Thursday, 31 December 2020

Review: Poems to Save the World With

In 2018, Chris Riddell chose and illustrated a collection of 46 poems. Poems to Live Your Life By came in eight sections as diverse as possible. 

In late 2019, Riddell gifted us, Poems to Fall in Love With, chosen classic and modern favourites which celebrate love in all its forms, decorating the pages with artistic expression.

Poems to Save the World With, presented in six sections, brings poems on advice, hope, happiness, compassion, acceptance and reflection in a time when all these things in life are so important.

The contents of this third collection, like the others, are as different as the days of the week and as powerful as a full blown storm. Poems of reassurance that people are fine the way they are, random acts of kindness, and an encouraging word that may save a person’s life, will move and change you.

Standouts are The Mushroom Hunters and What You Need to be Warm by Neil Gaiman, A Word of Advice by Libby Russell, Kindness by Nikita Gill. (I would gladly list the remainder of all the collection here, but won’t.)

The poetry is taken from: Emily Dickinson, William Blake, The Ecclesiastics, William Wordsworth, Robert Browning, Rudyard Kipling and other well-known and not so well known poets.

True to the times, the collection ends with poems about Lockdown.

Riddell’s illustrations are wisps of ink on the page. Fine-lined with a feather-touch, they appear to have landed on the paper as lightly as a floating flake. Simply perfect!

This book is influential. It will send you to your nearest book supplier to buy his other titles. You have been warned!

Title: Poems to Save the World With
Author/Illustrator: Chris Riddell
Publisher: Pan Macmillan, $ 26.99
Publication Date: 17 September 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781529040111
For ages: 12+
Type: Poetry










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Guest Post: Sherry Shahan on The Challenges and Revelations of Writing a (Teen) Novel in Verse

Wednesday, 30 December 2020

Review: The Drop Bear


Are you a drop bear denier?

Do you question the existence of these rarely seen, yet well-known bushland creatures?

Well, if that's so, then this book is a must. 

Chris Edser presents compelling evidence of the presence of a large, aggressive (yet curiously shy) tree-top dwelling, sleepy, kind-of-but-not-quite koala-like creature that's easy to miss if you gaze up at the canopy of a eucalyptus forest.

Easily ignored, the casual bushwalker could stroll by a drop bear's tree and be none the wiser.

Unless they drop rubbish in its niche, of course. This book serves a fair warning to those who befoul our native bushland. Beware! Silently and without warning, the drop bear will retaliate by doing what it knows best. 

And it's at least ten times heavier than the average koala. 

Chris Edser presents a strong argument in favour for each of us to do our best to keep our native bushland pristine. Illustrated with a muted palette, Edser portrays a quiet version of the Australian bush, which underscores the message of it being a sacred place for our fauna, a delicate place where humans are almost tolerated. A world where humans need to be mindful of the myriad consequences of a careless action. A place that needs a protector.

Embedded in these images are gorgeous pictures of a variety of indigenous creatures for the reader to search for and to find.

Title: The Drop Bear
Author: Chris Edser
Illustrator: Chris Edser
Publisher: Five Mile, $24.99  
Publication Date: November 2020
Format: Hardback
ISBN: 9781922385314
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book




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Tuesday, 29 December 2020

Review: Pie in the Sky

Jingwen and Yanghao his nine-year-old brother, arrive in Australia with absolutely no knowledge of English. They start school right away. Their ever optimistic Mama who is familiar with the language, reassures them that they will learn quickly.

In his mind, Jingwen sees the Aussie kids as Martians; their speech just as alien. This keeps him from making friends. (He blames his mother for not getting a tutor to prepare him). 

At any other time, with more focus and less preoccupation, he might have managed to pick up basic English.

But, he is still grieving at the loss of his father just before their departure, and all the plans they’d mapped out together for their bakery, Pie in the Sky.

What tortures Jingwen the most is their last heated exchange.

He believes that if he can bake his way through his father’s cake recipes, he will honour him, and his harsh words will be forgiven.

How can this be done with Mama’s cardinal rule of no using the oven while she is away?

Having to mind the pesky Yanghao while Mama works, Jingwen inculcates him into his scheme. Using pocket money to purchase the ingredients, Jingwen begins to bake his way to forgiveness.

Remy Lai starts the book by taking the mickey out of many views and habits her characters have. This creates a light-hearted tone as it moves into a more serious but always humorous one.

A mixture of graphic novel and illustrated middle grade novel, the images add to the hilarity of many situations that the brothers get into through the quest they’ve set themselves.

Well-written and highly entertaining throughout, it follows Fly On the Wall, also full of jokes and funny stuff that will keep a smile on the reader’s face.

Title: Pie in the Sky
Author/Illustrator: Remy Lai
Publisher: Walker Books, $ 19.99
Publication Date: 2 September 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781760653156
For ages: 9+
Type: Middle Grade Fiction


 



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Monday, 28 December 2020

Review: We Are All Kind

This is the sort of book that invites a snuggle-up time between  a caregiver and a child to share and enjoy together.

This gentle, rhyming story explores the ways in which we can all show kindliness. 

It celebrates the simple, everyday acts of kindness that require very little effort, but give so much when it is needed.

A smile, a laugh, an invitation to include, offering a helping hand are all examples of very simple yet so powerful acts.

The latest title by the prolific P. Crumble, who has published thirteen other titles, including  The Cat Wants Custard and Me and Moo.

Jonathan Bentley's illustrations complement the text beautifully, demonstrating how easy it can be to make anther person feel better, and showing that small deeds are the most powerful.

Gentle, sweet and warm, this is one for bedtime or for a preschool teacher to settle a rowdy class with.


Title: We Are All Kind
Author: P. Crumble
Illustrator: Jonathon Bentley
Publisher: Omnibus, $19.99
Publication Date: November, 2020
Format: Hardback
ISBN: 9781760972363
For ages: 4 years +
Type: Picture Book




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Sunday, 27 December 2020

Review: We Are Wolves

It is the heart of winter, 1945. Fighting for Hitler, Eric Wolf is now missing in action. The remaining Wolf family – two grandparents, Mama, Liesl, Otto and baby Mia, join the thousands leaving East Prussia to escape the invading Russian army. 

They go forth, wagons loaded with belongings and hope, to reach ships that are moving people across the Baltic Sea.

The grandparents collapse as a result of freezing temperatures. They join the trail of lifeless shadows and scattered possessions, the price paid for the long journey to freedom.

