Showing posts with label Sailing boats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sailing boats. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Spirit by Cherri Ryan illustrated by Christina Booth


To me, the title of Spirit sums up the theme of the book. It conjures up the strength of spirit that each of us has inside ourselves and our character has to find when Spirit encounters a big crash. 
Cherri Ryan

I built a ship from this and that.
I named her Spirit.
Could Spirit sail?
I knew she could.

In the garden Spirit's handkerchief sail helps her glide across the lily pond. Over the coming days the little girl takes Spirit into larger and larger bodies of water. At night, in her dreams, she imagines herself on board her boat oiling the hull, polishing the deck, tightening the sails. But this little vessel is fragile. What will happen when she is pushed against the rocks?

"I searched for her, left and right. Where was she? There! I plummeted into the reeds. I lifted my broken Spirit and cradled her. All through the night, I tended her, and mended her, from this and that. By morning I knew Spirit was not broken. She was stronger. My Spirit was stronger than ever before."

How did I miss this book back in 2018? And how did the CBCA miss it in their 2019 Notables? This is one of those special books you could share with your younger group aged 6+ and also with upper Primary readers. Christina Booth is a fabulous Australian illustrator - you can see more of her books here. We (IBBY Australia) did contact Christina Booth asking if she might like to participate in our Mini Masterpiece art auction. If we run this again in 2027 I hope we can entice her to support us - I would love to own a piece of her art. 

Spirit is a NSW Premier's Reading Challenge title. If you read PRC titles your library Spirit is a K-2 PRC title [31130] or you could encourage a teacher of Grades 4-6 to share this with their class. Sailing fans will enjoy all the nautical references but there are also deeper themes to consider and discuss. 

Here is an interview with the author and a quote:

Approximately five years ago, I came up with a story idea, which I originally called ‘My ship won’t sink’ which was about a child going through some difficult times and he turned his bed into a pirate-style ship and added planks and all sort of bits to it whenever he felt he needed to add strength to his life. That story sat in my mind for a long time while I worked on other things. One day, I was driving to work when the story began to change in my mind and I pulled over my car and scribbled it onto the back of a receipt in my glove box as I knew that this was how the story was meant to be. At that stage it was called ‘Hope’ but other than a few small changes, it was very similar to the final story. I learned that a child’s first sailing boat is called an ‘Opti’ which is short for ‘Optimists’ and I thought that concept also captured my story.

Reading Time said: This is a special picture book that sends a message of persistence and resilience, and the importance of trying again and again if we do not first succeed. Highly recommended for all school and public libraries, this is one to watch out for.

This is a wonderfully positive story to read with young children, reaffirming the reality of not always being successful but encouraging them to try again. Read Plus

Spirit is a deceptively simple story about a boat being mended after each foray into the world but as the title indicates Spirit is also a parable for everyone who has ever set out into the perilous unknown seeking their destiny and as such is a positive message to children to persevere and believe in themselves and their dreams. Story Links

Companion book:


Tuesday, December 23, 2025

The Keeper of the Octopus by Neridah McMullin




"Every child in the village grew up hearing the tale. It was folklore. A long time ago a shark attacked a Portablow fishing boat as a it sailed up the river with its catch. A giant octopus who lived at the river mouth fought with the shark, saving the fisherfolk and their livelihood. And from then on, an octopus had always lived at the river mouth to protect the fisherfolk from sharks. At least that was the story."

Pippy lives with her elderly great uncle. She desperately misses her mother who has died recently and also longs to talk to her father, but he has headed away to sea and has been gone for nine months. It is clear Uncle Isaac who is caring for her now, is suffering from memory loss. It has begun to feel dangerous to sail with him, but Pippy needs to do this because Uncle Isaac, like all the people in this village, rely on fishing for their income.

