The Brotherband series book 7. Random House Australia, 2017.
ISBN 9780857980137
(Age: 11+) Highly recommended. Themes: Survival, Rescue, Kidnapping,
Piracy, Team work, Sailing. Charged with the task of rescuing a
kidnapped Emperor from a far-flung volcanic island fortress, the
Brotherband (led by the extremely capable leader - Hal) are again
able to demonstrate their highly honed fighting and sailing skills.
This crew of mostly young Skandians is able to sail the small craft,
the Heron, with fearless expertise and superb teamwork. Despite
violent opposition from pirates and the elements, yet again the crew
take on a mission that will push them to the brink . . . but a life
depends on them acting quickly and putting the rescue mission before
their own safety.
John Flanagan writes with great flair to produce an action-packed
adventure that all readers will enjoy for its adrenaline rush and
wonderful introduction to the world of skilful sailing.
Note: the book also includes a bonus Ranger's Apprentice
short story. This is a surprise gift at the end.
Highly recommended for readers aged 11+ (even if you have not read
any of this series before book 7)
Carolyn Hull
Fox in the night by Martin Jenkins and Richard Smythe
Walker Books, 2017. ISBN 9781406355154
(Age: 5-8) Subtitled: A Science Storybook About Light and Dark.
Fox is hungry so she emerges from her dark den to look for food only
to find it is still daylight outside. (It's dark in Fox's den
because the daylight doesn't reach inside.) When she does finally
emerge, it is night and she is even hungrier and so she ventures
into the nearby town in search of dinner. There she is helped by all
sorts of light sources to find what she needs - and to escape!
Science surrounds us - it is not limited to people in white coats in
sterile laboratories that television news crews choose to use to
report breakthroughs and in this story very young readers will not
only enjoy Fox's adventure but also learn about light, why it is
important and where it comes from as there are simple explanations
that match the storyline on each page.
It also includes an index, bibliography and extra questions and
experiments to get young readers thinking about the science behind
the story and for them to explore further - a perfect parent-child
activity to do together. It suggests that the child compares the
length of their shadow over a couple of hours and this is a great
activity to do with a class if you get them to trace each other's
shadow in chalk in the morning, noon and afternoon.
It teaches them so much about the sun's path as well as measurement.
This is the first in a new series from Walker and I look forward to
many more.
Barbara Braxton
How to hang a witch by Adriana Mather
How to hang a witch Book 1. Walker Books, 2018. ISBN
9781406378795
(Age: 14+) Recommended. Themes: Witches. Ghosts. Salem (Mass.).
Trials. When Samantha Mather arrives to live in Salem,
Massachusetts, she finds herself at the centre of attention as the
descendant of Cotton Mather, one of the men who had been responsible
for the trials of the witches in the infamous Witch trials. A group
of teens directly descended from the original witches and called the
Descendants, are not happy that Samantha has come to town,
especially as terrible things start to happen around her. Sam too
has encountered Elijah, the ghost of a young man from the time of
the hangings and Jaxon the boy next door who is the only person who
has made an attempt to be friends.
The real strength of How to hang a witch is its fast pace,
and this makes it very difficult to put down. Sam lurches from one
catastrophe to another as things seem go wrong around her - she is
the only witness to the death of one of the Descendants and the only
person not to get a terrible rash at a party. She is blamed for all
the bad luck happening in the town and accused of being a witch. But
Sam is a strong, resilient, if sometimes unlikeable character and
with the ghost Elijah ably helping her, she perseveres with her
investigation of what is happening, knowing that she must turn all
the trouble around to save her father from his coma.
The note at the back of the book lets the reader know that the
author is a descendant of the original Cotton Mather and this adds
much interest to the story. She has made Salem with its many
cemeteries, old houses, woods and ghostly appearances feel very
spooky and readers who are interested in witches and the paranormal
will enjoy the spine-chilling exploits of the Descendants and want
to find out more about what really happened in Salem during the
original witch hunts.
