Wednesday, 30 June 2021

Review: Lucy and Copper

Lucy has grown up with Smudge her little pony always at hand. They have experienced many first things together and Lucy loves him very much. 

Now Lucy is big. Her legs no longer need the help of a crate. But Smudge has remained small.

She longs to be able again, to ride free across the paddocks and through the streams as she had when she was younger.

Copper comes into their life. Neglected and longing for love and attention, he is ignored by Lucy and cared for by dad.

His hands tenderly brush the knots from Copper’s mane as he whispers words of comfort with each stroke.

Growing up means letting go; leaving certain things behind. It is a hard lesson for Lucy to learn, but dad is patient.

Seeing Smudge and Copper running side by side, attracts Lucy’s attention. Is there a way to share and enjoy the outdoors with Smudge once again?

Mandy Foot’s delightful illustrations bring her story to life. Things unsaid with words find their voice in the illustrations.

Her palette preference adds a soft and tender aura to each image intimating her characters are shy, uncertain, questioning.

Her double spreads of the fences and paddocks in the morning absorbing the light from the surroundings, are like photographs in cinemascope.

It is evident through the visuals, that Mandy Foot sees animals with different eyes than others would or do. Her portrayal of the horses and the people that love them, speak of her love for all creatures.

Title: Lucy and Copper
Author/Illustrator:Mandy Foot
Publisher: Hachette, $16.99
Publication Date: 30 June 2021
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780734420282
For ages: 5+
Type: Picture Book




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Tuesday, 29 June 2021

Review: Growing Pains

Finn is curious about trees and he wonders if they feel the cold. 

He wonders if the tree in his yard would like a scarf. Does it get hungry? Would it like some toast?

When his feet fidget and ache with growing pains, Finn wonders if the tree has growing pains too. 

When the dark seems too dark, he wonders if the tree gets scared.

Growing Pains is a lovely exploration of curiosity and a child’s world from a child’s perspective. It’s filled with wonder and questions and imagination, and I love how far it pulls the reader into Finn’s home and life.

This story is about being a kid, growing up and learning about the world around you. Through Finn’s eyes, it’s filled with the questions kids would think of — filled with the amazing possibilities that may not make sense to anyone else but kids.

Beautiful collage-style mixed media illustrations by Melissa Johns bring whimsy and wonder to the story. They are quirky, fun and detailed, and they perfectly match the story world author Alison McLennan has created.

Title: Growing Pains
Author: Alison McLennan
Illustrator: Melissa Johns
Publisher: EK Books, $24.99
Publication Date: 16 June 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925820522
For ages: 4 - 6
Type: Picture Book





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Announcing: New KBR Team Member: Leigh van der Veen

Our loving KBR family is forever swelling and ebbing, like a winter's tide. 

Today we take much pleasure in welcoming another member into our illustrious reviewing team, Leigh van der Veen. Leigh is an avid lover of Kids' Lit - an absolute pre requisite in our eyes! 

She is also part superhuman, juggling a large family, burgeoning writing career and baking cakes. Welcome, Leigh! Let's get to know you better with your first 12 Curly Questions...

1. Tell us something hardly anyone knows about you.
My gorgeous husband and I sang at the Opera House in the same combined schools choir in the same section when we were in Year 6. I lived in the Southern Highlands and he lived in the Blue Mountains. We didn’t actually meet until years later when we were teaching at the same primary school. I’d love to see photos of the choir and see if we happened to be standing next to each other.

P.S. I can twist my tongue and roll it too. I used to be able to do blackflips into the pool. I wonder if I still can?!

2. What is your nickname?
My family nickname is Possum or ‘Possie/Pos’ for short.

3. What is your greatest fear?
My greatest fear is that I won’t be ‘present’ enough in my life. Being a writer and illustrator help with this though, as I can use all my senses to really notice things.

4. Describe your writing style in ten words.
Layered, meaningful, funny, deep, short and sweet, rhythmic, sound-oriented, vivid

5. Tell us five positive words that describe you as a writer.
Messy, creative, determined, thoughtful, curious

6. What book character would you be, and why?
Bastian from the Neverending Story. Imagine reading a book and becoming a part of the story? So cool!

7. If you could time travel, what year would you go to and why?

Back to 1965 so I could meet my Dutch grandparents before they died. I miss them so much, although I never knew them.

My grandparents inspired me to research my Dutch family history. This research was the basis of my honours thesis and beyond. I finally reconnected with my Dutch family in 2018 in the Netherlands!

8. What would your ten-year-old self say to you now?
‘Come on write that story. You know it’s a good one. Remember when we were ten, we lived above that restaurant built by the convicts and it was haunted by a ghost! Trust yourself. You can do it.

P.S. You could still do a backflip into the pool. You’ve done it like a hundred times.’

9. Who is your greatest influence?
My curious, passionate, giggle-your-head-off children. I have four them. Whoa. Plus my angel baby. She makes five all up.

10. What/who made you start writing?
My Year 5 and 6 teachers got me writing. They are part of the reason I become a primary teacher.

We had creative writing on Mondays at school. It was beautiful, free writing in response to different stimulus e.g. a photo or a newspaper article. When we were finished, we sat in a circle and each person took a turn to read their work. After each person read, others could give feedback.

11. What is your favourite word and why?
My word for this year is ‘connection’. I have connected with so many wonderful creatives and publishers through my reviews for ‘In a Nutshell Book Reviews.

I also love words that make my ears fizz like, ‘bonkers’, ‘wooshka’, ‘clunky’. I always try to slip a few interesting words into my stories.

12. If you could only read one book for the rest of your life, what would it be?
Danny, the Champion of the World by Roald Dahl. It’s such a beautiful story about the love between a parent and child. ‘A stodgy parent is no fun at all. What a child wants and deserves is a parent who is SPARKY.’ (Roald Dahl)

Leigh van der Veen, a primary teacher, creates stories and art in the Blue Mountains. Her writing has featured in Australian and international educational publications for fifteen years. Leigh’s writing has also placed in competitions run by CKT and KBR. Leigh is the founder of In a Nutshell Book Reviews.

