Ill. by Jennifer Miles. Princess Ponies book 9. Bloomsbury,
2019. ISBN: 9781547601646.
(Age: 7-9) Themes: Ponies, Magic. Chloe Ryder's ninth Princess
Ponies story The Lucky Horseshoe takes Pippa and her
magical ponies on another entertaining adventure. It's St Patrick's
Day and poor Pippa's experiencing loads of bad luck, her cereal's
run out, she trips on the front steps and she's placed in a
different team for gym class. As she lays in bed thinking about her
day, she hears a noise outside her window and there are her friends,
Captain Rascal a black and white horse with a purple eye patch and
three other ponies. They need Pippa's help to stop Divine a
trouble-making pony from taking over Chevalia with an evil spell.
Just at the end of the street is a bedecked pirate ship tied up to
the bank. They set sail on The Jolly Horseshoe to search the
coves of the enchanted island of Chevalia to find Captain
Scallywag's hidden treasure. Their trip is filled with danger, high
seas, fierce winds and the mast caught by ropes. After Pippa climbs
high to free the sails, their magical seahorse friends tow them to
safety. Encounters with cowsharks, watching a special theatre
performance and meeting royalty, all lead Pippa up to uncovering
something special. Life on Chevalia is exciting and magical, this
young girl loves helping her friends and solving mysteries. Lucky
for Pippa, time in the magical kingdom is different to her earthly
time!
Chloe Ryder's junior chapter book is just right for young horse fans
who like a little magic and adventure. Jennifer Miles' line drawings
bring the enchanted horses of Chevalia to life.
Rhyllis Bignell
Flat Cat by Hiawyn Oram
Ill. by Gwen Millward. Walker Books, 2019. ISBN: 9781406371543.
(Ages: 3-8) Recommended. Themes: Freedom, Independence, Materialism.
Bright crayon illustrations bring the world around the flat cat to
life (because Jimi-My-Jim really is just a flat, line drawing).
Sophie lives at the top of a big apartment building in a beautiful
city with a beautiful cat. She really spoils Jimi-My-Jim with the
best food, toys, fancy collars and cheeky clothes. 'Most of the most
spoilt children in the world didn't have as many tantalising toys as
Jimi-My-Jim'. Jimi tries to be grateful and do what Sophie wants but
deep down he feels trapped. 'When Sophie went off with her parents
each morning Jimi sat at the window watching her go, watching the
world he longed to be a part of, watching a cat he so wanted to
meet'. He really does live a 2-dimensional life and starts to feel
and look flatter and flatter. When the chance to escape presents
itself, Jimi doesn't hesitate, making straight for the cat he so
wants to meet. The cat, named Blanche, shows him around town and
Jimi has the best day, ending in a party back at the apartment. When
Sophie and her parents arrive home to the mess all his new friends
disappear, leaving Jimi to face the telling-off alone.
'I think I know why you did it', says Sophie later, 'You wanted the
world, you wanted the wild and all I've done is smother you with
THINGS'. He is soon presented with his own set of keys and some
rules: keep out of fights, be in bed by ten and no dodgy friends in
the apartment.
The illustrations and text are humorous (children will love the
Jimi's ridiculous outfits and the dodgy cat party) but there is also
a nice message about how living life and doing gives us happiness
rather than things. It is also about how part of loving someone is
letting them be who they are, not just keeping them to ourselves.
Nicole Nelson
Calm mindfulness for kids: Activities to help you learn to live in the moment by Wynne Kinder
Dorling Kindersley, 2019. ISBN 9780241342299.
(Age: 8-12) Highly recommended. Themes: Mindfulness. Kindness.
Emotional wellbeing. Wynne Kinder brings her comprehensive
experience in mindfulness education and creating digital content for
the brain breaks program GoNoodle
to this Dorling Kindersley information book. Calm mindfulness
for kids is beautifully presented with photographs of children
engaged in calming and distressing activities. Presented in six
chapters, educators and children can delve in to the sections -
Focus, Calm, Move, Change, Care, and Reflect. They are guided
through each chapter, through the distressing, learning calm breath,
sensory experiences, caring for themselves and collaborating with
others.