Pat Pledger
Is it warm enough for ice cream? by Violet Peto
Ill. by Victoria Palastanga. Dorling Kindersley, 2018. ISBN
9780241313053
(Age: 2-5) Board Book. Theme: Seasons. This bright, colourful board
book looks at each season and asks "Is it warm enough for ice
cream?". It is an English publication so some vocabulary and content
is not as meaningful for an Australian audience. For example, the
winter page shows snow and frozen ponds, which is only a reality for
a very small proportion of Australian children. The only season it
says is warm enough to eat ice cream is summer, when in reality it
is often warm enough to eat ice cream all year round in some parts
of Australia. There is some English vocabulary (ice lollies,
sledging) and although some are also found here the animals are
native to England (rabbits, squirrels, deer). Despite these slight
drawbacks for Australian readers, this is a handy introductory book about the different
seasons of the year and what they look, feel, sound, smell and taste
like. It is predominantly nature/science based (animals, plants,
weather, outdoor activities) which will help to build the vocabulary
of young children and make them more aware of what is happening
around them.
Simple pictures encourage pointing, labelling and discussion. The
pictures use a combination of drawings and photographs (especially
of animals, plants and flowers) to create realistic yet interesting
and varied visual spreads.
Nicole Nelson
Lucky button by Michael Morpurgo
Ill. by Michael Foreman. Walker Books, 2017. ISBN 9781406371680
(Age: 10+) Highly recommended. Themes: Orphans, Foundling Hospital
(London), Illness, Bullying, Friendship, Schools. When Jonah is
bullied he takes refuge in the chapel in his school, once a
Foundling Hospital in the country, used after the London premises
became overcrowded. Here he meets the spirit of a foundling, named
Nat Hogarth, who loves to play the organ, a noise sometimes heard by
the students, giving rise to the story of ghosts of the children who
once lived there. Nat relates his life story to Jonah, telling the
reader about this astonishing place.
He tells of his time with foster parents then returned to the
hospital for his education before being apprenticed at sixteen
revealing the lives of these children, many of whom died while in
care, education subservient to trying to deal with disease and
malnutrition. Nat is sent to a country house where he is treated
poorly, but at his second place he meets the Mozart children with
whom he develops a long standing relationship. Readers will be
thrilled reading about the place music comes to take within Nat's
life, and how it parallels Jonah's life, augmenting the link between
the two. This is a charming tale of lives lived two hundred years
apart, being pulled together through a love of music. Its beautiful
cover and pages of illustrations will ensure the book is read from
cover to cover.
The Foundling Museum in London's Brunswick Square is a most
arresting place to visit, with art treasures from famous people,
Handel and Hogarth for example, who supported the work of the
Foundling Hospital, and memorabilia from the unfortunate mothers who
left their babies there. Set up in 1739 by sea captain, Thomas
Coram, it was the first charitable trust developed to support
homeless children, because its founder could not ignore the vast
numbers of children left on the streets. To this end he set up the
hospital with the help of wealthy supporters who donated art works
creating an art gallery unlike any other. The work of the children's
trust continued until 1954, and today supports children in a variety
of ways. More can be found about this startling place at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundling_Hospital and
the museum at https://foundlingmuseum.org.uk/
(Check 'About' to find information about the foundlings and what is
on display) The display of the tokens and mementoes left by the
relinquishing mothers will tear at your heart strings.
This museum, not well known on London's tourist trail is well worth
a visit and is near the Dickens' Museum. Dickens' portrayal of young
lives has parallels within the walls of the Foundling Hospital.
Fran Knight
The ashes of London by Andrew Taylor
HarperCollins, 2017. ISBN 9780008207755
(Age: secondary to adult) Highly recommended. Themes: Great Fire of
London, Sir Christopher Wren, London, Murder, Restoration,
Commonwealth, Puritans. The year 1666 was already inauspicious
containing three sixes, the mark of Satan to some, making the Great
Fire of London a sign that things had not gone well after the
restoration of Charles 11.
Intrigues still survive with some regicides, those who killed
Charles 1 still at large, and undercurrents of the dissenting ideas
of Cromwell are still at play.
So when a body is found in the ruins of St Paul's, James Marwood,
working for Master Williamson, a real character, editor and
publisher of the London Gazette, is given the job of finding out who
the man is. A second body is found in the Fleet Ditch some days
later and Marwood links the two as they both had their thumbs tied
together behind their backs.
But Marwood's father was a Dissenter, and needs constant attention,
causing Marwood to take time out for his welfare. And when he tells
his son in one of his rambles that he has seen Tom Lovett, Marwood
tries to elicit more information from the old man.
