Reviews

Thea Stilton and the Star Castaways by Thea Stilton

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Scholastic, 2011. ISBN 978 0 545 22774 2.
(Age 9+) Thea Stilton and the Star Castaways follows the same layout as the popular series Geronimo Stilton. Thea is Geronimo's sister and is off on her own adventures. This story is part of a series but you don't need to have read others to know what is happening as the book has an introduction and profiles and pictures of the characters. Thea Stilton is the narrator and she tells the story of our main characters - Nicky, Colette, Pamela, Paulina and Violet. They call themselves the Thea Sisters and are learning to be journalists. The girls are chosen to go on the first space flight to a resort on the moon and after much preparation, the team including investors, the girls and other journalists, set off for the moon resort. Despite the excitement, things go wrong at the resort and the girls are left to solve a mystery. Who is sabotaging the trip and the resort? Why are the robot servants attacking? Will they get back to Earth safe and sound?
The best part about this series is all the characters are mice and they use a lot of language relating to that eg.' . . . his mind is sharper than a block of cheddar', 'Fabumouse' and ' . . . chuckling under his whiskers . . . ' The larger font used throughout the story makes it interesting and eye catching for younger readers too as many of the adjectives are written in colourful font to match the action and the colourful cartoons add to the enjoyment. I would recommend this book to girls who are independent readers aged 9+. A great way to get reluctant readers reading longer stories.
Kylie Kempster

Gamerunner by B.R. Collins

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Bloomsbury, 2011. ISBN 978 1 4088 0648 7.
Rick is a Gamerunner. Daed is his guardian from the corporation, Crater. Rick's job? To test The Maze for bugs and glitches. This game is much more than normal games.  Physically you become your avatar in The Maze. You run, fight and loot, all the while avoiding deadly traps. Rick's life is The Maze. When Rick accidentally finishes the game, Daed and Rick are faced with being thrown out into the world with acid rain and gang's right out the door. Rick has to work hard to stay.
The storyline is well written but I felt it was lacking something to lighten the mood at times. There was little hope through the story. Rick and Daed's relationship seems odd but Daed seems committed to keeping Rick safe but Daed doesn't seem to mind that Rick suffers in the process. I was shocked when the only character who shows some compassion meets an untimely end halfway in the book. I found it hard to get into but I eventually got into the book somewhat. I found it hard to follow the emotions of the characters. Overall I found the book all right but a bit hard to get into at the beginning.
Cecilia Richards (Student)

Strays by Ron Koertge

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Walker Books, 2008. ISBN 9781406316124.
Ted is a teenaged boy who must deal with the death of his parents, subsequent entry into the world of foster care and life in a new school as a potential victim. The individuals with whom he interacts in the context of the drama have often been damaged and hurt by other people and life itself.
This is by no means a bleak story which dwells upon misery or abusive themes as so many contemporary narratives do. Instead, the characters involved in the welfare system and foster care are realistic in their essentially good intentions but imperfect makeup. Ted himself is a resilient soul possessing a mature outlook, a philosophical rationale and the capacity to silently communicate with animals.
The roles of animals are symbolic of human experiences, ranging through suffering due to abandonment and neglect to flourishing from compassion and loving care. It is soon appreciated that Ted is no Dr. Doolittle but he is a lonely and scared boy who has learned to seek solace and companionship from animals when humans have failed him. Anyone who has hugged a friendly dog will understand and identify with this.
Ted's predicament could reasonably have been the start of a spiral descending into dysfunction, disengagement and withdrawal from structured and meaningful life. Instead, the acts of kindness, the instances of loyalty and the moments of support from his peers influence this child and provide him with a sense of hope and fulfillment.
This story is simple and affirming yet I was left feeling disappointed by the fact that it deserved greater detail and expansion than is possible in a novel which is pitched at teens who won't read more than two hundred pages. There is nothing wrong with this book, however it might have been a great one if Koertge had allowed his marvellous idea to develop by doing justice to the narrative and characters. The clipped episodic events and compactly summarized characters tended not to contribute to a narrative flow and left me feeling that I was reading a heavily edited version of the larger story which had been published for less capable readers.
Rob Welsh