When a bomb is dropped onto the stream of travellers towards the end of their quest, the frozen lagoon swallows the Wolf’s horse and wagon. Mama’s cry to run is all the children take with them as they escape into the forest to become part of the German Wolfskinder, the wolf children, victims of war.

They undertake a seemingly impossible trek across country in search of a home without their mother, surviving on whatever edible the forest contains and stealing or begging from farms – abandoned and occupied. Danger lies everywhere. Liesl does her best to protect the younger children. But hunger and the elements leave their mark on them all, including others fleeing, whom they encounter along the way.

There is a short respite from deprivation when two Russian soldiers show compassion and offer the children temporary protection from the savagery that reigns within the Red Army against all Germans, children included.

Alone again, they learn that in the bordering Lithuania, food is plentiful. When they find shelter there with a childless couple, to survive, they must change their names and replace their mother tongue to become Lithuanian in all aspects.

Fictionalised, the novel is based on true stories about what become of the German children who were left orphaned and homeless after the invasion of Germany by Russia.

We Are Wolves is a poignant, at times disturbing novel that tears at the heart. It addresses the hardships many children experienced during war time. The absolute determination and resourcefulness in order to survive is strongly portrayed, along with the compassion and kindness of strangers offered to the Wolfskinder simply because they were children.

Title: We Are Wolves
Author: Katrina Nannestad
Publisher: Harper Collins, $ 19.99
Publication Date: 29 October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780733340888
For ages: 10+
Type: Middle Grade Fiction




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Review: Turtle Boy

Saturday, 26 December 2020

Review: Toffle Towers: Order in the Court

Chegwin Toffle is the manager of the Toffle Towers hotel. 

It’s not a normal hotel, unless you call being able to check in upside down in magnetic boots normal… or Lolly Rooms are standard in hotels you’ve been to… or gravity-free restaurants are old hat in your opinion.

I guess the other un-normal thing is that Chegwin is a kid, but that doesn’t make him an unskilled, untrained, unknowing manager. 

Except… sometimes Chegwin makes mistakes (he is still learning of course!), and when his arch nemesis Brontessa Braxton tricks him into signing a contract, his mistake could lead to losing the hotel.

But that’s not the only challenge Chegwin is facing in book three of this awesome series. The hotel has also been snowed in, there is a thief on the lose, a mystery guest no one can find and the hotel roof is in danger of caving in.

All in a days work for a hotel manager, but, seriously, how is Chegwin going to solve ALL these problems?

Toffle Towers: Order in the Court is a brilliantly funny and entertaining junior read for kids. It’s for fans of zany, fans of silly and fans of fun. Filled with mysteries galore, humour and a giant cast of brilliant characters, it’s a fast-paced read that keeps you guessing and totally engrossed until the very end. 

Foley’s brilliant illustrations are peppered throughout the book, in all the right places. And Harris delivers some really cool storytelling techniques throughout, including letters, Chegwin’s inner monologue thinkings, text message conversations, letter exchanges and mini comic strips. These things add so much fun to the story and the whole atmosphere of the Toffle Towers world.

Buy this book (and series) for all the kids in your life! I thoroughly enjoyed reading it, and if you know kids who love mystery, humour, fun and entertainment, they are going to love it too.

Title: Toffle Towers: Order in the Court
Author: Tim Harris
Illustrator: James Foley
Publisher: Puffin, $14.99  
Publication Date: 4 August 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780143795445
For ages: 7+
Type: Junior Fiction, Middle Grade




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Junior Review: When This Bell Rings

Friday, 25 December 2020

Review: Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Deep End

Greg Heffley and his family are off on a road trip. They’ve escaped Gramma’s basement and they’ve got Uncle Gary’s old camper. They’re off, and nothing is going to get in their way of having a jolly good holiday.

Except, well… everything goes wrong.

The holiday parks are full, every other piece of wilderness seems to be owned by someone who doesn’t want them trespassing, and when they finally find somewhere to stay, it isn’t exactly a picture perfect place. 

Everything goes wrong. And I mean EVERYTHING! Can the Heffley’s holiday be salvaged? Will they even make it out of there alive?

If you’re looking for a fun, funny and easy read, the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series is what you’re looking for!

Written as journal entries, The Deep End (and the rest of the Wimpy Kid series) takes you deep inside Greg’s head, experiencing his world through his inner most thoughts. 

He isn’t shy about telling his journal (and you) what he thinks, and the situations he gets himself (and his family) into as a result of his straight forward attitude are so entertaining.

With a generous amount of illustrations on every page, these books are great for junior readers starting to read independently. The illustration to words ratio is pretty much even, and this is perfect for kids taking on new reading adventures for themselves.  

With a long line of books before it (each which can be read as a standalone), the series is also a great one to get kids hooked on. They’ll have read eight, nine, ten Wimpy Kid books before they even realise it!

Title: Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Deep End
Author: Jeff Kinney
Publisher: Puffin, $14.99  
Publication Date: 27 October 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780143796084
For ages: 7 - 12
Type: Junior Fiction




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Review: The Forest of Moon and Sword

Thursday, 24 December 2020

Guest Post: Donna Paul: A Montessori Teacher's Approach to Picture Books in the Classroom

Meet The Illustrator: Ana Duna

Name: Ana Duna

Describe your illustration style in ten words or less.
Fun, playful and humorous.

What items are an essential part of your creative space?
I need paper and pencil (I start every project with these two lovely things). I also use my graphic tablet and lately I have also been using a lightbox to make the final linework of my illustrations.

Do you have a favourite artistic medium?
Recently I have been working a lot with digital tools, I love how versatile they are because they allow me to experiment as much as I want without it taking very long. However I don’t like my work to have a digital feel to it, that’s why I always try to use brushes that give a warm look to the final result and also lately I have been doing all my final lines using real pencil and scanning it later. With time I have found that the best way of working for me is the one that combines analog and digital tools into the final piece.


Name three artists whose work inspires you.
I have always loved the way Quentin Blake illustrates, I really admire how loose his lines are which makes his work very dynamic and full of life. Ronald Searle’s work is also such a delight, his characters have so much personality and his line is also very energetic and inspiring. The last one would have to be Sempé, I can spend hours looking at his work, for some reason it speaks to me at a very personal level, he has a very unique way to observe life which in my opinion is one of the nicest qualities an illustrator could have.



Which artistic period would you most like to visit and why?
When I was studying Fine Arts I remember that I got very interested in the Fauvism period. Color has always intrigued me and I would have loved to be able to see how these people thought about color and how they played with it without fear.