Alongside this story runs another, that of Cat Lovett, Tom's
daughter, taken in by a self serving family after her father
disappeared. People are after him, his politics now out of fashion,
while she is betrothed to a man she does not care for, more
interested in her family property than her. When the son of the
house rapes her she escapes, throwing herself on the mercy of
another family, that of her manservant, Jem, and in their inn she
serves an architect working for Dr Christopher Wren on the plans to
rebuild London. Cat was brought up with a modern thinking aunt who
loved architecture and she developed in her niece some rare
interests and gifts, unusual for those days, so Cat takes a real
interest in the man's work, often helping him as palsy sets in. Told
to leave the inn where she has been working, Cat hides in various
places wanting to keep away from her father and his beliefs.
The political intrigue behind the story is fascinating, revealing
that the Restoration did not smooth over the fraught times of
killing a king or of having Cromwell's Commonwealth ruling Britain.
Monarchists are questioning the extravagance of Charles 11 and his
indebtedness to some of the wealthier men in Britain. Dissenters
cause alarm and those still at large after the execution of Charles
1 are still being hunted down.
The fathers of both Cat and Marwood were involved in the plot
against the king and Marwood is doing his best to help his father,
impeded by his growing dementia and ill health, while Cat's father
is being sought by the authorities for greater reasons that his
beliefs.
Against the converging of these two protagonists is the marvelous
rebuilding of London. Taylor's descriptions of the aftermath of the
fire are riveting, and following the characters as they make their
way through the streets of London makes for exciting reading. Ash
still covers the streets, homeless are everywhere, people wander
about still in shock, food is scarce, surveyors are trying to
establish a sense of boundary markers, and still the London Gazette
publishes its weekly list of the dead, now including the two unknown
men whose identities Marwood is seeking.
This is a most engrossing crime story set within a richly detailed
historical setting.
Fran Knight
Horses wild and tame by Iris Volant
Ill. by Jarom Vogel. Walker Books, 2018. ISBN 9781911171324
(Age: 7-70) Highly recommended. Themes: Horses - History, Horses -
Breeds, Horses - Famous, Horse-riding. Horses Wild and Tame
is an extremely informative and visually engaging book that explores
the evolution of horses, horse breeds, famous horses, work horses,
sports horses and horsemanship. Iris Volant's facts are accessible,
easy to read and the facts will capture the interest of readers of
all ages. The author takes us on an historic journey from the dawn
of time, when the small dog-sized North American Eohippus had front
feet with four hoofed toes and back feet with three-hoofed toes.
Wild horses gallop across Asia and European steppes, and the reader
can find out about the Mongolian wild horse, the takhi once extinct
in the wild that has been returned to its homeland through
conservation work around the world.
From cave paintings to Pegasus from Greek legends, war horses, to
royal Indian steeds disguised as elephants to win battles, Volant
includes unusual, the unfamiliar and more familiar to pique the
reader's curiosity. Anna Sewell's novel Black Beauty
initiated reforms in both England and America in the kinder
treatment of work horses. Even the index is pictorially presented
with a Clydesdale, an Appaloosas and an Arabian steed standing tall.
Jarom Vogel's digital illustrations, boldly gallop, prance and race
across the pages, and with their clean, crisp edges the horses stand
out from their natural settings. Each scene is detailed, the
charioteer's horses are shown ready to leap of the pages, racing
around the Colosseum while the silver and cream winged Pegasus flies
high in the deep blue night sky. Horses Wild and Tame is an excellent non-fiction book
suitable for students engaged in researching animal biology, their
adaptations to environments and for writing information reports from
realistic texts. Horse lovers and readers who enjoy factual material
presented in a stylish and visually appealing way will thoroughly
enjoy this book.
Rhyllis Bignell
Rebel voices : The rise of votes for women by Louise K. Stewart
Ill. by Eve Lloyd Knight. Wren and Rook, 2018. ISBN 9781526300232
(Age: 8 - Adult) Highly recommended. From the fascinating eyes that
follow the reader on the front cover to the end papers with vibrant
red ticks this is a book that is totally engrossing and informative.