The village is near a cove and decades ago there was a problem with shark attacks. Pippy is sure this is not the fault of the sharks but rather a symptom of things being out of balance. There has always been the story about an octopus but surely this is just a folktale. Young Pippy discovers it is her own mother who has been the Keeper of the Octopus but now that her mother is gone destiny determines Pippy herself must now feed, care for, and learn to communicate with Octavia. Uncle Isaac gives Pippy a special talisman, a stone that she wears around her neck. It glows and helps her know when Octavia is near. She also has the diary written by generations of her ancestors which tells her how to care for and recognise the moods of the octopus. 

Then three brothers arrive in the village. They appear at first to be fishermen but then they bring back an enormous catch with all sorts of precious sea creatures - way more than the town could ever need. Pippy knows this is a wrong and dangerous practice and then she hears one of the men talking about Octavia and so she knows this will be a race against time to keep Octavia safe and to convince the town authorities that the Calamary brothers are dangerous. 

As with all great stories there were moments in this book when I gasped, when I cheered, and when I sighed. One special character, apart from young Pippy who is wise beyond her years, is her friend Wally.

"Wally had been born with a deformed foot, a foot that turned inwards and downwards, worsening as he grew older, which meant he couldn't walk very fast nor go very far. Teased at school because of his limp, Wally stuttered a little when he spoke. He never said much. But he was a child who noticed things, small things."

And there is an element of magical realism because Pippy and her uncle live with a family brownie named Ferg. He tends to the house and the cooking. I loved his way of talking he always addresses her by saying - Pippy Cocklebiddy, daughter of Claudine and he uses words like bairn, Mither, orright, and nowt. He reminded me a little of Dobbie from the Harry Potter series. 

Here are a couple of text quotes:

"There were masses of bluefin tuna, black bream, tommy ruff and kingfish; hundreds of snapper, flathead, silver perch, and graylings; and many smaller good eating fish such as garfish, whiting, salmon and trevally. There were even parrot fish, which Pippy thought was odd because everyone knew they were inedible. Portablow fishers always tossed them back into the sea. The brother hauled even more baskets onto the wharf, tipping out dozens of sharks, Bronze whalers, and even a huge basking shark ... It was beautiful but its bright blue eyes quickly faded to a dull grey, dead colour."

"Pippy felt heavy with sadness. Uncle Isaac's memory was getting worse. He'd just put both their lives in terrible danger. It was as if his brain was erasing everything he'd ever known, including her, and that was what hurt the most. She had to do more to help him, more to look after him, but she wasn't sure how much more she could do unless she was with him for every minute of every day."

This book is certain to be a 2026 CBCA Notable title in the Younger Readers category. Here is the web page for Neridah McMullin. Here is a link to some detailed Teachers Notes.  I have previously talked about Eat my Dust; Drover; Tearaway coach; Fabish the horse that braved a Bushfire; and Evie and Rhino

Publisher blurb for The Keeper of the Octopus: Since her father sailed away, Uncle Isaac is the only family Pippy has left. Together they spend their days fishing off the coast, until one day Pippy is knocked into the sea and rescued by a gentle, giant creature … Uncle Isaac knows it’s time to tell Pippy the truth. Pippy is the descendent of a long line of Keepers – the Keeper of the Octopus, responsible for the giant octopus who protects the fisherfolk of the village. At first, Pippy is hesitant to meet Octavia, but soon the octopus is sharing her dreams with Pippy and they recognise each other as kindred spirits. But when the Calamary Brothers come to Portablow, she learns of their search for a particular giant octopus. It's up to Pippy - and her rag-tag crew of a cat, a dog, a hobgoblin called Ferg and an albatross – to rescue Octavia from the Calamary’s clutches.

