what it takes to make it as a professional. The book was slightly predictable but was still a very good read. I loved reading about the hardships Scarlett had to face. The connection Scarlett had with her teacher, Jack, and her friends was the highlight of the book for me. To read the problems that a dancer has to face daily and all the completion that they have to compete for was great; I never knew how much they had to face.
Cecilia Richards (student)

Chasing Odysseus by S.D. Gentill

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The Hero Trilogy, book 1. Pantera Press, 2011. ISBN 9780980741865.
Hero is abandoned by her mother when she is five. Her mother, a champion of the Amazons, does not want a child with poor eyesight and so Hero is left with her biological father Agelaus. Agelaus is a herdsman who lives in the mountains in a cave with his three adopted sons. They live a peaceful life until Hero is fifteen, when war breaks out between the Greeks and the Trojans and the herdsmen are unfortunately caught in the middle of it.
Based on a Greek myth, the four siblings watch the fall of the city of Troy and then watch as the herdsmen are blamed for it.
This first book in the trilogy follows the adventures of Hero and her three brothers as they set out on a quest to clear the reputation of their people. They encounter many strange people, wondrous lands, princes and princesses, gods, warriors and grand adventures. The book begins well but, with all the crazy adventures the four go on, it gets a little bit hard to follow in the middle. Then, at the end, as all trilogies do, it leaves you hanging. I'm sure some readers will like it; Chasing Odysseus did catch me, but it didn't keep me interested.
Rachel Brabin

It's a Miroocool by Christine Harris

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Ill. by Anne James. Little Hare, 2012. hbk, RRP $A24.99. ISBN 9781921541018.
Audrey Barlow has reached one of the milestones of childhood - she has lost her first tooth! But Audrey lives in the outback, many kilometres from the Tooth Fairy's usual nightly route, so how will she find her way to Audrey's bedside and the billy containing that precious prize? Because Audrey is clever, she has lots of ideas and spends the day making sure that the Tooth Fairy will find her and goes to bed knowing she has done as much as she can to guide the fairy. But she doesn't count on the fickleness of nature, and during the night all her plans are wrecked. Will she wake up disappointed and disbelieving in a tradition that has been around for decades? The ending is magical - so much better than a gold coin or whatever inflation has put the value of a tooth at, these days. (Miss 6 has her first wobbly one, so I wonder if she will also treasure the Tooth Fairy's gift in the same way, when the time comes. I will give her this book!)
Many students are familiar with this lovable wonderful character through the Audrey of the Outback novels that Christine Harris has created, so to see a hardback picture book story will just delight them. And if this is their first introduction to her, then the promise of a series of novels to read afterwards will be greeted with anticipation. Audrey brings a particular slice of Australian life to the lives of children who will probably never experience it for themselves. Just HOW could you guide the Tooth Fairy to your house when it's not even marked on a map? In fact, Audrey's ideas had such an impact on Miss 6 that now, when she has a problem, we ask "What would Audrey do?"
The whole is brought to life by the remarkable artwork of Ann James which complements the story perfectly. Even the youngest reader is able to envisage the isolation of Audrey, feel the dryness, and delight in the solutions that Audrey thinks of. The medium, colours and style work so well together to convey the landscape, the actions, the mood and atmosphere that this is the perfect author/illustrator match. We could feel Audrey's concern when she realises her predicament; feel her delight and excitement as she carries out her plans and thinks she has all bases covered; and her anguish as Mother Nature rears her head. These pictures are drawn by someone who has lived Audrey's life.
Apart from the value in having the readers predict how Audrey might solve her problem, this book has a particular place on library shelves just because of its setting. It is a rich springboard for a compare-and-contrast exercise about how children in rural and remote Australia do the everyday things that children everywhere must do. It's a superb introduction to helping children understand that theirs is not the only life led. There's even a song written and sung by Bill Marsh to accompany it available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqG9Wx5d0ZY that incorporates images that complement the artwork and take the children to where Audrey lives.
Teaching notes for a range of themes that could be explored are available . Audrey even has her own blog and website.
This one definitely deserves a place on the shelves.
Barbara Braxton

Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore

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Gollanz, 2012.
(Age: 15+) Highly recommended. Bitterblue is now Queen of Monsea. Leck, her violent father, has left a terrible legacy which her advisors would like her to forget about. They want her to forgive all those who committed acts of atrocity under Leck's rule and move forward. Bitterblue escapes the castle and while walking the streets of her city disguised as a commoner, begins to realise that the only way to forge a new path is to understand the past.
Cashore is a clever author with a deft way with description and atmosphere. She keeps the reader's attention with her beautifully developed characters and setting and she also has the ability to maintain a gripping pace that kept me reading this book virtually in one sitting.
Bitterblue comes of age by the end of the book. Her excursions into the wider world where she meets Saf and sees how the common people live give her an insight into what she should do for the kingdom. Cashore doesn't compromise about the difficulties of being in love and the responsibilities that people in different roles must take on in life. She doesn't take the easy way out with the love story between Bitterblue and Saf. Instead she leaves the reader pondering on what it means to be a ruler and whether personal needs and wants can come before those of the kingdom.
What I have enjoyed so much about this fantasy series is that each book can be read separately although of course maximum enjoyment comes through first reading the other two books, Graceling and Fire. Bitterblue is equally as good if not better than the first two books and is a joy to read and think about.
The three books in this series are well worth having in libraries. They are so much more challenging than most of the fantasy that abounds at the moment and are sure to get discussions going about feminism, the role of women in society and the responsibility that being in love can bring. These books are ones that will remain on my shelves to be reread.
Pat Pledger

The Secret of Zanzibar by Frances Watts

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ABC Books, 2012. ISBN 9780733330650.
Recommended. The Secret of Zanzibar is the final book of the Gerander Trilogy and brings to the conclusion the adventures of triplets Alex, Alice and Alistair, Tibby Rose and a cast of relations and friends.
Time is running out for the members of FIG (Free and Independent Gerander) as Queen Eugenia of Souris is about to march on Cornoliana and claim the throne of Gerander. Alex and Alice's mission is to encourage a mass peaceful protest to prevent the Queen entering the City, whilst Tibby Rose and Alistair are off to Templeton to enlist the help of her Godfather Granville, editor of the local paper. Their mission is to inform the Sourians of the truth of the occupation of Gerander.
The fortunes of the two groups are followed in alternating chapters. This allows for the author to build on the suspense as the reader is left hanging at an important point, then bought back to the story of the other group. Great for serialisation! The confrontation at the gates of Cornoliana brings a surprise twist and begs the question 'Where to next?' for both the characters and author.
The characters are mice operating in a fantasy world, but the themes of freedom and resistance are universal and the situations the young spies find themselves in, hiding from the Queen's guards or imprisoned and interrogated are reflective of the real world at the present time. There are many other themes touched on in the book including prejudice, freedom of the press, home and family which would serve as teaching or discussion points.
I love the way the author has taken famous quotes and tweaked them slightly to fit the story eg. 'You never really understand a mouse until you consider things from his point of view - until you climb into his skin and walk around in it,' attributed to Atticus Finch a wise mouse from the book To Kill a Mocking Bird and 'All that is needed for evil to triumph is for good mice to do nothing.'
An enjoyable read with something to say.
Sue Keane

Slave girl by Alexa Moses

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Angus and Robertson, 2012. ISBN 0 73229498 4.
(Ages: 10+) Historical fiction. While on an exchange visit to New York, precocious thirteen year old student, Jenna, wants to be nowhere near the museum that her teacher has taken her to. She would do anything to be at the fabulous hair salon she has read about, but instead follows the cat in the museum back through a portal into Ancient Egypt. There she is mistaken for a slave girl and given menial tasks to do, handed from one owner to another because she is useless at all she is given to do and answers back without a thought.
I found the girl insufferable, but then I was wanting her to learn something about Ancient Egypt instead of trying to get back home,. The background to this novel is marvellous, a tribute to a young mum's feeding times in the early hours of the morning watching television, and so readers will certainly learn easily a lot about Ancient History in reading this story. The tale of the girl did not hang together as well as it might, but it was still a fascinating read, one sure to capture the imaginations of its readers of upper primary school age.
Fran Knight

My Mum makes illustrated by Dee Texidor

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Lothian Children's Books. ISBN 978 0 7344 1281 2.
This vibrant book is a real celebration of the role that Mum plays in the life of the young narrator. From the minute the girl gets up, Mum is there, making sure that her daughter is up, dressed and fed. They do cooking together, make crafts, play with friends, do gardening (with a subtle nod to the growth of organic plants, which reads as a little smug and pretentious to be honest), oversees rest time, and tucks her young daughter in with a story at night.
The girl recognises that Mum is ALWAYS busy doing things, and that sometimes she has to play on her own (which is a nice balance, otherwise the message young ones could take away from the story is that Mum is a one stop entertainment machine!), and that now Mum has made something new! A baby!
My only concern with this book is that, in reading it to a young child with a new sibling, or a sibling on the way, is that it is setting them up for disappointment. It's a very special Mum indeed that can keep up all the former activities, right down to the planting of the organic plants, with a newborn in the house as well. Perhaps the book would have been better to run a few pages longer, and capture the reality of 'once baby comes, things will be different, but now I can make things for baby'.
Nonetheless, this is a bright, colourful and collage filled celebration of a dedicated Mum, and a daughter who knows she has a very busy and talented Mum. The book touches on Mum having enough love to share with 2 children, which is always a valuable take away message.
Freya Lucas

