John Marsden was best known for his Young Adult book series and titles such as Tomorrow when the War Began but here are the titles that I would also like to highlight. I have put the covers I remember - many of these do have updated newer covers. You might also like to notice some of the wonderful illustrators featured here too - Matt Ottley, Shaun Tan, Peter Gouldthorpe, Sally Rippin and Craig Smith. I should also mention my former school and library had a small connection with John Marsden because his niece and nephew attended my school and he kindly gifted us many of his picture book titles.
Momo celebrating time to read
Saturday, December 21, 2024
John Marsden (27 September 1950 – 18 December 2024)
Hush! by Minfong Ho illustrated by Holly Meade
Bookseller blurb: In an endearing lullaby, a mother asks a lizard, a monkey, and a water buffalo to be quiet and not disturb her sleeping baby.
And of course there is a delightful twist on the last page. This book has wonderful illustrations and it would be a beautiful gift for a young child or a new baby. I wonder if a board book edition was ever made?
Hush was published in 1996 with a new edition in 2000. My copy was purchased for the library I visit each week in 2012. Hush! won a Caldecott honor in 1997 for Holly Mead (1956-2013). This book is still available to buy.
In this video the text has been changed into a song - this is well worth watching.
Minfong Ho was born in Rangoon, Burma, and raised in both Singapore and Bangkok, Thailand. Her parents are of Chinese origin, so she spoke fluent Chinese in her home, Thai in the marketplace of Bangkok and English in school. She was educated in Thailand and Taiwan, before moving to the United States to attend Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. While attending Cornell University, Ho began writing her first short story, in an attempt to combat strong feelings of homesickness. She recognized that many Americans had false notions about life in Asia and she set out to change this by writing based on her own experience there.
Friday, December 20, 2024
All the Beautiful Things by Katrina Nannestad illustrated by Martina Heiduczek
In the world of Germany in 1939 to 1945 every child has to be perfect. Anna is perfect - the perfect German girl. She is athletic, clever and has that perfect blonde hair and bright blue eyes. Her sister however is not perfect. She has a disability and Mutti and Anna know if little Eva is found she will be taken away.
"Eva was born with a disability that weakens her body and makes it hard for her to learn new things. Eva didn't walk for a long time and she's still a bit wobbly. Words came much later .... It's unlikely she'll ever learn to read. And she's so very small and thin, more like a toddler than a seven-year-old."
Eva takes delight in making paper dolls. The family have to keep her hidden, but Anna is able to collect tiny treasures - a piece of lace, a ribbon, a small piece of coloured paper - and Anna weaves a magical story for Eva as they work together to create new outfits for dolly.
"Eva fetches her square biscuit tin and returns to the kitchen table. She opens the lid and gasps with delight even though she knows exactly what's inside - Dolly, a flat cardboard doll with woollen hair and tissue paper underwear, and eight flat dresses. They're all made from scrap paper and other treasures Mutti and I have scrounged from floors, streets, bins, barns. ... Every piece of the dress needs a story."
Anna and her friend Udo work hard to keep Eva a secret but there is danger everywhere. A boy in their neighborhood - Manfred is especially dangerous. "He is fourteen, tall, strong and handsome. He is in the special patrol group, Hitler Youth's very own police."
Woven into All the Beautiful things we meet Eva Braun, visit the countryside home of Hitler, and in some awful scenes witness the indoctrination of the children in class against anyone who is not perfect - people with disabilities, people who are different and of course Jewish people. In one scene we see brave Anna quietly taking Nazi propaganda posters from her school and at home she burns them.
Luckily Anna and Udo do find friends in their town and one of these is seamstress Fraulein Linz. Little do they know that this lovely woman will be the one to hide little Eva when it becomes too hard to keep her at home and keep her safe. Fraulein Linz is living a double life. The Nazi wives visit to have her make their beautiful clothes and she even appears to be friendly with Eva Braun but this is all just a ruse.
"How do we tell the monsters and the angels apart?"