Who or what inspired you to become an illustrator?
This is a very tricky question, because I really don’t know! I guess it has been a mix of a lot of things, I always loved to draw so I studied Fine Arts and during this period I remember one day that I found a magazine with an interview of a few illustrators, they were talking about their work and I felt really surprised that this was actually something that you could do for living! So later I decided to study a Master’s degree in illustration and graphic design, while I studied it I realised that what I liked to do the most when I was drawing was to tell stories, it was my favourite part so children illustration was just a very natural path for me to follow.


Can you share a photo of your creative work space or part of the area where you work most often? Talk us through it.
During the past years I have been living in different cities so my studio has been changing (which I actually enjoy a lot) I always like to have some inspiration hanging up on the walls, a nice table (I’m a bit obsessed with tables) my drawing tools and I also appreciate having good light.


What is your favourite part of the illustration process?
The best part for me is definitely the beginning, I really enjoy receiving the manuscript, reading the story and the whole thinking process; at this point every possibility is open and you kind of imagine how the final work would look but it still surprises you changing and developing everyday. I also love how loose and playful the first sketches are because they suggest the image but you finish it in your mind, I find this part of the process so magical.

What advice would you give to an aspiring illustrator?
To never forget to have fun with it, sometimes we put so much pressure on ourselves trying to make everything just the way we wanted that we forget to have fun and enjoy the process, I think it is so important to never lose sight of this.


Ana is a children’s book illustrator based in Spain. She studied a bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts and later a Master’s degree in illustration and graphic design. She started working as a pattern designer for a fashion brand but soon she decided to focus on her passion: children illustration. Humour being an essential part of her work she loves to have fun working and she particularly enjoys creating interesting characters and the worlds they live in.

 For more information, please visit Ana's website and behance or follow her instagram.

 





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Wednesday, 23 December 2020

Review: Brain Freeze

Much-loved children’s author Oliver Phommavanh delivers fun, funny, silly and entertaining in this fabulous collection of short stories to freeze your brain with wacky deliciousness.

A super-competitive chess game, a slushy slurping competition with freezing consequences and acts of kindness when you’re living in the middle of a pandemic. 

If you’re looking for whacky, fun and entertaining, delivered in short snippets, Brain Freeze is for you!

The blurb describes this book as a collection of stories featuring characters who are trying to step up and be brave, and that theme really does shine through.  

Each tale is about a kid faced with some kind of challenge that requires them to be courageous — real and relatable challenges, even in a whacky world where your parents are allowed by law to change your name everyday.

Weaved throughout the stories are ones that kids will really relate to this year — stories of life in lockdown and remote schooling. I loved these stories in particular, not just because they are reflective of our year, but because Phommavanh has a way of pulling you into stories, acknowledging the bad but infusing the good (with loads of humour), so you finish reading feeling seen, heard and part of something.

The stories are the perfect size for a cosy read before bed, which also makes this a great book for kids who like to take on bite-sized reading challenges. It provides a variety of stories for kids to try, each fun and entertaining, but each different with lots of different characters (both girls and boys).

Fun, entertaining and kid focused, Brain Freeze is for kids who love a relatable story to laugh out loud at.

Title: Brain Freeze
Author: Oliver Phommavanh
Publisher: Puffin, $14.99  
Publication Date: 1 September 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781760897147
For ages: 10+
Type: Junior Fiction, Middle Fiction




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Tuesday, 22 December 2020

Review: Busy Beaks

Beaks and the bodies they’re on, are exposed in stunning colour and artwork with their scientific name included for those that love to learn – adults and children.

This is a brilliant collection of unique Australian birds that float and fly, peck and pick, strut and soar. Others suck on nectar. The Laughing Kookaburra calls out to its friends.

I loved this book right away as I am always excited when reading something from which I can learn. As will readers. 

This bevy of beauties compete with one another as on stage.

A tall emu father, Dromaius novaehollandiae, and his babies stand on the opposite page to Palm cockatoos, Probosciger aterrimus, who communicate while sitting on the shell of a tall tree.

Shorebirds and penguins on parade will delight children as they learn the names of our colourful, noisy, quiet, active and sluggish birds. Waiting to be discovered are those that flock together, others that prefer to be alone like the Wedge-tailed eagle, and those who prefer life in pairs; all visible birds. Others like the Spotted Pardalote, Padalotus punctatus, prefer their nest out of sight.

This is a reference book of sorts, but not. It’s a delight to go through slowly, observing, like a walk in the park, discovering things that you’d not noticed before or knew about.

Facts and Feathers steal four pages at the end, to exhibit the birds in miniature images, with additional information on each.

And that’s not all! The wrapping for all these divine goods are the gorgeous end pages covered in as many varieties of eggs, as the book has birds. 

Sara Allen is inspired by the natural world and hopes to inspire others with her work.

An ideal gift for giving, overseas visitors, libraries and home bookshelves. Or simply for yourself as a special present.

Title: Busy Beaks
Author/Illustrator: Sarah Allen
Publisher: Affirm Press, $ 19.99
Publication Date: 29 September 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9787925972948
For ages: 5+
Type: Non Fiction




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Review: Meerkat Christmas

Emily Gravett is the winner of two CILIP Kate Greenaway Medals, and author of Too Much Stuff, Cyril and Pat, and Meerkat Mail amongst others. In Meerkat Christmas, she has created another glorious and fun-filled adventure.

Christmas is approaching. Sunny wants everything to be perfect. In the Kalahari where the meerkat family lives, nothing around him is anything like the images in his magazine. He sets off to find a place that is. 

He takes his check list with him.

His pen pal Kev the koala seems to be enjoying himself. Shrimps on the barbie, sausages on a stick, a seaside retreat and lots of sunscreen. Not what Sunny wants. He moves on. Letters are sent home to keep the family informed.

Trevor’s the tarsier’s decorations are award-winning. But where is the snow? Another card is sent off with a snack enclosed.

Sunny gets caught in the rain (he hates getting wet!) and huddles into a Christmas stocking while red robin and family sing carols. Rain blotches the writing on the card he sends off this time.

At last he finds snow – and penguins, presents and singing. But snow is not like sand. Sunny is now a freezing meerkat. But he recovers when he opens penguin’s present.

Sunny finds all that he was looking for. Trees, decorations, presents, and even sprouts, his favourite food. But there is still something missing.

Santa finds Sunny's last card home. Can he give Sunny his heart’s desire?

Gorgeous family photos of the meerkats close the book. A festive atmosphere flows throughout as it introduces various animals in their habitat. Encountered on Sunny’s travels.