Rigg's Crossing by Michelle Renee Heeter

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Ford Street, 2012. ISBN 9781921665707.
A teenage girl is found in the wreckage of a car and requires a lengthy hospital stay to recover from her psychological and physical injuries. Little is known about the girl who staff name 'Len' other than a violent altercation obviously occurred at the scene of the accident. She doesn't appear to have been registered at birth, isn't registered with Medicare and may have been home schooled. Until Len is able to provide more information about her past it is difficult to know how best to help her. A decision is made to place Len in a therapeutic refuge for troubled teens where she has access to professional counselling.
The circumstances under which Len arrives at the refuge are mysterious and the potential for a thrilling story looms large. However the story evolves more as an internal monologue of Len's daily life at the refuge as she seeks to reassemble a sense of identity. The arrival and departure of other residents, intrusive counselling sessions and the return of memories from her troubled life are a few of the issues Len has to deal with. A heightening of tension is signalled when characters from her past make an appearance. Unfortunately these developments prove to be diversions that promise much but deliver little. Consequently, the conclusion feels disappointing.
Tina Cain

It's always time for a nursery rhyme illustrated by Emma Stuart

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Lothian, 2012. ISBN 978 0 7344 1269 0.
(Ages: 6+) Picture book. Nursery Rhymes.
This is a strange book, full of old nursery rhymes, with no credited author, and illustrations that lack distinction. Purporting to be Australian themed, the illustrations are similar to those spied years ago in the Little Golden Books series, and although some have an Australian theme, which may encourage readers, most do not, simply following the age old dictum of 'Medieval' costumed figures drawn to accompany old folk's tales and rhymes such as these.
I am always intrigued by uncredited rhymes and stories, because a little search allows the reader to find where these are from, adding to the richness of the story. Round and Round the Garden, for example is one of those fingerplay rhymes, this collected in the 1920's and finally catalogued in the 1950's. It is a very late poem, as teddy bears were not invented until early in the 20th century. For me, this adds a richness to be shared with a class, and I am sorry not to see it thus authenticated. Many of course, are from Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes and I feel should be authenticated with this information if nothing else.
Counting rhymes, repetitive rhymes, old country rhymes, finger play and body parts rhymes all have a huge role to play in a child's development, the affinity with words and rhymes, and, not insignificantly, the closeness and richness of reading something together, should be supported with a rich and varied diet of rhyming stories and this book just does not hold up to a close inspection.
Fran Knight.

Into that forest by Louis Nowra

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Allen and Unwin, 2012. ISBN 9781743311646
(Ages 13+) Recommended. Children raised by animals. Two young girls, lost in the Tasmanian bush after a boating accident, form the basis of this rivetting tale. Hannah has some knowledge of the bush, but the other, Becky, has none, coming from a sheep farm where her father and the local bounty hunter kill all the wild dogs they can. But Hannah is more respectful of the tiger with the stripes and dog like features. Her father, a whaler, has told her stories about wild animals and she hates the visits of the bounty hunter to their house.
The girls, about five and six years old are taken in by a pair of Tasmanian Tigers. The girls become part of their den, learning to hunt with their tiger family, suckling, snuggling in with the he and she dogs, Hannah calls Dave and Corinna, for warmth. The girls become attuned to sleeping through the daylight hours, waking at night for hunting and feeding, they learn to hunt in a pack, tearing at uncooked flesh and eating it down, lapping the water with their tongues. They begin to lose the trappings of the life they once lead, abandoning their clothes, forgetting their language, taking on the growls and coughs of the animals as the form of communication.
One winter, desperately cold and starving, Hannah leads her family to the bounty hunter's shack, where she remembered there were sheep. It saves their lives, but the bounty hunter now knows a pack of tigers is around. He kills the two new cubs, but spots the naked girls in the bush trying to warn the mother.
An engrossing tale of family and togetherness, of familial loyalty as the two girls become part of the tigers' family, running with them in the wild, then turning to killing sheep, the one thing sure to focus the eye of the bounty hunter on them. All the while the reader knows a climax is coming, one where all their loyalties will be tested.
Nowra gets into the nitty gritty of a child learning to live with animals, which raises questions about our society and the trappings of civilisation which have glossed over the fundamental issues of family life, the basic stuff of survival, closeness, food and shelter. This astonishing book could be compared with others like it, Dog boy by Eva Hornung (2010) and the much earlier Dogboy by Victor Kelleher (1990) along with the stories and fables of old, Romulus and Remus, Mowgli, Tarzan and so on, which all have their bases in children being raised in the wild. This would make an amazing text to study for secondary readers, as the question of what is civilisation is tantamount to any discussion of what happens in the book. The environment, the extinction of the thylacine, the treatment of the Aborigines in Tasmania, are all issues which could have a sound airing through the study of this story.
Fran Knight