Connect with Leigh via her website and Instagram channel @leighvanderveen. Stay tuned for Leigh's first KBR review in a couple of days.

 

 




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Monday, 28 June 2021

Review: The Prison Healer

Review: Pear of Hope

Anna spends a lot of time beneath the pear tree playing, enjoying its wonder, climbing with friends, swinging on branches, embracing the trunk and sitting in its shade.

The wonder disappeared when the clouds rolled in.

The darkness that comes with sickness and the time spent in bed waiting for it to pass, is visually portrayed by the changing of the seasons: 

Anna felt like something was missing… like a tree bare, standing against the cold…

And the sickness passed. Anna is able to go again to the pear tree and embrace it, beneath the branches covered in buds that promise new life.

A butterfly wings past and Anna knows her hair will grow back again in time.

The buds have burst and become blossoms on the pear tree. Anna has company as she lies on a blanket beneath the snow-white flowers that drop their petals on, and around her.

When the pears appear, Anna finds a seed in the fruit she eats. She plants it and waters it every day. As it grows, so does Anna’s hair, and her strength, and her hope.

Wenda Shurety has created a story full of hope and love for children and others in times of severe illness. Her use of the pear tree as a metaphor for the passing of time needed for growth and change, is perfect. This is juxtaposed superbly with the changes in Anna – her sickness, her loss of hair, then its regrowth that symbolises her recovery.

The stunning, full page illustrations by Deb Hudson, transform the text into poetic movement. The immersive visual narrative makes use of the weather, the seasons to imply time as a healer. Her illustrations do justice to the powerful alliteration used to describe nature and Anna’s emotions.

 I loved the dog that was in the story; silent, loyal and supportive. I also loved the addition of the symbolism of the pear added on the last page of the book. It was a beautiful touch to a superb book.

Title: Pear of Hope
Author: Wenda Shurety
Illustrator: Deb Hudson
Publisher: Exisle, $ 24.99
Publication Date:1 May 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925820867
For ages: 5+
Type: Picture Book




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Sunday, 27 June 2021

Review: The Bark Book

Dogs bark. A lot.

They have all kinds of barks. And emotions, just like people.

In The Bark Book, you'll hear the many barks of a family dog. 

Sad barks, perfect stick barks, and please help barks, are just three.

Victoria Mackinlay has made clever and sparse use of language to share a dog's eye experience of the world.

Repetition, adjectives, opposites and other concepts are all part of The Bark Book.

Beth Harvey, an artist and animator (including on Bluey), has brought the dog's experiences to life with a playful and appealing canine friend.

The pictures are simple and humourous. Look out for camouflaged faces in some of the trees, not to mention the mischief the dog gets into.

You will definitely be able to spot your favourite dog in the antics of this dog; whether chasing a skink, relaxing after being fed, or anxiously waiting for a walk.

The Bark Book is a perfect book for dog lovers and beginner readers in particular.

Title: The Bark Book
Author: Victoria Mackinlay
Illustrator: Beth Harvey
Publisher: ABC Books, $ 19.99
Publication Date: July 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780733341397
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book



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Saturday, 26 June 2021

Review: Where the Heart Is

Where the Heart Is is the beautiful true story of Dindim the penguin and Joao, the man who saved him.

On a beach in Brazil a tiny penguin was washed ashore. He was covered in oil and so sick that he couldn’t open his eyes.

Joao took the little penguin in and named him Dindim. He cleaned him and took care of him, and when he tried to take Dindim back to sea, Dindim wouldn’t leave.

Dimdin stayed for a year, but did finally make his way back home to the Patagonia Coast. Until...

...months later, he heads back to Brazil to find his friend Joao.

The story of Dindim and Joao is incredible and truly inspiring. Before this book begins, the details of their entwined lives is revealed to audiences, so going in you understand the power and wonder of this loving tale.

Then the story begins and author Irma Gold pulls you right into the emotion of this true story with a retelling that tugs on heart strings and inspires bravery and caring for others.

The best of times were when Dindim lay in Joao’s lap and sang to him, a lullaby of belonging.

With stunning illustrations by debut illustrator Susannah Crispe, Joao and Dindim come alive. Blues of the ocean, greens of the Brazilian jungle and the soft grey and bold black of Dindim’s coat as he grows are beyond beautiful. Crispe builds emotion in so many layers — in Joao and Dindim’s expressions, in their body language and in the detailed landscapes.

A beautiful story to share at home, and equally as perfect to explore as a class, Where the Heart Is is a powerful and joyful tale that proves friendship and love know no distance.

Title: Where the Heart Is
Author: Irma Gold
Illustrator: Susannah Crispe
Publisher: EK Books, $24.99
Publication Date: 16 June 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925820874
For ages: 4 - 6
Type: Picture Books




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Thursday, 24 June 2021

Review: Life Sucks!

Life Sucks! is Clancy Tucker’s third book in the ‘Kick Ass’ series featuring the bold, intelligent and proactive, Sam Tyler. 

She is a dynamic character; a fighter for lost causes who believes in giving everyone a fair go. Many important issues are addressed through her thoughts and dialogue.

After beating brain cancer, Sam is now a Law student on a scholarship at Folkestone University. She immediately becomes involved in the Student Council, continues her karate at which she excels, and gets a part-time job at Ollie’s Tavern near the campus.

She is eager, willing and able to be the best she can be in every area of her life.

Past hardships have taught her to be compassionate and grateful, and ready to serve where she is needed. Just like her dad who died when she was twelve.

Sam meets the wealthy Mrs Chandler who owns a mansion close to the University. She is the now elderly daughter of the first Governor of Folkestone. Mrs C is impressed by Sam’s honesty and forthright manner. It doesn’t take long before they spark up a warm friendship.

When Sam learns that the University is working in an insidious manner to take Mrs C’s home from her, Sam’s is determined to stop them. Research on the manor uncovers many important facts; about the people on the board as well as the historical and Indigenous significance of the land. This is the first uncovering of a cluster of unknowns.

