30 October 2010

Hale and Hardy

by Paul Carter

Pan Macmillan Australia. Adult fiction, Australian. Paperback, rrp $34.99

Reviewed by Barbara Brown

Doctor John Hale and his wife have emigrated from the mother land to to Melbourne to escape and forget. But travelling half way around the world doesn’t help and the couple go their separate ways. Life takes a huge backwards step until one night Hale finds himself sitting in his car when he notices a sign on a run-down church ‘Unless you change direction you will end up where you are going.’

Seeing the sign as an epitaph, Dr Hale decides to leave the hustle and bustle of Melbourne and move to the slower, more relaxed lifestyle of a country doctor.

Every chapter in Hale and Hardy is a story in itself. Paul Carter is a country GP in central Victoria writing about a world he knows well - the people and animals that surround small rural communities. Although some may think that country life is slow and dull, Paul Carter has created a wonderful cast of fascinating characters. There is tragedy, love, companionship, grief, happiness all told with a delightful humour that kept me intrigued right to the last page.

I hope there will be another book continuing the story of Doctor John Hale. And if you are wondering who is Hardy, all I can say is he is a remarkable companion, listener and philosopher. Read the book. You won’t regret it.

28 October 2010

Graffiti Moon

by Cath Crowley

Pan Macmillan Australia. Young Adult fiction, Australian. Paperback, rrp $16.99


Reviewed by Sandy Fussell

Lucy loves Shadow, even though she’s never met him. She knows he is her soul mate. She can see it in the scope and colour of his sprawling graffiti artworks. The city is his canvas and his friend Poet, adds just the right words.

No matter how she tries, Lucy cannot catch Shadow at work. He is as elusive as his name. Reality provides less appealing and far less romantic alternatives. Reality provides Ed, the high school dropout and paint store attendant. Not likely! She’s already been on a date with him and even though it was over a year ago, neither of them has forgotten how Lucy broke Ed’s nose.

When Lucy’s best friend Jazz sets her heart on Ed’s friend Leo, and their new friend Daisy is in a tenuous relationship with another of Ed’s friends, Dylan, a new social group emerges. She’s forced to spend time with Ed again. But it’s not as bad as she dreads and he even offers to help her find Shadow.

Love is hard to understand. Lucy’s having occasional fuzzy thoughts about Ed. Her parents, who have moved apart, seem to love each other more. Nothing is ever what she expects. Not even Shadow.

This is so much more than a love story. It’s about having dreams and deciding which ones to follow and which ones to let go. It’s about the freedom of artistic vision and the need to provide for everyday life. It’s about friendship, family and having fun. It’s a beautiful book and an excellent story.

26 October 2010

Old MacDonald had a Farm

illustrated by Mandy Foot

Hachette Children’s Books. Australian, Picture Book. Hardback rrp $24.99

Here is another children’s favourite song brought to life by Mandy Foot in her uniquely Australian way.

Everyone around the globe can sing the traditional version of the song about Old MacDonald and his variety of farm animals. But in Australia we have the emu and the kangaroo, the cockatoos and the kookaburras. Of course the standard farm animals are there too - the horse, the pigs and the sheep.

Old MacDonald had a Farm is a fun interactive book for children of all ages. Old MacDonald himself is wonderfully portrayed as a typical outback farmer, right to the point where he lies in his outdoor bathtub still wearing his old hole-ridden hat.

Throughout the pages readers can count the number of kookaburras and at the end find the words and music reproduced for those budding musicians. A great book for all young children and a special treat for overseas readers.

The Reading Stack reviewed Mandy Foot’s The Wheels on the Bus in October 2009.


24 October 2010

Mini Shopaholic

by Sophie Kinsella

Random House Australia. Adult Other. Paperback rrp $32.95

There are five previous books written by Sophie Kinsella about Becky Brandon (née Bloomwood) and I confess I have not read any of them. I also confess I now want to after reading Mini Shopaholic.

Becky Brandon is married to Luke and they have a two-year-old daughter, Minnie. They live with Becky’s parents in London. Becky is a personal shopper and fashion consultant at a major clothing store. Luke runs his own successful PR company.

