I saw an image of the cover of this book somewhere on the internet. I previously LOVED this book also by Catherine Norton but I wrongly listed it as a book the CBCA missed adding to the 2025 notables list. This first book by Catherine Norton - The Fortune Maker was published in 2023 this means it SHOULD have been a 2024 CBCA Notable!
Thursday, May 22, 2025
Hester Hitchins and the Falling Stars by Catherine Norton
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
The Midwatch by Judith Rossell
Getting kicked out of one orphanage and being sent to another is absolutely the best thing that could ever have happened to Maggie. Yes, I did say the 'best thing'. Sister Immaculata delivers Maggie Fishbone to The Midwatch Institute for Orphans, Runaways and Unwanted Girls.
Maggie's first impression is that this is a thoroughly dreadful place. I have emphasised some of the words in these quotes to give you an idea about this place:
"The woman frowned, let them in, the closed the door behind them with a heavy thud."
"They were wearing long, grey hooded cloaks, and they walked silently past with their eyes down."
"The gloomy organ music echoed around the hallway. Maggie could feel the sadness seeping into her like a trickle of cold water."
"The woman opened the door into a large, shadowy room full of tables and chairs."
"At the far end of the room was a platform, where an extremely tall lady, as upright as a ruler, was playing the organ. She had a grim expression and a black eye-patch and she wore an old-fashioned black gown that reached to the ground."
You now have an impression of The Midwatch but I have to tell you that you are entirely mistaken. Maggie Fishbone, Nell Wozniak and Sofie Zarescu - the three new girls - are all in for a huge shock. All of those sights and sounds from the first scene are designed to trick the outside world and especially people like Sister Immaculata.
What is really going on in this place? How are the activities connected with the night monster - a creature that has been attacking people in the Northside of the city. Why do the girls need to learn codes, German, fencing and even stranger subjects like Hiding and Observing? Why has the librarian Dr Entwhistle been hurt and where is Miss Fenechurch? Surely she was just using the library for innocent plant research.
Judith Rossell is so skilled at world building and she also knows how to write about delicious food.
"The hot chocolate was rich and delicious and quite different from the watery cocoa they sometimes had at the orphanage."
"Maggie hesitated, then took the closest cake, which was shaped like a frog. It was sweet and crumbly and filled with strawberry cream. She finished it in three slightly messy bites."
"Maggie was very hungry, despite all the cakes. They filled their plates with stew, mashed potatoes and green peas."
"On Sundays, there was no morning bell and no lessons, and there were hot cinnamon waffles with maple syrup for breakfast."
If you look at my labels for this post you will see Steampunk because the world of this book is somewhere in the past and perhaps set in a city a little like London or maybe New York (there are two lions outside the library), but this place also has some modern technology and of course airships like the one you can see on the cover. Here is another illustration:
I don't usually quote cover endorsements but I totally agree with Jaclyn Moriarty:
"A cracking concept, sensational characters and absolutely smashing pictures. The Midwatch is the cat's pyjamas."
I can't recommend The Midwatch highly enough. Pop it on your Christmas shopping list and your school library wish list. If your school library buys the Standing Order service from Scholastic, or the Lamont Standing order, or the standing order from Pegi Williams then you will already have a copy of The Midwatch. Why not take it home to read over the Christmas break - you are sure to thoroughly enjoy this clever, page-turning story. And I love the way the publisher Hardie Grant has produced this book as a scrumptious textured hardback.
I am certain The Midwatch will feature in our 2025 CBCA Younger Readers award lists - Notable title and Shortlist and it would not surprise me if this book is even the winner!
POST UPDATE - This book didn't make the CBCA short list - I am so shocked and desperately disappointed for Judith Rossell. Today (6th May, 2025) I saw this book has now arrived in the US. It has a new cover, amended title and a glowing STAR review from Kirkus:
Australian review comments:
Companion books:
Here are other books by Judith Rossell - she also did the splendid art in her book and I am lucky to own a small piece from Withering-by-Sea.
