Tuesday, 8 December 2020

Review: Aster's Good Right Things

Eleven year-old Aster is different. She goes to a school for gifted children, something she denies being. She is small, unattractive in people’s eyes, and tends to become invisible in others’ presence. Aster believes her insignificance to be the reason her mother left.

Dad and Aunt Noni are the only people who believe she is special and understand the monsters of anxiety, insecurity and self-doubt that plague her.

She always accommodates others in her life, never asking for what she really wants because it’s the good, right thing to do. This mantra dictates her daily rituals, which must include one good, right thing for someone or else her world will shatter, a situation with which Aster is intimately acquainted. 

A brown notebook, always with her, keeps record of all the things Aster does, wants and never gets.

School is a struggle each day due to the venomous Indigo, who projects her own internal anger, hatred and frustration onto Aster who refuses to retaliate.

It is at the bottom of the schoolground one solitary lunchtime, that Aster finds the rabbit and meets Xavier, a boy who wars against the black dog the controls his life. Different and home schooled, he enters her life bringing hope and friendship with him.

This new beginning heralds more unexpected and miraculous shifts in Aster’s life.

Through intriguing and expressive thoughts, Aster opens up her internal world to us. We come away humbled by the lessons learnt, but also bruised by the reminder that degrading words to children by children, can be as destructive a force as words by adults to children, if not more.

This emotive and person-centred novel has many layers. It addresses family breakups and its effect on children, the magic influence of friendship, that being different shouldn’t be a stigma, and the life-saving value of books.

Title: Aster's Good Right Things
Author: Kate Gordon
Publisher: Rivited Press, $ 14.99
Publication Date: 1 November 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780648492573
For ages: 11+
Type: Junior Fiction




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Review: Fearless Footsteps

In this crossover publication, thirty-six writers leave their footprints in true travel stories that capture the spirit of adventure. These are not travel guides in any form, but strong narratives that inspire and expose each story’s sense of daring verses independence, an overcoming of fear and challenge that travel has initiated, and the euphoria in executing a challenge.

The title of the book, Fearless Footsteps, perfectly portrays the journeys depicted in the collection. For me to choose a standout is impossible for every story is outstanding in content, presentation and tone.

The stories incorporate travel from and to, around the globe. They begin with helping boat people come ashore in Greece, to continue with hiking in North Wales to extinguish depression, sisters travelling through Europe – their fears and experiences,

as bartender in the Amsterdam underground culture, adventures on horseback or on foot, down river, and descending into a crater after an uphill trek.

These are merely examples of the variety contained in this brilliant collection that educates through the narrative without ever being didactic, informing about countries, traditions, customs, approaches to travellers, and difficulties and joys experienced.

Intrepid Times has succeeded in producing another spectacular compilation of personal experiences about travel. Readers will be impressed with the quality of the work which will send them to their computers to seek out their own next travel adventure.

Title: Fearless Footsteps
Author: Various
 Publisher: Exisle, $29.99
Publication Date: 23 November 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781925820577
For ages: 16+
Type: Young Adult Non Fiction



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Guest Post: Skye Huges on How We're All In This Together

Monday, 7 December 2020

12 Curly Questions with author Sharon Davey

1.Tell us something hardly anyone knows about you.
I once dressed up as a clown for a week (for charity).

2. What is your nickname?
My family are very big on calling people things other than their name. My favourites are pickle, sunshine, blueberry and duckling.

3. What is your greatest fear?

Ladders. I really don’t like being up high on something wobbly.

4. Describe your writing style in 10 words.

Big characters, small sentences. Always leave people wanting more…

5. Tell us five positive words that describe you as a writer.
Lively, jolly, inquisitive, creative, tenacious.

6. What book character would you be, and why?
That’s a tough question. I sometimes think the Mad Hatter for all thing crazy things I make and do.

7. If you could time travel, what year would you go to and why?
2120, because I am super nosey, and I want to know how it all works out.

8. What would your 10-year-old self say to you now?
Can you do a cartwheel yet? (No, no I can’t)

9. Who is your greatest influence?
Quentin Blake. I love him. The freedom and expression in his work wriggles off the page and I admire him so much.