The Brandon’s life seems complete. The only minor hitch is finding a home and after a few failures they finally can see the light at the end of the tunnel. Becky’s parents can have their home to themselves again and Becky can expand the family to give Minnie a sibling.

After only a few chapters of Mini Shopaholic I realised that nothing is ever simple for Becky. And when disaster strikes time and time again, it seems the Brandon’s have a few serious problems after all.

Minnie might have a behavioural problem. Becky starts to question if her child is spoilt and she is doing the right thing by her. With Luke’s surprise birthday party thrown on top of everything that is going on it is a wonder Becky doesn’t fall from her Jimmy Choo’s and land into the world of the £0.99 and Pound Store.

It took me a while to assimilate into the unreal story of the Brandon’s but by the end I was emotionally involved in the character’s lives. This is not a book to be taken seriously but a fun, light-hearted look at how the other half lives (not my half!). The second half of the 400+ pages was worth the wait to get there.

http://www.sophiekinsella.co.uk/

22 October 2010

Martha Doesn’t Share!

by Samantha Berger, illustrated by Bruce Whatley

Hachette Children’s books. Australian, Picture Book. Paperback, rrp $16.99


Martha’s favourite new word is … MINE!

Every adult knows about that word. Every child knows about THAT word. And Martha knows it very well. Too well in fact. Her baby brother, mother and father all leave Martha to play with her toys, after all, they are hers.

But Martha learns a very important lesson.

Martha decides to play a game.
But it’s hard to ping
when you don’t have someone to pong.

A wonderful book for children to learn about sharing in a very subtle way and Whatley’s illustrations of Martha and her very defiant face meld perfectly with Berger’s story. I can almost see Martha’s expressions change from page to page – twitching as she soon realises her error.

The Reading Stack reviewed Bruce Whatley’s Zoobots in June 2010.

21 October 2010

The Happiest Refugee

by Anh Do

Allen and Unwin. Australian, Autobiographical. Paperback rrp $32.99

Guest Reviewer – Ian Brown

You may have seen Anh Do on television. He’s a popular guest doing stand-up comedy on programs such as The Footy Show, Rove and Matty Johns Show.

Do arrived in Australia via Malaysia on a boat when he was just a young kid. It was 1980, only a few years after the Vietnam War and Anh Do’s extended family had pooled all their money to buy a boat and make the dangerous open sea voyage to Australia.

After an amazing and tragic journey, they were lucky to still be alive when they arrived in Sydney with nothing. Here the family found a life of struggle. In addition to the hard work and hard living conditions, his father leaves the family when Do was 13. The photos in the book show a strong sense of family. Although mother and children had to work hard, they always seemed happy and the departure of Do’s father, made Do more determined to ensure his family would survive.

After finishing university, Do was sitting in the final interview for a high powered job, when he asked the interviewer how many hours a week did he work. That same night he was at a comedy club and asked a comedian the same question. The answers guided Do into choosing a life which has seen our lives enriched with laughter and made Do a very happy and successful man.

Told with wit and humour, this heart-warming story is a classic tale of ‘boy makes good’. Anh Doh is someone who begins with nothing but dreams, and succeeds beyond the wildest of those.

http://www.anhdo.com.au/

20 October 2010

Room

by Emma Donoghue

Picador. Adult fiction. Paperback rrp $32.99

Reviewed by Barbara Brown

What sort of story do you get when you have a small boy who has never been outside one room?

Jack has just turned five and he and his Ma live in Room. Jack has been brought up in Room and thinks that he and his Ma and Old Nick are the only ones in the real world. The un-real world is in the television.

Old Nick kidnapped Ma seven years before and has kept her in a sound proof reinforced room. Now Ma is worried for her and Jack’s life. Old Nick got angry and cut their power a few days ago. What if he doesn’t turn it back on? Ma has to ‘unlie’ to Jack about the real world to try and get him to help lead the escape to Outside.

Can Jack really save himself and Ma? How can an isolated five-year-old manage to get help from the real world all by himself? ? Will Jack be able to interact with others when he has only ever known Ma?