Thursday, February 16, 2023
Crookhaven: The School for Thieves by JJ Arcanjo
Gabriel Avery and his grandmother are just getting by. His grandmother works as a housekeeper for a wealthy family but the pay is so low that often they only eat one meal a day. Gabriel, however, has a talent for picking pockets. His grand mother does not ask any questions but Gabriel is able to 'obtain' enough money each day so that they don't starve.
In his pocket Gabriel carries a lucky coin but one day, after picking a pocket at the railway station, his coin is stolen. In its place he finds a card inviting him to a town called Moorheart. In this remote and deserted place he discovers a school for crooks. He discovers students with other amazing talents. He discovers why the Headmaster of the school, the aptly named Caspian Crook, stole his coin. And later he discovers just why he was selected to attend this school.
When books proclaim - "Perfect for fans of Harry Potter" - I usually cringe but I found myself saying exactly that as I read this debut novel, the first in a planned series. Actually this book does not use the Harry Potter marketing strategy but it could!
There are heaps of Harry Potter tropes in this book but they do not feel worn out. JJ Arcanjo adds such a layer of intelligence to this story of a school for criminals albeit criminals who will do good deeds.
"The word crook is misunderstood, I think. You steal for the same reason we at Crookhaven steal - to put the world back into balance."
Things about the school:
- Sorting into classes is done by pebbles which leave a colour on your hands - 1A (blue), 1B (red), 1C (green) and 1D (Yelloe).
- Students can win and loose points. The goal is to win the Crooked Cup.
- There are two types of students - Merits (like Gabriel) and Legacies (offspring of crooks)
- The youngest/newest students are called Crooklings and this year there are 48
- Other years are called Miscreants, Lower Delinquents and the final year students are Robin Hoods.
- The guards around the school are called Gardeners but they are really skilled crooks and the grounds have very sophisticated sensors and cameras.
- Classes - Forgery; Deception; History of Crookery; Tricks of the Trade; Cultivating a Crook; Crimtastics and Tech-nique.
- The challenge - to break into the Headmaster's office and steal something without him knowing that something is missing.
- Friends: Penelope Crook; twins Ade and Ede; and Amira.
- Characters you will want to meet again in book 2 - Leon Marquez (Robin Hood) and Villette (is she really a villain?).
One final thing - here is a description of the librarian:
"A slender, red-haired librarian strode past, her burnt-caramel eyes sweeping over the two of them ... she wore black jeans, a thick maroon fleece and thin black gloves, likely to protect the more precious books from fingerprints."
The technology in this book reminded me of the Artemis Fowl series. If you want to read another book with Harry Potter overtones try to find this one (sadly it is long out of print)
Huge thanks to Beachside Bookshop for my advance copy of Crookhaven: The School for Thieves (Hodder/Hachette) which will be released in March 2023.
Monday, March 21, 2022
The Calling of Jackdaw Hollow by Kate Gordon
In the book The Heartsong of Wonder Quinn we meet Wonder's special friend - a crow named Hollowbeak. In this newest book, fans of this series can now discover more about the young boy Jackdaw Hollow - a boy who will become Hollowbeak.
This newest instalment begins with a prologue. Here we read about Jackdaw's tragic beginning. His beautiful parents are killed on a stormy night and baby Jackdaw, who is now an orphan, is taken to Direleafe Hall. He is given in the care of Mrs Beekman who runs this school for girls. Jackdaw is a boy and a baby but Mrs Beekman agrees to take him.
"But now ... Now, Mrs Beekman had a boy. And he was to be her son. Mrs Beekman looked down at this baby - her new baby boy - and finally, after all those years, she felt something inside her crack and the almond within it was sweet. She felt joy returning to her soul. It might be mad peril, sure enough, but loving this boy might be the making of her."
Jackdaw has a happy childhood. He is a keen student and he is deeply loved by Mrs Beekman but something is missing in his life. He is sure he needs a calling or a purpose. Why did he survive when his parents both perished? He meets three young girls who also live at Direleafe Hall. They are ghosts and they befriend Jack and encourage his friendship with a young local girl called Angeline. Angeline is suffering but she has a plan to run away - to run away and join the circus. Is it up to Jackdaw to rescue Angeline? Is this his true calling?