Star League Series by H. J. Harper

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Random House Australia, 2011.
Robot Reboot (Book 6), Box Office Smash (Book 7), The Final Cut (Book 8).
(Age 8 - 12 years) These 3 books continue the story of 6 young characters that all possess a different superpower. As The Star League they battle evil, especially their arch enemy Professor Pestilence. The leader of the group is Jay who is a movie star in his daily life. In each chapter a different character from the group tells a part of the story, this includes Connor a werewolf, Asuka a Ninja, Roger a zombie, S.A.M. a robot, Leigh an animancer and of course Jay. There are black and white illustrations throughout the book that add to the understanding of the story.
Robot Reboot, concentrates on the character S.A.M. the robot, Box Office Smash introduces the Shadow Six, 6 evil kids with superpowers, while The Final Cut reveals information about Jay's long lost parents.
These quick reads are full of excitement and action and will appeal to 8 to 10 year olds and older reluctant readers.
Jane Moore

There is no dog by Meg Rosoff

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Penguin, 2011. ISBN 9780141327181.
(Age: 16+)Imagine if the creator of the world is a typical teenage boy, Bob, self-obsessed, thoughtless and sex mad. His mother is a gambler and hard drinker who loses Bob's pet Eck, a strange penguin like creature, at a card game with the mighty Emoto Hed who decides that he will eat it, much to the horror of his daughter Estelle. And then there is long suffering Mr B who tries to clean up after Bob's messes and finds it depressing to attempt to answer all the prayers for help. Lucy, the beautiful young girl that Bob falls in love with works at the local zoo, and Bob, head over heels in lust, plays havoc with the weather while he courts her. Floods and droughts cause chaos in the world.
Rosoff has come up with a hard hitting idea to why the world is in trouble today with floods and famine, whales and other species extinct or endangered. It is because Bob is too careless to spend time on his creations or to think through the implications of what he does. Bob is a totally unlikeable character, or god, with no apparent good features except for the occasional brilliant creation. The anagram in her title There is no dog, is a further hint to what Rosoff is thinking, although her little group of gods appear to be more like the gods of Olympia rather than the God of Christianity.
As I read the book I kept thinking that the themes were more of an adult nature rather than ones that would appeal to teenagers. Certainly her premise of Bob being God, and only interested in beautiful girls, is one that will not go down very well in Christian schools. However I couldn't stop reading it, the inclusion of the last Eck in the world under threat of being eaten was a suspense maker, and I had to find out what would happen to him in the end!
Rosoff has written a challenging and uncompromising satire that is sure to be a discussion starter among adults who read adolescent fiction. It is definitely a book for older, experienced readers,  because of the content and the complexity of the ideas.
Pat Pledger

Meet Poppy by Gabrielle Wang

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Ill. by Lucia Masciullo. Our Australian Girl series. Penguin, 2011. ISBN 978 0143305323.
(Ages 9+) Australian history. Recommended. Poppy, living in an orphanage, a mission for children with an Aboriginal background, happens upon a letter in the head sister's office. It says that her brother Gus is about to be removed to another place, one where his habit of wandering off can be curbed. Fearful, Poppy tells Gus and he takes off that night. When the same woman then tells Poppy that she is about to be adopted by a Christian family from Sydney, she too, follows her brother, cutting off her hair and donning a boy's clothes to cover her tracks. The time is 1864, and Poppy and Gus are of Aboriginal and Chinese backgrounds, and both want to find their parents.
A lively adventure, Poppy is the main character in a quartet of books about this girl of Aboriginal and Chinese parents, finding her way in the gold seeking world that is Victoria in 1864. This character is one of the girls in the series, Our Australian Girl, giving modern readers a look at how girls lived in Australia's past, an engaging addition to books which will support the new Australian Curriculum with its emphasis on history. Much information is added to the readers' knowledge of Australia's past through reading these series.
Each of the books is about 100 pages long, with large clear print and they are easy to read. The stories are gripping and characters lively and likeable. Each book has information at the end of the story underlining that given in the story, and has a teaser, the first few pages of the book following this one, to get the readers interested in the following book.
Fran Knight