Mindfulness is a key tool which underpins classroom harmony,
promotes positive energy and helps support children developing
positive emotional health. There are colourful circles placed
throughout to help grownups support and explain the activities. In
'Bubbles of kindness' there is an easy-to-follow exercise with the
ingredients listed, bubble mix and twisted pipe-cleaners. Adults can
help the child focus on sending kind bubble thoughts to their
friends and those they find difficult to relate with.
'Reflecting is a way to turn an experience into wisdom.' By making a
gratitude paper chain, siblings, families, classes and teams can
write something they are grateful for on individual strips of
coloured paper, then build a chain to decorate their home or
classroom. A mindful body begins with eyes closed focussing on
breathing and quietly stilling the body. Each activity boosts
self-confidence and builds esteem. They are malleable enough to suit
the individual child's flexibility and levels of understanding. Calm mindfulness for kids is an excellent resource for
teachers supporting students developing their personal and social
capabilities. Kinder illustrates that promoting children's positive
wellbeing can be achieved in short sessions, without expensive tools
and is inclusive for all. For families, this is a wonderful tool to
promote a well-grounded sense of self-knowledge and self-confidence,
great for parents and children
Rhyllis Bignell
We are displaced by Malala Yousafzai
Hachette, 2019. ISBN 9781474610049
(Age: 12+) Highly recommended. Non-fiction.
Nobel Prize winner and campaigner for every girl's right to complete
12 years of free, safe and quality education, Malala Yousafzai
presents not only a short version of her own story in this new
publication, but has gathered together the stories of many brave
refugee girls she has met in the years following the attack on her
by the Taliban. Her aim is to help people understand the enormity of
the current refugee crisis, the biggest refugee crisis in history,
and to hear the stories of the people caught in it, ordinary people
caught in conflict and forced to leave their homes, choosing life
over death.
The refugee stories are gathered from around the world: Yemen,
Syria, Iraq, Colombia, Guatemala, the Congo, Myanmar, Uganda. The
stories are quite short but oh so powerful! The first tells of
Zaynab and Sabreen, two teenage sisters, who fled the bombs in Yemen
and travelled to Egypt to apply through the US Embassy to be
reunited with their mother who had already reached safety in the
United States. Zaynab, the eighteen year old, was granted refugee
status. Her sister, sixteen, was inexplicably, senselessly,
rejected, and left on her own. Zaynab was able to fly to Minneapolis
and undertake college education. Sabreen was left to risk her life
on a boat with other refugees crossing the Mediterranean to Italy.
The different fates of the two girls were cast by a careless and
cruel administrative decision.
Marie Claire's family fled the Congo, running from wild militia
groups terrorising the country. Marie Claire saw her father stabbed
in the head, and her mother brutally murdered, sacrificing herself
to save her children. Marie Claire and her extended family were
lucky to be approved by UNHCR to go to Pennsylvania, and be welcomed
by Jennifer, a warm-hearted volunteer with a refugee support
organisation.
There are other stories, of young girls in desperate situations,
seeking refuge and determined, like Malala, to build a better
future. They are sad but also inspiring stories, of people who if
just given a chance, are able to rise up to achieve their dreams.
The coloured photographs of each of the girls reinforce that these
are real people, who just by the chance of the place they were born,
have had to deal with the most terrible life circumstances. Their
stories reveal that they are also very strong, independent and
determined people deserving of our admiration.
Proceeds from We are displaced go to the Malala Fund for girls'
education. But the message of the book is that we can all help, not
only by donating money, but by educating ourselves about the refugee
situation, giving time and attention, having empathy, and being kind
to someone who has been displaced.
Helen Eddy
The little grey girl by Celine Kiernan
The Wild Magic Trilogy book 2. Walker Books, 2019. ISBN
9781406373929.
(Age: 9-13) Recommended. Themes: Fantasy. Ghosts. Witches. Scary
books. In the second book in The Wild Magic Trilogy, following Begone
the raggedy witches, Mup and her family travel to the castle,
where Mam is greeted, to her dismay, as the new queen. But the old
queen is still powerful and the kingdom is in danger. Mup sees a
little grey girl, a ghost who has extraordinary powers, and
discovers that she can make anyone exceptionally sad as she haunts
them with terrible memories from the past. What can she do to help
heal the kingdom?