I was enthralled by this book, because it captured a timeless world with a touch of magic, coupled with a commentary on some of the issues we face today: grief, environmental issues, bullying and disability. Wally was such a cool character too, and I loved his friendship with Pippy, and that he believed her without question. This is the mark of a true friendship. It was one that I loved, and one that I think kids need to see more of in the books they read. And it’s another reason I love reading kids’ books, because they feel less judgmental and more accepting. The Book Muse

Companion books:





Sunday, May 18, 2025

Ghostlines by Katya Balen


Blurb: On the Island of Ayrie, everybody knows everyone. They know each other's stories as they know every road, every hill and the coming of the tide. In the summer, there are bonfires to celebrate the migration of the puffins. Everything is familiar, nothing much changes, and for Tilda, nothing ever should – it is beautiful, it is perfect and it is home. When newcomer Albie arrives at the island, Tilda wants to show Ayrie off – Albie wants her to leave him alone. She learns quickly that it'll take more than a tour and some seal viewings to win him around. Then, she remembers stories of the old island just an hour's boat ride away from the shore. The old island is a death trap. The journey there is treacherous. Trips across to it are strictly forbidden. And there's a rumour it's haunted by the ghosts of those left there to die. But with all else having failed, the old island is the only way for Tilda to make Albie see what she sees in Ayrie. Besides, it's a different kind of ghost that worries Tilda. The ghost that's been following her, now, since her brother left the island …




"Ghostlines is an adventure story about family, friendship, belonging and community. Balen weaves humour through this first person, present tense story. Her original figurative language and use of italics for direct dialogue, immerse the reader into Tilda's perspective." Magpies Magazine March 2025

Readers aged 10+ who enjoy atmospheric stories with touches of mystery and the possibility of ghosts along with kids who put themselves into dangerous situations will enjoy Ghostlines.

"The sea is starting to shift itself and the light is fading. The story is looming and taking in a deep breath before it huffs and blows and shrieks its wild self across the islands."

Listen to an audio sample here - great Scottish accent used for the narrator. Here is a Q&A with the author and Good Reading Magazine

I do like the alternate cover:

I do enjoy stories set on islands (this setting feels little like Fair Isle) and of course I am crazy and puffins but, in some ways, even though this story was engrossing, the resolution sort of let me down. I cannot explain why because that would be a massive spoiler. I guess I had especially high expectations because I really enjoyed her previous books October October (four stars from me and the 2022 winner of Yoto Carnegie Medal) and Foxlight (five stars from me). Having said this book was not as good as I expected I will say Katya Balen does give her reader a strong sense of foreboding. At every turn I expected something terrible or life threatening to happen - and this kind of writing does keep you on the 'edge of your seat'.



Companion books to read after Ghostlines:








Monday, March 31, 2025

The Elephant and the Sea by Ed Vere


As a young elephant, Gabriel dreams of sailing the high seas. When he asks the sailors they say:

"You're a bit young, lad. Come back when you're older. Come back when you're stronger."

So, over the following days, months and years, Gabriel reads books about sailing, he practices his rowing and of course, because he is a young elephant, he grows bigger and stronger. I imagine you have guessed what happens when he asks the sailors again if he can join them.

"Oh, Gabriel, you've grown a bit! You're too big for the boat, lad! We're sorry."

Gabriel is not crushed. He is a problem solver. He builds his own boat and luckily it is finished just in time because a huge storm hits the coast, and the sailors are way out at sea and in danger of drowning. Our young hero Gabriel saves the day, but this is not the end. The other sailors can see his talent and so together they build an even bigger boat so everyone can join in. 

When you talk to your young library group about this book, after reading and enjoying the story, you could talk about the story structure which begins in the present when Gabriel is an old elephant remembering his past, then there is a series of flash back scenes about his childhood and journey into boat building and ultimately the rescue and then the story returns to the present with Gabriel reminiscing about his past. You can see inside this book here. This book was published in 2024 and is available here in Australia in paperback for a really affordable price so you should consider adding this little gem to your school library. If you have a music teacher in your school, it would be fun to learn some sea shanties.