Kate Gordon creates memorable characters in this book especially Jack himself of course but also young Angeline who is both brave and vulnerable, suffering horribly and yet also optimistic. I also loved the distinct voices of the three ghosts - Nell, Lucy and Florence. As for scenery, the idea of cartwheeling through a field of tulips is so appealing.
"The girl in the tulip field turned, heels over head, like foam-topped waves rolling to shore. Above her moonlight made the shape of her, the paleness of her, more stark, more visible. She seemed at odds with the landscape. A thing outside, separate. Above it all."
Can you see thistles on the cover?
"Hope is a tulip in springtime. Hope is a thistle that grows through the cracks, that grows on mountainsides, where nothing else will grow. Hope is a bird that takes flight, over and again, even though flying seems an impossible thing. Even though it's dangerous. Hope is a baby who survives."
The Calling of Jackdaw Hollow will be available on 29th March. Huge thanks to University of Queensland Press for this advance copy of this book. I recommend this book for readers aged 10+. even though this is officially the third book in this series I would actually recommend you could begin the series here.
Here are the three books in this series by Kate Gordon. Look closely and you can see a seasonal reference in the background of each image - Winter (Book One The Heartsong of Wonder Quinn); Spring (Book Two The Ballard of Melody Rose); Summer (Book Three The Calling of Jackdaw Hollow). This makes me wonder if Book four is planned.
Kate Gordon lives in Tasmania and she won the IBBY Australia Ena Nöel award in 2016. Since then her writing seems to have gone from strength to strength.
Thursday, November 22, 2018
Dolls of Hope - a Friendship Dolls book by Shirley Parenteau
Dolls of Hope is the second book of three from the series Friendship Dolls. You might begin by reading my thoughts about the first installment - Ship of Dolls. I so enjoyed my discovery of these historic events when I read Ship of Dolls earlier this year.
In Dolls of Hope we meet Chiyo. She is living in a remote rural village in Japan but her sister is promised to a wealthy older man from a larger town. Chiyo is told she must stay home during the omiai or meeting where her sister Masako will meet Yamada Nori. Chiyo is desperate to see this man, to discover what he is like, to see his house, to perhaps stop her beloved sister making what she thinks is a big mistake so she stows away in a basket on the back of the family cart. She is breaking all the rules and most of all not showing herself as modest quiet girl which is what everyone expects of her.
She disrupts the family meeting and so it is decided she will be sent away to Tasuchiura Girls School. She is told she must model herself on the behaviour of a girl called Hoshi the daughter of a General but Chiyo soon discovers, while adults admire Hoshi, in reality she is a wretched bully.
At the end of Ship of Dolls we watched 12,000 dolls sail away to Japan. In Dolls of Hope they have arrived and now a ceremony in Tokyo is planned where the dolls will be officially welcomed.
After a very rough start at her new school, thanks to Hoshi, Chiyo joins the choir. The children are learning a welcome song and six girls will have the honour of attending the ceremony in Tokyo. Chiyo earns a place and the girls visit a display of the dolls:
"Under no circumstances are any of you to touch the dolls. We will walk past the display and admire only with our eyes. I do not wish to see any of you put even a finger on a doll."
Chiyo has no plan to touch the beautiful dolls with their blonde hair and blue eyes but the horrid Hoshi pushes against the display table and calls out a warning. Acting on instinct Chiyo catches one doll, Emily Grace, just as she is about to fall onto the floor. So begins a series of events Chiyo could never have imagined. She meets the mayor of Tokyo, Emily Grace is gifted to her school and she meets a master doll maker who is working on one of the 86 special dolls that will be sent from Japan to America. But at every turn Hoshi tries to thwart her. Several times I found myself holding my breath hoping against hope Hoshi would not hurt Chiyo or the precious doll Emily Grace.
Here is the Kirkus review. Here is an interview with Shirley. You can read about the restoration of one of the friendship dolls here.
I do have one little connection with this book. Chiyo has a kokeshi doll which she names Momo. I found this one from a shop and they say momo means peace although I don't imagine Chiyo's doll looked like this. Just a warning sensitive readers may find the scenes where Hoshi takes Momo quite distressing.
I found this cover of a Japanese version of Dolls of Hope.
If this topic interests you I have discovered another book by Kirby Larson which I plan to read. And of course I have book three from The Friendship Dolls series - Dolls of War on my list too.