10. What/who made you start writing?
My mum is a master storyteller. Even if she’s simply telling me about a trip to the post office there will be drama and tension, funny characters and a brilliant ending. I listened to so many stories before I started writing my own.

11. What is your favourite word and why?
Discombobulate. Which means to be confused. I am discombobulated most of the time.

12. If you could only read one book for the rest of your life, what would it be? 
The Giraffe, the Pelly and Me by Roald Dahl. It’s such a gorgeous story. Full of quotable positivity.

Sharon Davey is a children’s illustrator based in Surrey, England. She loves to draw grumpy kids and collecting plastic dinosaurs. Sharon has worked for a variety of clients, including David Fickling Books, Oxford University Press and Bloomsbury. Bears Don’t Wear Shoes is Sharon’s first ever author/illustrated book. For more information, see www.sharondaveyillustration.com.




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Review: Santa Jaws

Santa Jaws is a fishy, festive, rhyming story of a shark and a squid, set in the deep sea on Christmas eve.

When a clever Christmas loving shark named Shelly sets out to share some cheerful fun with the other ocean animals, they steer clear, assuming it is a trick or a trap; after all Shelly is a shark. Then, a wide-eyed squid named Sid who also loves Christmas is lured into Shelly’s dark cave by the temptation to meet Santa Claus, many moments of anticipation prevail. 

It’s safe to say that this isn’t a Christmas disaster, and while there are a few pages of concern, everything works out jolly fine. The new and unlikely duo work together to give their fellow ocean creatures a very ‘Merry Fishmas!’ and a nice message about sharks not being as scary as they seem, stands strong.

Gorgeous artwork with Christmas colours and illustrations which show swift, floaty movement set the ocean environment wonderfully. I loved looking at all the gorgeous creatures and discussing what they are with my children. We were particularly interested in the cheerful-looking anglerfish and the cute shellfish, we even researched their species later.

Santa Jaws would be a splendid gift, and Christmas season read. Mark Sperring and Sophie Corrigan are also the creators of Mince Spies which is another fabulously fun Christmas story.

Title: Santa Jaws
Author: Mark Sperring
Illustrator: Sophie Corrigan
Publisher: Bloomsbury, $14.99  
Publication Date: 3 November 2020
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781408897812
For ages: 0 – 5
Type: Picture Book



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Sunday, 6 December 2020

Review: Tree Beings

Tree Beings are people who love trees. Photosynthesis – sunlight, air and water, is food that keeps trees alive and helps them grow new wood. 

This book leads us through the life of trees and the people that love and protect them, past and present. Trees have a language of their own that connects them to all living creatures.

This knowledge is made available to us.

A tree’s life is mapped out from how they breathe, fight climate change, help make rain, care for soil through their roots, clean the air and provide homes for wildlife. Their secret strength is made of a tough coat of bark, phloem, cambium, xylem, and heartwood.

This is a life-changing look at the power of trees. Its structure is four Big Ideas, held up by inspiring stories of people who fought and suffered for years, in many different ways, to protect trees. This spectacular production – for that is what it is, celebrates these people of all ages that warred against the destruction of forests.

The rare Foreword by Jane Goodall that covers her experience with forests and trees and her relationship to them, leads the parade of personalities and tree warriors. Her club, Roots and Shoots, inspires young people to care for our living planet.

Known and unknowns are profiled. Julia Butterfly spent 738 days up a giant redwood to stop it being chain-sawed. Professor Wangari Maathai became known as Mother of the Trees due to her life-long passion to protect and plant trees. Richard St Barber Baker travelled around the world for 70 years extolling the power of trees. There are many more warriors and their causes for trees.

Stories and myths extend to John Seed in Australia, who was one of those that fought to save the Daintree rainforest in Queensland. 180 million years old, it is the oldest rainforest on our planet.

Stunning illustrations full of light fill the pages. The cover is cloth-like and end pages are mazes of tree tops and roots spread into the earth feeding and protecting countless colonies of living things. There are lists of creatures to find hidden in countless puzzles and mazes, and much more.

For those looking for something extraordinary full of facts, figures, challenges, information and education that will change their view on living things, here it is!

