Monday 30 November 2020

Review: The Midnight Guardians

What if there was a place where our childhood imaginary friends came to life? 

A place where not just our private imaginary friends resided, but where the collective fantastical characters of mythology lived too?

Col no longer believes in his imaginary friends. He had three of them when he was younger – a tiger, a badger and a miniature knight, his guardians, all sworn to protect him. 

But now he’s too old for that, so he is as puzzled as he is wary of their sudden appearance in his life.

Unfortunately, Col needs protection. 

Set during World War 2, Col has been forced to flee his home in London and take refuge in the country with his cantankerous old aunt. 

He misses his adult sister Rose, particularly now that they have become orphaned. 

He is determined that they should spend Christmas together, so he runs away to London to find her. 

However, a vision of London being bombed and reduced to fiery rubble galvanises him – the quest has upped a notch to saving Rose.

His guardians join him on his quest. But the problem with his imaginary friends being able to breach the barrier between worlds means that mythical creatures are able to as well – so not only doe Col have to contend with the very dangerous events in our world, but also the eternal struggle between timeless enemies: the evil Midwinter King who would have our world permanently frozen, and the Green Man, the embodiment of spring and rebirth.

And this time, the Midwinter King has a plan to overthrow the Green Man for good.

Overall, this story is a fun adventure. With so many elements included, it could have ended up disjointed and messy, but Montgomery does a great job in drawing the threads together and giving readers a fun journey and a satisfying ending.


Title: The Midnight Guardians
Author: Ross Montgomery
Publisher: Walker Books, $18.99
Publication Date: 7 October, 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781406391183
For ages: 8-12
Type: Junior Fiction





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Guest Post: Kate Forsyth & Belinda Murrell - Part One

Searching for Charlotte: The Fascinating Story of Australia’s First Children’s Author has just been released. 

Multi-award winning writers and sisters, Kate Forsyth and Belinda Murrell, descendants of writers and artists, have co-authored an exquisite documentation of their research journey, undertaken to uncover unknown aspects about the life of their great-great-great-great-grandmother, Charlotte Waring. We welcome and thank them as they share with us, a little about this epic undertaking.

What inspired you to start this research together?
K: We have often been invited to tell our great-great-great-great-grandmother's fascinating life story at literary festivals and events, and we are always mobbed by people telling us we must write a book about her. Next year is the 180th anniversary of the publication of her book, A Mother's Offering to Her Children by a Lady Long Resident in New South Wales, and so it seemed the perfect time to celebrate her achievements.

B: Both Kate and I have been intrigued by the story of Charlotte’s life since we were young. As children, we grew up on romantic family tales about Charlotte’s life of love, grief and violence – and about her struggle to assert an independent spirit.

Our grandparents would take us down to Sutton Forest in the Southern Highlands, and we would peer through the tangled hedges at Oldbury, the beautiful sandstone house built as a wedding present for Charlotte in 1828. It was this lifelong fascination which inspired me to write my children’s book, The River Charm, about the Atkinson family. I had done months of research into Charlotte’s life and discovered so many enthralling details, but there was still so much we did not know. It was such a joy to collaborate with Kate, and work together to dig up the details of Charlotte’s extraordinary life and ultimate triumph.


Family stories have been handed down to you since birth. How familiar was Charlotte’s life to you before the research?

B: The stories from our grandparents were romantic and inspiring tales, and I suspected that her real life might be more ordinary than we’d been told. Yet in fact, the truth was far more mysterious and tragic than we had imagined. Although we knew the broad facts, we had no idea how many amazing discoveries there were still left to find.

For me, an absolute highlight was finding Charlotte’s 1848 sketchbook, buried in the archives of the Mitchell Library, which had been misattributed to her son. This included a beautiful self-portrait of Charlotte as a young woman, wrapped in James’ plaid cloak, on the journey to Australia when she became engaged to the love of her life. There were also several unknown family portraits, including a tender sketch of her 19-year-old daughter Charlotte, our great-great-great grandmother, on her wedding day.

K: We also discovered that Charlotte was probably the author of two other books, including one which contains the very first children's story set in Australia. That was so exciting! We found the first clue in a handwritten note by the literary bibliographer Marcie Muir, buried in the archives at the National Library of Australia. She had scribbled down the name of another early colonial book: P & P's Tales. As I was wondering why Marcie Muir had included such a notation in her file on Charlotte, Belinda found a reference to Charlotte being the author of ‘several’ books in the archives she was reading. So, we wondered if Marcie Muir had perhaps been conjecturing that Charlotte was the author of that book too. I did some investigative work and found a collection of stories that had been published in London in 1832 called Peter Prattle's Tales. The Mitchell Library had a copy of this very rare book, and so I examined the book and found very compelling evidence that it may have been written by Charlotte. It was a kind of linguistic forensics!

Following in Charlotte’s footsteps must have been very rewarding to you and your daughters who accompanied you. Can you please expand.
K: It really was! Such a special sister-mother-daughter-cousin expedition. We went on literary pilgrimages to the houses of Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters, went hiking on the moors, discovered our ancestors' long-lost graves, and listened to the girls reading each other Pride & Prejudice out loud as we drove all over England. It was such fun, and very poignant. My daughter was 15 - the same age that Charlotte began work as a governess. It really helped me understand our great-great-great--great-grandmother as a young woman!

B: By the time we went to England with the girls, we had been intensively researching Charlotte’s life for over a year. Visiting the places where Charlotte had lived and worked transformed the dry facts of her life and made her seem very real to us, as though we could see into her thoughts and motivations. Both Emily and Ella embraced the trip as an enthralling treasure hunt, sharing our excitement. It truly was a life highlight for us all.

A tremendous amount of research was demanded of you both. How did you recognise what to keep and what to ignore for the purpose of this book?
B: That was the difficult part! To me, the research was addictive and fascinating, but I began to feel like I was getting lost down rabbit holes, chasing tiny details. Yet sometimes it was when we were lost checking endless newspaper articles or dusty archives, that we made our best discoveries. In the end, Kate and I learned so much information, that we just could not include in the final book. We had a mantra which helped asking ourselves ‘It’s interesting but is it relevant?’ In the end, we both had to cut out whole chapters because the book was too long.