Then Sam learns that her dad and Ollie from the tavern were mates during the Vietnam War. At last, there is someone who can give her information about her dad’s war life!

There is more than Law for Sam to learn at Folkestone. 

Mrs C has secrets she won’t share with anyone. Sam’s roommate and three friends, who refuse to buckle down and study, are facing expulsion. There is the matter of homelessness that tugs at Sam’s heart. Her ability to show kindness and understanding is her greatest weapon against things that need changing. Then there is the Varsity Karate Tournament. It has never been won by Folkestone. Can she be the first to bring home the trophy?

Challenges are what Sam thrives on. But sometimes, life sucks!

Always with positive and inspiring messages, award-winning Clancy Tucker’s writing is spellbinding. A Human Rights Activist among a string of other things, his work with street kids puts him in a perfect position to write about young people authentically, passionately championing those in need. Issues that are close to his heart always surface in his books, with his leading characters their conduit.

Life Sucks! is another terrific, no-holds-barred look at society’s shortcomings, and the scandalous manipulation and abuse of power that occurs within the political ranks. More so, it explores the secrets people keep, the importance of acts of kindness, and giving everyone a second chance, regardless of their mistakes or shortcomings.

Title: Life Sucks!
Author: Clancy Tucker
Publisher: Morris Publishing, $ 40.00 (includes postage)
Publication Date: 27 April 2021
Format: Paperback
ISBN:
9780994601049
For ages:
14+
Type:
Young Adult Fiction




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Meet The illustrator: Xin Li

Name: Xin Li

Describe your illustration style in ten words or less.
Painterly, colourful, dream like.

What items are an essential part of your creative space?
Pencil and office printer paper. I often draw thumbnails on loose sheets of paper - it feels less serious, and leaves room for experiment and play.

Do you have a favourite artistic medium?
I produce most of my final artwork digitally, mainly due to the tight schedules and flexibility for client work. But I always keep lot of art supplies around me and I use them when I just want to play, or when I hit a creative block. I love Chinese calligraphy brushes, and watercolour. I would like to do a picture book using watercolour paintings one day. 


Name three artists whose work inspires you.
This is a really hard question for me, the answer changes all the time. I took a couple years of painting class when I was a teenager. Back then I was very into impressionism. It was when I read Neil Gaiman´s Sandman in my early 20s that I realised that art can do more than hanging on the wall. I think Scott Mccould´s book  Understanding Comics had a lot of impact on me as a storyteller.
 
In terms of picture books, my favourite artist would be Shaun Tan. For me, his artwork feels like postcards from a parallel universe, with secret messages in them. If only I look harder, I will discover something profound.

   
Which artistic period would you most like to visit and why?
It would be the impressionist era - late 19th century and early 20th century of  Paris. Impressionism was my first love crush with art.


 Who or what inspired you to become an illustrator?
I tried to get into the fine art program after high school. But I did not get in because I could not draw well enough. So I majored in graphic design and worked as a designer more than a decade. I never considered I have the talent to draw and paint. After becoming a mom, I started looking for picture books so I can read with my daughter. I see all kinds of art styles, subject matter, and ways of telling stories in the picture book world. I was very inspired. When I read enough of picture books, I could not help to start drawing and painting again, wanting to write and illustrate my own picture books.

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 a temporary setup. We just moved out of the capital city partly due to the pandemic. Currently, we are renting an apartment and looking for a house to buy at the same time.
 
I normally paint on a 13 inch Cintiq. I have a A3 printer, mainly for printing out my illustration and see it in real size physically. More than half of the drawings hanging on my studio wall currently are by my 3 years old daughter - she loves decorating my studio. I also print out illustrations I love in postcard size and hanging next to my desk for inspiration.



What is your favourite part of the illustration process?
I love the beginning, the phase which all possibilities are still open.


What advice would you give to an aspiring illustrator?
Spend as much time as you can to learn the craft, and learn about yourself. Every piece of artwork you are making is essentially an experiment.

Xin Li was born and raised in China and currently lives in Norway with her husband and their daughter. After years working as an interaction designer in the software design industry, she found her true passion in visual storytelling. Xin loves quiet magic, surrealism, and stories that evoke imagination.

For more information, please visit Xin's website or follow her on instagram.





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Wednesday, 23 June 2021

Review: Fairy!

Best friends Lena and Luka are back, and this time life has changed a little for Luka.

She has a new baby sister!

Luka loves Daisy, but baby sisters do bring challenges.

When Lena sleeps over and baby Daisy won’t stop crying, they try everything to calm her down. 

But everyone knows there’s only one thing that can help. 

A fairy!

In a whisp of starshine, a fairy flutters through the window to help. There is much calamity, bunnies turned to frogs and sticky crumbs on the pillow, but fairies know just what to do to help babies get to sleep.

Fairy! Is the fourth book in this gorgeous picture book series from Maggie Hutchings and Cheryl Orsini, following Unicorn!, Mermaid! and Dragon!

These books are so much fun. They capture what it’s like to be a kid and believe in the fantasy worlds you find through hidden doorways at the bottom of the garden. They explore all your favourite creatures and invite you into a reality where imagination makes them real.

Orsini’s illustrations are bright and bold. Every book in this series is filled with colour and glorious details to explore. They're funky and oh so delightful.

For the fans of the fantastical, Fairy!, and all the books in this series, will inspire wonder, curiosity and eagerness to step into the unknown.

Title: Fairy!
Author: Maggie Hutchings
Illustrator: Cheryl Orsini
Publisher: Affirm Press, $19.99
Publication Date: 25 May 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781922400772
For ages: 4 -6 
Type: Picture Book





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Tuesday, 22 June 2021

12 Curly Questions with author/illustrator Heidi Cooper Smith

1. Tell us something hardly anyone knows about you.
I can throw a pot (on a pottery wheel, not across a room) in under 30 seconds with my eyes closed.