Saturday, March 3, 2018
Figgy takes the city by Tamsin Janu
Figgy and her friend Nana sit for a scholarship exam and both of them are selected to attend Hope College in the city of Accra. Figgy knows her friend Nana is clever and that he has studied hard to earn this honour but she is not so certain about why she has been selected.
"Principal Alfoso smiled. And he said, 'You deserve it for a number of reasons.' My breath caught in my throat when he tapped my cheek. Just below the spot where my second eye should be. I was not getting a scholarship because I was good at reading, sport or maths. Not even because I was in a movie I was getting a scholarship because I was missing an eye."
When the children finally arrive in the city after an eventful journey and a confusing first week they go to stay with Uncle Philmond. Figgy is struck by the poverty she sees. "It was the biggest slum I had ever visited. It seemed to go on forever." We know Figgy feels concern for the slum dwellers but it is Nana who takes practical steps to help them. Nana can see Uncle Philmond is rich and yet he often fails to send much needed money to Grandma Ama. Nana wants to make money to pay Grandma back for his care. He joins the slum kids each weekend scavenging in the dump instead of staying with Uncle Philmond. Figgy is both curious and furious. Nana seems so different and mysterious - is he still her friend? He won't answer her questions so one evening she follows him.
Tamsin really lets her readers inside a scene and this one is especially graphic. Here Figgy is following Nana :
"The alleyway was not as busy as the street. I had to be careful Nana wouldn't see me ... The ground was muddy, slippery, and littered with bits of glass and plastic. I almost cried out when I tripped over a cow's head, which was surrounded by a cloud of flies. The cow's mouth was wide open, as if it had been yelling as it died. Most of it's skin had peeled away and what remained was being eaten by maggots."
Here is a review in Reading Time. I especially like the way the three covers all link together and I thank Tasmin Janu for allowing me to spend a little time in Ghana with Figgy - watching her growing up and taking on new challenges.
Thursday, December 28, 2017
The Princess and the Suffragette by Holly Webb
I picked this book - The Princess and the Suffragette - in a bookshop recently for two reasons. Firstly the title - I am fascinated by the suffragette movement in England prior to WWI and secondly I liked the cover but when I sat down to read it a couple of days ago I made an odd discovery. On the cover it says "A sequel to the much loved classic A little Princess." I had no idea about the book A Little Princess and wrongly assumed it was also by Holly Webb. I searched all over this new book for a clue. I looked at some bookseller sites and eventually I discovered A Little Princess is a book written by Frances Hodgson Burnett in 1905. I wonder why the publisher didn't put this detail somewhere on the book.
This is the second 'sequel' book I have read by Holly Webb. About a year ago I read Return to the Secret Garden - a sequel to another book by Frances Hodgson Burnett - The Secret Garden. Holly Webb is not the first person to pen a sequel to A little Princess - I have also found a book by Hilary McKay called Wishing for Tomorrow.
Knowing this was a sequel I needed to find A little Princess. Luckily it is available through Project Gutenberg. I will say I do think it is essential to read this classic first or as a short cut you could read this plot outline from Wikipedia.. I found the early chapters of The Princess and the Suffragette very confusing before I realised this was a special kind of sequel.
At the end of A little Princess, Sara is rescued by her father's business partner and moves in to the house next to Miss Minchin's school and it seems her life will now be perfect. The Princess and the Suffragette picks up the story nine years later. In this story the main character is Lottie who was left at the school aged 4. Now aged eleven Lottie has begun to question her situation. Why won't her father come to visit? Would he have abandoned her if she was a born a boy? What does her future hold? Then she sees the school's scullery maid wearing a mysterious badge. She demands to know the truth. Living a sheltered life in the school Lottie knows nothing of the Suffragettes but Sally has newspapers and pamphlets and over the coming year Lottie learns about the struggle, the suffering of Suffragettes who have been imprisoned and the movement of 'deeds not words'. She is invited to the races by Sara. It is the Derby where Emily Davison runs onto the track and is killed. In the final fast-paced scenes Lottie discovers the truth about her mother, who she had been told was dead, and she is able to confront her absent father.