Title: Tree Beings
Author: Raymond Huber
Illustrator: Sandra Severgnini
Publisher: EK Books, $ 34.99
Publication Date: October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781925820539
For ages: 7 – 12
Type: Non Fiction




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Saturday, 5 December 2020

Review: Grow: Secrets of Our DNA

What is DNA and how does it work?

Grow: Secrets of Our DNA is a simple explanation of this scientific concept which is responsible for the growth of all living things.

Written by Nicola Davies and illustrated by Emily Sutton, it's pitched at early primary aged children (although also suitable for all ages) and explores size, speed and change, amongst other things.

For example, the speed of growth differs from species to species. Some plants and creatures grow fast, while others are super slow (Quahog clams can take up to 500 years!).

After starting with broad environmental examples, the book moves onto the growth of human beings, and how the instructions for our development (from the time we're as small as a tiny dot) are written in the code of our individual DNA.

DNA can be complex, and Grow offers a basic description of DNA and the four kinds of 'steps' that come in many and varied orders to create our spiral shaped DNA ladder.

Grow shows how our DNA creates our different looks, and connects us to our ancestors going back over many years.

An excellent book for children and adults, Grow: Secrets of Our DNA offers a great introduction that makes sense to those with or without scientific background. 

Title: Grow: Secrets of Our DNA
Author: Nicola Davies
Illustrator: Emily Sutton
Publisher: Walker Books, $24.99
Publication Date: April 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781406382778
For ages: 5+
Type: Junior Non-Fiction



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Giveaway: Awesome Aussie Kids on Holiday Prize Picnic Pack!

Friday, 4 December 2020

Video Review: All in a Drop

Join Yvonne Mes for a short and snappy video review of All in a Drop: How Antony van Leeuwenhoek Discovered an Invisible World. A non fiction chapter book for children aged 8 to 12 years old. Written by Lori Alexander and illustrated by Vivien Mildenberger.



Title: All in a Drop
Author: Lori Alexander
Illustrator: Vivien Mildenberger
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
Publication Date: 6 August 2019
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781328884206
For ages: 8 - 12
Type: Non Fiction Chapter Book




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Thursday, 3 December 2020

Review: Who is at the Zoo?

A delight to look at and to read, this highly entertaining book turns daily situations on their head. Imaginative, humorous and creative, and with charismatic characters, everyone who opens this book will discover a magical world whose reality is limited only by their imagination.

Rhyme and rhythm make it the perfect book for reading out aloud, for laughs and entertainment. The stunning, expressive illustrations by Suzanne Houghton, fill the pages with unexpected situations appearing like everyday occurrences. 

A young girl wakes to a house full of animals.

She goes in search of answers. She finds a tiger on the toilet; another animal in the tub. In fact, a parade of animals has invaded their house. But that’s not all.

A Zebra cooks in the kitchen while a leopard watches sport on the television. A bear is in the laundry doing its washing. The squatters feel like the new residents!

Outside a deer mows the lawn as a squirrel tries driving the owner’s car.

They have taken over not only the house but all the street. A turtle is the lollipop person at the school crossing; penguins are seen painting a front door.

The further into town the girl goes the more animals she discovers in roles that humans held. The baker, the marketplace, the timber yard, the library, the café and in all the other businesses, positions have been replaced by animals.

A voyage of discovery begins. If the animals are everywhere now, what has become of the town’s occupants?

This is a brilliant picture book overflowing with hilarious situations and questions without answers. A curious challenge for children is to ask and find out why animals have replaced humans and where are the humans?

Title: Who is at the Zoo?
Author: J Boyce
Illustrator: Suzanne Houghton
Publisher:
Larrikin House, $24.99
Publication Date: 1 October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN:
9780648804963
For ages: 3 – 8
Type: Picture Book




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Junior Review: Trials of Apollo: The Tower of Nero

Wednesday, 2 December 2020

Review: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dangerous Animals

Deadly and dangerous these animals may be, but each one contributes in some significant way to the natural environment.

Award-winning author and illustrator, Samy Bayly, has created a unique and stunning encyclopedia in The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dangerous Animals, from its impressive covers with indented title and pen and ink end pages, to everything in between.