It is beautifully produced with fabulous illustrations that
stimulate the imagination and the information about how women all
over the world have gained the right to vote is comprehensive and
very interesting. Rebel voices is engrossing. It tantalises the reader right
from the beginning with the unusual contents page that will make the
reader stop and think but also gives the opportunity to pick the
topics that were of interest. Starting with the trailblazers in New
Zealand and Australia the book then continues to describe
chronologically, and by country, how women won the right to vote.
Many of the entries also give information about the women who fought
so hard to gain recognition. Thus the reader learns about Sojourner
Truth who campaigned in the US and the inspiring life of Matilde
Hidalgo de Procel in Ecuador as well as other fascinating women in
countries around the world and better known figures like Emmeline
Pankhurst.
This is a fascinating and well researched look at the time it has
taken for women to get the vote. The excellent time line and the
range of women who fought so hard make this a really good volume to
have in the primary and secorndary library and classroom.
Pat Pledger
This book isn't safe by Colin Furze
Puffin Books, 2017. ISBN 9780141386959
(Age: 7-13) Highly recommended. In a world where children watch
videos of other children opening toys for fun, it is not a strange
occurrence that a YouTube star should write a book. Colin Furze is a
self confessed crazy inventor who makes a living designing
inventions such as vacuuming shoes, building the worlds fastest
mobility scooter and creating a 360 degree swing as big as a house.
His YouTube channel states "this channel is the home of crazy
inventions, brilliant world records and constant disregard to health
and safety," basically all the thing young kids love to watch!
This book showcases his life and crazy creations, while giving
instructions for 10 inventions the reader can make at home.
I have to admit that I had never heard of Colin Furze before (and
immediately googled him!!!) and found that he has a huge following -
over 5 million - and that many of his projects are funded by
television and gaming companies.
This book is set out in a way that children of about 7-13 years old
would love, with lots of photos and easy to read explanations. There
are also multiple fonts on a page, bright colours and a combination
of hand written and typed information.
I liked this book for a number of reasons:
1) It is written with humour and appealed to both myself and my 7
year old. It is so good to be able to read a book and BOTH laugh.
2) The inventions the author explains step by step are all feasible
for kids and their parents which is important as it would be
disappointing to read this book and not be able to do any of them!
3) The author explains how to safely learn to drill holes, saw wood
and measure things. I think these are all really important skills to
have and to include them in this way will hopefully mean children
take note and learn how to do them correctly.
There was not anything I didn't like about this book, it would make
a great gift for a young child who loved to build, make and create!
Lauren Fountain
Harry Potter: a journey through a history of magic by British Library
Bloomsbury, 2017. ISBN 9781408890776 (Age: All Harry Potter fans) Highly recommended. If you are a Harry
Potter fan then this book is a MUST HAVE! After bringing this book
home I made the mistake of showing to my son (a new Harry fan) and
it has been a struggle to get any time with the book myself! Harry Potter: a journey through a history of magic is a wonderful
book showcasing the amazing collection of artefacts put together for
an exhibition for the British Library to celebrate 20 years since
the first instalment of the record breaking series.
This book intertwines the daily lessons and faces of Hogwarts with
the ancient history and art of magic that has been recorded over the
last thousand years. As I read the chapters I really got a sense of
where J. K. Rowling was able to explore her ideas and add meaning
and appropriate description to particular scenes such as the Bezoar
stone or the first documented use of incantations.
I particularly loved the hand-drawn maps and pictures by J. K.
Rowling, with little questions on the side where you can see her
thinking, and also how well planned out her story is. In addition to
this you get to see copies of both hand-written and typed draft
pages of various books - complete with words crossed out, re-typed
and questions raised as to where she may go with that idea next.
When I asked my son why he enjoyed this book so much it was a pretty
simple answer from him - the illustrations! He loved Jim Kay's
artwork which were taken from the illustrated editions. He said they
were "colourful, funny and looked just like them"
I think that this book would be a wonderful gift for any Harry
Potter lover, at any age, and also a great addition to a school
library to add more meaning and understanding to this popular
series. 10/10 from both myself and my Harry Potter obsessed child!
Lauren Fountain
Unearthed by Amie Kaufman and Meagan Spooner
Unearthed book 1. Allen and Unwin, 2017.
ISBN 9781760292157
(Age: 13+) Highly recommended. Themes: Science fiction. Adventure.