This is a book that will appeal to children and young adults who
like ghost stories with brave protagonists who try to fight evil.
The little grey girl has frightening powers and children with vivid
imaginations will be able to see the terrible things that she
remembers from the dungeons under the castle. (It is not a story for
the faint-hearted to read at night.) However many readers will be
able to concentrate on the closeness of Mup's family, her friendship
with Crow, and her determination to help everyone, including the
little grey girl.
Mup is a very strong character who can stand up to witches and
ghosts, while acknowledging when she is wrong and being able to
apologise when her actions hurt someone. Throughout the story she
gradually learns about her powers as a witch and uses them to do the
right thing.
Kiernan's prose is vivid, sparse and easy to read and it takes the
reader on an adventure with Mup soaring through the air, sitting on
the castle roof with Crow, and using her witch light to explore the
tunnels and dungeons that are hidden under the castle floors.
Tiny illustrations throughout the book add atmosphere and add to the
tension. Readers who examine the front cover, too, will get a shiver
down their spines when looking at the shadow of the fierce dog
depicted there.
Older readers might like to continue reading about ghosts with City of
ghosts by Victoria Schwab, and younger readers might like the
style of books by Katherine Rundell.
Pat Pledger
There are fish everywhere by Britta Teckentrup
Big Picture Press, 2018. ISBN 9781787410763.
As summer draws on, it is likely that many of our young readers will
have either been fishing or will have eaten fish or perhaps seen
them 'in the flesh' over the past few months. While those who have
caught them in rivers, lakes or the sea may be able to identify the
species of their catch, with over 33,600 described species in the
world, fish are the most diverse creatures than any other group of
vertebrates found in aquatic environments all over the world.
'Big or small, spiny or flat, spiky or blobby, bright or exactly the
same colour as the sand', fish have inhabited the planet for about
420 million years, and in this richly illustrated, informative book
from Britta Teckentrup, young readers can investigate all things
fishy, from the biological characteristics of fish to their evolution
to what lives where. Focused on providing initial answers to a
variety of questions it is a broad-ranging text that will satisfy
the reader's curiosity and perhaps inspire them to investigate
further. With information in manageable chunks and accessible
language it is an ideal starter text for the independent reader, and
with invitations to search for things, including the rarely seen but
most common fish on the planet, the bristlemouth, they are
encouraged to read and look carefully. Ideal for those with an
interest in these amazing creatures.
Barbara Braxton
Where happiness lives by Barry Timms
Ill. by Greg Abbott. Little Tiger, 2018. ISBN 9781848699519.
In the beginning Grey Mouse is very happy and satisfied with his
sweet little house which has enough room for each mouse to have fun,
plenty of windows to let in the sun where he is safe and never
alone. But one day while he is out walking he spots a much larger
house that is hard to ignore, the home of White Mouse who invites
him up to the balcony to view an even more impressive house high on
a hill. Together they set out to visit it, so focused on reaching
their destination they are oblivious to all the sights, sounds and
smells that surround them on their journey.
When they get there, it is indeed a house like no other, and they
are welcomed in by Brown Mouse who delights in showing them round
her magnificent mansion. Grey Mouse and White Mouse feel more and
more inadequate as its features are revealed until they come to a
room that has a large telescope and they peek through it.
Told in rhyme and illustrated with clever cutouts and flaps to be
lifted, this is a charming story for young readers who will learn a
lesson about bigger not always being better, and the difference
between wants and needs, as well as being encouraged to reflect on
what makes them happy. Is it things? Or something else? Is the grass
always greener?
Both the story and the presentation have a very traditional feel
about them, making it perfect for young readers who relish the
places books can take them. And with the aid of boxes, rolls and
other everyday items they can have much fun creating their ideal
home!
Barbara Braxton
Feminism is... by A. Black et al.
DK, 2019. ISBN 9780241228029.
(Age: 14+) Highly Recommended. Non fiction. Feminism is...
follows on the heels of the recently published Feminists
don't wear pink and other lies - a collection of feminist
essays edited by Scarlett Curtis. Both books consolidate the concept
of intersectionality but Feminism is...takes the form of a
lively reference book. It might be a contradiction in terms, but
familiar frames for lucid explanations reward every page turned. The
thought-provoking topics form double page spreads within each
section, including a handful featuring key historical identities.