This novelty book is something unique for Christmas. It includes real cards which Sunny has written, a free print for a child’s door or wall, and lots of meerkat-inspired ideas for Christmas decorations. (They are only ideas. Not meant to be implemented!)

Title: Meerkat Christmas
Author/Illustrator: Emily Gravett
Publisher: Pan Macmillan, $ 24.99
Publication Date: 29 September 2019
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781509857296
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book




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Announcement: New Team Member: Meet Sue Warren!

Monday, 21 December 2020

10 Quirky Questions with author Paul Collins

1. What's your hidden talent?
If I told you that then it wouldn’t be hidden! But let me see. My super power on the tennis court is my speed. Opposition players often comment on it. I suspect my age fools them. They wouldn’t believe how fast I was in my thirties lol.

2. Who is your favourite literary villain and why?
My equal favourites are Modesty Blaise and Artemis Fowl. They’re both ‘heroes’, really, but then, technically, they’re the bad guys because they’re both criminals. So I don’t see the term ‘villain’ as black and white. And that’s what I love about them. They’re multi-layered characters. Needless to say, the authors are simply the best.

3. You're hosting a literary dinner party, which five authors would you invite? (alive or dead)
Peter McDonnell, Eoin Colfer, Philip Reeve, Stan Lee and Fritz Leiber. You won’t find that combination anywhere.

4. Which literary invention do you wish was real?
A time machine would be pretty cool.

5. What are five words that describe your writing process?
Organised, episodic, funny, diverse and energetic.

6. Which are the five words you would like to be remembered by as a writer?
SF, dystopian, humour, action, plot-driven.

7. Picture your favourite writing space. What are five objects you would find there?
Computer, books, pens, paper and telephone.

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!)
‘Bonds like superglue,’ said Mrs Witchard, loftily holding up her latest invention: a camouflaging skin mesh. (Trust Me Too.)

9. If you could ask one author one question, what would the question be and who would you ask?
I would ask Peter O’Donnell if he rolled in his grave when the first Modesty Blaise movie was released. Had his character been taken seriously, like for example, James Bond, the Modesty Blaise franchise would’ve been huge. Instead, it was made satiric.

10. Which would you rather do: 'Never write another story or never read another book'?
Never read another book.

Paul Collins has written over 140 books and 150 short stories. He is best known for The Quentaris Chronicles (The Spell of Undoing is Book #1 in the new series), which he co-edited with Michael Pryor, The Jelindel Chronicles, The Earthborn Wars and The World of Grrym trilogy in collaboration with Danny Willis. Paul’s latest book is James Gong: The Big Hit, published by Hybrid Publishers. He is also the publisher at Ford Street Publishing and director of Creative Net Speakers’ Agency. Paul has been short-listed for many awards and won the Aurealis, William Atheling and the inaugural Peter McNamara awards. He recently received the A Bertram Chandler Award for lifetime achievement in Australian science fiction. He has black belts in both ju jitsu and taekwondo and was trained in kick-boxing by then Australian Heavyweight Champion, Dana Goodson. See www.paulcollins.com.au for more information.




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Sunday, 20 December 2020

Review: Chasing Rainbows

Can anyone chase a rainbow? If so, how is it done?

Siblings Sam and Ruby love rainbows. 

Their dad tells them stories about the rainbow magic he sees from his helicopter.

Their minds draw pictures of what they could see and feel and do with a rainbow if they could also see the rainbow magic. They long for a rainbow to appear to them in puddles.

But it is a sun shower that brings the colours they’ve waited for. They try to catch it but they can’t reach. Not on their pogo sticks, or jumping on the trampoline, or from the roof of their cubby house.

They continue to long for the rainbow magic that dad talks about.

They have a brief glance of their rainbow again when the sun glitters through the hose water, but it disappears too soon.

There was one way that they could see dad’s rainbow magic. The only way. But would the children get their wish?

A world of colour is to be found throughout the book, ideally matching the children’s fantasy of rainbow magic. Illustrations in bold lines and vibrant tones produce up-close full page images.

Highly imaginative, the story captures children’s longing for the impossible; the mystery and the magic which sometimes becomes possible.

Title: Chasing Rainbows
Author: Katrina McKelvey
Illustrator: Cheri Hughes
Publisher: Big Sky Publishing, $ 14.99
Publication Date: 13 August 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781922265708
For ages: 4+
Type: Picture Book



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Saturday, 19 December 2020

Review: Zombie School Teachers

Since his debut in 2015 with My Dead Bunny, and his more recent release, There's Something Weird about Lena, Sigi Cohen has established himself as the author of wildly fun, gross picture books that do not take themselves at all seriously.

His most recent book, Zombie School Teachers, continues this trend with a dark theme told in rhyme, infused with lashings of humour. Cohen makes fun of a target that his readers will appreciate: school teachers!

The teachers suddenly start acting very strangely – lurching around the classrooms, grunting and trying to feed on the students! 

Even the principal gets in on the act.

It takes some action by the quick thinking kids to get themselves out of this mess with their brains intact.

This over-the-top tale is a silly bit of fun. The illustrations area celebration of gross detail – green tongues, bloodshot eyes and flying limbs abound – which is sure to delight its audience. The zombie teachers pop up various states of decay feasting on brains and chasing innocent children, but (spoiler alert!) are no match for the speedy class.

However, the resolution relies on adult intervention, so this book is not as satisfying as his previous works.

Although the story and illustrations are clearly meant to be funny rather than scary, it is nevertheless best for primary, rather than preschool aged children.

Title: Zombie School Teachers
Author: Sigi Cohen
Illustrator: Matty Mitchell
Publisher: Larrikin House, $24.99
Publication Date: 1 Octoner, 2020
Format: Hardback
ISBN: 9780648804925
For ages: 5 +
Type: Picture Book for Older readers





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Review: Through the Night Sky

What happens at night in the sky? Mysteries are opened up to us in all their fascinating complexity in Through the Night Sky: a collection of amazing adventures under the stars.

It reveals the habits of nocturnal birds and animals, those that migrate with their departure timed by the Moon, the effect on the behaviour of animals and wildlife by solar eclipses, and the stars and planets in all their glory.

Night birds and living things that move at night, are many. Barn Owls, who mate for life, use the same nesting place every year.

Fireflies make light in their abdomen, where special chemicals mixed with oxygen cause a glow.

The Dung Beetle also works at night. It needs to travel in straight lines or else it will keep going in circles all the time. It can push 50 times its weight, using the light from the Milky Way to guide them.