Older Primary students who enjoy historical fiction should look for this book. I really appreciate the research done by Holly Webb. For example she mentions this slogan. From Prison to Citizenship.
Sally has this poster in her attic room but Lottie has no idea what it means. Factory Acts Regulations for Women - They have a cheek. I've never been asked.
One more connection. I have long had a memory of a Shirley Temple film where two little children are sleeping in an attic. Someone comes in the night and transforms the space providing floor rugs, furniture and a soft beautiful bedding. I now discover this scene is from is the movie of A little Princess. Actually there have been many movie and television adaptions of this famous book.
Holly Webb is such a prolific author. She has written over 90 books. Here is a review with more story details. You can listen to an audio sample which begins from page 4.
Here are some covers for A little Princess. It is fascinating to see the different ways illustrators and publishers have presented this book.
Saturday, June 18, 2016
Cartwheeling in thunderstorms by Katherine Rundell
After reading Rooftoppers I knew I wanted to pick up another book by Katherine Rundell. I started Cartwheeling in thunderstorms early this afternoon and finished it before the sunset. This is a fabulous book and as Philip Pullman says on the back cover Katherine Rundell has a 'distinctive voice and a wild imagination.'
Will (Wilhelmina) has a blissfully free life in Zimbabwe. Her friends are the wild animals, her horse and the neighbourhood boys especially her best friend Simon. The farm where she has lived her whole life is owned by Captain Browne and Will's dad is the foreman. Wills' mum, Lilibet, was a very special lady who also embraced life in the wilds of Africa but sadly she died when Will was only five.
"Seven years after his wife's death, William Silver started running a temperature. The next day he collapsed on the packed earth floor of the stable."
The story now references Cinderella. Captain Browne takes a wife. She immediately plots to get rid of little Will. She organises to send this wild child to an English boarding school.
I love this description of Cynthia (Captain Browne's new wife). "Cynthia Vincy was well-dressed, strong jawed, long-legged, conscious of her power over men: formidable. ... Cynthia smiled down at Will. The smile marred the woman's perfect poise; it was a square smile, like a letter box. Cynthia was aware of this and rarely smiled."
Everything about the school is horrid. The food, the tiny room she has to share with one of the school bullies, the bitter cold and the endless rules.
"She discovered that times tables had nothing to do with time, not in fact with tables; that history was not a thousand stories building up into the colossal, strange, heart-stoppingly beautiful present; that knowing about cows and snake bites and birth and umbilical cords was irrelevant in science class. She also learned that shorts were wrong and she had gypsy hair and she wasn't funny, wasn't clever, and looked like a mad tramp in her thick socks and muddy boots."
Will finally escapes after an especially distressing incident where a gang of girls force her into a cold bath. She wanders the streets of London. It is Winter and she is only wearing shorts. She spends a night at the zoo, a night in Hyde Park and tries to hide in a corner of Harrods department store.
While at the zoo she has a chance meeting with a young boy. He shares his Mars bar and gives her half of his comic book. Later she sees an address scribbled on a corner of this comic. Perhaps she can at last find somewhere to feel safe and take refuge.
After reading Cartwheels in thunderstorms you might look for Duck for Danger (sadly long out of print), Callie and the Prince (also out of print) and Figgy in the world.
Take a minute to watch this video with Katherine Rundell where she describes her own childhood in Zimbabwe. You could also read the beautiful speech she gave at the Horn Book awards.
I do need to mention the title - Cartwheeling in thunderstorms. After her journey, both physical and emotional, Will now accepts that for now she needs to learn how to cartwheel in thunderstorms.
Kirkus have given this book a star! Here is an extract from their review :
Thursday, January 14, 2016
Olive of Groves by Katrina Nannestad illustrated by Lucia Masciullo
Olive of Groves is a romp. Reading this book is such a treat. I smiled from page one through to page 260. Some truly awful things happen to Olive (a couple of times I had to stop reading) but I knew I was in very good hands with Katrina Nannestad and that this gifted author would protect her heroine Olive. Olive will survive. Olive will triumph. Goodness and kindness, patience and perseverance will defeat the evil school bully - Pig McKenzie.