K: For example, we had always been brought up on stories that the Waring family was descended from a Norman knight called William de Warenne who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. I’d always been fascinated by this romantic history, and spent far too long investigating it. In the end, we decided that all we needed for the book was a paragraph or two! But sometimes you need to do the research to know what you don’t need …

When learning about the predicaments Charlotte faced as a woman in Colonial times, is there any comparison to be made with women in the same situations in today’s society?
K: Absolutely! Charlotte had to struggle to make her own way in the world, she had to fight against a patriarchal court system to keep custody of her own children, and to find a way to support them. She suffered sexual violence and domestic abuse, a problem that is still far too prevalent in our world, and still find the strength to care for her little family. And, like many women, she had to find some way to balance her own artistic aspirations with the need to make a living. She is a woman for our times!

B: Life for colonial women, was tough, violent, and unfair. Yet we discovered there were so many similarities to the concerns of modern women – the love of family, raising and educating children to be the best they can be, dealing with life’s setbacks, finding your passion, being resilient and determined, and the importance of standing up for what you believe in. Charlotte was a fiercely independent woman and an early feminist who was derided as being abrasive and a ‘she-dragon’ because she fought to keep her children! Kate and I joked that even now, a man who stands up for himself is called a leader, while a woman who stands up for herself is abrasive. So sadly, there are some things that haven’t changed at all.

We invite you to re-visit the site on Wednesday 2 November for Part Two of this mesmerising interview with Kate Forsyth and Belinda Murrel




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Sunday 29 November 2020

Winner: When This Bell Rings

Our lucky winner is...

Joseph Spagnolo, NSW

Congratulations! 

You have won the page-turning mystery middle grade novel,  
When This Bell Rings by Allison Rushby.


Thank you to ALL who entered. 



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Saturday 28 November 2020

Review: Nightshade

It's twenty years since the first Alex Rider story was published, and Nightshade is the thirteenth Alex Rider book.

In Nightshade, as Alex arrives in England by plane, a retired politician dies.

Soon after, the head of MI6's Special Operations is called to the office of a high ranking government official who has just discovered fifteen year old Alex has worked for MI6. 

She's hauled over the coals and ordered never to use Alex again. 

What follows is an unofficial operation which will see Alex put in the most difficult position he's ever been in. 

Someone from his past resurfaces in a most unusual way, and Alex must grapple with a dangerous new enemy known as Nightshade. 

They have unexpected resources ready to do their nefarious bidding. Alex must uncover their latest target and he’s completely alone.

I won't say much else because I don’t want to spoil the plot, but it involves a secret prison in Gibraltar, kidnapping, a cult, parachutes, and deadly poison.

Bestselling author Anthony Horowitz has created another fast-paced story filled with mind-bending situations which Alex, the teenage spy who would rather be at school, must overcome to save both himself and those around him. 

There is a resolution to Alex's deadly adventure, but Nightshade ends on rather an onimous note, which readers can only hope signals there's another book in the Alex Rider series to follow.

You can watch the official launch of Nightshade on YouTube, with Anthony Horowitz reading an extract, talking about writing and reading, and answering questions. It runs for about one hour.

Download teachers' notes about the Alex Rider series from Anthony Horowitz's website.

Title: Nightshade
Author: Anthony Horowitz
Publisher: Walker Books, $ 16.99
Publication Date: April 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781406395877
For ages: 10+
Type: Young Adult Fiction



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Video Review: Climate Change for Babies

Join Yvonne Mes for a short and snappy video review of Climate Change for Babies, a nonfiction board book written for children aged one year and up by Chris Ferrie and Katherina Petrou.



Title: Climate Change for Babies
Authors: Chris Ferrie and Katherina Petrou
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Publication
Date: 1 October 2020
Format: Board Book
ISBN: 9781492680826
For ages: 1+
Type: Nonfiction 




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Friday 27 November 2020

Review: An Artist's Alphabet

An Artist's Alphabet is an imaginative and whimsical book.

It takes a particular way of looking at the world to see the letters of the alphabet in the world around us.

Norman Messenger takes that to the next level with his illustrations.

A cat curled up in a ball, with its tail held high, becomes a lowercase letter d. 

A much larger and rounder cat whose tail is held close to its body, becomes the uppercase D.

A carefully placed chain and a string of pearls, depict the letter s; while the long ears of a rabbit form a v. 

And an acrobat with legs akimbo standing on the back of a horse forms the uppercase letter a.

There are no words in this book. It's artistic and could be used when talking with young children about language and letters, or as a kind of puzzle for older readers.

How many alternative letter designs can you or your children come up with?

Grab a copy of An Artist's Alphabet to tempt children into language activities, try their hand at their own art and design, or simply marvel at the beauty of the pictures.

Title: An Artist's Alphabet
Author/Illustrator: Norman Messenger
Publisher: Walker Books, $17.99
Publication Date: March 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781406392784
For ages: 5+
Type: Picture book




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Review: The Ultimate Animal Alphabet Book

Award-winning, Tasmanian writer and illustrator Jennifer Cossins’ most recent book, was the small format picture book about baby animals and their fathers, The Daddy Animal Book.

Her current release, The Ultimate Animal Alphabet Book, a companion book to The Ultimate Animal Counting Book, is another stunning offering featuring over 400 animal species.

Beautiful illustrations of living things close up in vivid colours, and alphabetically arranged are a delight to discover.

 

 

Animals, fish, birds, butterflies and others, are accompanied by short facts and trivia about most of the entries. 

They all reflect her love of animals and nature.
These are not common animals. They are from all over the world, large and small, with strange exotic names like aardwolf, the black and rufus elephant shrew, degu, Diard’s trogon.

Interesting unknown information such as the douroucouli, also called the night monkey, is the only truly, nocturnal monkey in the world.

Did you know that orcas sleep with one half of their brain at a time? This enables them to be able to surface to breathe.

Elephants sharks are also known as ghost sharks, or plownose chimaeras.