Would you like to know about the magnificent about Baobab trees? These extraordinary, living beings flower once a year. (The book refers to the species in Madagascar of which there are six). When they do, after weeks of rains, they shed their leaves and are replaced by pods, which crack open when the sun goes down to reveal white flowers. Their smell signals lemurs, fruit bats and moths that it is feeding time.

(There is also an Australian Boab tree – Andansonia gregorii, found only in the Kimberley and Western Victoria River Region).

The Universe, its beauty and mystery are displayed through the planets, Northern and Southern Lights and all the brilliance of everything in between.

A stunning presentation in full colour with fantastic illustrations, is aimed at younger readers, dreamers, star gazers and night lovers, and those who find the Universe a spectacular and captivating area of interest.

Title: Through the Night Sky
Author: Anita Ganeri
Illustrator: Charlotte Pepper
Publisher: Penguin, $ 19.99
Publication Date: 3 November 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780241355459
For ages: 9+
Type: Non Fiction




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Friday, 18 December 2020

Review: The Incredible Runaway Snot

Ever wondered what life must be like for a harmless snot, sitting in somebody's nose all day only to face the eventual indignity of being picked by a thoughtless finger and given the flick?

Well, me neither.

So I guess I have to thank Josh Pyke for drawing my attention to what must be a world-wide dilemma.

This rhyming picture book tells the story of Eric the Snot, who decides to stand up for his fellow boogers and snot.

He starts up a snot school, to teach his fellows to fight for their rights and avoid eviction from their beloved nostrils.

But alas - Eric is too successful for his own good, and the nose becomes uncomfortably crowded. What's a poor booger to do?

Well, the title might provide some clues.

Full of snot jokes, this is the sort of story that kids will find hilarious and want to read again and again. It's full of naughtiness and plain old silliness. Heath McKenzie's cartoonish illustrations, bursting with colour and awesome facial expressions, complement it well.

Title: The Incredible Runaway Snot
Author: Josh Pyke
Illustrator: Heath McKenzie
Publisher: Scholastic Australia, $21.99  
Publication Date: 1 November, 2020
Format: Hardback
ISBN: 9781760971083
For ages: 3 years +
Type: Picture Book




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Thursday, 17 December 2020

Review: Eric

Every Shaun Tan title comes with a mystery to be solved, on how to translate and set an age bracket on his incredible work. I find it impossible to classify. I simply allow myself to absorb and appreciate the thought-provoking aspect of it.

More questions are born than are answered.

Children will view it with an innocent and practical eye, describing what they see, perhaps more clearly than adults. Adults will dig, and deconstruct, and wonder at the complex and simple sides of Tan’s meticulous and intriguing work. I prefer to allow the reader to find what they think is hiding there.

 

Each person will discover something different and so, make the book theirs.

Here is the visible. The title page with a single button and the name eric in lower case. The next page, Eric by Shaun Tan, is written on a crumpled, then smoothed out envelope of the old par avion style, that had the red and blue slanting boxes around the border. This sets the scene.

Eric is a foreign visitor; an exchange student. As there is no clear way of knowing who or what he is, we immediately conclude he is as unusual as his name which can’t be pronounced, from another culture and tradition.

He told us to just call him Eric.

He was unused to the comforts of home that were offered, so Eric chose to study and sleep in the pantry. His thirst to know about strange and unlikely things made others uncomfortable as they couldn’t offer answers. His interest was in the small, common items of daily life. He preferred distance to closeness.

This was put down to a cultural thing.

As quietly as he came, he left. Questions were passed around. Lack of understanding ruled.

Eric left behind a note in a cup saying, thankyou for wonderful time, and countless tiny sprouting seeds planted in everyday objects. An expression of parts of who he identified with.

Regardless whether they were understood or not, they held a singular beauty. This was the greatest gift of gratitude.

Stunning end papers reflect Eric’s thoughts and needs.

Title: Eric
Author/Illustrator: Shaun Tan
Publisher: Allen & Unwin, $ 19.99
Publication Date: 1 September 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781760877972
For ages: 7+
Type: Picture Book




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Guest Post: Chris Collin

Award-winning author, performer and Enthusiologist Chris Collin, is the creator of Funky Chicken, A Bug Called Doug, Funky Chicken: Chooks in Space, and Mission Crocible. His last two years have been spent working on an exciting new project, The Things You Can Do with Blue Whale Poo to be released in January 2021. Chris shares his inspiration and other wonderful and interesting facts about his new book.

 It’s a strange name which will grab the attention it deserves. Why this title and what inspired the idea for the book… Blue Whale Poo?
Believe it or not, I have to thank Social Media for the title inspiration. I opened a story about a giant flocculant flume of whale poop floating on the surface of the ocean. The story revealed the source of the bright orange flume, which was from the insides of a blue whale! On reading the article, and the importance this stinky stuff had in our world, I was instantly ‘hooked’, and for the first time ever, the title came to me before the story!

It is gross, funny and perfect for getting an environmental message across. How long did it take to complete the book?
It only took a week or two to write the story. And then another 3 months or so of revisiting the script with minor edits here and there to get the story to the stage where it was ready for publishing. This is mostly to get the meter spot-on! From that point there’s another few months illustrating and designing the book. All up it was around 9 months labour of love.

This picture book educates on many levels through its characters and the clever, informative text. Did you have a song in mind when you chose the humorous rhyming verse?
As with all of my previous books, I was always going to have a song connected to this book. I work with an incredible song-writing, engineering and composing team, Adrian and Barb Hannan of the SongStore. Barb normally comes up with the songs, ingeniously plucking bits and pieces of the text from the book, but still managing to separate the song from the story, so it’s an entirely different entity all of its own, but still connected to the book. One word to describe this amazing team is GENIUS!



…Blue Whale Poo is divinely illustrated by the talented, multi-international award-winning Bruce Potter. He is also author, musician, stage performer and composer, amongst a string of other things. How did your collaboration come about?

I was connected to Bruce through a couple of amazing children’s authors, Dean O’Brien (a.k.a Mr Yipadee) and Craig Smith (Yes, the Wonky Donkey man!) who has collaborated with Bruce on a few other projects. Craig and Dean had interviewed Bruce recently together, and when I mentioned to Dean the Blue Whale Poo project, he very kindly connected me to Bruce, and as they say, the rest is history! Bruce has done a fabulous job, and I hope to continue the partnership on other projects down the track.