It’s a fantastic collection of more than sixty animals from all over the world, from tiny insects to huge and heavy animals and things that crawl, fly and swim.

The Contents page is a detailed introduction of what to expect, presented in tiny grey, shadows. It’s when you come to the main attractions, that you discover gold. Each exquisite poster-like image is better than the last. 

The Alligator Snapping turtle, Australian magpie, Bibron’s Stiletto Snake – Atractaspis bibronii, the Black-legged tick, and the Bloomslang are just a few of the portraits and their biographies.

Life-like and pulsing on the page, they are accompanied by their scientific name, with layouts in blocks that inform and instruct about description, diet, danger factor, location/habitat, conservation status and lots of fun facts such as those for the Ostrich.

The Ostrich’s eyes are bigger than its brains. They can live for fifty years. One Ostrich egg is equal to twenty-four chicken eggs.

Included is the length of time each animal/insect lives and its collective noun name.

There are lethal and non-lethal subjects and invasive and toxic species which prove very interesting. It explains how each one collects or activates its toxins such as the Hooded Pitohui, Pitohui dichrous.

Found in Australia are: The Coffin Ray, Australian magpie, Crown-of-thorns starfish Irukanjdi jellyfish, Red-headed Mouse spider, Red kangaroo, Southern Blue-ringed octopus and Tasmanian Devil and Cane toad. 

An ideal reference book for lovers of the unusual in facts and figures. It surprises with the amount of creative work that has gone into it and the learning that is offers. An ideal gift for the curious and animal lovers, and an absolute essential for home and school libraries.

Title: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of  Dangerous Animals
Author/Illustrator: Sami Bayly
Publisher: Hachette, $ 32.99
Publication Date: 29 September 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780734420015
For ages: 8+
Type: Non Fiction




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Review: How Do You Make A Baby?

Guest Post: Kate Forsyth & Belinda Murrell - Part Two

We continue our mesmerising interview with Kate Forsyth and Belinda Murrel, on their collaboration for Searching for Charlotte: The Fascinating Story of Australian's First Children's Author

How long did the book take to write and were there any obstacles encountered that you can share?
B: The book took over two years to write, including many months of intense research. While we were working on this project, we also had to deal with deeply stressful family dramas, other work commitments and our busy everyday lives. For me the greatest obstacle was probably self-doubt. Could we do Charlotte’s story justice? Would the final book reflect the vision we had imagined? How should we weave in our own personal experiences and thoughts into the narrative?

K: For me, the biggest difficulty was finding the time we needed to do such intensive research and writing, when I had such a heavy publishing and touring schedule. The book took far longer than we had expected, and so I was working on the road while on a publicity tour for my most recent book while I also had to ask for an extension on my latest novel-in-progress, something I hate to do. It was exhausting and stressful and – like Belinda says – we were also dealing with a lot in our private lives.

What was the most rewarding aspect of this travel and research?
K: For me, it was definitely writing this book with my sister. It was definitely a challenging experience, but also exciting and joyous and beautiful. I particularly loved out trip overseas with our daughters – that was one of the most special experiences of my life!

B: It was such a joy to collaborate with my sister on this book – we spent endless hours discussing how we should write it, what to include and what to leave out, and sharing the thrill of making new discoveries. Travelling to the UK with our daughters was an absolute highlight and walking in Charlotte’s footsteps brought her to life. We even had the chance to study at London University together! Our family has always been tight-knit but sharing this project has brought Kate and I even closer together.


This journey of discovery was not only about Charlotte. You discovered you had another sister. Can you share this with us?

B: While we were writing this book, our father confessed that he had been keeping a secret for 37 years – that we had a half-sister called Emma Jane (coincidentally her name is made up of Kate’s and my middle names). After our parents’ divorce, Dad met a Scottish nurse, and Emma was born, although Dad had only met her a handful of times. The news was a huge shock at first. I contacted Emma and asked her if she would like to meet us. Since then we have developed a lovely relationship with Emma and her family. It has been a warm and wonderful experience for us all.