Room is a wonderful story told through the eyes of Jack. A boy who, after escaping Room, has to learn everything, from wearing shoes to walking up a staircase. Although the story of Ma and Jack is horrifying, but told through Jack eyes, it is an uplifting story of a child’s innocence and resilience. I cried and cried. Brilliantly written. Brilliantly crafted.

http://www.emmadonoghue.com/

19 October 2010

Saving Tigers

by Dr Carla Litchfield

black dog books. Australian, Junior Non-Fiction. Paperback rrp $16.99


Dr Carla Litchfield is a scientist at the Adelaide Zoo who has written a number of fantastic educational books for young children. In Saving Tigers, Litchfield opens our eyes to a wonderful but endangered creature.

Tigers are the largest cats in the world yet there are fewer than 3,200 adults left in the wild. Throughout the text, Dr Litchfield explains the characteristics of the tiger and the problems they face in the wild and in zoos.

These graceful yet powerful animals are beautiful to behold and because of this they are killed for their fur or used as attractions in poorer countries.

Saving Tigers is not only an educational book on tigers but also contains a strong message that we must act to ensure the tiger does not go the way of the hundreds of extinct animals in the world.

The Reading Stack reviewed Dr Carla Litchfield’s book The Gorilla Book – Born to be Wild and her daughter, Kaitie Afrika Litchfield’s book The Little One. The Story of a Red-tailed Monkey in June 2009.

http://www.unisanet.unisa.edu.au/staff/homepage.asp?Name=Carla.Litchfield
http://www.yog2009.org/

18 October 2010

Dare You

by Sue Lawson

black dog books. Australian, Young Adult. Paperback, rrp $18.99

Guest Reviewer Jo Burnell

Friends Forever: that’s what the ‘happily-ever-after’ stories say. That nothing will change.

Dare YouDare You defies the fairy tales. Those who are tired of feel-good stories will be drawn into a very different world. People do change as they grow: especially teenagers.

Ruby, Kaden and Sas have been inseparable since early school years, but in the middle of secondary school things start to change. For a start, Kaden can’t stop thinking about Sas; her hair, her body, the way she moves. Will he dare to explore? What would this mean for Ruby? Can you have a trio when two share things that three can’t?

Everyone wants to stick together and stay the same, but that can hurt more than moving on. Dare You portrays the pain of friendships tearing. Can a dare keep friends from falling apart or does it push them further away? Why do we stay friends? Is it just because? Does there need to be a better reason?

Dare You is not for the faint hearted. Some 15 and 16 years olds might find the dilemmas portrayed uncomfortably close to the truth. Some danger can’t be avoided when it lives in your house, but risky decisions lead to irreversible outcomes. There is little light relief between the pages of Dare You, but life can be like that.
Dare You is a perfect read for 11 to 14 year olds who are on the cusp of their own life changes.

http://www.suelawson.com.au/

17 October 2010

The Princess Who Had No Kingdom

by Ursula Jones, illustrated by Sarah Gibb

Hachette Children’s Books. Children’s, Picture Book. Paperback rrp $16.99


Princess was beautiful and kind, travelling the country with her horse and cart looking for her kingdom. Everyone knew her and would ask “Found your kingdom yet Princess?” To make money she delivered parcels that could not be delivered in the mail.

One day the Princess comes across a Prince being crowned King. He spends most of the night dancing with her and then asks her to marry him. But so do some other Princes. They all want to marry her because of her beauty and kindness. Next there is a food fight and the Princess thinks it is a terrible waste of food and slips away.
While travelling through the countryside she comes across a court jester whom she helps and finds that her kingdom is closer than she thinks.

This is a wonderful story with illustrations that reflect the princess and her beauty. I fell in love with the black silhouettes (similar to linocuts) looking into the rich homes and the delicate flowers surrounding the princess. The Princess Who Had No Kingdom is longer than most picture books and will be suitable to read to little ones or read with emerging readers. It will be a book that little girls will treasure for years.

Ursula Jones is the winner of the 2003 Smarties Prize. Sarah Gibb is the original illustrator of The Tiara Club which The Reading Stack has reviewed previously.

http://www.sarahgibb.com/  

15 October 2010

The Vintage and the Gleaning

by Jeremy Chambers

The Text Publishing Company. Australian, Adult Fiction. Paperback rrp $32.95


Twenty-first century in central rural Australia. A white boy raised by nuns in the dusty outback with young mission Aborigines. Smithy left the home as soon as possible to live the life of a top gun shearer. Weathered and well travelled throughout the farms, he marries and has a son, Spit.