There is so much to love about this book: the repeated ‘heave ho’ of the seamen; the animals in the harbour, mending nets and building boats; the lifeboat crew ... (and) it is the detail that will fascinate readers from 3 years upwards; old Gabriel has a cat called Milou, and young Gabriel is depicted with a very small cat in his duffel coat pocket, or following him as he runs through the harbour, or sitting beside him as he gazes at the sea through his window. And the seagulls alone are worth following through the book as they echo the mood of every page in this delightful fable of determination and courage. Just Imagine

If you loved the problem solving and determination of young Stella in Stellaphant then you must look for The Elephant and the Sea. 



Here is another book by Ed Vere:


Friday, September 1, 2023

To Greenland by Pip Smith illustrated by Beau Wylie


"It's alright,' Lewyn said, 'let's go on, let's persist, we can't quit just because Greenland doesn't exist!' But how would the three of them know where to find a country seen only inside Ellie's mind?"

Lewlyn Sylvester meets an elephant - a green elephant. He is green because he has just returned from Greenland. In Greenland he has seen the most marvelous things - jellyfish lights, ice cream hills and cottages made from chocolate pies. 

The world of Lewlyn Sylvester is so dull. No colour and no excitement. Lewlyn heads over to the zoo to talk to Ellie (the green elephant). 

"I'm sorry for doubting your story so far. I'd love to see Greenland, but I don't have a car."

Lewlyn climbs onto his elephant friend, and they head off across the outback, then over to the coast, across the ocean to arrive at the equator where they are stopped and told they need to fly. Luckily an eel arrives with a small sailing boat. And so their journey continues across the ocean until the arrive on a shore. But is this really Greenland? And if it is not the place of their dreams, what can they do?

"Would you like to visit the land of your dreams? Where hats can be boats, and eels sell ice-creams? I'll turn out the light, tuck you in, shut the door. Close your eyes, are you ready? One two three ... four!"

The final page (which might shock or surprise or puzzle you) made me think of these books:



The journey feels little like the famous Lewis Carroll poem - the Hunting of the Snark. 



So much care has gone into the design of this book. It has interesting end papers which are sure to be terrific discussion starters. Extra money has been spent to include green foil on the cover. The way the partial view of the elephant is seen to be marching forward is the perfect invitation to open this book and discover more. 

The illustrations early in the book reminded me of The Lost Thing by Shaun Tan. There are charming extra details inside the emerald igloo such as a train in a bottle, a deep diving helmet, a world map and a pair of skis – all icons of an adventurous explorer. Turning the elephant’s hat upside down is reminiscent of the umbrella Lost and Found by Oliver Jeffers. There are also some very clever nods to Dr Suess. 

The word play is such fun – Gator Keeper, Ellie Phant and the eel deal. I love the images of ice cream cones when they construct Greenland. Food used this way reminded me of War and Peas by Michael Foreman. There are so many layers to this story which means it will be appreciated across a range of ages. The page turns add drama and suspense. The messages of wonder and dreaming, of teamwork and perseverance, and the rewards of a community working together are very worthwhile. Even though the rhyme is uneven (I suggest you practice before reading this book aloud to a group of children), I do like the rich word choices. This book celebrates imagination and special friends. The ending is funny and unexpected. Share this book with children aged 6+.

You can see Beau Wylie's quirky art style on his web page here. Scroll down to see illustrations from To Greenland. Click to see an image of Beau painting his green elephant

Pip Smith is a novelist, poet, songwriter and children’s author based in Sydney. Her critically acclaimed first novel, Half Wild, was published by Allen & Unwin in 2017, and her first collection of poetry, Too Close for Comfort, won the inaugural Helen Anne Bell Poetry Bequest Award in 2013.