K: When Belinda rang me to tell me about Emma, I had just finished writing a chapter about our father and his work as a scientist, so it was quite eerie. We have now built a close relationship with our half-sister, and have been very glad to welcome her into our family.

Readers recognise the great connection to the landscape and place that you both have. Was this originally there or was this magnified by what you experienced and learnt?

B: The importance of place and landscape has always been an integral part of my writing and my values, perhaps inspired by the beautiful stories we were told as children about where our family came from. Yet, this connection was magnified when we were exploring the places where our ancestors were born, where they lived and worked for generations, where they loved and died and grieved. These places sang to us.

K: My answer is the same as Belinda’s!

You learnt a lot about Charlotte but also about yourselves. Can you expand on this for us?
B: Writing this book was a huge challenge in many ways. It was incredibly time consuming and much of it was written when we were facing very stressful family and personal challenges. For me, Charlotte’s determination and courage were a huge inspiration, helping to make us stronger and more resilient.

K: When we began this journey of discovery, some of our fear was that there was nothing left to find about Charlotte, and that our lives were not interesting enough to turn into a memoir. I remember saying to Belinda, ‘all we ever do is read and write and look after our families. We’re so ordinary!’ But what we discovered is that even ordinary lives have meaning. Charlotte’s life (and our own) strike such a chord with so many women, partly because she (and we) are just women fighting to look after our families and create a space for ourselves where our voices can be heard. Her struggle is the struggle of so many women.

You have a strong family line connected to literature and artistic endeavour. Do you feel your talents were inherited, or do you see them as the result of a nurturing environment combined with the oral history passed down to you?
B: Nature vs Nurture! I do feel that our raw talents were inherited from our forebears. Yet I also believe that talent cannot shine unless it is encouraged, practiced, trained, and valued. Kate and I were incredibly lucky to grow up in a family which encouraged us to aim for the stars, to follow our passions and which made great sacrifices to give us the best education they could.

K: I’ve always said that I was born wanting to be a writer – I knew from a very young age that it was my dream. So, I feel that it must have been inborn in me. Yet both of us received so much support and encouragement along the way, and both of us have worked so hard to make our dreams come true. Both of those things – our support networks and our years of toil and effort – are just as important a part of our story as our family inheritance.




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Tuesday, 1 December 2020

Review: Santa and the Sugar Glider

It’s Christmas Eve and the rainforest animals cram against one another to see an incredible sight. Santa and his reindeers have landed! A catastrophe has occurred on their special night! Comet has collided with an albatross and sprained her ankle.

Santa needs help!

He announces to the animals that an audition for a temporary replacement will take place at sunset. His Christmas magic can make anyone fly. But only a special kind of animal will do.

 

Snap the sugar glider, small though he is, decides this could be his time to prove his worth; to reach his full potential.

But so do all the other animals. Bouncy Warren the wallaby believes he is the one. Rufus the owl, who claims to own the night sky, scoffs at this assumption. He was definitely the one!

Snap shows off his gliding expertise to reinforce his talent. Everyone laughs. He is too little for the triple twist; to pull the sleigh. In fact, too little for anything much.

The auditions see Cass the Cassowary dance, Gemma the goanna glide, and Colin the crocodile snap and roll. Each animal takes their turn to show off their skills.

With auditions almost over, and as Santa calls for anyone else, Comet stretches out to pick a leaf of a stinging tree.

Snap soars and glides, twists and drops right onto Comet’s back, causing him to eject the leaf from his mouth in surprise.

Santa sees Snap is just what he needs. With a finger movement, and his Christmas magic, Santa has the sugar glider floating in the air. He becomes the littlest animal to pull Santa’s sleigh!

Festive front end pages in green leaves and coloured baubles welcome you into an Australian Christmas delight.

Looping text matches Snap, the sugar glider’s preference of movement. Expressive animal body language speaks louder than words. Hooray for a wonderful Aussie Christmas tale!

Title:  Santa and the Sugar Glider
Author: Alexa Moses
Illustrator: Anil Tortop
Publisher: Hachette, $19.99
Publication Date: 1 October 2020
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780734419521
For ages: 3+
Type: Picture Book




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