There are files to download as well in addition to the book. Please tell us what they are and how you hope they will complement the book’s content and intent?
We like to call our books musical picture books. Our books all come with an incredible musical package of the entire story narrated to an orchestral backing score and song, both performed by the author. Along with my life and business partner, Nadia Rabiller, one of the most important things for us in this business was to create quality Australian books that anyone could enjoy, regardless of abilities. 

Our music can be downloaded as audio only (mp3) or an audio-visual movie slideshow (mp4). This means anyone with hearing or sight limitations can still enjoy stories like this together, whether they be children, a sibling, parent or grandparent. We have had a great deal of feedback over the years from families who have struggled to find this kind of package in traditionally published picture books, and to my knowledge, we are the only publisher consistently producing this kind of package in a picture book. Also did I mention…it’s FUN!

Will you please share with us your serendipitous experience while at a beach house at Macleay Island, working on … Blue Whale Poo?
I am very fortunate to have some dear friends who own a small beach house on an island off Brisbane. For years they had offered the house to me if I needed to escape to write, and late in 2018, I finally took them up on it. My intention was to work on two other ideas. After two days of floundering about getting nowhere, I shelved those projects and began drafting a story that befitted the title I’d had floating in my head for months, The Things you can do with Blue Whale Poo! It took 3 days to come up with a draft that made sense (assuming of course that a story of blue whale poop can actually make any sense!)


Your Funky Chicken books have been turned into full musical stage productions. How did this wonderful and unexpected progression come about?

Some years ago, we were connected to an amazing Australian playwright, actor and teacher, Jodie Cook. A couple of years ago Jodie contacted us from Vienna, where she was living and working at that time, asking if we would be interested in her creating a full musical stage production that schools could perform for themselves using the characters and themes from our beautiful books. Needless to say, the answer was a very loud YES!

Interestingly, Jodie wanted to use our books simply due to the fun, joy and uplifting themes they represented. Oh, and did I say they also come with a world-class musical package, which has been modified brilliantly again by Adrian and Barb from the SongStore especially for the play. We are very excited indeed to confirm the play is now available for school to access for 2021!

I understand you were performing over 100 events in schools, preschools and libraries. Can you expand on this please?
Our business has always been closely connected to schools. Nadia and I have always had our focus on supporting literacy not only through our fun, musical books, but also by creating our own blend of literacy-based performing arts shows and workshops. We have been lucky enough over the years to travel a great deal around Australia and internationally, and one thing I have learnt from all the places we have been is that children (and adults for that matter), are always keen to engage with story when there is a combination of engaging stories, music, puppetry and humour!


Performance is not merely an entertaining factor, is it? Is it your belief that appearances encourage children to read and discover how books can change or influence their lives?

100%! I consider myself incredibly fortunate to do what I do for a living. I believe my role is to encourage kids of all ages to develop a love of reading and writing through fun, engaging books and author experiences. Even as adults, we seem to have a built-in ability to absorb and remember information when something is interesting and FUN! Laughter around books really is the BEST medicine, and I believe changes lives, and the world for the better!

Over the years, many schools have asked if we could create curriculum lesson plans around our books. I was lucky enough to meet another amazing Jodie, Jodie Carlson, an amazing teacher-librarian in NSW. Jodie has created an awesome lesson plan package around our books, with individual plans for all year levels from the early years through to year 6. The lesson plans follow the Australian curriculum, and include a STEM activity.

We are so fortunate to have been connected to all of these incredibly talented and fun people throughout our journey, all of whom fit our funky ethos of fostering literacy through fun and funkiness! https://www.funkybooks.com.au/





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KBR Spreading the Merry 2020!

Wednesday, 16 December 2020

Review: Juno Jones #3 Book Sleuth

Juno Jones, owner of an over-active imagination, and a master of setting scenes in exaggerated detail, is back again in a third title, Book Sleuth.

Juno is in the dumps due to the departure of Futoshi and his unicorn Blade, through a magic portal. She must now find a new vocation to fill her life in alignment with her secret and growing interest in reading and writing.

Yes, it’s true! Muttonbird Bay Primary School is constantly producing surprises! 

Formerly a child who disliked reading and writing, Juno has now transformed into a dedicated book lover with a favourite book. Shy Vi has won Best Public Speaker and a detailed catch-up about Juno's current relationship with Perfect Paloma and Smelly Bella, puts the reader into focus with her present situations.

There is also her amazing brother Genius George, always there to prop her up when needed.

The saga of Juno’s favourite book begins when she returns a borrowed book to the library. She is drawn to an illuminated book that calls to her from the desk. After reading it repeatedly each day for a week, Juno wants to re-borrow it.

The book disappears. Despair sets in. This initiates the Case of the Missing Book. The classroom becomes a courtroom against all opposition, as Juno is determined to find the book thief by whittling away at the suspects.

Easily distracted Juno tends to go off on a tangent with each cross-examination. The seven footnotes grow longer in turn. These serve as built in sources of information, as are her references to her writing and reading, where a lot of literary language is used and explained.

Always funny and entertaining, with the brilliant images by Sandy Flett to enhance the text, the Juno Jones series is a secret weapon for reluctant readers, who, after one book, emerge from their lack of interest in books, to become book lovers like Juno!

Title: Juno Jones  #3 Book Sleuth
Author: Kate Gordon
Illustrator:  Sandy Flett
Publisher: Yellow Brick Books, $ 12.99
Publication Date: 1 October 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780648492566
For ages: 7+
Type: Junior Fiction Younger

 

 



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Guest Post: Alexandra Eidens: 7 Why Students Should Keep a Journal

Journaling - the practice of writing in a similar structure every day, is an important tool for students. It can seem daunting to encourage your student to implement the daily practice. They are busy and may already be feeling overwhelmed.
The benefits of journaling are too many to ignore. They range from improving your health to reaching your goals. Here are 7 reasons why you should encourage your student to try journaling:

1. Explore Your Thoughts
One type of journal is to write daily thoughts. When we’re moving through our day, it may seem like nothing eventful happens most of the time. Still, the practice of daily writing is important because it lets students explore their thoughts.

Writing down their backstory allows students to see where they are and where they’ve come from. It lets them see how their thoughts have developed and grown. Seeing that development can give them insight into their mindset and areas of growth.

When students have a clearer picture of who they are, they can work to become who they want to be.

2. Build Better Habits
Keeping track of what you do each day has other benefits. It allows you to see your behavioral patterns - and where you can improve them.

Students who learn to journal, using journals for teens, get a head start on the process. Students are often very busy. Keeping track of assignments, meetings, practices, jobs, and every other time commitment can be difficult. Establishing systems that give them insight into what works and what doesn’t is a valuable tool.