Each topic fans out across the gutter to engage with stylized
diagrams, bold boxed headings and a monochrome photo.
It's a ready reference with all the accessible features plus a
directory, glossary and index. Textbook sized, the topics are
classified into broad sections: A political and social movement,
Body and identity, Relationships and families, Education and work
and Culture and society. The simple language explains complicated
academic concepts and the spectrum of topics range from 'No Means
No' to 'Feminism and Sex Work.' A further delight is that every
topic gives equal weight to the opposing views of different schools
of feminist thought.
Like its counterpart, the gambit of feminism is linked by a central
idea - that intersectionality is at the heart of feminism. Feminism
cannot exist in a vacuum. The majority of humankind identify with or
belong to more than one marginalized and exploited group. Feminism
champions equal rights for everyone who is a victim of patriarchal
institutions - in reality that means fighting for as many men (of
character) as women. The media, legal system, education and religion
are the pillars supporting tyranny of a privileged system that
filters through family, language, work, politics, culture and
sexuality.
Feminism has evolved. The book may be aimed at youth, but it
provides everyone with access and clear understandings of hitherto
complex academic theories. Secondary schools should stock a feminist
reference book so thoroughly executed, if only for the simplest
definition proposed by Gemma Cairney in the foreword: 'It's a
hopeful term to associate ourselves with - it means you believe in
human rights'. As a result, Cairney was invited to take part in the
'My Life in Objects' series for The Pool. Meet her online on YouTube.
Deborah Robins
Lift-the-flap Engineering by Rose Hall
Ill. by Lee Cosgrove. Usborne, 2018. ISBN 9781474943659.
Highly recommended for your STEM collection. "Engineering is not
just about engines. Engineering means designing, testing and making
all kinds of useful things. To do this, engineers use mathematics,
science, and - above all - their imaginations." Engineers work in
teams to solve puzzles, whether the puzzle is big or small. They
follow a series of steps including:
asking questions to ensure they understand the problem
imagining possible solutions by letting their brains go wild
making detailed designs of their ideas
making models to test their ideas
having the final version built and checking it carefully.
Not so long ago primary students had 'art and craft' lessons in
which they usually followed a set of instructions to create a
cookie-cutter model of something their teacher had decided would be
appropriate for the current theme or unit of work. Then, in the 80s
with the launch of the National Profiles, technology became a
recognised key learning area and the strand of 'design, make and
appraise' gave students more freedom to imagine solutions to set
problems and actually trial their thoughts. In those days,
engineering was still viewed as a subject for university level. But
with the advance of computers and computing and inventions like the
Internet came a realisation that university was too late to start
that sort of thinking and now we have a real focus on 'STEM
subjects' - science, maths, engineering and technology - and with
it, a growing understanding of how integrated all the disciplines
are. There are no and can not be stand-alone slots in a timetable.
And now, with the rise of 'makerspaces', even our youngest children
are involved in engineering on a daily basis.
While this is a 'lift-the-flap' book it is a sophisticated one like
others in the Usborne collection, providing explanations and answers
in an interactive format that engages the reader and offers easy-to-
understand text within a myriad of diagrams. Things typically
associated with engineering like aircraft, rockets and robots are
explored but so are more everyday things like bicycles, solar panels
and sounds.
Barbara Braxton
Fairy stories for little children by Lorena Alvarez and Susanna Davidson
Usborne, 2018. ISBN 9781474951784.
This selection of five well-loved fairytales - Cinderella, Goldilocks
and the Three Bears, Jack and the Beanstalk, Little
Red Riding Hood and The Princess and the Pea - has
been lovingly recreated in words and pictures to appeal to the young
reader, either as a read-along or one who is verging on independence
and knows the stories well enough to predict the text.
Fairytales never go out of fashion and there is always a new
generation of children coming through to enjoy these age-old tales
so a new, revamped version is just the thing for sharing with them.
The illustrations in this edition are very modern although still
retaining the charm of the past, making this a suitable book for
those children who are older but who are learning English as another
language, and who are expected to be au fait with these traditional
tales. They may even have similar tales in their own language that
they can compare and contrast these with. Cinderella,
for example, has a version in many different cultures. Similarly,
the stories could be used to compare other versions of the same
story or even the movie versions so their appeal is not limited to
just emerging readers.