The Undying, an alien race, has left behind technology on Gaia, an
abandoned planet, that will save the earth and there is a race to
discover more of it. Jules Addison has come to Gaia as a scholar,
convinced by his father that there is a secret warning contained in
a message that tells of danger to those who uncover it. Meanwhile
Amelia (Mia) Radcliffe has won passage on a space ship because she
is a clever scavenger who just wants to make enough money to save
her sister back on Earth. When the two confront other scavengers
after their equipment, they decide to work together to find out the
secrets that the Undying have left behind.
From then on it is all action as the pair race across the planet
with the scavengers in hot pursuit. They have to pool their
abilities once they reach the hidden temple and the way they work
out the clues and avoid all the obstacles and traps makes for an
exciting read. Told in alternating chapters by Jules and Mia, the
reader gains an in-depth understanding of the character and
motivation of each and can sympathise with both as they work toward
such different goals. They are both intelligent and clever and
gradually see where the other is coming from and gain a measure of
trust. The snappy dialogue between the two is often funny and gives
the reader some relief from the ever present danger and action.
Even before I knew that Unearthed would be made into a film
I found myself agog with the sheer speed and action in the book and
could easily imagine it on the big screen. In fact it reminded me a
lot of Indiana Jones and Lara Croft movies and the story line would
have great appeal to audiences who enjoy the action adventure movie
and book. And the ending is sure to keep the reader waiting
impatiently for the next episode in the story.
Pat Pledger
Nicola Berry series by Liane Moriarty
Pan Macmillan, 2017. Nicola Berry and the petrifying problem with Princess Petronella.
ISBN 9781760554736 Nicola Berry and the shocking trouble on Planet Shobble. ISBN
9781760554743 Nicola Berry and the wicked war on the Planet of Whimsey.
ISBN: 9781760554750
(Age: 10+) Recommended. Themes: Humour, Space Travel, Competitions.
A trio of funny space travel books about Nicola Berry are
rereleased, after first appearing in 2009. Nicola Berry and the petrifying problem with Princess Petronella
is the first of this three-book outer space adventure series for
young readers written by adult author, Liane Moriarty. Each of the
books is about 200 pages long, with about 40 chapters, making it an
encouraging read for mid to upper primary readers.
Nicola Berry's life is changed completely when an odd looking man
from another planet, Globagaskar, comes to earth on an even odder
mission. This very tall person is on the lookout for someone to
travel back to his planet, where as the Earthling Ambassador, she
will try to convince the very spoilt princess on Globagaskar that
earth is not to be used as a waste disposal dump.
She is not sure that she has the wherewithal to convince the girl,
but off she goes with the blessing of Earth's inhabitants behind
her. And once on Globagaskar her confidence begins to ebb.
Moriarty has developed a fascinating premise, akin to The
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Douglas Adams) where earth
is to be destroyed to make way for a super highway, and her
characters are bubbling with enthusiasm and self doubt tackling the
huge problem.
The other two in this fine series, Nicola Berry and the shocking
trouble on Planet Shobble and Nicola Berry and the wicked
war on the Planet of Whimsey were also first published in
2009, and have been rereleased as well.
They are just as funny as Nicola and her friends, The Space Brigade,
find themselves in all sorts of trouble, but in using their
considerable cleverness manage to elude their pursuers. Wonderfully
entertaining, hilarious and with lots of jokes about society's hang
ups, the series will be eagerly picked up by new readers.
Fran Knight
That inevitable Victorian thing by E.K. Johnston
Dutton Books for Young Readers, 2017. ISBN 9780735231597
(Age: 15+) Recommended. Themes: Fantasy. Alternative British Empire,
Diversity, Romance, Duty. Genetics. Readers will find themselves in
a very different political and scientific world when they encounter
Victoria-Margaret, a direct descendant of Queen Victoria who has
travelled incognito to Toronto to be presented as a debutante at her
cousin's ball. She is excited to have the opportunity to shed the
trappings of royalty and meet people as a normal young woman.
Helena, too has been invited to the debutante ball. She is the
daughter of a pre-eminent geneticist, and as her mother's daughter
must present a happy face even when uncertain in the social whirl of
tea parties and dances. August Callaghan is also in Toronto for the
ball and is overjoyed to be meeting Helena again, hoping to cement
their childhood attachment, even though he is frantic about the bad
decisions he has made about his family's shipping empire which is
under siege from pirates. The three discover an unusual bond, which
will fascinate the reader.