Smithy’s whole life is spent working and drinking and when his wife dies, Smithy and his son continue living in their small winemaking town near the Murray River, working in the vineyards. Medical problems force Smithy into sobriety and his world is opened up in a new unfamiliar way. He realises Spit, who is married with a child, is starting to go on the same downhill bend Smithy travelled.

When a local woman, Charlotte, asks for a place to stay the night before her violent husband, Brett Clayton, gets out of gaol, Smithy opens his humble home to her. The two begin a strange relationship, not friends, not lovers, but confidant and listener. While Charlotte pours out her soul, Smithy listens and silently reflects on his own life.

 
Without alcohol scattering and confusing his consciousness, his clarity of his past shrouds him with guilt, regret and long lost feelings. Looking back Smithy realises that he wasn’t a good husband and he hopes his loving dead wife will be able to forgive him, wherever she is. Can he help Charlotte and Spit and then be able to redeem himself?

13 October 2010

The Glasshouse

by Paul Collins, illustrated by Jo Thompson

Ford Street Publishing. Australian, Picture Book. Hardback rrp $26.95

Guest Reviewer Jo Burnell

The Glasshouse is a treasure for everyone. Preschoolers will be drawn to Jo Thompson’s vibrant colours and the stark contrast between pages. Middle Primary students will revel in their ability to read with minimal assistance. Teenagers will recognise Clara’s determination to keep control and her anguish at facing the unknown. Adults will have to line up for their chance to ponder parallels with the modern world. What are the pumpkins in your life?

Multiple messages wait between the pages. Is Clara really worried about her pumpkins? Her hair colour mirrors the hues of her beloved produce so closely that I’m inclined to think her fears are much closer to her heart. Can she ever break free? What will it take? Does she have to destroy the glasshouse to escape her worries?

We all have glasshouses we hide in and pumpkins we try to protect. The Glasshouse helps me see what will happen if I let worries take over. Is Clara obsessive compulsive? Does she have an anxiety disorder? Perhaps she’s just hit a rough patch. We all go through times when we can’t make things happen the way we want. How can we break free?

The Glasshouse echoes in my mind long after the last page. Can you let your pumpkins go? I’m trying, but I need Clara to keep reminding me how it is done.


The Reading Stack had Paul Collins as a guest blogger in February 2010 and have reviewed The Slightly Skewed Life of Toby Chrysler in December 2009.

11 October 2010

A Whale of a Time

Book 5 bindi Wildlife Adventures

written by Chris Kunz

Random House. Australian, Junior. Paperback rrp $9.95


With her second series of four books in the bindi Wildlife Adventures, Bindi Irwin is ensuring that young children learn about the importance of protecting fragile animal habitats.

In A Whale of a Time Bindi introduces her two English friends to the sights of Australia. Bindi surprises the twins, Andy and Caitlin, by taking them whale watching off the Queensland coast, south of the Great Barrier Reef.

Andy suffers sea sickness and Caitlin has images of pirates floating through her mind, but the day begins well with a whale and her calf coming to play near the three friends’ boat.

Disaster strikes when a fishing trawler gets into trouble. An overboard fisherman is rescued but the friends soon find that there are far worse problems at sea. A ship is leaking oil and it isn’t the fishing trawler or Bindi’s boat. Where is it coming from? The whales are heading right for the slick.

Not only is A Whale of a Time a great adventure story for ages 6 to 12 but a useful source of whale information. I never knew whales birth in warmer waters and stay until their young develop enough blubber for them to survive the icy waters of the south. Educational and factual, these books will be popular in every primary school library.

The Reading Stack reviewed Book 1, Trouble at the Zoo in August 2010.

09 October 2010

Takeshita Demons

by Cristy Burne. Illustrated by Siku

Walker Books Australia. Junior fiction, Australian. Paperback, rrp $14.95


Reviewed by Sandy Fussell

The first in a unique new series, Takeshita Demons is an exciting cross-cultural adventure. The story combines the action and exoticism of Japanese anime with a classic tale of friendship and good versus evil.