2. What is your nickname?
I swear, I don’t have one – isn’t that incredibly sad?

3. What is your greatest fear?
Accidentally forgetting to wear clothes... I assume so anyway, as I’ve had that nightmare for as long as I can remember!

4. Describe your writing style in 10 words.
Whimsical, succinct and verb-heavy, with a tendency toward the absurd.

5. Tell us five positive words that describe you as a writer.
Passionate, sporadic, image-driven, changeable and hopeful.

6. What book character would you be, and why?
These questions really are curly! I’d quite like to be Alexander in Too Many Ducks to be honest. I’d love for my biggest problem in life to be a big flock of friendly ducks following me around.

7. If you could time travel, what year would you go to and why?
Around 2030, to see if I can lay my hands on an enormous iPad to bring back for my illustration work. While I’m there I’ll check to see if my kids survive their teenage years.

8. What would your 10-year-old self say to you now?
Why on earth did you wait 25 years to pursue your dream as a picture book creator?

9. Who is your greatest influence?
My author-illustrator friend, Suzy Houghton. We chat every day and send each other stories and sketches/illustrations for feedback. Having someone like that in this industry, who you trust and admire, is an absolute godsend.

10. What/who made you start writing?
When I started creating illustrations for Tania’s 52 Week Illustration Challenge, there was usually a story behind each one. I felt compelled to go ahead and tell those stories!

11. What is your favourite word and why?
Epiphany – it’s just such a lovely concept.

12. If you could only read one book for the rest of your life, what would it be?
If I had to pick one that I’ve read more recently, I’d say either Small Spaces or Deep Water by Sarah Epstein. She’s utterly brilliant and I can’t get enough of her writing.

In 2014, Heidi Cooper Smith found herself with three kids under four and joined an online illustration challenge during naptime to stay sane. Six months later, she was offered her first contract and began writing shortly after. Her illustrations incorporate watercolour and digital techniques and she writes in both prose and rhyme. For more information, see www.heidicoopersmith.com.




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Review: The Art of Words

Many of us as children at school, were given a list of letters or a big word, and told to see how many new words we could make from them. What fun that was, and we learnt so much!

If you have never considered how spectacular the alphabet can be, thought-provoking proof lies between the covers of this book.

Clever, colourful, and creative, with full page illustrations, Robert Vescio’s The Art of Words is highly imaginative, entertaining, and a unique early learning tool.

Hats off to Joanna Bartel, who makes art out of words with her stunning illustrations.

Letters! Everywhere you look, there they are! Communication depends on the alphabet. Put letters anywhere. They’ll always behave the way you want them to.

Opposites and basic punctuation are explored. They boast about how the use of a comma, full stop, exclamation or question mark, has the power to change the role of a word.

Words! What more valuable thing can you own? They come in different sizes and can be joined to others to change their meaning.

They can be read back-to-front and still make sense, cut in the middle, added to, or reformed. You can take them anywhere with you. They are very social.

They are free to collect. Kids can put as many letters on a line as they want and test themselves to see what they can create with their chosen ones. Games are not only played on electronic devices, or with toys. Try something new with letters and words.

At this moment, I am stringing letters together to create words for this review. Ask yourself, what is the greatest tool used for learning and literacy?

This will make a wonderful and valuable addition to all classrooms, homes and libraries and preschools. Highly visual, The Art of Words is an adventure through learning and expression.

 Title: The Art of Words
Author: Robert Vescio
Illustrator: Joanna Bartel
Publisher: Exisle, $ 24.99
Publication Date: 5 April 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925820843
For ages: 5+
Type: Picture Book




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Monday, 21 June 2021

Review: How To Hug A Cactus

Winner: Wonderful Shoes

 

Our lucky winner is... Liz Dorrington, WA

Congratulations!

You have won a copy of the gorgeous picture book, Wonderful Shoes, by Emma Bowd and Tania McCartney, and published by Windy Hollow Books.

Enjoy!

Thank you to ALL who entered.







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Sunday, 20 June 2021

Review: The Woolly Bear Caterpillar

How much do you know about caterpillars? Can you name some different types?

The Woolly Bear Caterpillar is a wonderful introduction to four particular caterpillars and their flying counterparts.

The woolly bear caterpillar is the star of this story, and she's fluffy-looking and extremely fond of dandelion leaves. When they disappear from the garden where she lives, she embarks on a journey to find them.

As she explores, the woolly bear caterpillar encounters the sycamore caterpillar, vapourer caterpillar, and puss moth caterpillar.

The other caterpillars are proud of their unique features, and chant at woolly bear caterpillar, teasing her about how special they are, and how plain, dull, and boring she is.

It's only after the caterpillars emerge from their cocoons as moths, that they realise the woolly bear caterpillar has become a beautiful, colourful, perfect garden tiger moth.

The Woolly Bear Caterpillar is a brand new story from Julia Donaldson, bestselling author of The Gruffalo. It really is an insect variation of the fairy tale, The Ugly Duckling, and encourages acceptance of everyone.

The illustrations by Yuval Zommer take you into the wild world of the garden and its tiny inhabitants. Just like the beautiful garden tiger moth, the illustrations are vibrant and offer a magnified view of their world.

In case you didn't already have enough reason to read The Woolly Bear Caterpillar, it comes with a small, companion non-fiction book called All About Caterpillars and Moths by wildlife expert, Michael Blencowe. You will learn all about the life cycle of a moth, the different body parts of a caterpillar and a moth, and a raft of facts and figures.

The Woolly Bear Caterpillar is a brilliant combination of enjoyable and educational storytelling. Find a copy and start exploring!

Title: The Woolly Bear Caterpillar
Author: Julia Donaldson
Illustrator: Yuval Zommer
Publisher: Macmillian Children's Books, $ 26.99
Publication Date: June 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781529012187
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book



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Saturday, 19 June 2021

Review: Grumble Boats

Emma is spending the afternoon with her grandmother, but she’s very grumbly. She didn’t get to go to the pirate party with her brother and she feels left out.

Grandma takes Emma to the beach, but her grumbles won’t go away. 