This book has 327 pages, and I read it all in one sitting - YES, it is that good. In fact, this book is wonderful! I actually read this book about 3 weeks ago but I just wanted to sit and think and let it settle before penning something here on my blog. I actually feel I am quite inadequate as a blogger and lover of middle grade children's books to even begin to talk about this amazing book. One of the most precious parts of this story is the emotional intelligence of young Eva.
There are some quite terrifying scenes in this book which I think demonstrates the power of this writing. One that has lingered with me is when Anna is stopped and told to empty her pockets by a member of the Gestapo. They have been watching Udo. He is part of the resistance and their communication is via train tickets. Udo has slipped it into Anna's pocket and now Anna needs to take it to Pastor Almendinger.
"The railway station's a perfect exchange for messages. Always busy. ... I'm there all the time, looking for discarded tickets for Dolly's dresses. In fact, there are four in my pockets right now. ... 'I'd like to see what's in your pockets.' ... I stick my hands into my pockets, grab the lining at the bottoms and turn them inside out. Everything that was inside spills. The tiny folding scissors, bottle tops, acorns and buttons fall into the snow, but the wind grabs the rest and sends it fluttering along the street. Including the very important train ticket for Pastor Almendinger."
All the Gestapo see is a collection of rubbish.
Here are a couple of text quotes:
"We're crying for Eva, who is safe, but whose life has grown smaller yet again. How many times must her world darken and shrink? How long can she live this way without the light in her eyes fading, before hugs in her arms slacken?"
"And then I shudder. Not because of Manfred's fanaticism. That's old news. It's just I've never been called a traitor before. I realise that a person can be both a hero and a traitor. It depends on your point of view. To Eva and Mutti, I'm a hero. To Hitler and Manfred, I'm a traitor."
All the Beautiful Things is certain to be a CBCA Younger Readers Notable, and I am also sure it will be shortlisted. Here are a set of teachers notes from the publisher. I highly recommend All the Beautiful Things for readers aged 11+.
Some things to think about:
- It is interesting that Katrina named Anna's little sister Eva and Anna also meets and 'befriends' the famous Eva Braun.
- When you read a book like this as a reader you put your trust in the author that there will be a 'happy ending' and that characters you love will be kept safe. What happens if this 'rule' is broken?
In November I attended a terrific 'fireside' chat at Gleebooks Kids with Katrina Nannestad. Here are some things I discovered:
- Katrina will appear at our Sydney Writer's Festival in May 2025
- Her favourite character from her books so far is Udo (from All the Beautiful Things) and also Sasha from Rabbit Angel Soldier Thief
- Silver Linings is her personal family story and a sequel is planned
- Katrina reads and researches history through personal accounts. She likes to find lesser-known stories of World War II
- She plots her stories and has a clear plan of the way the plot will be structured
- When Katrina is writing one of her novels, she writes every day of the week and often becomes totally absorbed in the journey of her characters. Each book from this series takes 8-9 months to write.
- Her new books - another Lottie Perkins title and a new series about a character named Frances Bloom.
After reading All the Beautiful Things you will want to read every book by Katrina Nannestad especially her stories set during World War II -
Here are some other companion books:
Thursday, December 19, 2024
Goodnight Songs by Margaret Wise Brown
Goodnight Songs are a set of previously unpublished lullabies by Margaret Wise Brown with illustrations by twelve different illustrators. I knew six of the names and six I needed to investigate. You already know I do enjoy books like this that bring together the work of different illustrators.
Jonathan Bean; Carin Berger; Sophie Blackall; Linda Bleck; Renata Liwska; Christopher Silas Neal; Zachariah O'Hora; Eric Puybaret; Sean Qualls; Isabel Roxas; Melissa Sweet; and Dan Yaccarino. The cover illustration is by Isabel Roxas. You can see more of her books here. My fabourite pages are the ones by Eric Puybaret (from France) and Sophie Blackall.
Watch this video to see and hear some of the illustrators and learn more about how this book came to be discovered and published.
Listen to a two-minute audio sample here of the first lullaby - The Noon Balloon. There are links here to all of the songs (but this site does have advertisements). You can see all the pages from Goodnight Songs here.