Why are flamingos pink?

Amazing in all aspects, this book will thrill young and interested zoologists with its incredible amount of information. Encyclopaedic in presentation, adults as well as children will find it fascinating, informative and highly educational.

These are the types of books children long to find on library shelves and in schools.

Cossins’ talent doesn’t stop here. Her creativity extends to designing homewares, textiles and stationery with which she fills her shop Red Parka. Behind everything she does is her endeavour to encourage and foster love and care for the natural world.

Title: The Ultimate Animal Alphabet Book
Author/Illustrator: Jennifer Cossins
Publisher: Hachette, $ 29.99
Publication Date: 27 October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780734420091
For ages: 5+
Type: Non Fiction




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Cover Reveal: Oswald Messweather by Dimity Powell

Dimity Powell's writing style is often described as powerful and emotive, laced with humour and lilting language to soften the often sensitive subject matter she tackles. 

The meme, ‘Don’t let your ice cream melt as you count the sprinkles’ resonates strongly with Dimity and not just because she loves ice cream! 

She too shares a tendency to obsess over minutiae, often losing sight of the bigger beautiful picture, which might explain where the idea for her latest picture book came from.

Oswald Messweather, due out mid March 2021 with Wombat Books, is not a picture book that focuses intently on the educational perspectives of children with OCD but rather more on the emotional aspects associated with this debilitating condition. Oswald is caught in the grips of needing to be in control of the messier aspects of his life and like many young children suffering from obsessive worrying and anxieties, wants to stop but can’t. Maybe Oswald's crayons hold the answer. 

By allowing Oswald to take control of his anxieties and employ them with purpose, Oswald gains room to breathe and awareness that they need not govern him. 

Master of crayons (aka the illustrator of Oswald Messweather) is Siobhan McVey who's unique style and carefully considered colour palette allow children to absorb the complexity of this condition in a fun relatable way that both she and Dimity hope will buoy and enlighten. And now...you can see for yourself! We present, Oswald Messweather.


Pre-order your copy of Oswald Messweather through Wombat Books. Available mid March 2021. 





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Thursday 26 November 2020

Guest Post: Video Review by Kaavya Prasad

Today we welcome a dedicated book lover all the way from India. Kaavya Prasad reviews her favourite reads and shares this collection of classics with us with precision and enthusiasm. Enjoy!

Title: The Naughtiest Girl
Author: Enid Blyton
Publisher: Hodder Children's Books, $19.99 
Publication Date: 2012 - 2015
For ages: 7+
Type: Junior Fiction




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Meet The Illustrator : Patrick Shirvington

Name: Patrick Shirvington

Describe your illustration style in ten words or less.
An amalgam of traditional techniques coupled with new possibilities.

What items are an essential part of your creative space?
Being surrounded by pencils, paper, paint and ink in my bushland studio, with natures sounds emanating all around.

Do you have a favourite artistic medium? 
I use all the mediums I can get my hands on. However, I have to say watercolours are hard to beat.

Name three artists whose work inspires you.
Van Gogh, Arthur Boyd, Charles Blackman 

Which artistic period would you most like to visit and why? 
Late 1800’s – 1920.The nexus between impressionism, expressionism through to abstraction, is a wonderful launching pad for any art today.


Who or what inspired you to become an illustrator? 
My Nan and a science teacher in high school, who, knowing I wasn’t to be a nuclear physicist, asked if I could do some illustrations for the school annual….. Which I still have.


Can you share a photo of your creative work space or part of the area where you work most often? Talk us through it. 
My studio is situated quite a distance from my house, in a peaceful bush setting. I have recently added approx 20 sqm to the original size. As you can see in this first picture… ‘ it is clean ‘,unlike the area behind the door .. 




What is your favourite part of the illustration process?
No favourite part…..all one big adventure.



What advice would you give to an aspiring illustrator? 
Like anything in life…just do it and enjoy being who you are. 



Patrick Shirvington started his journey as an artist in 1975, attending the Academie de la Grande Chaumiere, Paris, and later receiving a UNSW MCDArtDes. Patrick has received many awards for his work including being listed for CBCA Notable book, nominated for a Crichton Award and shortlisted for an Australian Wilderness Society award for children’s literature. 

For more information, please visit Patrick's website.















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Wednesday 25 November 2020

Review: Remind Me Why I'm Here

This is a fun, sweet-level teen romance. It starts off with a misunderstanding. Maya, an American teenage girl, flies halfway across the world to what she thought was a home-stay vacation in the trendy Sydney suburb of Barangaroo.

Wrong!

She’d actually booked and paid for a home stay in a dry and dusty sheep farm in Barangaroo Creek. Oops.

Her host-brother Gus is less than impressed to have to show her around as he had been bulldozed into helping her to tick-off experiences on her very cliched Australian to-do list.

He’s so unimpressed that he tries to spook her with a variety of scary creatures that Australia is renowned for, in the hopes that she will run away screaming back to the city and finish her holiday there...thereby freeing him to spend his summer doing what he wanted to do.

Luckily for him, it’s easy to scare the animal-phobic Maya.

But she proves to be quite resistant, despite his childish pranks. As the story unfolds, it seems that Maya is more than a clueless tourist. There is a sad story behind her motivation to holiday in Australia, and as they get to know one another, Gus and Maya find they have more in common than they thought.

This is a story about both finding meaning in grief and moving on from guilt.

Overall, an easy and sometimes humorous read, with lots of clash-of-cultures, prank-wars and opposites-attract moments to enjoy. But in its attempt to tackle more profound issues, a whiff of ableism taints the sweet novel with a sour undertone.

Older brother Patrick supports Maya when Gus is being a jerk to her, but this wheelchair-bound person exists in the narrative to give Maya a problem to solve. No question of a romance there! How lucky for him that not only is Maya a mechanical whizz-kid, but her guilt being parallel to Gus’s means that Gus can come to terms with it, and finally allow Patrick to access the mobility aid he needs to fulfil his ambition.

