Monday, May 18, 2026

Meet the illustrator Anna Walker


Anna Walker launched her newest book at Gleebooks on Saturday. I have loved her work for decades but had never heard her talk or had the chance to introduce myself. Here is her newest book:


Publisher blurb: In a small boat, the turtle sets off on a journey to deliver dreams in the nearby city. Meanwhile, a young girl, scared in the night by the shadows in her room, finds comfort in her toys ... but cannot sleep. As the two stories unfold side by side, the young girl and the intrepid turtle must each harness their courage and overcome their fears as their worlds collide in the most wonderful, magical way.







Anna Walker bio from her webpageAnna Walker is an illustrator and author of picture books based in Naarm/Melbourne. Using traditional mediums, Anna creates stories inspired by the quiet and sometimes joyful details of life. Her books include Florette - New York Times/New York Public Library Best Illustrated Book, Mr Huff shortlisted for the Prime Minister’s Literary Awards and winner of the CBCA book of the year Early Childhood. Her most recent book is The Dream Keeper, an exquisitely imagined journey of imagination and courage.

Anna Walker contributed her art to the launch of The Little Bookroom. Here is her Instagram page. Here is an interview with Let's Talk Picture Books. 

Some things I discovered at the book launch for Dream Keeper:

  • This book took seven years to create - you need to share this with your students and also adults who think they could so easily just throw some words and illustrations together for a picture book!
  • Anna completed 110 drafts of this story.
  • She used spray paint and a stencil for some of her illustrations.
  • Take time to linger over the end papers which are different front and back. The back ones are sure to generate some deeper discussions with an older group of students.
  • Anna Walker calls her book "a story in a story".
  • Notice the toys in the child's bedroom and the compare these with the animals on the island and with the final end paper.



Questions I did not ask at Gleebooks last weekend:

  • Your new book Dream Keeper is almost wordless - did you consider making it completely wordless? Do you like this form? 
  • Do you prefer to work alone as author and illustrator - many of your books are collaborations especially with Jane Godwin.
  • Can you tell us about your plans for any new books?
  • Can you talk about your CBCA awards and in particular your award for New Illustrator with your first book Santa's Aussie Holiday.
Anna Walker awards (an abridged list):

  • 2026 Between by Anna Walker | Received a Notable for the Children’s Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year Award
  • 2024 A Life Song, written by Jane Godwin, illustrated by Anna Walker | Winner of the Australian Book Industry Awards for Children’s Picture Book of the Year (ages 0-6)
  • 2023 Snap! by Anna Walker | Winner of the Speech Pathology Book of the Year Award, 0 - 3 category
  • 2023 Snap! by Anna Walker | Shortlisted the Children’s Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year: Early Childhood Award
  • 2023 Snap! by Anna Walker  | Selected as a 'White Raven'—a prestigious annual selection of 200 books for children from around the world by the International Youth Library based in Germany.
  • 2022 Don’t Forget, written by Jane Godwin, Illustrated by Anna Walker | Received a Notable for the Children’s Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year Award
  • 2021 Hello Jimmy!, by Anna Walker | Received a Notable for the Children’s Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year Award
  • 2020 Tilly, written by Jane Godwin, Illustrated by Anna Walker | Shortlisted for the Children’s Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year Award
  • 2020 Lottie and Walter, by Anna Walker | Received a Notable for the Children’s Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year Award
  • 2019 Go Go and the Silver Shoes, written by Jane Godwin, Illustrated by Anna Walker | Received a Notable in the Children’s Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year Award
  • 2018 Florette by Anna Walker | Won The Wilderness Society Environment Award for Children’s Literature
  • 2018 Florette by Anna Walker | Shortlisted for CBCA Book of the year
  • 2018 Shortlisted in the Australian Book Design Association Best Designed Children’s Illustrated Book: Florette
  • 2016 Winner of the Book of the year: Early Childhood, CBCA – Mr Huff by Anna Walker
  • 2013 CBCA Awards Early Childhood Short List: Peggy by Anna Walker.
  • 2013 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards Children’s fiction shortlist: Peggy by Anna Walker
  • 2011 CBCA Awards 2011 Early Childhood Notable: I Don’t Believe in Dragons
  • 2010 58th Book Design Awards of Australia Lets Play House
  • 2009 CBCA Awards Early Childhood Notable I Love to Dance
  • 2009 CBCA Awards Early Childhood Notable I Love to Sing
  • 2009 CBCA Awards Early Childhood Notable I Love Holidays
  • 2009 CBCA Awards Early Childhood Notable I Love Birthdays
  • 2009 CBCA Awards Early Childhood Notable Little Cat and the Big Red Bus


Books I have explored here on this blog illustrated by Anna Walker:



Kirkus Star review: A charmer of a chicken has a big adventure ...












I own a limited edition print from Florette. The Kirkus Star review said: Lessons in both gumption and the sacred nature of urban green spaces.


About Hello Jimmy Kirkus said: Walker’s artwork is delicate and understated; gentle precision gives a light touch to everything from facial expressions to chairs, shoes, and headphones.