Poppy at Summerhill by Gabrielle Wang

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Ill. by Lucia Masciullo. Our Australian Girl (series). Penguin, 2011. ISBN 978 0 14 330533 0.
(Ages: 9+) Australian history. After Poppy runs away from the mission, she falls into life at Summerhill, a station where Aboriginal stockman Tom, has a fair idea of just who she is in her boy's disguise. He helps her as she catches her ankle in a dingo trap and taking her back to the station, nurses her back to health, all the while teaching her some of the bush crafts and lore of the local Aboriginal people. At the station she is befriended by a young girl of her own age, Noni, but her brother Joe is very suspicious and bullying in his behaviour towards her. Poppy is a lively, fascinating character, as are the others she meets in this story, and although credulity is a little stretched and the incidents do pile one on top of the other, it is eminently readable and will be highly appealing to the middle primary audience it is aimed at.
This is the second in the quartet about Poppy, a girl living in the gold rush era of Australia, with factual information at the end of the book along with a teaser leading the readers to the next in the series of four, part of the Our Australian Girl series.
Fran Knight

Poppy and the thief by Gabrielle Wang

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Ill. by Lucia Masciullo. Our Australian Girl (series). Penguin, 2011. ISBN 978 0 14 330534 7.
(Ages: 9+) Australian history. Poppy hears about Jimmy Ah Kew from the owner at Summerhill Station, when he spies her letter with his seal. She leaves the place headed for Wahgunyah, the town where Jimmy lives, again alone on the road, where many adventures befall her. She shares a meal with a man she meets, and later finds he is the notorious bushranger, Harry Power, and she finds a friend in Jimmy Ah Kew, as well as a dog she calls Fisher.
The third in the quartet about Poppy, a gold rush era girl living through the mid 1860's, a time of great change for Australia. The perspective of an Aboriginal Chinese girl gives it a different point of view of many other stories set in this time, and the facts given at the end of the book will help students understand the times more readily. As with the others in the Our Australian Girl series, there is a teaser leading readers to the fourth book in this series within a series.
Fran Knight

Poppy comes home by Gabrielle Wang

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Ill. by Lucia Masciullo. Our Australian Girl (series). Penguin, 2011 ISBN 978 0 14 330535 4.
(Ages 9+) Australian history. In an ending which ties up all the strands from the three before, Poppy comes home, sees our hero finally reaching Beechworth, where she is working with a travelling salesman and his crew, selling entertainment and then medicines to the beguiled public. While performing she spies Blossom in the crowd, but is distracted when the bushranger, Harry Power is brought to justice. Talking to a man in the crowd, she finds he is the bookshop owner who sensing her love of books, takes her on as his assistant. She then introduces Blossom to the owner and she is adopted by his family. Searching for her dog, Fisher, lately stolen and sold by the professor from the travelling show, she comes across some people who tell her that Gus is buried in the local cemetery. But all is not lost, it is not Gus but another boy, and the family is reunited.
An easy to read story, it gallops along with plenty of adventure, coincidences and happenings for middles primary readers to enjoy. Poppy is engaging, and readers will want to know that her family is complete, while reading of this girl in the Our Australian Girl series.
Again lots of information is given in the background of the story adding to the readers' knowledge of Australia in the gold rush era, and information is given at the end of the book, before two pages showing the next two girls in the series, Nellie, 1849 and Alice, 1918.
Fran Knight