Otherwise, Patrick is an inoffensive nice-guy with no depth, no ownership of his own backstory, no grief or PTSD and ultimately, no agency. Patrick only appears on-stage when Maya and Gus’s story requires this of him and obligingly remains back-stage otherwise.

Sweet and fun, but a missed opportunity to include and celebrate a diverse voice.

Title: Remind Me Why I'm Here
Author: Cat Colmer
Publisher: Rhiza Edge, $16.99
Publication Date: 12 Auguat, 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781925563924
For ages: 12+
Type: Young Adult Fiction





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Tuesday 24 November 2020

Review: Beyond Belief

Little is known or written, about the Grand Mosque of Paris, and how Muslims saved countless Jews during the Second World War. 

Dee White draws us into the story with details and revelations about the dedication, purpose and sacrifice shown by the Muslims in the mosque, in order to keep the children safe.

Jews all around Paris have been rounded up and taken away on buses never to be seen or heard of again.

It is during one of these raids that eleven year old Ruben is taken by his mother to the mosque in the city, after escaping their hiding place in a friend’s cellar. Her intention is to keep him safe while she and her husband try to find their daughter. 

Arrangements are made for the Fox to see Ruben safely to Spain when the time is right.

Against all that he believes, Ruben becomes Abdul. He must now fit into the surroundings there, learn to read Arabic to recite prayers, and be shown how to pray. He must act like a Muslim and put his Jewish life aside temporarily. 

 He finds it is not easy to become something other than who you are.

He is a good student but is not accepted by all the children there. He learns patience, forgiveness, kindness, courage and faith by following the other children’s examples. This transition means survival; his reunion with his family. The whisper of his mother and father’s words keep him strong and focused.

It is an adventure that Ruben embarks upon, a rite of passage; a maturation process full of life lessons. Nothing is easy. But difficult situations make the best lessons.

When the mosque is raided, Ruben flees through the sewers, guided by the heroic, nameless people of the Resistance, in order to reach the safe house where the Fox waits to secret him to Spain and safety. Many surprises lay in store.

Another exceptional book in the Heroes of the Holocaust series that produces wonderful stories from which young people can learn history.

Title: Beyond Belief
Author: Dee White
Publisher: Scholastic, $ 17.99
Publication Date: 1 April 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 97817606612516
For ages: 11 +
Type: Historical Fiction




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Guest Post: Sandra Bennett on Holidays Sparking Ideas!

I always wanted to write an adventure series to encourage readers to fall in love with books just as much as reading books like The Famous Five had done for me. I have been an avid reader since my early childhood, literacy is my passion. When I grew up, I naturally leaned towards teaching and soon found my love of books lead me to write stories for the kids in my class and my own three growing boys.

Many years ago, we were on a family holiday in Bali. After the exhausting but exciting adventure of each day, we would snuggle into bed with our boys to read another chapter of Indian in the Cupboard by Lynne Reid Banks. It was a fabulous adventure story, one that made my boys ask ‘one more chapter’ before they would fall asleep. I was so intrigued, I had to read ahead. This bonding experience was so wonderful for our family that I wanted to write a story that would have families sharing it just like we had shared Indian in the Cupboard. 


Bali inspired me; the smells, the culture, the lush green rice fields and everywhere we explored. I searched Kuta and Ubud to find an adventure story written for kids set in Bali but came up empty handed. I decided to write a pirate treasure hunt around the exotic island that took kids on a journey of thrilling adventure from Kuta, to Tanah Lot Temple, Ubud and up into the volcanic mountains. I became an Indonesian LOTE/ESL teacher shortly after that holiday. Secrets Hidden Below the Adamson Adventures 1 evolved from there. In those early years it had a different title and was intended to be a stand-alone story. It wasn’t until I found a publisher nearly 20 years after that first draft, that I was asked to make it a series.
This was an exciting prospect for me, I had already begun a story inspired by our annual camping holiday down on the NSW South coast. It was set among the remains of an old ruined lighthouse that inspired ghost stories around our campfire at night. Kids love a good spooky story, and one set around camping at the beach, made it even more relatable than the story set in Bali. All I had to do was finish writing it. I changed the characters to become the same as the three siblings in Secrets Hidden Below, titled it A Lighthouse in Time and the Adamson Adventures was born. My publisher then asked me for a blurb for book 3 to put at the back of A Lighthouse in Time. That too, was inspired by a holiday.

I had always wanted to visit Winton in Queensland. My eldest son grew up with a passion for rocks and fossils, naturally some of that has worn off on me. After all, what’s not to be intrigued about? Australian dinosaurs and their fossils are fascinating and all kids love dinosaurs at some time in their childhood. Four years ago, we finished a two-year working stint in Darwin and planned to drive the car we bought up there home to Canberra. The obvious route for me was via Mount Isa, down the centre of Queensland through Winton and Longreach. It was a fabulous holiday in the outback.


From the minute I visited the Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum, I knew a story had to be set in the area. I immersed myself in research while I was there and later, on my return home. While there we toured the information centre, the working research lab and the surrounding escarpment. Learning about Banjo and Matilda, the two fossilised dinosaurs that had been discovered together sparked a thread of an idea that would eventually become Fossil Frenzy; the Adamson Adventures 3.

Sandra Bennett's desire to write continued to grow throughout her teaching career until one day when she decided it was time to leave the classroom and focus on writing full-time. Through her writing, Sandra hopes to help parents and teachers improve literacy in our children. Sandra is devoted to writing stories that engage and entice readers with excitement, adventure, a bit of mystery and a whole lot of fun.

Sandra’s chapter book Secrets Hidden Below was long listed in the Sisters in Crime 2019 Children’s Category, Davitt Awards and Shortlisted for the Speech Pathology Book of the Year Awards 2019. Fossil Frenzy is the third book in her
Adamson Adventures series, following A Lighthouse in Time and Secrets Hidden Below.

Website: https://sandrabennettauthor.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GingerbreadAliens

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SandraBennettAu

 




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Monday 23 November 2020

10 Quirky Questions with author Deborah Abela

1. What's your hidden talent?
I studied Judo when I was younger and can still throw someone over my shoulder who is much bigger than me.