When Miku’s Baba (grandmother) dies, the family moves from Japan to England, not realising the danger they have unleashed. Away from the protection of the traditional home and without Baba’s vigilance, it falls to Miku to keep in place the preventatives that ward off ancient demons.

The bloodthirsty nukekubi follows the family across the sea, relentlessly hunting the Takeshita children. This monster’s head flies free of its body as it searches for prey. With her new friend Cait, Miku must rescue her little brother Kazu from the nukekubi and ensure the future safety of the Takeshita family.

But the nukekubi is not the only demon to be feared. The terrifying yuki-onna is seen in the snow and the faceless noppera-bo impersonates Cait’s father. Then there’s the dragonish Woman of the Wet, a nure-onna, who appears to be on Miku’s side.

For middle grade readers looking for adventure with a supernatural theme, this is the perfect choice. The ghosts and demons of this tale are drawn from traditional Japanese folklore and the element of horror is never gratuitous. Few readers will be frightened although many will catch their breath at times.

Takeshita Demons is a unique window into another world. Boys and girls from 8 – 12 years will love it.

In 2009, Takeshita Demons was the winner of the Frances Lincoln Diverse Voices Children’s Book Award.

http://cristyburne.wordpress.com/
http://www.cristyburne.com/

07 October 2010

Kisses for Lula

by Samantha Mackintosh

Hardie Grant Egmont. Young Adult. Paperback rrp $17.95
Tallulah Bird (aka Lula, Lu, Tatty, T-Bird, Tatty Lula) is about to celebrate her sixteenth. Her good friends reckon it’s time to ensure that the jinx of boyfriends past disappears and that Lula doesn’t become an old spinster. It’s time to turn “Sweet Sixteen and BE kissed”.

So begins the wonderful, funny, sometimes scary story of a fifteen, soon to be sixteen, year old girl’s saga at trying to get her first kiss before the toll of bells ring for her sixteenth.

The main problem is to find someone worth kissing, and if that can’t be done, at least someone unafraid of her jinx problem and willing to kiss her. In the past every boy who has ever come near Tula has needed the services of the local doctor, and being a small university town, everyone knows! From bumped heads to fingers being cut off by an ice skate! Tallulah Bird is accident prone and boys are fearful for their lives.

In contention for the great kiss are Fat Angus (but Tallulah’s younger sister snares him), Billy Diggle (he IS twelve years of age), Arnold (Arns) Trenchard (her workmate at the uni library) and Ben Latter (the boy she has had a crush on since she was six years old). It seems that Arns is the most likely one, until she helps him with a makeover and hooks him up to the girl of HIS dreams, Mona! Arns and Mona thank Tula for her matchmaking by organising a double date with Ben Latter – THE Ben Latter.

Maybe, with only one day to go, Lula will get the kiss she needs to cure the jinx and also get the man of her dreams. But Kisses for Lula isn’t going to make it that easy. With the stalker, the arsonist, her father’s supposed affair, her mother’s work issues, the historical witch site that was her and her grandmother’s favourite place about to be demolished, there are a lot of obstacles set in Tallulah Bird’s way before that kiss can happen. When Lula finds herself waking up on her sixteenth birthday to help with a covert operation to catch a thief, it isn’t what she expected.

Kisses for Lula is a great book for any girl, from sixteen to sixty. If you think you have problems, Tallulah Bird will convince you otherwise. I loved it.

05 October 2010

Anonymity Jones

by James Roy

Woolshed Press (Random House Australia). Young Adult fiction, Australian. Paperback rrp $ 17.95


Reviewed by Sandy Fussell

From the very first page this is a story about identity and change. Anonymity’s mother changed her name when she got married, and changed it again when the marriage fell apart. Older sister Raven changed her name just for the hell of it. And Anonymity… her name is a statement in itself.

To find out who she is, Anonymity must survive a changing world. Her new stepfather is a hovering potential predator. Her best friends now have boyfriends. Her sister is leaving home. Dad has his own troubles. The teacher she has a crush on is sending her mixed messages.
As a protagonist Anonymity is not always likeable and her actions often lack personal honesty but that is what makes her real. She is a strong, feisty heroine who sometimes makes the wrong decision. Or does she? Who is to say what is right and what is wrong for her? Anonymity is not afraid to stand up and be counted. She confronts her lying friends, traps her stepfather when her mother refuses to listen and delivers a warning to her art teacher.