Olive of Groves contains a huge cast of characters - each with special and sometimes dangerous talents. There are eleven naughty boys. Tiny Tim who never ever washes his socks, Reginald the butter spreader and Carlos an explosives expert. There are eleven talking animals including three friendly rats - Wordsworth who loves his dictionary (I have quoted him at the top of this post), Blimp who loves to eat and Chester who collects and loves buttons. Among the circus performers you will meet Anastasia, Eduardo and Alfonzo the most fabulous acrobats. Finally there is the school headmistress Mrs Groves "befuddled and bonkers" and Pig McKenzie "a pig of evil intent."
Olive arrives at her new school - Mrs Groves' Boarding School for Naughty Boys, Talking Animals and Circus Performers.
"Olive was ... a sensible and practical girl. She ate peas with a spoon and folded her toast together like a sandwich so that if dropped, it could not land jam-side down; she wore her jet-back hair long enough to pull back into a ponytail, but short enough that it was easy to keep clean and tangle free; she kept small snacks under her pillow in case of midnight hunger pangs; and she arranged all her clothes in alphabetical order."
Can you see the problem? How will Olive fit in to her new school? She is a girl, not a boy or a talking animal. Her only course of action is to become a circus performer. This will be difficult but Olive is determined to stay at Groves. Mrs Groves tells Olive she can stay for one week on probation. She is assigned her room and Mrs Groves quickly runs away because she is scared of girls! When Olive finally reaches the turret Olive meets three very special rats. She sets out her possessions including her alarm clock and arranges her clothes in alphabetic order. After dinner Pig McKenzie visits her room. He picks up her clock. "Glass shattered and springs, coils, cogs, screws, hands, bells and other mysterious clockwork components exploded across the room." This is the first of many horrid incidents involving the despicable pig. Luckily her friends come to the rescue. One of my favourite scenes comes the next day when these delightful little rats repair her clock.
"The newly assembled alarm clock was a truly amazing piece of engineering. ...The hands moved backwards in an anticlockwise direction, ... a chunk of cheese sat where the number eight used to be." In spite of this haphazard repair the clock and alarm still work.
One other little delightful touch in this book relates to the buttons. Teachers could use this as a simple stimulus for writing. Chester invents the most wonderful and fanciful stories to explain each button.
"I found this one down the back of the sofa in the library four weeks, two days and three hours ago. It's from the Napoleonic Wars. Fell off the Duke of Wellington's shirt during the Battle of Waterloo."
Here are some of the wonderful words in this book. This is just a tiny sample :
esteemed
conflagration
rotund
robust
ricocheted
sauntered
cocooned
supplicated
malice
botulism
avowal
Pig McKenzie uses some hilarious names for Olive - her is another fun writing exercise - finding words beginning with a particular letter - here is it O.
Oblong
Ostrich
Octagon
October
Obligation
I loved The girl who bought Mischief and so I was delighted to see Katrina Nannestad had written another book. Read an extract from Olive of Groves. Once again I have found a book that is truly wonderful. I recommend you rush into a library and grab this book today! Make sure you read the chapter headings - they are part of the delight! I dare to hope this book will be short listed for our 2016 CBCA Book of the Year awards - fingers crossed.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
The Dragonfly Pool by Eva Ibbotson

“Twenty years earlier a very rich couple from America came and build a school on the ruins of Delderton Hall … they believed that only the best was good enough for children and they were as idealistic as they were wealthy. …Each child had its own room… The common rooms had well-sprung sofas, the pianos in the music rooms were Steinways and the library housed over ten thousand books… Delderton was to be a progressive school - a school where children would be free to follow their instincts and develop in a natural way. There would be no bullyings or beating, no competitive sports … no exams – just harmony and self development in the glorious Devon countryside. A school where teachers would be chosen for their loving kindness and not their degrees.”
As World War Two is about to begin Tally, short for Talitha, is sent by her loving father Doctor Hamilton to Delderton Hall. Dr Hamilton is a wonderful practitioner who is loved by his patients and one has arranged a scholarship to Delderton for Tally.