2. Who is your favourite literary villain and why?
Lemony Snicket's Count Olaf. I love his terrible overacting and his ability to love himself above all others when there really isn't much about him that’s loveable.

3. You're hosting a literary dinner party, which five authors would you invite? (alive or dead)
Kate Dicamillo, Patrick Ness, RJ Palacio, Rebecca Stead and Roald Dahl.

4. Which literary invention do you wish was real?
Bear’s rocket from Bear in Space. I remember when I was writing about this flying machine, I really really wished it was real.

5. What are five words that describe your writing process?
Clumsy, chaotic, persistent, joy-filled, muddled.

6. Which are the five words you would like to be remembered by as a writer? 
Warm, heart-felt, exciting, engaging, enduring.

7. Picture your favourite writing space. What are five objects you would find there?
A craggy ocean view, a roaring fireplace, a fully stocked kitchen and fridge, a bookshelf filled with my favourite books, a giant bouncy castle in the yard.

8. Grab the nearest book, open it to page 22 and look for the second word in the first sentence. Now, write a line that starts with that word. (Please include the name of the book!)

‘Know yourself, truly and honestly, and this will be your greatest power against those bullies.’
Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate Dicamillo

9. If you could ask one author one question, what would the question be and who would you ask?
Anh Do: How to make me laugh and cry all in the same sentence?

10. Which would you rather do: 'Never write another story or never read another book'? 
What? Oh that’s too hard because for me they go so well together. The more I write, the more I crave reading and the more I read, the more it inspires me to get back to my writing. 


After finishing a teaching degree, Deb Abela went to Africa where she was caught in a desert sandstorm, harassed by monkeys and thrown in jail twice! She’s written 25 books, including Max Remy Superspy, Grimsdon, Teresa A New Australian and The Most Marvellous Spelling Bee Mystery. Her first picture book was Wolfie, An Unlikely Hero. Deb has won awards for her books but mostly hopes to be as brave as her characters. For more information, see www.deborahabela.com.


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Drawing on the Industrial Revolution and with the Cole’s Book Arcade of Melbourne in 1893, as a backdrop, Amelia Mellor has written a highly imaginative and inventive fantasy novel with historical building blocks. 

She won the 2018 May Gibbs Children’s Literature Trust’s Ian Wilson Memorial Fellowship, for The Grandest Bookshop in the World.

Pearl Cole’s Pa is a man of great vision who thirty years ago, designed the Cole’s Book Arcade for his family. Skilled at enchantments, he applied them to fill the Arcade with animals and rare flora and fauna, creating spaces of great beauty and peaceful surroundings for people to go to read, not necessarily to buy.

Having lost his beloved daughter Ruby to Scarlet Fever, he makes a deal with his old rival, the conniving and powerful Obscurosmith, Magnus Maximillian, to bring Ruby back to life. He is coerced into forfeiting the Arcade if the deal succeeds.

But the clever magician and master manipulator of words – said and unsaid, always wins. The Ruby he produces is close to, but not exactly, what he has promised.

Pearl Cole, observant and highly intelligent, discovers Pa’s secret dealings, and determined to save their home, makes her own deal with Magnus. Unable to undertake the challenges alone, she reveals her plan to her brother Vally.

Seven tasks in an allocated time-frame is what Pearl commits to. These turn out to be harder than the siblings imagined. Magnus’ unwritten rules keep breeding extenuating circumstances which he uses to steal their memories and weaken their father’s health.

Time is running out. What they are doing is discovered by the remaining siblings and the circle of participants widens.

Who will be the winner and what will they have lost along the way? As the Arcade slowly disintegrates, Pa becomes frail and Pearl and Vally’s memories weaken further. Will they manage to meet the deadline and if so, how?

Edge-of-your-seat tension propels the story forward. Full of action, magical scenes and twists and turns, this fabulous read is for everyone who loves clever language, mind-bending suspense and a sizzling storyline.

Title: The Grandest Bookshop in the World
Author: Amelia Mellor
Publisher: Affirm Press, $19.99
Publication Date: 29 September 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925972955
For ages: 11+
Type: Middle Grade Fiction



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Sunday 22 November 2020

Video: Story Surprise!

Story Surprise! is a great initiative by professional actors, Lauren and Anthony (Lauren Jimmieson and Anthony Craig). With a background in education and theatre, they have created a series of videos suitable for children aged from three to eight years, bringing books to life with stories, songs, and other activities. 

'What started as a few videos to connect with friends and family across the globe has turned into a weekly themed adventure!'

Each of the videos, which are 10-15 minutes in length, features a diffferent theme and comes complete with original music. They are also aligned with the Early Years Learning Framework. Explore the Story Surprise! season 1 and season 2 playlists, and watch the example below which is the episode about megabeasts, especially great for kids who love dinosaurs.



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Guest Post: George Ivanoff Part Two

Here is Part Two of a scintillating and revealing interview with George Ivanoff, one of Australia's most-loved children' authors.

I believe you were a reluctant reader as a child. How did your metamorphosis come about?
Yes, I spent a large chunk of primary school as a reluctant reader. With the benefit of hindsight, I can say it was due to not having the right reading material. It was not until I read a science fiction book for the first time The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet by Eleanor Cameron that I began to take an interest in reading. And it was the discovery of Doctor Who books that turned me in to an avid reader. I was (and still am) quite obsessed with the television series, so when I discovered that there were dozens and dozens of books based on the series, I just had to read them all. Once I became a reader, my interests widened and I started to read more broadly.

Do you have a writing genre preference?
Science fiction. It was the genre that sparked my interest in reading and writing. While I enjoy playing in a variety of genres, I always love returning to science fiction.

Many writers plan their novels from the end. Others plan from the beginning. Where do you start and why?
Sometimes it is the ending, sometimes the beginning, and sometimes a random point in between that gets me brainstorming. I’ll make copious story notes, with little thought to where those elements will fit into the structure. But once I sit down to plan out the story properly, I will go from beginning to end, as I need to get that progression clear in my mind.