Come down, cat! by Sonya Hartnett

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Ill. by Lucia Masciullo. Penguin. Viking. 2011. ISBN978 0 670 07475 4.
(Ages: 3+) Recommended. Picture book. Just as the sun is setting, and early evening draws near, Nicholas becomes concerned for his cat. She is on the roof of their house, and refuses to come down for the night. No matter what Nicholas says or does, the cat just says, 'Marl', and moves further back onto the roof. The cat, of course, is mercurial and independent, a large white Siamese, with eyes that shine on her owner. The 'Marl' which Hartnett puts into the cat's mouth is just right, reminding generations of cat owners just how their cat sounds. But Nicholas cannot sleep knowing his cat is still on the roof and imagines all sorts of awful things happening to his cat. He finally sleeps but is woken in the night by the sound of rain. He leaps out of bed and climbs the tallest ladder to rescue his cat,  which this time is very willing to leap safely into Nicholas' arms.
A charming story of bravery, the illustrations reflect the two main characters beautifully. Nicholas is in his pyjamas, ready for bed, he climbs the huge ladder, trying to get to the roof of this enormous house to fetch down the cat.
The cat, so tiny for most of the book, cowers on the roof,but when the rain falls her face fills the page with anguish until Nicholas climbs up and she leaps happily into his arms. I love the illustrations, from the Art Deco house, to the owls and bats flying over in the night, to the wonderful sequence of illustrations showing differing perspectives, that of the act on the roof, looking down, or the boy looking up at the cat, or the owl's view of the cat on the roof. All the different perspectives encourage the reader to see things from another's points of view, not just to focus on the boy and what he feels.The discussions about just who is the bravest will keep many readers thinking for a long time after the book is read.
Fran Knight

Alaska by Sue Saliba

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Penguin, 2011. ISBN 9780143206118.
(Age 15+) From blurb:
mia's heart made a sound that no one heard
except for mia
late one night when she woke from dreams into darkness.

ethan was asleep beside her, and em was a forest away.
outside it was night and dark and alaska.
the sky was upside down.

Mia has left behind an alcoholic mother to live with her sister Em in Alaska. Em had always been the older sister, the one who protected her and helped her to survive their single parent family. However when Mia arrives in Alaska, she finds that Em has new priorities, her domineering husband, Terrence and baby Christian. Beguiled by the beauty of the forest surrounding Em's house she spends much time there and it is there that she meets a young engineer, Ethan, who she feels she may love. But does she know what love is?
Saliba's prose is lyrical and sparse. The omission of capital letters for sentence beginnings and names was difficult for me at first, but no doubt teens will have no problems with that! Once I became used to that I found the writing wonderful. Indeed, the forest almost became a magical entity for me. With a few words, Saliba paints the glory of the forest landscape, the fascinating deer and the horror that it all might be defaced by the pipeline that a corporation wants to run through it.
Saliba  delves deeply in the lives and motivations of Mia and her sister Em. It is essentially a beautiful coming of age story as Mia comes to grips with the fact that her sister has grown away from her and that she too has responsibilities and challenges to face on her own. Ethan is a shadowy character and little is known about other secondary characters, leaving the readers to come to their own conclusions about them. This leads to a surprising conclusion.
Older readers will find much to think about in this book. The themes of coming of age, of responsibility, of compromise, and of protecting the environment will linger for a long time in the minds of thoughtful teens.
Pat Pledger

The corpse walker and other true stories of life in China by Liao Yiwu

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Text, 2011. ISBN 9781921656514.
(Age: Senior school) Recommended. Liao Yiwu is a Chinese writer and performer who was imprisoned for his poem Massacre, written and performed in response to the suppression of the Tienanamen Square student protests. In this collection of twenty-seven interviews translated by Wen Huang, Liao presents a view of a complex and multi-layered society, in which threads from the past inform the present. Some of the interviewees, the Human Trafficker and the Corpse Walker, were chosen because of their connections with traditional life while others, the Rightist and the Former Red Guard, because their lives epitomize the experiences of many during the cataclysmic events of the last century. The Corpse Walker describes the traditional practice of 'walking', by carrying on one's back, a corpse back to its home and family. Corpse walking becomes a metaphor for the burden of history carried by many of the interviewees in this collection. Chairman Mao is a dominant figure in the stories of these ordinary people's lives.The deprivations suffered during the Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution and the Tienanmen Square massacre are described in a number of interviews, The Rightist, The Former Landowner and The Yi district Chief's Wife for example. The hunger, the loss of family members, the destruction of personal dignity, and the waste of years spent in unproductive activity are clearly revealed, as is the stoical bewilderment caused by living in a society where the political values were unpredictable. What is also clear is the extent to which traditional life and values exist; the family is important, and above all, a robust sense of humour that helps ensure and sweeten survival. This collection is recommended for any reader interested in China, and in the great events of the twentieth century in Asia.
Jenny Hamilton