Here is one of her newest books:



Other books to explore about dreams (a few here are from Bookroo):








Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Elixir by Lindsay Galvin illustrated by Kristina Kister


Ann has inherited the gift of healing from her late grandmother. She works with her parents, brother and sister in the family apothecary.

"The rest of my family followed recipes exactly when they made our normal tinctures, infusions and syrups. It was an open secret that I didn't follow a recipe. My parents only let me get away with it because my tinctures worked so well. My family also knew I scratched a spiral mark into the base of the glass bottles containing my special tinctures. They didn't know it was the sign my grandmother had taught me and that it helped my medicines work."

You have probably noticed some arcane words in this quote - tinctures, infusions and syrups. The year is 1665 and so, yes, this a story set in the past but wait a minute do you know what was happening at that time - the witch trials. Now the stage is set - Ann has gifts but others will be suspicious. There are witch hunters roaming the countryside. Ann and her siblings have been left in charge of the shop because her parents have been called away. To help make ends meet a border has moved into the attic room - and very strangely this young man is Isaac Newton. These are also the times of the plague. If Ann is able to heal the townsfolk will she be accused of witchcraft and can she survive the drowning trial?

Ann forms an alliance with Isaac- and together they strive to make a very special elixir - the elixir of life. Then her brother is in a terrible accident and Ann, without permission, administers a few drops of the mixture. Yes, her brother is healed. Isaac is furious and so in a moment of recklessness Ann grabs the elixir and drinks it. What will be the consequences?

Here are a few text quotes:

"Grandmother taught me that grinding herbs on a full moon, then letting them soak in the moonlight would make powerful extracts. ... I started with Vervain. Its colour was a rich chestnut brown, excellent for restoring strength and vitality. Next, I bruised some Horsetail and Yarrow, used in cases of bleeding. These were fluffy shades of blue and grey."

"I described how when I touched people, I saw their colours in my mind. When I knew the colours of my customers, I could recognise when a hue was missing and find the mixture to restore them. I explained how ingredients that were matched to a person's colour nearly always strengthened them."

This book has 110 pages so it is a quick one to read but it is also an absolute page turner. 

This is a truly gripping story where the tension is palpable as danger builds and impossible choices are made. There are plenty of unexpected twists and turns with an ending that took me completely by surprise. A masterful blending of history, science and fantasy that left me utterly captivated – and astounded! The illustrations are absolutely stunning and capture the time period and the emotion of the story perfectly. An enthralling page-turner that captures the indomitable spirit of a young girl who uses her innate abilities to help others and stand against hatred and prejudice. Book Craic


Bookseller blurb: With a witchfinder skulking about town, gifted healer Ann and a young Isaac Newton must be careful not to draw too much attention in this high-stakes story from Lindsay Galvin. Will the discovery of the Elixir of Life lead to a death sentence for a talented young healer? Ann Storer has inherited her grandmother's mysterious gift of healing, which she shares through the special tinctures she dispenses in her family's apothecary shop. When she combines her talents with the genius of a young Isaac Newton, recently arrived to board above the shop, the two create an incredible elixir with seemingly unlimited powers. But seventeenth-century England is a dangerous place to display any special abilities, and Ann must hide all evidence when witchfinder Abel Geach arrives in town. So when the plague starts to run rife and those she loves are in danger, will Ann risk everything to help them?

When I see a Barrington Stoke title in a bookshop I always pick it up and read the blurb. I wonder why our stores here in Australia don't make a bigger deal of this series - they only seem to stock one or two at any one time. I found this one in a Newsagent in Deniliquin - they added it to their children's book section (which is terrific by the way) in November last year. If you don't have any books from this series click the label on this post to see other titles. I also recognised the art on the cover of this book by Kristina Kister (The Book of Wondrous Possibilities by Deb Abela).

I have also read these historical fiction books by Lindsay Galvin:






And The Elixir reminded me of these two books:



I love all the different cover of Tuck Everlasting


I have recently discovered this series and this title would be a terrific follow on from The Elixir


Happy Birthday Winnie the Pooh 1926-2026


Pooh: “What day is it?”
Piglet: “It’s today, my favorite day.”




The character of Winnie-the-Pooh was inspired by a stuffed toy that Milne had bought for his son Christopher Robin in Harrods department store, and also a bear named Winnie they had viewed at London Zoo. In this post I am going to focus on the original version with illustrations by EH Shepherd. The Disney creations date from 1961.


In my third library working as a Teacher Librarian, I had a set of handmade Winnie the Pooh toys - they were made from a sewing pattern. I wish I had kept them as I am sure they are no longer in that library:

They looked a little like this:




The actual original toys currently reside the New York City Public Library. You can see baby Roo is missing but just a few weeks ago the King and Queen of England visited the US and Camilla bought a new little Roo with her. The toy was faithfully reproduced by the company who made the original set.