Also, the act of writing what you do each day is a discipline that flows into other areas of life. When you learn to develop and keep one healthy habit, it is easier to build others.

3. Improve Communication Skills
To write well, you need to work on writing. Journaling can be a non-threatening and easy way to practice.

It goes beyond writing, though. When people write regularly, it can help them develop better communication skills in general. Students who journal are able to use their writing skills to improve their speaking skills. Being articulate - the ability to express complex thoughts well - will help students in a wide-range of groups and social conversations.

Good communication skills are soft skills that will only enhance opportunities and outcomes for students.


4. Elevate Emotional Intelligence

Part of building emotional intelligence requires a look at how we’re feeling and thinking about topics. Students who journal practice this idea regularly, so understanding what they are thinking and feeling can be easier for them.

When students use a journal for teens to work through personal feelings, it gives them perspective on their own lives. They can see what bothers them when they interact with others, and they can learn to change their behaviors or thinking around the problem.

Having a strong emotional intelligence doesn’t mean your student won’t have interpersonal conflict, but they will have the tools they need to work through those conflicts more easily.

5. Improve Writing Skills
A benefit of journaling for students that should not be overlooked is that it improves writing. A daily writing practice makes the act of writing easier. And journaling can be an easy and safe way to incorporate the practice.

With a journal, students can start writing without needing a particular theme. They just write. It’s the 'getting ideas on paper' that can be difficult, so the repeated practice of working through how to say something makes their writing better.

Developing writing skills takes time and effort. Journaling supports that practice while also delivering other benefits.

6. Learn Self-Reflection
Using a journal for self-reflection is powerful for students. It can be difficult to inspect our thinking to determine which thoughts and actions are serving us and which are not.

Journaling at night as part of a self-reflection practice gives students the opportunity to work through personal growth habits in a self-accepting and honest way. Students can use a journal for teens to see patterns and behaviors and to build compassion for others.

Self-reflection allows students to develop their thoughts to become who they want to be.

7. Achieve Your Goals
Journaling goals is another powerful tool. To write down a goal, large or small, means you’re admitting you want it to yourself. It makes it real.

When students learn journal goals, it can help them achieve those goals. Regular goal writing keeps the goal on their mind. That focus helps them take the small steps they need to keep moving toward their goal. It’s those steps over time that move the goals from just a dream to a reality.

Like most good habits, journaling does take some discipline to implement. It doesn’t have to be daunting, though. Encourage your student to start small: a bullet point list of actions and thoughts of the day. As the habit becomes more regular, they can build from there.

The practice of journaling is a life-long self-care habit that can’t be started too soon.

Alexandra Eidens is the founder of Big Life Journal, an engaging resource to help kids develop a resilient growth mindset so they can face life's challenges with confidence.



 



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Tuesday, 15 December 2020

Video Review: Saltie Mumma

Join Yvonne Mes for a short and snappy video review of Saltie Mumma. A non fiction picture book for children aged 5 and up. Written and illustrated by Sandra Kendell.



Title: Saltie Mumma
Author/ Illustrator: Sandra Kendell
Publisher:
Windy Hollow Books
Publication Date: 1st October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781922081889
For ages: 5+
Type: Non Fiction Picture Book




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Monday, 14 December 2020

12 Curly Questions with author TC Shelley

1. Tell us something hardly anyone knows about you.
I can scratch my nose with my big toe.

2. What is your nickname?
At the moment, the kids at school have started calling me Shellster. Hmmm, not sure what I think of that.

3. What is your greatest fear?
I’m nervous about a lot of things: height, public speaking, but I still talk to groups and I’ve been sky diving. I think the only thing that really terrifies me is something happening to someone I love.

4. Describe your writing style in 10 words.
I am chaotic in scene order, but disciplined in approach.

5. Tell us five positive words that describe you as a writer.
Eager, regular, early (as in mornings), daydreamy, focused.

6. What book character would you be, and why?
Lucy Pevensie, because I always wanted to find a door to another world.

7. If you could time travel, what year would you go to and why?
All of them, all the years, forward and backwards, from the beginning of time until the end. If I could time travel, why would I just go to one point in time?

8. What would your 10-year-old self say to you now?
‘You look just like Nanny.’

9. Who is your greatest influence?
CS Lewis, because he did help me find a door to a magical kingdom.

10. What/who made you start writing?
See above, I read the Narnian Chronicles and decided I wanted to write too.

11. What is your favourite word and why?
Hiraeth. It’s a Welsh word which means homesickness for a place you’ve never been.

12. If you could only read one book for the rest of your life, what would it be?
No, that would be torture. Noooooooo. If you’re asking me what my favourite book is: Tess of the D’Urbervilles.

TC Shelley studied creative writing and literature at university. She has been teaching English for over 20 years and her first school was classified as the most remote in Australia. She loves an audience and long before she took up teaching was writing and performing her poetry and short stories. She began writing novels to entertain her daughter, who wisely suggested that she try to get them published. Shelley lives with her husband, her daughter and two dogs in Perth, Western Australia. For more information, see www.bloomsbury.com.



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Review: Searching for Charlotte: The Fascinating Story of Australia's First Children's Author

Searching for Charlotte: The Fascinating Story of Australia’s First Children’s Author is a documented journey of discovery undertaken by award-winning writers and sisters, Kate Forsyth and Belinda Murrell. 

Having grown up in an encouraging, nurturing environment filled with books, writing, and stories, the girls were always told stories about their ancestors, especially great-great- great-great grandmother, Charlotte Waring Atkinson.

It was unknown to them that she was the author of A Mother’s Offering to her Children. Written in 1841 when Charlotte and her children were destitute, the identity of the writer had been a mystery until 1981.

A warm-toned, flowing narrative is shared by Kate and Belinda in alternate chapters. Filled with history, personal stories of their childhood and adult experiences, and a family life filled with love, are trunks of vivid images.

They accommodate additional stories spread like branches on a family tree; extending out with others extending from them. Endless stories.

Peeled back and revealed is the background of Charlotte’s life. A reverence and pride at her strength, determination and absolute dedication to her children is made visible by the illuminating words that accompany her name.

In 1826, at 30 years old, Charlotte left England for a post as governess to the Macarthur family in NSW. An intelligent, highly educated, strong-minded woman, she wasn’t thwarted by the long voyage or any expectations. On the ship she met and soon after married James Atkinson, the love of her life.