In the end, the hodgepodge group meets a happy ending, proving the importance of teamwork and how communities can work together to make their dreams a reality. Books and Publishing

To Greenland! is an enchanting picture book about the power of the imagination and a tribute to the adage that ‘the journey is more important than the destination.’ Its themes include friendship, teamwork, and persistence. Wylie’s illustrations and Smith’s text are equally divine and work together beautifully. The narrative is written in playful rhyming couplets, and the stunning whimsical artwork appears on single and double-page spreads. The monotone endpapers are compelling and a great talking point. To Greenland! is highly recommended for an audience aged 5 years and older. This talented author and illustrator team are also the creators of the picture book Theodore the Unsure, published in 2019. Buzz Words


Sunday, October 30, 2022

Little Bear by Richard Jones

 


Many years ago a Kindergarten teacher asked me for books to share with her class that used the days of the week as a story device. I began to collect them, I added "days of the week" as a subject heading in our library database catalogue and I started a Pinterest of these titles. I have now added Little Bear and I do wish I could share this perfect book with that teacher from all those years ago. (perhaps she reads this blog).

Your youngest reading companions are sure to exclaim over the cover of this scrumptious book - little - that bear is not little - the boy is little - the bear is huge.

Turn to the first page and enormous bear fills the whole page in the same way the bear fills the front cover. Turn the page and we see his real size. This change in perception reminded me of "I'm coming to get you" by Tony Ross. (see cover at the bottom of this post)

On Monday, I found a polar bear in the garden.

He was so small, I held him in my hands.

Preschool children love stories with patterns. In this book, alongside the story device which uses days of the week to advance the plot, we also have the issue of a growing bear. At first the boy can hold the bear in his hands, then he moves into a pocket. By Wednesday he has outgrown the pocket and is placed in a comfortable hat. It is now clear this bear needs to go home. 

You are sure to have read a similar heart-warming story involving the journey of an arctic animal in the wonderful book Lost and Found by Oliver Jeffers. In that book the pair of friends, penguin and boy, travel to Antarctica but in this one they need to go to the arctic because that's where Polar Bears live.

The boy and the polar bear climb aboard a small sailing boat but each day the bear gets bigger and so eventually the boy climbs onto the bear's back. Their arrival is a joyous one with a partner for the bear and several young polar bear cubs. The boy is sure his friend is now home and so he says goodbye and sails away. Is this a happy ending? Yes but it is also tinged with a layer of sadness. 

This is a large format, hardcover book and I amazed to say it is not very expensive. I highly recommend you add this book to your school library or preschool library/bookshelf shopping list. Don't hesitate - you need this book now!!

There is joy in their friendship and the scenes are playful and happy even when goodbye is inevitable. A Library Lady

As satisfying as a warm blanket or a cup of cocoa. Kirkus  " Joyous art, celebrating freedom and the beauty of the sea, matches the text in tone and quality."

Very strangely in the US this book has a completely different title and cover illustration - I can hardly believe this is the same book!


I have previously talked about three other books illustrated by Richard Jones (I need to add his name to my list of favourite UK illustrators)








When you want a terrific book to talk about or experience perception of size try to find this one (it is very old).


And as I mentioned Lost and Found will be the perfect companion book.



I have also added two more books illustrated by Richard Jones to my "to read" list:



Sunday, July 17, 2022

The Island at the End of Everything by Kiran Millwood Hargrave






"I know that being Touched comes from tiny specks that travel in your body. That is why Nanay and I must be careful not to drink from the same water or eat from the same spoon, 
in case these tiny specks go from her to me. "

Publisher blurb: Amihan lives on Culion Island, where some of the inhabitants – including her mother – have leprosy. Ami loves her home – with its blue seas and lush forests, Culion is all she has ever known. But the arrival of malicious government official Mr Zamora changes her world forever: islanders untouched by sickness are forced to leave. Banished across the sea, she's desperate to return, and finds a strange and fragile hope in a colony of butterflies. Can they lead her home before it's too late?

Opening sentence: "Even if I told you that we have oceans clear and blue as summer skies, filled with sea turtles and dolphins, or forest-covered hills lush with birds that call through air thick with warmth. Even if you knew how beautiful and quiet it is here, clean and fresh as a glass bell ringing. But nobody comes here because they want to."