This is a book that grew on me. It’s not that I didn’t immediately like it. In fact, that was the problem. I read it too fast, in one sitting. Discussing it later with a friend I realised I had totally overlooked the most identity-less character of all. It’s a credit to Roy’s storytelling that he paints with such a light touch, and a debit to me that I rushed past without noticing. So read slowly and savour as I did second time around.

Teenage girls will particularly enjoy Anonymity Jones but the readership will certainly extend to a wider audience.

View the book trailer here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ROmEdhYbPZo

03 October 2010

Empire of Silver

by Conn Iggulden

Harper Collins. Australia, Historical Fiction, Paperback, rrp $32.99

Reviewed by Sandy Fussell

 
Empire of Silver is the fourth book in the historical Conqueror series which tells the story of the Great Khan, Genghis, and his descendants.

The Mongol Empire has been at peace for two years and Ogedai, Genghis’ youngest son, has forsaken the tribes’ nomadic ways to build a great white city on the plains. Internal and external threats arise to shatter the peace. Ogedai’s elder brother Chagatai believes he should be the Great Khan and does not agree with the changes his brother has made. While the brilliant and loyal General Tsubodai cuts thr
ough Russia, crushing the Templar Knights and devastating the Hungarian kingdom, the Song dynasty, ancient Chinese enemy of the Mongols, grows stronger.

Ogedai survives every challenge except the frailty of a weak heart. Suddenly everything is in jeopardy – his son, city, his general and his expansion plans. As Iggulden comments in his Historical Note appendix:

“There are not many moments in history when the death of a single man changed the entire world. Ogedai’s death was such a moment. If he had lived, there would have been no Elizabethan age, no British Empire, no Renaissance, perhaps no Industrial revolution. In such circumstances, this book could very well have been written in Mongolian or Chinese.”

History lovers will relish Iggulden’s comments on how he dealt with the empty corners of historical record by carefully blending fact and its logical fictional derivative.

This is an epic series, a sweeping saga of triumph and tragedy. I waited impatiently for Empire of Silver and now am waiting equally impatiently for the fifth instalment.

http://www.conniggulden.com/

01 October 2010

The Spook’s Nightmare

by Joseph Delaney

Random House. Junior, Young Adult. Hardcover rrp $29.95


Tom is the seventh son of the seventh son so is automatically placed into training as the Spook’s apprentice. The Spook is a man who protects the County from all sorts of entities from witches and boggarts, to ghosts and bugganes. Anything that is evil. Tom is the last apprentice – the last hope to succeed where twenty-nine others have already failed.

When Tom, the Spook and Alice, a girl who assists both Tom and the Spook and may be a witch, arrive back in the County after working in Scotland, they find the Spook’s home burnt to the ground and Alice’s mother, Bony Lizzie, a very powerful witch, escaped from her dungeon and missing. The Spook is devastated as hundreds of years of his and past Spook’s writings are now ashes. But there is no time for reflection. The County is under attack from men from the north and the three find themselves escaping across the seas to Mona an island north-west of the County.

Arriving on Mona, the fugitives find they are not welcome. There are too many refugees for the island to cope with. Tom and Alice are caught and tried as witches, locked away awaiting death by the buggane. The buggane is an underground creature that uses nightmares to suck out souls, then returns later to eat body and bones, bit by bit.

Tom and Alice find that Bony Lizzie has reached the island and with the help of the buggane, is becoming more and more powerful. When the opportunity arises to capture Bony Lizzie, the Spook fails. Not once but twice. Are his powers weakening? Is the Spook’s nightmare becoming reality?

Will the three escape from the island and from Bony Lizzie? And will the Spook be able to recreate the library that was lost in the fire before he is too old to remember?

The Spook’s Nightmare answers all these questions and more. But reader beware, Joseph Delaney’s excellent descriptions might give you nightmares of your own.

The Reading Stack reviewed The Spook’s Mistake in Issue 12 in September 2008.

http://www.spooksbooks.com/