You are flexible in your choices of themes and genres. What advice can you give to budding writers about the importance of being so?
I’m not sure that a flexible range is all that important. There are many successful authors with a narrow, specialised focus. What matters most is that you’re interested in your topic. There is little point in writing about something that doesn’t interest you. If you’re not interested in what you are writing, how can you possibly expect anyone to be interested in reading it? I’m just lucky in that I have a wide range of interests, as well as a general curiosity about everything and anything. I adore doing research and learning new things.

Do you read many children’s books? If so, who is your favourite writer if you have one, and why?
I read A LOT of books aimed at young people. I do read grown-up books as well, but I definitely lean towards children’s and YA titles. As a teen, my favourite author was John Christopher and my favourite of his books were the Tripods trilogy. They were science fiction books, but his heroes were always ordinary boys that I often felt a connection to. These days, I can’t say that I’ve got one favourite author. But I can give you a few examples.

I love EVERYTHING by Carole Wilkinson. She is best known for her DragonKeeper books, which are fantasy stories set in ancient China. But my favourite of hers is Sugar, Sugar, about a teenage girl travelling the hippy trail in 1970s. Carole has an extraordinary talent for effortlessly creating a sense of time and place in her books.


I am also seriously impressed with Amie Kaufman. The Illuminae series she co-wrote with Jay Kristoff is a YA game-changer. Extraordinary for the way in which it tells a narrative though a series of seemingly disparate documents. Her middle-grade Elementals trilogy is gorgeous — a cracking story, with cooperation and acceptance at its core. I love how diversity is present in this series, without ever calling attention to it. One of the characters, for instance, is non-binary. No one ever comments on it… the other characters simply use they/them pronouns for that character.


Goodness…. I could go on and on. Other Aussie authors whose work I’ve loved recently include Michael Pryor's Graveyard Shift in Ghost Town, Alison Evans' Euphoria KidsThe Grimsdon trilogy by Deborah Abela, Tim Harris' Mr Bambuckles series and The Peski Kids by RA Spratt.

Is there anything that you would like to add?
I recently finished my first grown-up novel, Fear Frequency. It’s for the Lethbridge-Stewart range of books, a spin-off from the Doctor Who television series, published by Candy Jar Books in the UK. The book is currently in editing and the cover artist has just been commissioned. It will be released next year. This is a bit of a fanboy dream come true for me, as Brigadier Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart is one of my favourite supporting characters from the original series of Doctor Who. Writing this book has been so much fun and I can’t wait to hold a copy in my hands.

But fear not… I’m not giving up on writing for kids. In fact, I’m in the process of writing an outline for my next Puffin book. 

https://youtu.be/Fpf33QG2Q6E
https://youtu.be/Hce6HhvbwKs
https://youtu.be/V9QIuJyxyLo

http://georgeivanoff.com.au









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Friday 20 November 2020

Giveaway: When This Bell Rings

What if you could get inside the world of your favourite books? No, really inside them . . .

In London's Belgravia, Tamsin lives next door to Edie St Clair, famous author of the ‘London of the Bells’ series of graphic novels. With the series’ tenth and final novel overdue, Tamsin offers her idol help and discovers that Edie can literally draw herself into her stories. 

When Edie goes missing, Tamsin draws herself into the novel and lands in a world of unexpected danger. How can Edie help Tamsin write her way to the perfect ending?

Thanks to the middle grade marvels at Walker Books Australia, we have a copy of this page-turning mystery by acclaimed middle grade author, Allison Rushby to give away.

For the chance to win this book prize, in 25 words or less, tell us which book you would like to have the ability to 'draw yourself into'? 

Email your answer along with your name and postal address to dimity. The response we like best will win a copy of this amazing new release. Competition is open to anyone, worldwide, so long as they have an Australian postal address for delivery of the books. Please note, we cannot deliver to PO Boxes. Entries without a name and street address will be ineligible. Winners will be announced right here on our website on  30 November 2020.

Competition runs from 5.00 am 21 November 2020 to 5 pm 28 November 2020. Adults can enter for those aged 17 and under. This is a game of skill, not chance. The judge’s decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into.





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Thursday 19 November 2020

Review: Brickman's Family Challenge Book

Many families around the world have their own collection of the colourful little bricks known as LEGO.

They're a perfect tool for using and developing creativity and imagination at any age, from young children to adults.

And the best thing is that with LEGO there is no right or wrong.

In Brickman's Family Challenge Book, readers will find plenty of inspiration and information, enough for hours of home-based, intergenerational entertainment.

Brickman is Ryan McNaught, the southern hemisphere's only LEGO Certified Professional, and his team of brick artists.

There are thirty challenges in the book which you can undertake at one of three levels of difficulty (easy, intermediate or difficult). And lots of pro tips are given to help you improve your brick building skills.

The challenges vary from those like creating a maze which can be a marble run, to artistic (LEGO versions of your favourite food), to those with a speed focus (how tall a tower can you build in ten minutes?), or even a musical chairs type of game where you start building a creature and it gets added to by someone else each time the music stops.

Not to mention vehicles and buildings, animated models, and artistic designs (like a 3D self-portrait).

Some challenges are made for solo attempts, while others are appropriate for competing with family and friends, or for working on as a team.

Brickman's Family Challenge Book also includes useful information like the techical names of various LEGO pieces (SNOT stands for Studs Not On Top), and a warm up exercise called speed sorting. Speed sorting involves categorising your LEGO pieces into colours, which also gets your hands and brains ready for creating.

Wanna-be LEGO master builders will love poring through this book. 

Brickman's Family Challenge Book is perfect whether you're looking for a gift, or something for the whole family to do together.

Title: Brickman's Family Challenge Book
Author: Ryan McNaught
Publisher: Murdoch Books, $35
Publication Date: November 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781760525941
For ages:  6+
Type: Junior Non-Fiction




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Wednesday 18 November 2020

Review: Bandits

Fern lives alone with just her books in an ordered city where people keep to themselves. She reads about the past; a time when trees filled the streets and parks.

The town awakes one morning to find rubbish spilled about their well-ordered streets.

They conclude it is bandits, who came to trash and steal. But is it really?