Barbara Braxton
Malala, my story of standing up for girls' rights by Malala Yousafzai with Patricia McCormick
Wren and Rook. ISBN 9781526361592.
(Age: 7-10) Highly recommended. Auto-biography. The
extraordinary true story of the Pakistani girl who stood up for
girls' rights to education and was shot by the Taliban is now
available in a new publication for a younger audience, so that they
too can learn about the young girl who refused to give in to
terrorism and believed that truth must prevail.
Malala was fortunate to have a father who encouraged her
independence of thought and her aspirations for education,
allowing her to participate in a BBC website on the daily life of a
girl in Pakistan under the rule of the Taliban, highlighting to the
wider world the issue of girls' rights to education. Hoping to
silence her, Taliban supporters stopped her school bus, and fired
shots to her head. The ensuing airlift to medical services, first in
Pakistan then to Britain as the seriousness of her injury became
apparent, brought her once again to the attention of the world. When
Malala's bravery is recognised with the award of the Nobel Peace
Prize in 2014, the youngest person to ever receive it, it means that
instead of being silenced Malala's message will continue to be
heard.
This version of Malala's life is written simply with short chapters
and large font. There are explainer boxes on some pages to explain
topics such as the celebration of Ramadan, the shalwar kamiz
clothing, the difference between an internally displaced person and
a refugee, the Malala Fund charity etc. And simple black and white
drawings by Joanie Stone further enhance understanding of the text.
At the end there is also a glossary of terms, a guide to
pronunciation of some words, and a timeline of significant events in
Malala's life.
All in all, this is a very accessible book, and would make a
worthwhile addition to every school library. The story of standing
up for one's beliefs and refusing to give in to bullies, is one that
will continue to be relevant to young readers.
Helen Eddy
How to raise your grown-ups by Lauren Child
Hubert Horatio, Book 1. HarperCollins Children's, 2018. ISBN
9780008264086.
'These stories are about the days when the Bobton-Trents had it
cushy, very cushy indeed.' The Bobton-Trent seniors certainly know
how to make the most of their extravagant wealth - socialising,
doing things, buying things and generally being more than a little
bit irresponsible. Luckily for them, their son Hubert Horatio
Bartle Bobton-Trent is an exceptionally intelligent, talented and
sensible child. Unluckily for Hubert, this tends to mean that a lot
of his spare time is spent steering his rather unruly set of
grown-ups out of trouble. So oblivious are they, they don't realise
that their lavish lifestyle means that their money has run out even
when the Bobton-Trents and their guests sit at a bare dinner table,
waiting for an hour and 22 minutes for the maid to serve them,
unaware that the staff has left. They are also unaware of
their only child's immense talents - he phones his parents at
the age of one, reads at two and, when he tumbles into the pool at
age three, discovers that he is "a natural swimmer" - and when their
financial situation becomes clear to him, he tries ways to raise
money through schemes like hosting board game sessions and opening
the mansion up for tours, but all his schemes fail because his
parents just spend the proceeds. It even becomes his decision to
sell the mansion and downsize to an apartment!
Lauren Child brings her unique combination of story-telling,
illustration and humour to this new series of books for the
newly independent reader. Even though the message about money not
necessarily being the happiness-bringer it is reputed to be may be
lost on the target audience, nevertheless young readers will delight
in the outrageous lifestyle and Hubert's constant vigilance and
tactics to keep the family afloat. Those who are a little older
might like to think about how income is derived and disbursed and
the sorts of decisions that must be made.
With the second episode Alien beings due later this year,
this is a series that will become very popular as the word spreads
among your students.
Barbara Braxton
Katherine Johnson by Ebony Joy Wilkins
Ill. by Charlotte Ager. DK Life Stories. DK; Penguin Random
House, 2019. ISBN: 9780241358580.
(Age: 8 - 13) Highly recommended. Themes: Biography; Katherine
Johnson; Mathematicians; Space; NASA; STEM; Discrimination.
Katherine Johnson may not be well known to Australian readers, but
her story has now been told in the movie Hidden Figures.