"Nanay says that in the places outside, they have many names for our home. The Island of the living dead, The Island of no return, The Island at the end of Everything."

Ami is born on this island - it is the place where the lepers have been sent. Ami does not have leprosy but her precious mother is very badly affected.  One day a government official arrives with the news that the untouched children will be taken away to another island to live in an orphanage. 

If you need to share a written portrait of a truly evil person you could explore this man - Mr Zamora.

"His gaze is fixed on the dying butterfly, and all my fear of him returns. He is enjoying watching it die."

Over the next few days all of the children are checked then they are loaded into a boat and taken to a nearby island. Mr Zamora collects and kills butterflies which is a perfect metaphor for the way he treats the precious children from Culion. Ami will be gone for six years but she and her mother promise to write to each other every day. I imagine you have guessed Mr Zamora forbids this but somehow Ami does discover her mother is seriously ill and so with her new friend Mari and a small silent boy from home the three children set off in a leaky boat to make the very dangerous journey home.

Read an extract here

I have COVID - I am going to say this is perhaps not an appropriate book to read when you feel ill but on the other hand it was such an engrossing story that I was able to read the whole book in one day. Here is some background reading (for adults) about the history of Culion Island, 

A heartbreaking and heartwarming must-read about love, loss, friendship, and determination in times of desperation. Kirkus Star review

This story was simply stunning. I don't know how I can describe it in many more words. I was swept up in Ami's narrative from the first page and I stayed engrossed until the very last page. ... Yet what I loved most about the story above all else was the themes that flowed throughout. Children's fiction doesn't have to be simple and one-dimensional, and the author proves this by exploring how damaging prejudice can be and how wrong it is to judge others by their appearance. The Book Bag

Poetic, bittersweet and full of heart, this has the feel and quality of an instant classic. BookTrust

You could follow The Island at the end of everything with this book and also Maria's Island:


I added The Island at the end of Everything to my Kindle because I previously loved The Girl of Ink and Stars.

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Little Rat sets Sail by Monika Bang-Campbell illustrated by Molly Bang



Little Rat's parents sign her up for sailing lessons but Little Rat is utterly terrified of falling in the water. She is wearing a life jacket but it does not give her courage:

"Little Rat felt shy and nervous.
She looked different from everybody else.
Her life jacket was gray, with a big red stripe across it and laces up the sides.
Everybody else had on neat yellow-and-orange zip-up life jackets.
Everybody else was cool.
Little Rat felt like a dork.
She wanted to go home."

Luckily for Little Rat, the instructor, Buzzy Bear, is patient, intiutive, kind and a terrific teacher and so over the coming weeks of summer Little Rat tries new things, there are no terrible disasters, and Little Rat surprises herself by learning to sail and discovering she actually likes it!

Here are some of the important words for new sailors: mooring, heeling, capsize, centerboard, tiller, mainsail, cockpit, jib. There is also an excellent labelled diagram included.


It is such a shame that I am so late coming to this book because it is out of print and because I missed so many opportunities to put this gem of a book into the hands of keen readers in my former school library. I am sure this would have been a popular book so many of the children at my school were sailors or lived in families with boats. Yes we did have a copy of Little Rat sets Sail, and no you can't read every book, BUT I do wish I had taken the time to read Little Rat sets Sail and the sequels. With just 45 pages, and five chapters this is a PERFECT book for a keen sailor, for a reader who is curious about sailing, and for a newly independent reader. I am happy to see this book is still available in my old school library but sadly this other very special book, illustrated by Molly Bang, has been disposed:



Molly Bang is the mother of Monika Bang-Campbell and I was not surprised to discover Monika is a keen sailor. The sailing vocabulary and experience are so accurately explained in this story.