Fern sees something unusual and wants to know what it could be. Is it the bandits? Forbidden to leave the city, Fern decides to follow the shadows anyway.

At sunrise, she looks at the surrounding strangeness. Fern recognises the forest from pictures in her books. There is a boy and his pet friend. He shows her what he does with the rubbish he takes and the benefits of returning waste food to the earth.

Can Fern leave the greyness of the city blocks and stay in the forest land where renewal and restoration are found?

Bandits is about environmental awareness and choice. It reflects on how people are ruled through fear; that simply accepting a given situation isn’t good enough. One must question. To dare to explore and to discover truth, can sometimes bring you what you thought was impossible.

Beautifully illustrated in a unique way, in vibrant colours and a style that will identify with Sha’an D’Anthes’ name.     

Title: Bandits
Author/Illustrator: Sha'an d'Anthes
Publisher: Hachette, $24.99
Publication Date: 29  September 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780734419675
For ages: 5+
Type: Picture Book




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Tuesday 17 November 2020

Guest Post: Jennifer Cossins

Author of The Daddy Animal Book and the best-selling A-Z of Endangered Animals, 101 Collective Nouns and The Ultimate Animal Counting Book, Jennifer Cossins, award- winning artist and writer, is dedicated to presenting to children through her marvellous books, knowledge about animals and their habitats. This has been the centre of all her publishing successes.
With her newest release, The Ultimate Animal Alphabet Book, Jennifer shares with us her inspiration, research techniques and other tasty morsels of information about her habits. 

You have a passionate interest in nature and the animal kingdom. Where does this deep connection, and the inspiration for your work, stem from?

I’ve loved animals since the day I was born so I honestly think I was just born this way!

Growing up in Tasmania, close to nature, I’m sure has impacted me as well. I find animals endlessly interesting so there’s no shortage of inspiration for my work out there! 

A tremendous amount of research is obvious for such comprehensive knowledge to be available in your books. Can you share your research techniques with us?
I research the traditional way - Google! However, it’s important to double check all those facts and find them on reputable sites. I also have a collection of animal books that are great for facts and getting inspiration.

Your research extends to the facts and trivia connected to each image you create. How much time does it take to complete one of your publications?
It takes about a year to complete a book. The majority of that time is spent on the artwork which takes me way longer than the fact finding, but it’s also my favourite bit. Getting lost in a drawing in my happy place!  

In your latest publication, The Ultimate Animal Alphabet Book, you have presented many unknown animals, from all over the world. Do you keep a record of which ones have appeared already in other books?
I have a folder with all the animals I have drawn in it. There are hundreds, probably over 1000 by now! I do try to keep introducing new animals with every book I do, but there’s plenty of favourites that have been drawn multiple times now - for example, wombats and elephants, my two favourite animals, feature in many of my books!


Your illustrations/art work are incredibly detailed. What media do you use, which do you prefer, and how do you bring the images to life with such clarity?
I draw digitally on a Wacom tablet with a digital pen. I always start with photos to help me get the positioning of an animal right, then once I’m happy with the basic sketch, I start meticulously adding details. I refer to photos a lot because it’s important to me for the images to be accurate. However, there comes a point where I start adding details and patterning to bring the animal to life in my own way. 

You also run a business, the Red Parka in Tasmania. Your vibrant designs used there again reflect your love of nature. Please share with us the other creative areas you are involved in that are available in your shop.
I design a range of products for the shop such as textiles, stationery and jewellery, all featuring the animals I love so much! I also dabble in pottery and sell some of my clay creations in the shop.

Your artistic work is very time-consuming. How do you manage to juggle so many areas at one time?
Honestly, I have no idea!! I do keep a diary and lots of lists that sometimes help me keep on track. But sometimes it’s chaos… I just work hard and hope it all comes together!

Do you have a future project started, or in mind, that you can share with us?
I’m currently working on a new book that will be coming out late next year called Book of Curious Birds. Birds are my favourite subject so I’m excited about this one!















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Dry To Dry: The Seasons Of Kakadu

Monday 16 November 2020

10 Quirky Questions with author Jackie Merchant

1. What's your hidden talent?
I don’t have one, of if I do it’s hidden from me too.

2. Who is your favourite literary villain and why?
Dracula – because it’s possible to feel some sympathy for him.

3. You're hosting a literary dinner party, which five authors would you invite? (alive or dead)
Karen Blixen, Dr Seuss, Bill Bryson, Rachael Treasure, and Elyne Mitchell

4. Which literary invention do you wish was real?
Time travel.

5. What are five words that describe your writing process?
Imagine, visualise, watch, ask, obey.

6. Which are the five words you would like to be remembered by as a writer?
Her characters kept me company.

7. Picture your favourite writing space. What are five objects you would find there?
Lots of notebooks, pictures of things or places I’d like my characters to be, a half drunk cup of ginger tea, my laptop and my old desk covered in dents and cup rings.

8. Grab the nearest book, open it to page 22 and look for the second word in the first sentence. Now, write a line that starts with that word. (Please include the name of the book!)
It was a surprise to everyone that Josh McGinty jumped into the river to save the dog, he’d never been that sort. The Barefoot Investor (not my book but the nearest!)

9. If you could ask one author one question, what would the question be and who would you ask?
I’m curious to know from any author where do they think their ideas come from?

10. Which would you rather do: 'Never write another story or never read another book'? 
I’d probably have to say read another book, because whilst ever I keep writing I can keep reading as part of that process – but I am very, very glad I don’t have to choose and hope I never do. 

Jackie Merchant has worked as a designer, art director and copywriter. She spent the majority of her childhood on the outskirts of Sydney, where, when she was 10, her parents bought an old run-down riding school. Even with no ponies at the time it was a dream come true for a girl with an imagination fuelled by ponies and horses. As an adult, Jackie is lucky enough to share her life with three beautiful horses (Moxie, Percy and Squiggles) and several other animals. She currently lives in Tasmania. The Pony Question is her second novel. For more information, see www.walkerbooks.com.au.