Luckily, Grandma has a really great idea to make Emma feel better.

Grandma sits in the sand and draws a picture of her own grumbles. She shows Emma how to take a grumbly picture and fold it into a boat. They take their boats out to the water, and on the count of three.

One, two, three... 

They release them into the waves and say goodbye to their grumbles forever.

Grumble Boats is a beautiful picture book about learning to let go of those cranky feelings that sometimes consume us. At the back of the book, you’ll find instructions on how to fold your own grumble boat, so you can have a go at making your own when you’re feeling a little grumbly yourself.

With stunning illustrations by Tasmin Ainslie, filled with beautiful soft colours and lines, you’ll fall into the pages and Emma’s world. The details are delicious in this picture book. It’s a book to explore as you turn the pages. You’ll miss such beautiful things if you move too fast.

Susannah McFarlane brings us family and friendship in this lovely story. I love how it explores the big feelings we sometimes feel and can’t squash, and I love how it explores the special relationship between a grandparent and child. Grandmas are so wise, and this book really celebrates how much of a best friend our grandmas can be.

Title: Grumble Boats
Author: Susannah McFarlane
Illustrator: Tamsin Ainslie
Publisher: Affirm Press, $24.99
Publication Date: 25 May 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925712919
For ages: 4 - 6
Type: Picture Book





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Friday, 18 June 2021

Review: Cardboard Cowboys

Twelve year old Lenny is the most unpopular boy at school; friendless and alone. Because of his weight, he is the target of all fat jokes and all unkindness.

But there is more to Lenny than his appearance, although he hasn’t discovered what yet.

His brother Frankie, whom Lenny loves more than anything, is somewhere unknown at this stage (to Lenny and to the reader). His parents won’t allow him to communicate with Frankie. 

Something has occurred which appears to be Lenny’s fault, for his parents have become distant toward him, and toward each other.

This sets up a mysterious unknown which we long to discover.



Lenny meets Bruce, a homeless enigma, on a seat in an isolated place in natural surroundings. A place where they both go to find peace and get away from things. A friendship is born from an altercation about Lenny’s littering.

Lenny, pushed to the edge by the constant bullying he experiences, starts missing classes. He intercepts a letter to his parents from the school, which requests a meeting to discuss his absences. Afraid to tell his father, he asks Bruce to pretend to be his dad at the school meeting.

Things work out perfectly. Bruce brings Lenny’s bullying to the school’s attention and this forces a shift in Lenny’s life. Lenny promises Bruce to attend every future class.

Through a freaky incident, Lenny learns where Frankie is.

A week of school break is imminent. Luckily, Dad is away on another long haul. Mum is lost in her world. Lenny needs Bruce’s help to get to Frankie. He is determined to uncover the truth and put his agony of unknowing to rest.

But, who is Bruce really? Why all the pretence of being a poor homeless person when he’s not?

Lenny is a child; Bruce an older man. It’s a long trip to the north of Scotland and mum thinks he’s staying with a friend for a few days.

This is a beautifully set up, suspenseful, and deeply moving story about friendship, the secrets we hold and why, and of life, with all the untrodden paths it leads us down. How we find our way out depends on the strength within us.

Title: Cardboard Cowboys
Author: Brian Conaghan
Publisher: Bloomsbury, $15.99
Publication Date: 5 May 2021
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781526628602
For ages: 9+
Type: Junior Fiction



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Thursday, 17 June 2021

Review: Maria's Island

With its full colour illustrations and detail in the chapter beginnings and ending, this book is a joy to look at.

Gill Smith’s illustrations depict the rich landscape of the village of Plaka in Crete, where this novel is set.

This tells the story of the young girl, Maria, who has a carefree life in her 1940’s fishing village. 

Her mother is the schoolteacher and her father a fisherman.

But an island off the coast of her village is a dark place, a place surrounded by mystery and fear.

It is the place where people infected by Hanson’s disease – then known as leprosy, are sent to spend the rest of their lives isolated from the rest of society.

The village children are equally fascinated and scared.

When tragedy strikes Maria’s family, she learns to dig deep and to draw upon reserves of empathy, courage and resilience to battle stigma and to face up to a huge challenge.

This is the children’s version of the bestselling book by Victoria Hislop, The Island.

Whilst the subject matter appears quite confronting, Hislop handles it with sensitivity and humour. It was a compelling read. And now I want to go and find the original version for adults.

Title: Maria's Island
Author: Victoria Hislop
Illustrator: Gill Smith
Publisher: Walker Books, $24.99
Publication Date: 2 June, 2021
Format: Hardback
ISBN: 9781406399073
For ages: 8-12
Type: Middle Grade Fiction



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Wednesday, 16 June 2021

Guest Post: Inga Simpson

Award-winning writer Inga Simpson, is the author of four novels and her memoir, Understory. Her latest piece of work, The Last Woman in the World is due for release later this year. 

Her first book for children, The Book of Australian Trees, is now available.Inga gives us a fascinating insight into her relationship with trees and nature, her favourite tree being the Ironbark.

Q. The Book of Australian Trees is the first book for children on this subject. How did the book come about?
My eco-memoir, Understory, is structured like a forest, with each chapter based around an individual tree species. A few people suggested a version for children, including my publisher, and when I found that there were no children’s books on the shelves looking exclusively at Australian trees, I felt obliged to remedy that!

Q. You are a Nature Writer. Can you define that phrase for us?
The traditional definition of nature writing is narrative nonfiction focusing on the natural world. It includes elements of natural history, but is more imaginative writing than say a field guide or scientific account. The narrative is based in the author’s relationship with the natural world and, more broadly, the human relationship with nature. 


Nature writing is inherently environmental – eco-centric rather than anthropocentric – in that it shows the natural world as central, rather than just a resource, and humans very much a part of nature, in a connected set of ecosystems. Thoreau’s Walden, Annie Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, Helen MacDonald’s H is for Hawk and Mark Tredinnick’s, The Blue Plateau are just some examples.