Here are the other two books about Little Rat:



If you are looking for a couple of other books to share with your young sailor or keen boating person.
You might find these in a well stocked library:



And for an older student you could look for Fort Island from the Aussie Bites series:


Monday, June 8, 2020

Across the risen sea by Bren MacDibble




Bren MacDibble takes us once again into the dystopian world of the future. This time the land is covered in water and small groups of people cling to life on tiny islands. Each island has it's own laws and rituals but there is room for some sharing between the communities and debris washed up from all the destroyed cities is now scavenged and adapted for use as shelters. Life feels difficult at times but the people have manged to make comfortable dwellings and they have access to plenty of fish. There is danger though - violent unpredictable storms, dangerous crocodiles, sickness and perhaps the threat of invasion or war.

As this story opens some strangers arrive at Cottage Hill - three tall people who speak a strange language. They are wearing shiny headbands and their boat has a sun image on the prow. It is clear they are powerful, wealthy and have come from a distant place known as Valley of the Sun. The three people, two sisters and a brother, climb the hill above the little island settlement and begin to cut down trees. Over the coming days they erect a tall pole and place two circles of logs around it. They hoist a metal box onto the top of the middle pole and attach wires which stretch down to the ground where they are buried under the inner circle of logs. After their task is completed the three strangers sail away. They refuse to answer any questions.

Old Marta, the leader of their island, knows all of this has something to do with 'teknology' but exactly why this strange contraption has been placed on their island is a mystery.  Neoma and her friend Jag are told to go and sketch the box so Marta can take a drawing to show the inhabitants of other near-by islands in the hope they may know what all this means. Neoma is a curious and fearless girl. She digs into the dirt below the box, even though they have been told by the strangers not to touch any part of this installation. She receives a powerful electric shock and has to run quickly into the sea to put out the flames burning her skin and hair.

Jag and Neoma have managed to complete a drawing of the tower and box so Marta takes Neoma to visit the nearby islands. There is something odd about the island of Jacob's Reach. It is clear their leaders are not telling the truth and there must be some reason why there are no children around.

I think my favourite scene comes next when Neoma, her Ma and Jag head off to Silver Water in their makeshift catamaran Licorice Stix. Silver Water is a high rise building which is now flooded. The kids climb up the stairs until they reach a former restaurant - well Neoma doesn't know it is a restaurant because she has never seen a place like this. No one has found this so it has not been looted and the kitchen is filled with food. It has been eleven years since the flood but the canned food is still okay so Neoma fills her sack. She and Jag then have to rush away because a very dangerous storm is approaching. I held my breath as Neoma's is forced to leap into the sea after tossing her salvage over the balcony rails.

On their way back, as the wild weather and water rages around them, they see a boat. It is the one that visited their island earlier - the one with the strangers from Valley of the Sun. The two women are in the boat. One is dead and one is badly hurt. What has happened? Are Neoma and her community now in danger? The people from Valley of the Sun will be back and they will want answers but no one has anticipated they will also want a payment and this payment comes in the form of a person. Jag is captured and taken prisoner and Neoma thinks this is all her fault and so it is up to her to rescue her friend and hopefully solve all the mysteries - the dead woman, the island of secrets, and most importantly to discover the purpose of device beaming a red light from the top of their island.

Bren MacDibble is a master storyteller. She gives her reader fragments of information that signpost past events and give a sense of place and of climate change:

"Marta was a young woman in the before-times. Before the risen sea drove everyone to the hills. ... She says when she was older she visited the great walled city of Sydney after most of it moved to New Armidale. She remembers when clouds were just white, she says the green is bacteria and it's the way the earth tries to make things right and clean ... "

"The surf coast was where the rich people lived, pretending it was safe from the flooding that was washing out the poorer coastal towns and making salty swamps of farmland. But Cyclone Summer sent six cyclones nose to tail and destroyed it. Survivors moved inland to a mountain range same as the poor people. But the sea rose so quick they din't get to take everything they owned."

My advance reader copy (thanks to Beachside Bookshop) of Across the risen sea has 270 pages but so much is contained within this thrilling story. I would summarise the plot into three 'acts'.