All I ever wanted by Vikki Wakefield

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Text, 2011. ISBN 9781921758300.
(Age 15+) Highly recommended. Mim has a set of rules that she is determined to live by. The first is not to be like her mother. She lives in a down trodden suburb, her mother sits on the sofa all day and her two brother are in prison for drug dealing. She longs to get away from her life and see the world, but she is stuck even though she is determined to finish school and do something. When she retrieves a package for her mother and Jordan, the boy she has had a crush on forever, takes it away from her, she is faced with lots of questions and danger. How will she be able to solve her problems?
This is a compulsive read on many levels.& Wakefield has kept the suspense quite tense for the reader as Mim struggles to get back the package her mother sent her to obtain. There are the sinister people who are involved with drug dealing and this thriller like thread makes for an excellent story. But it is the interactions that Mim has with the many characters in the street that flesh out this story and make it stand above many other adolescent books. Tahnee, her best friend for many years, is changing. She has discovered boys and booze and Mim is not sure that the friendship can last. There is a strange girl next door and she hates the elderly neighbour nearby. Jordan, who she has worshipped from afar for years, may not be the hero that she always thought and will the monster dog Gargoyle attack her?
Mim makes many discoveries on the way about herself, her perceptions of others and whether she can manage to live by a set of rigid rules.
An ideal class set or literature circle book, one that would appeal to reluctant readers, especially girls, All I ever wanted is sure to become popular if promoted in the library. Vikki Wakefield has been interviewed by Readings  and teacher notes are available at the Text website.
Pat Pledger

The golden door by Emily Rodda

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Omnibus, 2011. ISBN 978 1 86291 912 9.
(Ages 10+) Warmly recommended. Fantasy. With the skimmers attacking every night, getting through the heavily guarded and blocked doors and crevices of the homes in the Weld, actually killing one family, the Warden finally acts. A proclamation stirs the passion of Dirk and Sholto and their friends, intent on being able to get outside of the wall and find the source of the skimmers, so destroying them. In so doing they will win the hand of the Warden's daughter, and be named his heir.
In a very few chapters, Emily Rodda introduces her new world, a world once safe behind its wall, where a myriad of rules keep people comforted and secure, but when a few of the younger generation find things too safe, the restrictions too cloying, and with the opportunity provided by this recent threat, they go searching for action. First Dirk and Sholto go off in search of the reason behind the skimmer attacks, and fail to return, their mother receiving a badge to wear showing that her sons have died in the line of duty. But when the skimmers destroy their home and livelihood, Rye and his mother must seek shelter at the Keep. Here they are separated and Rye seizes the opportunity to also go beyond the Wall.
A fantasy series full of adventure and colour, Rye's journey into the Fell Zone outside the Wall takes him far further than he could have imagined. I love this new series and am looking forward to book 2, as I am sure all readers will.
Fran Knight

For all creatures by Glenda Millard and Rebecca Cool, illustrator

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Walker Books. 2011. ISBN 978 921520 81 8
(All ages) Recommended. Picture book. The array of creatures on the front cover impels the reader to quickly open this book to read what is going on. The title, reminding us of the hymn, All creatures great and small, too evokes many different memories and hints as we turn the page. Each page gives us a stanza with four lines of phrases, each phrase containing a group of words which describes a set of animals. But the descriptions are not those usually found, they are words which evoke a response from the reader, memories and observations, rounded off by the refrain, We are thankful. Frogs, for example, are described as a chorus of croakers, and this evocative phrase made me immediately think of times listening to frogs along a riverbank or pond. The words used are amazing, and Millard does not baulk at using words which will send both reader and teacher to the dictionary.
Each page is illustrated with animals and plants, surrounding the words in a visually stunning way, enticing the reader to look both at the words so framed and the illustrations complementing the words.
The colourful pages offer a dense series of richly detailed pictures for readers to look at over and over again. Their warmth and naiive quality will have immediate appeal to all readers, and are a stunning companion to the text.
Readers who enjoyed Isabella's garden by the same two will love this prayer to thankfullness for all we have around us. A wonder filled contribution to the array of animal picture books, this is a stand out.
Fran Knight