But I was labelled a nature writer before I published any nonfiction, because my novels focus so much on trees and birds, and characters living closely with Australian landscapes. Tim Winton’s fiction could be argued to be nature writing, too, I think. And landscape poetry, and particularly our First Nations poetry and stories. It is only really in western cultures that we see humans and nature as separate entities.


Q. When did your love for nature begin and from what did it stem?

I grew up on a farm, so the impacts of nature were central to all aspects of our existence. I helped my father with chores on the property and he taught me a lot about birds and trees and animals. He also taught me photography, which helped me focus on the details from a young age. I’m particularly sensitive to noise and movement, which has equipped me well for observing the natural world.

Q. Your relationship with trees is strong and deep. This is obvious in every carefully selected word you use about them. What is it about trees that enrich your life?
I have always gravitated towards trees. It’s human instinct I think, a genetic memory, to return to the forest. As a child, there was a wilder, treed part of the property that I liked to walk and camp in, which very much shaped my view of the world. Trees live so much longer than us, and so much of their existence is underground and inside their trunks, out of sight. There’s a wisdom there, a slower pace and broader perspective. Being around trees, particularly immersed in a forest, has always calmed me.

Trees are also how I read a landscape. They tell me what sort of country I’m in – the character of the soil, climate, geology.

As a child my imagination was fired up by Tolkien’s ents in The Lord of the Rings; I saw trees as sentient beings. And as an adult, this has been backed up by science. We now know that trees communicate with each other and perhaps even recognise individual humans. Maybe one day, we’ll be able to hear their stories.


Q. How much research was needed for your book, as there is a great amount of information included: history, height and width, their spread, roots, type of bark, flowers?

I was able to use a lot of the research I had done for Understory, and I chose trees that I know well, which helps me describe them. But I also have a considerable reference library at my fingertips, for some of the more technical information.

Q. Do you spend a lot of time in natural surroundings? If so, how does this solitude contribute to your work?
I lived inside a forest for ten years, in the Sunshine Coast hinterland. And I still live very much surrounded by trees, and right by the sea. I also walk alone a lot, and camp a little. I need the solitude, and immersion in the natural world to nurture myself and my creativity. All of my inspiration comes from the natural world – or the space between the landscapes around me and my imagination.


Q. The superb illustrations by Alicia Rogerson complement your prose perfectly. Did you have an input in who the illustrator would be for your book?

My publisher suggested Alicia. I wanted someone who could capture the botanical detail as well as the more imaginative concepts, and I think Alicia is a perfect match. I love her responses to my words.

Q. The Book of Australian Trees is an extraordinary and valuable resource for children. Have you considered exploring another side of nature as follow-up book for children?
Well, I’m a bird-lover, too. But at the moment I’m focused on trees. There are so many more interesting species that I would like to write about.

Thanks for the opportunity! 😊 https://www.ingasimpson.com.au/










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Tuesday, 15 June 2021

Review: Daisy and Bear and the Very Ordinary Day

There are no limits to a child’s imagination. This picture book, with illustrations as delicate as fragile glass, shines a light on how expansive and powerful thoughts can be; how the imagination can transform the ordinary into extraordinary.

Siblings Daisy and Bear have ordinary days. It’s when their play becomes reality, everything changes. Their reflections confirm they are who they imagine to be.

One day they are in Paris, enjoying bagels and cake with friends outdoors on a rug. They return home flying with birds through fluffy clouds.

Another ordinary day sees them on an African safari, beneath trees, watching tigers lap at a pool of water.

They can be singers on a stage, with adoring fans surrounding them. Or dragon slayers with swinging swords on castle towers.

If they choose, Daisy and Bear can become artists preparing work for a museum display, or they can fly to the Moon to catch a star.

Another ordinary day is transformed when they become master chefs creating splendid tiered cakes, or divers, deep beneath the ocean.

There is one thing they love the best. It is at the end of the day, when sleep sweeps them into dreams, and they go on the best adventure of all.

Stunning fine line pencil Illustrations by Bianca Pozzi decorate the pages with Daisy and Bear’s imaginative excursions. At the end of the book, she shares her creative journal and her storyboard, so children can experience the making of a picture book.

Haylee Hackenberg shares private thoughts that gave birth to this beautiful book.

As in most, if not all Red Paper Kite books, there is a double spread image to be copied to colour. Here it is of Daisy and Bear with their parents. Exquisite end pages in pencil show the illustrator’s preparations of the characters.

Title: Daisy and Bear and the Very Ordinary Day
Author: Haylee Hackenberg
Illustrator: Bianca Pozzi
Publisher: Red Paper Kite, $25.00
Publication Date: 9 May 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780648674290
For ages: 5+
Type: Picture Book




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12 Curly Questions with author Sharna Carter

1. Tell us something hardly anyone knows about you.
When I was a kid, socks drove me crazy! I had to wear plain, white, cotton, long socks (pulled right up) and even then the main seam near the toes would bug me! So I did the only thing I could do... I would cut the dangly seam ends off, which would leave me with two tiny holes in my socks! Yep, I had sock issues. OK, I still do.

2. What is your nickname?
I’m mostly called Sharna, but I have a few loved ones who call me me Sharns or Narn. As a small child everyone called me Sharna Banana.

3. What is your greatest fear?
If you saw my reaction to a dwarf skink that made its way into my kitchen the other day, you would think it was that! I do, however, have a serious fear of flipping down the visor while I’m driving. You can blame a pesky spider for that one.

4. Describe your writing style in 10 words.
Mostly funny, quirky, rhythmical, visual, genuine, dramatic, incomplete and overthought.

5. Tell us five positive words that describe you as a writer.
Random, fun, community-minded, optimistic, persistent

6. What book character would you be, and why?
The White Rabbit, because I’m an anxious person and often running late!

7. If you could time travel, what year would you go to and why?
I wouldn’t go that far back, just to 2014 so I could meet my babies all over again and soak them up.