At its heart this is a book about friendship. Tally makes wonderful friends among the teachers and students at Delderton Hall but her most precious friend, Karil, comes from the tiny European country of Bergania. Tally finds she has a connection with this country after seeing a short documentary film at the cinema. Quite by chance just after she sees the film her school receives an invitation to a folk dance festival in Bergania. Tally is a girl with determination and charm and so it is arranged that four girls and four boys will travel from England to Bergainia to perform at the festival. Sadly this beautiful country is in the sights of Hitler. He has sent his henchman Reichsgruppen Fuchrer Anton Steifelbreich to carry out the take over which will involve an assassination.
As with all books by Eva Ibboston I loved The Dragonfly pool and am happy to say a new copy will arrive in our school library very soon. At nearly 400 pages this looks like quite a long book but the plot moves along at a frantic pace with some surprising and delightful twists and turns. You might find the opening chapter a little odd and fragmented but just keep reading and you will find things will quickly fall into place.
If you enjoy books by Odo Hirsch especially Dairus Bell, or the Taspestry series Henry Neff by then you must grab The Dragonfly Pool soon. Children interested in the events of World War Two might also look for The Little Riders by Margaretha Shemin which also features a determined heroine just like Tally.
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Among the imposters by Margaret Peterson Haddix

Watching from a hidden and high upstairs window Luke discovers another third child in hiding. Her name is Jen, but unlike Luke, she knows about the world and is determined to fight to have this repressive and unjust law overturned. Her protest has disastrous consequences and the first book in this fabulous series by Margaret Peterson Haddix Among the Hidden, ends with a shocking tragedy. The ending reminded me of Robert Cormier. His book After the First Death lingers with me even now twenty years after reading it.
As this second installment Among the Imposters begins Luke is forced to flee is home. He is sent to a remote boarding school and he is given a new identity as Lee Grant. This new environment is not just foreign for Luke, it is terrifying. There are no windows, the constant threat of demerits and hideous bullies.
The real power in this book for me was the totally unpredictable plot. There are so many twists and turns as Luke negotiates this horrible school and tries to make sense of himself and those around him. Luke discovers the outside world and begins to make a garden. Then just as things seem somehow bearable, his garden is destroyed - it is a scene of senseless destruction.
There are seven books in this series and I can’t wait to grab the next one… Among the betrayed. I highly recommend this fabulous series for all serious senior Primary readers. Check out my blog post on book one.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
The Tapestry Book One The Hound of Rowan by Henry H Neff

Max McDaniels visits an art gallery with his dad, his mum has disappeared (I hope the resolution of this will happen in the second book). While he is at the gallery he sees a tapestry with a vivid battle scene. A mysterious man with white eyes appears to be following Max with sinister intentions. Later Max is visited by Nigel who works for the Rowan Academy and so Max leaves his dad and goes to live at the Academy which has all the usual features of a boarding school with eccentric teachers, banquet halls, ball games, and older students who are bullies.
There are some nice touches in this story by Henry Neff such as a grove of apple trees which the students visit on their first day. “Every year a Class Tree will bear one apple for each living member of that class. When a member of that class has passed on , his or her apple turns to gold. Thus we remember them, and those apples we do not touch.” Page 74
Then there are the rooms which are configured to match the students. Max and his room mate David are given the most magical room with an glass ceiling that reveals the night sky.
I also liked the magical creatures that the students are entrusted to take care of. The children are taken to the Sanctuary which is guarded by YaYa, a black lioness. Among the rare and endangered animals is a winged bull or Syrian Shedu, a small dog or Somerset Bray, twin fauns, a red bullfrog, a highlands hare called Tweedy and a silver gazelle or ulu. For Max the creature he must care for is Nick a Black Forest Lymrill which resembles an otter with metallic quills, a foxlike tail and curing black claws like a bear. To feed their animals the students tell a food bin what they need for example Max says ‘food for Nick: Black Forest Lymrill'. “The bin was piled high with crates of writhing rodents and worms along with small stacks of metal bars.” Page 143.
If you enjoyed the Harry Potter books, or Skulduggery Pleasant (Derek Landy) or The Tower at Moonville (Stephen Elboz) then I am sure you will gobble up Tapestry Book one The Hound of Rowan. A terrific start to the series which is sure to be a winner with Primary readers.