"One can hope to make a child laugh or feel clear and happy-headed as he follows the simple rhythm to its logical end. It can jog him with the unexpected and comfort him with the familiar, lift him for a few minutes from his own problems of shoelaces that won't tie, and busy parents and mysterious clock time, into the world of a bug or a bear or a bee or a boy living in the timeless world of a story." Margaret Wise Brown
Goodnight Songs was published in 2014 so it is now sadly out of print but if you can find a copy and you have a music teacher in your school you should share this book which comes with a CD so you can hear and sing each of the twelve lullabies.
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
'Twas the Night Before Christmas illustrated by Matt Tavares
I picked this book up at a recent charity book sale. I only paid $1 but this book now retails for over AUS$43. I have seen many editions of The Night Before Christmas which is attributed to Clement Moore but this one caught my eye because as the Kirkus review says:
Tavares provides monochromatic pencil illustrations with old-fashioned details and a period setting complementary with the poem’s original period, but his sophisticated perspectives and cinematic lighting pull the whole into the modern era. ... The moody illustrations suggest the drama and excitement of the magical night in an unusual way.
Here is the newer edition:
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
Lion of the Sky by Ritu Hemani
This book is sure to make you curious about the partition of India and also about traditional Indian foods.
This is a complex story about a time in history that will be unfamiliar to most young readers aged 10+ here in Australia but it is well worth the reading journey. I am quoting in full the book description by the author:
An evocative historical novel in verse about a boy and his family who are forced to flee their home and become refugees after the British Partition of India. Twelve-year-old Raj is happiest flying kites with his best friend, Iqbal. As their kites soar, Raj feels free, like his beloved India soon will be, and he can’t wait to celebrate their independence. But when a British lawyer draws a line across a map, splitting India in two, Raj is thrust into a fractured world. With Partition declared, Hindu, Sikh, and Muslim families are torn apart—and Raj’s Hindu and Iqbal’s Muslim families are among them. Forced to flee and become refugees, Raj’s family is left to start over in a new country. After suffering devastating losses, Raj must summon the courage to survive the brutal upheaval of both his country and his heart. Inspired by the author’s true family history, Lion of the Sky is a deeply moving coming-of-age tale about identity, belonging, and the power of hope.
Listen to an audio sample here. I read Lion of the Sky as an ebook. The hardcover novel with 416 pages is way too expensive for your library here in Australia. It was published in 2024 so I imagine there will eventually be a paperback edition.
There are some powerful words of wisdom in this book:
"Holding on to your anger is like drinking poison and expecting your enemy to die."
"Because we don't need your kind and my kind ... only kindness."
Here is an interview with the author. Lion of the Sky is her debut book.
Companion book:
Monday, December 16, 2024
Two Little Trains by Margaret Wise Brown illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon
"Two little trains went down the track, two little trains went west. Puff, puff, puff and chug, chug chug, two little trains to the West."
On the cover you can see the real train - the silver train - at the station. On the station there are two cases and a present. The present is a toy train and as you turn inside the present is unwrapped and then the dual story begins. On the left side we watch the journey of the huge silver train across a variety of landscapes meanwhile on the right or facing page the little toy train navigates landscapes inside the house. This idea is just genius and so different from the interpretations of the text by the two previous illustrators. My edition from 2001 takes this simple text to a whole new and completely wonderful level.
Take your time when you read this with your young reading companion because each pairing of outside and inside is such a visual treat. See inside here.
Two Little trains was first published in 1949 with illustrations by Jean Charlot. In 2000 the publisher released a new edition with illustrations by Greg Pizzoli. All editions are now out of print but you might be lucky and find one in a library - hopefully the one illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon.
I am little bit obsessed with Margaret Wise Brown (1920-1952) although oddly not because of her really famous book Goodnight Moon. Luckily my friend from Kinderbookswitheverything has plenty of books by Margaret Wise Brown in her school library but of course this is only a tiny portion of her amazing output which was over 100 books.