8. What would your 10-year-old self say to you now?
‘Umm, excuse me? Why aren’t you starring on Neighbours?’

9. Who is your greatest influence?
Aaron Blabey and Julia Donaldson. They are the masters of rhyming stories.

10. What/who made you start writing?
When I had my first child I read to him every day and developed a pretty massive love for picture books. Then I started having ideas for stories of my own and my writing career grew from there.

11. What is your favourite word and why?
Magic. It sparks curiosity, creativity and joy.

12. If you could only read one book for the rest of your life, what would it be?
On Writing by Stephen King, because there’s always something new to learn. 

Sharna Carter is a children’s author with a background in performing arts and teaching. Watermelon Pip is her debut picture book and she has had a number of stories published in anthologies. Sharna enjoys conducting author visits and is passionate about early literacy. Her stories encourage laughter, reflection and self-belief. For more information, see www.sharnacarter.com.

 



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Monday, 14 June 2021

Guest Post: Amanda Mandie - Part Two

Welcome to Part Two, of our inspiring interview with Amanda Mandie, Executive Director at Koala Kids Foundation.

Every single thing we do is to deliver happiness and provide happy moments for these children. If they are happy, you know the parents are happy. This happiness flows on to health care workers because their job is difficult as it is, but can be made so much easier by working with happy children.*

We decided a couple of years ago, not long after we took on our mantra, that the only photographs we would promote or post, would be of happy children. Happy children may have bald heads or nasogastric tubes and big black rings under their eyes. But we see the happiness; the wellness, in a child. 

We avoid the sickness so that we can deliver happiness, because as volunteers, we can’t get caught up in their sadness; in their sickness. The parents worry enough, suffering more anxiety than we can imagine.

We’re really proud of how we’ve grown and matured. We remained under the auspices of Koala Foundation. When Koala merged with another cancer paediatric support organisation called Children’s Cancer Foundation, we became a program of CCF until July 2015, when we sought independence and became Koala Kids Foundation and launched our fabulous new logo.

Our mantra has been proven right. We’ve got the most wonderful testimonials from staff, children, and young people, as we also support teenagers and young adults from fifteen to twenty-five.


During that growth period, Melbourne and Australian authors and illustrators, gave their time and would come into the Royal Children’s Hospital’s and Monash Children’s Hospital’s Children's Cancer Centres and read to the children, then engage them in activities around the theme of their book.

Sometimes it was poetry, or illustration; sometimes it was graffiti. There was always a story or something that went with it.

One very special and long-time volunteer is Glenda Strong. Glenda has a rich background career in education with a passion for literacy. She used to be the head of the Royal Children’s Hospital’s Education Institute. It was that collaboration that started the story-telling and we want to bring story-telling time back.

At Monash Children’s we have reactivated our volunteer program on a Monday morning. During school holidays, we’d love to be able to provide the sessions we do, to the children at home via Zoom.


This year, the children have gone back to school, but sadly, so many with cancer are not allowed to attend school, as they’re immune-compromised. You can’t risk the child getting something as simple as a cold. Currently, the most common cancer amongst children is called Acute Lymphoblastic Lymphoma and there’s about a 98.6% survival rate in comparison to zero in 1960.

They’re still struggling with brain tumours and rare cancers. There are about 800 children diagnosed in Australia each year with cancer who remain in treatment. Some of them are lucky to need only six months’ treatment. The other extreme is that they are treated for life, and tragically, their lives are cut short.

Our main aim is to provide LIVE interactive connections with kids and kids’ lit creators, either via Zoom or in person.


We feel very fortunate to have the opportunity to potentially connect with writers through our long-term relationships with some of Australia’s leading children’s publishers. Through our contacts there, we hope to establish some, and re-establish other relationships. Often, authors are able to donate books, other times, not. Perhaps they can donate an appearance.

We would be delighted if each month, one author can agree to donate their time to provide us with a Zoom activity; a Zoom story-telling and activity with children, and/or a pre-recorded story-telling time with their book. They can then suggest activities that children can do and maybe donate one or two live appearances to actually read with the children in the hospitals.

I’d love them to do a Zoom; to film a pre-record quite separate, exclusively for our Koala Kids children with cancer; as part of our happy base, where families with children with cancer safely store their information, so we can provide them with regular activities and offer them therapeutic items. Or in the hospitals under our care, so that we can post that on our website, available exclusively for our families, not to the public.


The thing that we’re looking forward to is to providing new books, toys and games to replace those that have been thrown out in the hospitals. We’re waiting for such time as they can start sharing things again, when we can provide all new little libraries to all the paediatric units that we support.

*We also work very closely and support: Ronald McDonald Houses, where families of children with cancer and other acute illnesses, come to stay from regional Victoria and interstate, and hospitals in regional Victoria and Tasmania.

In all, we support twenty-six units, paediatric units and adult hospitals because the fifteen-to-twenty-five-year-olds are included as well.

website https://www.koalakids.org.au/

Social media handles are:

@koalakids

#koakakids

#webelievehappyhelps

 

 








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Review: Milo's Little Secret

Awww, with those big eyes and furry belly, who could possibly resist a cutie like Milo?

Not his neighbourhood humans, that's for sure.

Everybody in town, it seems, has a soft spot and a bowl full of yummies for that little rascal.

Not that Milo objects, of course!

But his scheme to con fine food and other luxuries from the besotted fan club lead to an unexpected complication...And it's up to the neighbours to solve this conundrum by working together.

Told in rhyme, and illustrated with beautifully detailed and colourful pictures, this is a funny story about a sneaky little puss.

Everybody has a tale about a cat living multiple lives and charming food out of people. I once had a cat who could convince every human who crossed her path that she was about to drop dead of hunger, despite her ample waist line. And yet nobody resented her!

As long as there are gullible humans, this story will be totally relatable.

This is author Rebecca Ralfe's first picture book. Although Gabriella Petruso is a new illustrator, she has four picture books due in 2021, including the recently released Walking Your Human (see review here).

Both are clearly talents to watch out for!