E.K. Johnston is an author who is not afraid to take risks and write
very original and thought provoking books. Her first book, The
Story of Owen : dragon slayer of Trondheim (2015 YALSA Best
Fiction for Young Adults (Top Ten), 2015 William C. Morris YA Debut
Award Nominee) grabbed my attention and I have followed this author
with interest since then. Her story of an empire that has been built
on making diverse genetic royal marriages instead of the princes and
princesses marrying white royalty from Europe is unique and raises
lots of questions about what the world would be like now if Queen
Victoria has made those decisions. Throughout the book are snippets
of conversations that Victoria-Margaret has on the net with the
partner that has been chosen for her as genetically compatible and
Helena too finds a partner who suits her genetic profile.
This is a novel that will challenge readers as they follow the well
described characters of Margaret, Helena and August who must make
some difficult decisions about their sexual orientation and duty as
they come of age.
Pat Pledger
Star Wars: What is a droid? by Lisa Stock
Star Wars: DK readers level 1. DK 2017. ISBN 9780241301272
(Age: 6+) Star Wars. Droids. Space. The first in a series of readers
produced by DK, concerning the series Star Wars, this book
uses a format that is readily accessible to newly confident readers.
The book is 24 pages long and is divided into twelve sections of two
pages each with colourful illustrations and between twenty and
thirty words on each double page spread. The subject matter is
appealing to younger readers, the format is easy to use, and the
whole has an index and contents page teaching new readers skills of
using a non fiction book. The first of four, What is a droid?,
Blast off!, Rey to the rescue and The adventures
of BB-8, this one tells the reader the difference between good
and bad droids, then talks about several individually. C-3P0 and
R2-D2 take up the next four pages and will be easily recognised by
readers, and after this follows a range of droids used in the series
of films. I had no idea there were so many! After this is a two page quiz
and a glossary, making a complete book for young readers to absorb
and test themselves. The text does not play down to early readers,
and the illustrations add to the fun of the book. Early readers will
love recognising the droids they have seen in the films, and enjoy
the quiz at the end.
Fran Knight
The Polar Bear Explorers' Club by Alex Bell
Ill. by Tomislav Tomic. Faber and Faber, 2017. ISBN 9780571332540
(Age: 8-11) Recommended. Themes: Fantasy, Explorers and exploration.
Stella Starflake Pearl was saved as a young child from the Icelands,
an unexplored land and adopted by her rescuer Felix. This pale white
girl lives in a beautiful mansion with a polar bear, unicorns, pygmy
dinosaurs and mean Aunt Agatha who wants to send Stella off to
boarding school. Her one desire is to be an explorer, a navigator
and sail away with her father on his next expedition. He is a member
of the Polar Bear Explorer's Club that bans women from embarking on
their adventures, much to Stella's disgust. She is surprised and
delighted when Felix relents and the very next day, Stella and her
unicorn Magic set sail aboard The Bold Adventurer.
Stella is feisty and fearless. She soon befriends Shay the captain's
son and wolf whisperer and Beanie who is studying to be a medic.
They are handicapped by the Ocean Squid Explorers Club who are
accompanying them especially Ethan, a self-centred boy who dislikes
Stella, Beanie, and Shay. The fast-paced adventure includes an
ingenious escape from a collapsing ice bridge, navigating
subterranean caves and tunnels, problems with wolves and a herd of
woolly mammoths. With the young explorers separated from the others,
they learn to deal with the extremely cold conditions by relying on
each other's abilities.
Tomic's black and white sketches are styled to look like 19th
century drawings recorded by explorers. As the four young explorers
journey across the ice and snow, we see the daring sleigh ride
across the ice bridge, the magnificent sparkling castle rising in
front of them and the opulent entrance to the Polar Bear Explorers'
Club. Alex Bell's magical world captures the imagination, her
settings are detailed, her narrative lyrical, with her magical
creatures and humans filled with both wonder and danger. Read aloud
to a middle primary class, this fantasy promises to keep the
students engaged, and there are more adventures ahead for Stella and
her friends.
Rhyllis Bignell