This amazing Afro-American woman was born in the era of segregation
in USA in 1918. Her family though were determined that their
children would explore every opportunity for education and it was
obvious from very early in Katherine's life that she had
considerable talent with numbers. No human restriction was going to
stand in the way of her inquiring mind and determination to let
numbers and their ability to describe the world to be understood and
communicated. Working eventually as a 'human computer' and
Mathematical analyst within NASA, she defied both discrimination of
her race and gender to become an elite force to be reckoned with,
originally in the Academic world and eventually within NASA. During
the incredible era of the Space Race and the first Moon Landing, it
was Katherine's role to create mathematical certainty for the
astronauts. At the age of 97, Katherine was presented with the
Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama, an
incredible honour for a long and incredible life. For someone who
loves counting, she certainly has a lot of years of a rich life to
count!
This is a book that should be read! Katherine Johnson is such an
inspiring advocate for STEM learning and is also just an amazing
person, not letting social obstructions be a barrier to learning and
success. Her resilience and determination are also worthy of being
shared with a younger generation. The presentation of this biography
in the DK Life Stories series is simple with plenty of
illustrations in a cartoon style, and with photographs dotted
through the simple text. With some text boxes and bubbles explaining
unfamiliar terms this is a book easily accessible for young readers
and visually 'youthful'. The family tree and timeline of Katherine's
life appears at the end of the biographical detail.
Carolyn Hull
Believe me by JP Delaney
Quercus, 2018. ISBN: 9781787472419.
(Age: Adult, 18+) Highly recommended. An enthralling and turbulent
psychological thriller, JP Delaney's re-written and re-published
version of his 2001 novel The Decoy grasps the reader's
attention and interest and never relents. Claire Wright, a British
drama student living in New York without a green card, begins work
with a firm of divorce lawyers, acting as an easy pick-up in hotel
bars in order to entrap unfaithful husbands. Usually excellent at
her job, it is surprising when her newest target, Patrick Fogler,
remains faithful to his wife. While Claire dismisses this as merely
a rare decent husband, suspicions arise when his wife is murdered
later that very night. Requested by the police to make use of her
acting skills to lure a confession out of Patrick, the prime suspect
in his wife's murder, Claire gets to work. But from the beginning,
Claire has doubts about the part she is to play, and about whether
Patrick really could be a murderer. As she progresses with the
investigation, and wonders whether there could be more to this that
she was told, she learns that she never really knows who she can
trust, and that this might just be the deadliest role of her life.
JP Delaney provides a vivid and realistic world, with authentic
characters that make the reader question just how complex human
nature is. The storyline is engaging and keeps the reader on their
toes and constantly re-evaluating the motives of each character.
With each new twist and turn, the reader is sucked into Delaney's
world, and eager to uncover the mystery it revolves around. Note:
themes of violence, sex, murder, psychological torture, domestic
violence, necrophilia, BDSM and crime. Not suitable for younger
readers.
Daniella Chiarolli
The extraordinary life of Stephen Hawking by Kate Scott
Ill. by Esther Mols. Extraordinary lives series. Puffin
Books, 2019. ISBN: 9780241373927.
(Age: 7-10) Highly recommended. Themes: Biography; Stephen Hawking;
Scientists; Science; Cosmology. In a very unpretentious format, with
simple language and naive illustrations, this biography of Stephen
Hawking introduces this amazing man of Science to youthful readers.
Explanations of his journey as a scientist and cosmologist, while
coping with the difficulties of his diagnosis and life with MND, are
described with side notes to explain any complex terms. Basic family
history and Hawking's appearance or influence in popular media and
film are also included. Obviously, the science of cosmology needs to
be explained at a fundamental level for the target audience, and
this is done well. Disability and the resilience of Stephen Hawking
is described with sensitivity. A time line of his life completes the
biography.
This series makes biography a great alternative to a fiction text
for youthful readers. This is certainly easy enough for readers aged
7-10 to manage. The use of green text and illustrations also will
appeal to the visual generation. The book also includes excerpts
from two other biographies in the series: Malala Yousafzai and
Michelle Obama. With more biographies planned to be released, this
will be a great series to collect for school libraries or to add to
a reading program.
Carolyn Hull