Title: Milo's Little Secret
Author: Rebecca Ralfe
Illustrator: Gabriella Petruso.
Publisher: Larrikin House, $24.99
Publication Date: June, 2021
Format: Hardback
ISBN: 9781922503145
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book




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Sunday, 13 June 2021

Review: A Pair of Pears and an Orange

There's a saying that two's company, but three's a crowd.

In A Pair of Pears and an Orange, however, although three may seem a crowd, there's a positive message about making friends and learning to work and play together.

Big Pear and Little Pear love spending time together. 

They play table tennis, have fun on playground equipment, and ride a tandem bike.

So when someone new shows up, and they are asked to make room for a third, Big Pear isn't as certain as Little Pear about welcoming a new friend.

Orange's presence changes things. The games the two pears used to play together don't work as well with three of them, and Orange doesn't seem aware of the impact he's made.

When Big Pear decides to join new friends, a group of three peas, she doesn't really fit in and realises that she's missing both Little Pear and Orange.

Returning to her friends, Big Pear is able to bring with her some new games they can all enjoy.

Anna McGregor has both written and illustrated A Pair of Pears and an Orange. It's a unusually humourous tale of the dynamics of friendship, sharing, and problem solving.

Depicting the characters as different fruits, will not deter children from identifying what's going on, and adds a quirky element to the story, both in the pictures and the playful text.

Download an activity sheet for A Pair of Pears and an Orange from Anna McGregor's website.

Title: A Pair of Pears and an Orange
Author/Illustrator: Anna McGregor
Publisher: Scribble, $ 24.99
Publication Date: June 2021
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781922310750
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book



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Friday, 11 June 2021

Guest Post: Amanda Mandie - Part One

Awarded an OAM 2021, for service to the community through charitable organisations, Amanda Mandie is the Executive Director at Koala Kids Foundation, whose mantra is we believe happy helps. 

Their Vision, that Koala Kids will touch every child and young person undergoing cancer treatment in Victoria.

Their Mission is: Our volunteers provide small things that make a difference to children and young people during cancer treatment, their families and their healthcare team, and their Purpose, is to bring happy moments to children and young people during cancer treatment, their families and their healthcare team.

Koala Kids was founded by our then thirteen-year-old son Nick in 2005 when he was preparing for his Bar Mitzvah. He studied very hard to perform in the synagogue in front of many family and friends and was given a lot of gifts for his efforts, some in cash, which he decided to donate to a cause in support of adolescents who were less fortunate than himself.


Whilst looking around for a suitable avenue to participate in, we realised our daughter was in class with a little boy undergoing final stages of leukaemia treatment. His father – Tony, had launched the Million Dollar Lunch on behalf of the Koala Foundation, a group of parents of children undergoing cancer treatment.

There was some sort of opportunity within Tony’s organisation, which is integrally involved with the children’s cancer centres at the Royal Children’s Hospital and Monash Children’s Hospital.

How could young teenagers get involved in making days or school holidays brighter for siblings and children with cancer? We were told it was a great idea, but we couldn’t do it outside of hospital.

Insurance and psychosocial issues when explained to me, were obstacles. How could healthy kids from relatively normal lives, take other kids to the football or movies or hang out with them; kids whose lives have been turned inside-out by their siblings’ cancer diagnosis.

I recognised that there were already a lot of organisations filling the space, like Camp Quality, Red Kite, Challenge, Make a Wish, and Starlight, etc.


We decided to start a holiday program in the hospital. We couldn’t involve Nick and his friends because again, they had to be fifteen to be volunteers, but a group of girlfriends and I, a couple who were very arty, started doing art sessions in the Children’s Cancer Centre.

We started with school holiday sessions; creative art and story-telling, etc, for children, who with their siblings, were hanging around because they were all waiting for appointments. This went really well.

The art therapist mentioned that glue sticks, coloured pencils, sharpeners, markers, colouring books, and coloured paper were needed. Five boxes were donated from the various Officeworks stores. I took one in each week.


I had an orange basket. I would go in with it full of supplies for the art therapist and samples that I’d gathered. I became princess of the Two Dollar Shop. As a mother of young children, I knew what things would be good for children in hospital. That took off.

I continued to collaborate with the various therapists involved in the sessions for art, music, and play with the cancer kids, and assist them by procuring craft activities and other incentives that could be used to motivate or occupy the children having treatment.
That’s how we grew this gorgeous little project called Koala Kids. On my own at the start, with Nick in the background, we quickly amassed what we called a core group of girlfriends and we would meet once a month.

We’d say, ‘Mother’s Day is coming up. What can we buy inexpensively?’ We were using Nicholas’s money and by this stage, my parents had their fiftieth wedding anniversary, and asked all their friends to make a donation to Nick’s program.

For a long time, we ran it on the smell of an oily rag and got a lot of things donated. There were little things for children to do or make while they were in hospital, to give mother or a special friend for Mother’s Day.


Not long after that, the kids wanted to make cards to go with the gifts, so we put everything into an orange bag. This orange thing took off. The kids would then turn these orange bags into their cards.

There are some gorgeous stories about mothers who found the scrunched up orange bag shoved at the back of the cupboard hidden from them, only to be forgotten and found three weeks after Mother’s Day.

At that stage, we were dealing only with the Royal Children’s Hospital, where 220 children were diagnosed with cancer each year. On average, these kids remained in treatment for around three years. There were 750 children in treatment at any one time either in the ward, or as outpatients.


We then spread our wings and went to Monash Children’s Cancer Centre. A couple of years later, we established a relationship with Peter McCallum Cancer Centre where children go for their radiotherapy.

Eventually, our super hero program evolved. We decided that the children having radiation were super heroes. We registered Koala Kids Super Heroes. We believe happy helps became our mantra. From then on, children could nominate their favourite super hero. We’d source the costume and its accessories, wrap it all in white paper, tie it with an orange ribbon and give it to the children. At the end of their treatment, they would receive a custom designed Koala Kids Super hero certificate.

* Please join us on Monday 14 June at 5pm for the second half of our inspiring interview with Amanda Mandie on the Koala Kids Foundation and her special wish that includes our authors and illustrators.







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