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Sunday 15 November 2020

Review: The Bushfire Book

With Spring here and summer following quickly, The Bushfire Book: How to be Aware and Prepare, is a timely handbook for children, filled with information about prevention of, and preparation for, bushfires.

It’s beautifully designed, with gorgeous illustrations in Indigenous colours, stunning end pages, and lots of easy-to read points in text and images.

For thousands of years, First Nations peoples have used small fires to control the overgrowth of vegetation to prevent bushfires. In this way they protect the land and wildlife habitats.

This handbook has various bushfire plans, with Be Aware, the first essential. Prepare a bushfire plan and Share information which is always available. There is a list of sites at the end under the heading, Your Bushfire Plan Starts Here. There is also a wall poster that comes with the book with these points as reminders on How to be Bushfire Smart.

Images of Australian animals and a map are introduced to support and complement the text.

Other main points address how to prevent fires, what to expect, weather conditions to be aware of, and what drought means. These build awareness and as always, knowledge is power.

Although lots of specialised people work to identify threats of fire, fear always exists, especially in children. Explanation of each point is expansive and practical.

Accent is given to the three causes of fire, Fuel, Heat, Oxygen.

The book is presented optimistically, with emphasis on knowledge being as paramount as preparation and awareness.

Title: The Bushfire Book
Author: Polly Marsden
Illustrator: Chris Nixon
Publisher: Hachette , $19.99
Publication Date: September 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780734420077
For ages: 5+
Type: Non Fiction




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Review: The Fire Wombat

The Fire Wombat is a special story.

Jackie French wrote about this wombat after her own experience and observations of the 2020 bushfires. 

It's imbued with a strong sense of her love for land and animals.

The story begins as the dry, brown countryside is being enveloped by summer heat and smoke.

A small wombat sees and smells the change. The other animals do, too.

All seek safety. The only safe place is underground, and it's a place that the wombat knows well.

Her tunnels are long and cool, and all the animals follow wombat beneath the ground. She shares her home with them.

Australian Children's Laureate, Jackie French writes descriptively of the bushfire and the animals' response to it. 

Her words, which are like classic bush poetry, empathetically express the sights, sounds, and smells of the bushfires and their aftermath. 

This is the animal's perspective, and a kind of homage to the wombat whose determination inspired the author, but it's also a human perspective, as both the animals and people begin to see things come to life again.

The Fire Wombat may tell of the devastation of bushfires, but more than that, it's a story about survival and helping each other, and the hope, renewal and growth that follows. And the eventual rain.

Danny Snell's beautiful illustrations don't shy from the reality, but they also bring a sense of calm and camaraderie to the situation. They will appeal to children and adults alike.

For children who may be anxious about bushfires, reading this story is an excellent way to explain, or prompt discussion.

The Fire Wombat is an uplifting story highly recommended for families everywhere.

Visit the HarperCollins website to download a teaching guide with ideas and activities for before, during and after reading.

Note: Some of the proceeds of the sales of The Fire Wombat go to support The Wombat Protection Society.

Title:The Fire Wombat
Author: Jackie French
Illustrator: Danny Snell
Publisher: HarperCollins, $ 19.99
Publication Date: November 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781460759332
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book



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Friday 13 November 2020

Review: Pea and Nut Go For Gold!

Pea and Nut are back in a sporty new story.

Pea and Nut Go For Gold! is another humourous tale from Matt Stanton starring Pea the panda, a calm and cool character, and Nut the flamingo who is hyperactive and all go, go, go.

It's a case of opposites attract when it's hot and Pea wants to stay in the shade, but Nut wants to have some fun playing around in the pool.

Nut wants to race from one end of the pool to the other, and although Pea isn't particularly interested, they are soon both in the water.

Pea is determined to do her best, despite hiding her physique under a lot of fur.

Nut has a secret though, and his flamingo flippers are much more suited to swimming. Will Pea be able to make a comeback and win the race?

I like the way the use of typeface, and its placement on the page, help to create the sense of movement and activity throughout the story.

This combines with the expressive and colourful cartoon illustrations and perspectives to draw the reader into the middle of the story, and feel as if you're right there with Pea and Nut.

Whether you're cheering for Pea or Nut, or both of them, you will enjoy reading about their antics in the energetic, Pea and Nut Go For Gold!

Title: Pea and Nut Go For Gold!
Author/Illustrator:  Matt Stanton
Publisher: ABC Books, $ 17.99
Publication Date: August 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780733340680
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book



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Review: Dragon!

What do you do if your good friend Sam has to move far, far away? 

Well, if you’re Lena and Luke (and you’ve already once found a Unicorn! and met a magical Mermaid!), there’s really only one thing to do…

Wish for a Dragon!

We held hands and wished together for something wide-winged and wonderful with room enough of three.

Oh boy, does Sam get a shock when Lena and Luka turn up on the back of a dragon. But fantastically fun times are had and the three friends get to spend time together again.

Dragon! is the third instalment in this magical series by Maggie Hutchings and Cheryl Orsini. All fans of magic, fantastical adventures and mystical mysteries will adore it! It symbolises possibility and imagination — it’s about believing in the impossible and making it happen with that special kind of ‘kid’ magic that parents don’t understand. 

In that way, when you read Dragon! (and the other books in the series), you feel as if you are reading about a secret world that Lena and Luka have discovered. It’s a special adventure that is sure to spark some fantastic imaginative play.

I’ve said it before, but I’ll say it again. Cheryl Orsini’s illustrations are simply divine. Just look at that cover. How can you resist it? With added sparkle embellishments, it’s a cover that makes a big impression. Inside, every page is filled with joy. Stunning colours fill every page to the edges. And, of course, there’s lots of glorious dragon green.

I am in love with this picture book series. It is fun, imaginative and full of magic. 

Dragon! will make you believe in the impossible and the power of friendship. There’s no place in the world a friend can move that can’t be reached with the help of a special, scaly hero.

Title: Dragon!
Author: Maggie Hutchings
Illustrator: Cheryl Orsini
Publisher: Affirm Press, $19.99
Publication Date: 27 October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925972931
For ages: 3 - 6
Type: Picture Book




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