Charlotte Waring wasn’t only Australia’s first children’s author. She was an early Australian artist, interested in botany and a pioneer in the fight for women’s legal rights in a colonial patriarchal society, when women, their possessions and income, became their husband’s chattels.

A person with compassion and understanding for the traditional landowners, Charlotte always showed kindness and respect to them and their culture. Surviving an encounter with the bushranger known as the Berrima axe murderer, she endured domestic violence at the hands of her second husband, fighting the courts with amazing strength of character to keep her four children.

Fascinating is the perfect word used to describe the story. Beautifully written, it is also a pilgrimage to sacred places; places that enriched Kate and Belinda’s lives, creating in them a strong sense of belonging; of a rich inheritance that helped define them.

Poetic prose magnifies the lavish descriptions of the English countryside that the girls traversed with their daughters. A strong sense of connection with the landscape and the people they encountered, is evident throughout the book.

To be rooted is perhaps the most important and least recognised need of the human soul – French philosopher Simone Weil.

Title: Searching for Charlotte
Author: Kate Forsyth & Belinda Murrell
Publisher: NLA Publishing , $ 34.95
Publication Date:10 November 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780642279699
For ages: 16+
Type: Biography



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Winner: Awesome Aussie Kids on Holiday Prize Picnic Pack

Friday, 11 December 2020

Review: Bluey: Hooray, It's Christmas!

Christmas is not far away, and if you want to get into the spirit, Bluey: Hooray, It's Christmas! is a good place to start.

Bluey is of course the much loved Blue Heeler dog who has her own TV show.

This activity book is a sticker activity book, jam packed with seasonal fun for young children.

A4 in size, the book has a range of activities like Christmas bingo, a Christmas treasure hunt, and a sticker jigsaw. 

You can also create your own Christmas snow globe scene, use Bluey's template to write a letter to Verandah Santa, and try and trick someone with Bandit's Christmas jokes.

There is even a recipe for you to have a go at a 'custard cook-off'. 

The stickers will help decorate and complete the activities throughout the book. They are all foil stickers which makes the Christmas sparkle stand out.

If you have more than one Bluey fan in the family, you might want to think about sharing the activities one at a time, or buying multiple copies of the book!

Bluey: Hooray, It's Christmas! is perfectly timed as simple Christmas entertainment.

Title: Bluey: Hooray, It's Christmas!
Author/Illustrator: Bluey
Publisher: Puffin, $ 9.99
Publication Date: November 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781761040009
For ages: 3+
Type: Activity Book




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Thursday, 10 December 2020

Review: Ginney and Pinney Learn and Grow: Flight of the Kite; When I Grow Up

Flight of the Kite: A Story about Persistence is part of the Ginnie and Pinney series, an 8-pack slipcase which includes 64 pages of teachers notes and a video with each book. The video can be accessed by scanning the QR code on the back. 

We are initially introduced to Ginnie Giraffe and Pinney ‘Potamus and their animal friends. Each one’s character is described so children immediately recognise that everyone is different but they can all still be friends. 

It is a windy day and Ginnie is anxious and doesn’t want to go outside.

All the friends decide that it is perfect weather for flying kites. She doesn’t want to be left out so reluctantly agrees. They all set about industriously creating their own kite slowly and carefully. Everyone except for Pinney, who wants to finish before the others.

No sooner is his kite in flight that it falls apart from the force of the wind. The impulsive Pinney is disappointed, but is encouraged by Tao to start again; to take his time to make a stronger kite.

The next is too heavy and has no lift.

The third time he is convinced he can make the best kite ever. His kite gets tangled with the other kites, bringing them all crashing down.

There is only one solution. Can Pinney learn to make a kite that flies?


When I grow Up: A Story about Self Identity
is the second book released simultaneously with Flight of the Kite.

Another wintry day. The friends gather together to read adventure stories. This brings on a discussion of what each one wants to become when they grow up. They decide to have a dress-up party and become who they want.

They couldn’t agree on who gets what so Miranda decides to share out the costumes. Ginnie gets a fireman’s outfit. They have a wonderful time until they hear a fire siren.

The fire brigade need Ginnie’s help as she is dressed as a fire fighter. She feels she isn’t brave enough to help anyone. Her height is ideal for hosing water and helping everyone out of the high windows. Ginnie learns she can be brave.

The friends discover they like the role the costumes gave them. Will they change their minds about what they want to be?

This is an award-winning series with animals as characters addressing everyday issues. These books can be used as conversation starters with children to discuss positive social behaviour and emotional well-being.
Title: Ginnie and Pinney Learn and Grow: Flight of the Kite; When I Grow Up
Author: Penny Harris
Illustrator: Winnie Zhou
Publisher: Big Sky Publishing, $ 16.99
Publication Date: 1 October 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781922265760; 9781922265807
For ages: 5+
Type: Picture Books




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Event: Prime Minister's Literary Awards 2020

Authors Wai Chim and Helena Fox (Photo: Sarah Steed)

In an unexpected and unusual year, reading has been more important than ever. Today, at the end of the year, we had the announcement of the winners of the 2020 Prime Minister's Literary Awards, and the celebration of a bunch of special stories and their creators. Congratulations to the winners and all the shortlisted authors.

Winner for Young Adult Literature: 

  • How It Feels to Float by Helena Fox (read our review)
'[A] beautifully written, poetic and heart-breaking portrayal of grief, trauma, guilt and mental illness.'

Shortlisted for Young Adult Literature:

  • The Surprising Power of a Good Dumpling by Wai Chim
  • The Honeyman and the Hunter by Neil Grant
  • When the Ground is Hard by Malla Nunn (read our review)
  • This Is How We Change the Ending by Vikki Wakefield (read our review)

Winner for Children's Literature:

  • Cooee Mittigar: A Story on Darug Songlines by Jasmine Seymour and Leanne Mulgo Watson

'After traversing the organic and tactile design and muted colours of the cover, the reader is led into a textually and visually rich world which, despite being in English and Darug, is in fact a love song to the natural beauty of wider Australia, and the proud traditions of its original inhabitants.'

Shortlisted for Children's Literature:

  • Cheeky Dogs: To Lake Nash and Back by Dion Beasley and Johanna Bell
  • One Careless Night by Christina Booth (read our review)
  • Winter of the White Bear by Martin Ed Chatterton (read our 12 Curly Questions with Martin Chatterton)
  • Catch a Falling Star by Meg McKinlay (read our review)
You can read more on the official website for the Prime Minister's Literary Awards, and also watch the video of the livestream of the awards.



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