ACT 1. Installation of the 'teknology' on the island and the subsequent mystery of Jacob's Reach which is somehow linked to the death of the woman from Valley of the Sun. Jag is kidnapped.
ACT 2. The rescue of Jag which involves a dangerous pirate woman, a visit to the famed Valley of the Sun (this place is utterly amazing) and the making of a new friend.
ACT 3. The full truth is revealed.

I am going to make a prediction that Across the risen sea will be short listed by the CBCA for their 2021 awards. AND even though it is only June (this book is due for publication in August) I am going to predict Across the risen sea will be among the winners next year.  YES it is that good! This is a thrilling story, a mystery, a story of heroism, pirates, survival and so much more. I read it all in nearly one sitting and I was on the edge of my seat through the whole amazing 'voyage'.

In her letter to the reader Bren MacDibble says:

"I've let adventure lead me on a wild ride with this one. There's sinkholes, crocodiles, sharks, pirates, floating cities, and floating farms. I hope you and those you share books with will also enjoy the ride."

If you haven't discovered the powerful story telling of Bren MacDibble I suggest you RUSH out now and grab her earlier books:





Saturday, April 18, 2020

Ocean meets Sky by Terry Fan and Eric Fan


The first sentence of Ocean meets sky contains one very powerful word:

Finn lived by the sea,
and the sea lived by him.
"It's a good day for sailing,"
his grandfather would have said.

Did you hear/see/read the word - would? Sadly we can guess his grandfather is no longer with him. That possibly Finn's grandfather has died. Would - is a powerful word - past tense. There is so much longing in these four lines. Finn is in his room and we can see a photo of grandfather, a old hat and a small handmade toy sailing boat.There is a hint of the sepia which we see on the next page. The page turn takes us to times from the past. Grandfather is talking to young Finn, sharing his stories of the place where the ocean meets the sky. There are small treasures on the table - shells, a pipe, a carved bird and grandfathers spectacles. On the facing page the time shifts back to the present.

"His grandfather would have been ninety years old today."

Grandfather is gone but he is not forgotten. His treasures are still lying on the table. The image takes the viewer one step back and allows us to see more of the room -  a model of an airship, a painting of a hot air balloon, a ship in a bottle and Finn himself outside sitting beside the sea. Finn decides to make a boat, the one he and his grandfather had planned together. He gathers all sorts of odds and ends and build his boat then Finn climbs inside to take a nap. When he wakes up the boat is rocking the the adventure is about to begin.

He meets a fish who offers to take Finn to the place where the ocean meets the sky.  The huge golden fish has a face just like his grandfather.

The voyage takes them to the Library Islands "where hundreds of bookish birds were roosting."


Then they explore an island of giant shells, they see giant jellyfish floating just under the surface of the water and finally they reach the magical place where the ocean meets the sky. This is where the story magic really begins for the reader as we silently travel with Finn through a wondrous landscape leading to the place where Finn can finally say goodbye to his beloved grandfather.  Finn hears his mother calling him and in the tradition of Where the Wild things are, she has delicious warm dumplings waiting for him. These are the same dumplings his grandfather used to make.





Go back and look more closely at the library islands. I adore all the book references - The Call of the Wild; The Secret Garden; The Tempest; Great Expectations; The Wizard of Oz; The Odyssey; and the Fan Brothers own book - The Night Gardener. If you are sharing this book with a group of older students I recommend you spend some time on the page with the moon jellies. The perspective where we look down on the boat, the luminescence, and the opaque transparent jellyfish are simply breathtaking.

I will admit to skipping past this book on many of my library visits because my (incorrect) impression was that this was a long (possibly) complex picture book.  It is complex but also easy to read and contains a beautiful emotional exploration of grief. Ocean meets the sky was shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Medal in 2019.



I am really keen to read another book illustrated by the Fan Brothers - Scarecrow.  It is quite expensive here in Australia and very hard to source but I do have it on my wish list.