There is something almost impossibly moving about the fact that Queen Camilla, one of the most prominent advocates for reading in the world today, walked into the New York Public Library in late April 2026 and did something no one had managed to do for nearly ninety years: she reunited Roo with his family. The Queen's Reading Room, her beloved literary charity born quietly on Instagram during the pandemic, brought her to the NYPL's iconic Fifth Avenue branch for a historic UK-US literacy celebration, and the guest list alone was extraordinary, Dame Anna Wintour, the legendary fashion and cultural force who has shaped taste and culture for decades, and Sarah Jessica Parker, who told a reporter ahead of the event that her 'great focus' was on funding for libraries at a time when so many face hardship. 

But it was the children in that Trustees Room who owned the day. They had been taught by broadcaster and author Gyles Brandreth to practice their bows and curtseys, and when the Queen arrived they erupted in a chorus of 'Hello, Your Majesty!' that filled the room with the kind of joy you cannot manufacture. Camilla read aloud to them from the Pooh books, her voice warm and unhurried, the way a grandmother reads, the way a best friend reads. And then, with breathtaking gentleness, she handed over the little Roo, handmade by Merrythought, Britain's oldest teddy bear maker, to NYPL President Dr. Anthony Marx, completing a collection that had waited since the 1930s to be whole. The Queen herself had said it best: 'Books are the best friends you can have, in good times and in bad.' On this day, in this library, that truth felt more alive than ever, and a tiny stuffed kangaroo, after nine decades away, finally came home."

Giles Brandreth (not pictured here) was at this event because he has written a new book about AA Milne:



Watch a video here and you can read an extract on the publisher page


You might find this book in your local or school library:



Winnie-the-Pooh quotes:

Any day spent with you is my favorite day. So today is my new favorite day.

As soon as I saw you I knew a grand adventure was about to happen.

Pooh: “I don’t feel very much like Pooh today.”
Piglet: “I’ll bring you tea and honey until you do.”

Sometimes the smallest things take up the most room in our hearts.

Always wear a smile, because your smile is a reason for many others to smile!

Piglet: “What’s the first thing you say to yourself in the morning?”
Pooh:”What’s for breakfast? What do you say, Piglet?”
Piglet:”I say, I wonder what’s going to happen exciting today?”
Pooh: “It’s the same thing.”



Saturday, May 16, 2026

The Girl who Raced the World by Nat Harrison



Maggie is an orphan. All Maggie Appleton has is a letter written by her mother that she must deliver to a stranger but on the way the letter is taken by a policeman/detective. Maggie is distraught but she continues her journey through London having just escaped from the workhouse only to make the surprising discovery that the man who was supposed to get this letter now works as a valet for the famous explorer Phileas Fogg. I need to tell you that all of this action takes place over the first 25 pages. 

Maggie is swept up into the famous journey around the world and, as you are sure to have already guessed, and time is ticking because this unlikely crew have to be back in London in just 80 days. Maggie also needs to get her important letter back from , but she needs to keep Mr Fogg away from the Detective Fix because she knows it is not true that Phileas Fogg stole thousands of pounds from the bank. Has he been framed?

If you love trains, ships, catastrophes, wild story twists, and heroes you will devour this debut book by Nat Harrison. I read the whole book of over 300 pages in one day - yes, it is that good. This book could also be a terrific family read aloud. Oh, and I love the gold embossed cover. There are world maps scattered through this book but I would also suggest you might grab a real, old-fashioned, atlas so you can follow the around the world journey in more detail. Your young reading companion is sure, also, to ask questions about the way time works in the world and how you can jump days when you travel from west to east.

Book seller blurb: It is 1872 and, when Maggie Appleton's beloved mother dies, she is left with nothing but a letter for a mysterious stranger called Passepartout. With nowhere else to turn, Maggie seeks out Passepartout and, in doing so, is drawn into an adventure beyond her wildest dreams. Together with Passepartout's employer, the enigmatic Mr Phileas Fogg, Maggie journeys to Italy, India, Hong Kong, Japan and America, in a daring race against time to win the wager Mr Fogg has accepted. But with a bank robber on the loose, an angry Inspector on their tail and unread secrets in her mother's letter, Maggie soon discovers that there is much more at stake than keeping on schedule to win the bet. Who can she really trust - and will she ever find out where she truly belongs?



Like other readers who pick up this book I have not read the Jules Verne classic - Round the World in 80 days - so my knowledge of the plot was somewhat limited. I am telling you this because your young reader aged 10+ can easily read this new book The Girl who Raced the World with absolutely no idea about the original story. They are sure to enjoy this action-packed adventure. Some readers though might, after reading this book, which is based on the famous 1872 book, want to hunt out the Jules Verne story or perhaps read an abridged version or listen to it as an audio book. Huge thanks to Gleebooks Kids for sharing this new book with me. The Girl who Raced the World is available in paperback but if you find the hardcover edition you must lift the dust jacket - there is a terrific surprise under the cover. 

Here it is (from Instagram)



I now discover I have read several books with covers designed by Tom Clohosy Cole. (Cobweb; An Elephant in the Garden; Clifftoppers).  Here are some teaching ideas to use with The Girl who Raced the World. 




The sequel to The Girl who Raced the World is due later this year:



Companion books:










The Ship of Doom