Saturday, January 3, 2026

Emmie Builds Something New by Marjorie Crosby-Fairall


Emmie was little. But her ideas were big. ...
Everything was just the way she liked it. Until one day ...

Turn the page - an enormous shadow fills the space - yes, it is a cat. Emmie has read lots of books about cats such as "Care of Cats"; "Puss in Boots"; and "Cats in Wonderland".


This cat is terrifying so Emmie hides inside her little home, but Emmie is a problem solver. She is determined to scare that cat away. As with the way with all good stories she tries three times to make the perfect robot-like monster which she is sure will work. Her final creation sprays water all over the cat and at this point Emmie realises something - this little soggy cat is not scary at all. Is there a way to fix this situation? Perhaps the word 'sorry' will help. 

Thinking about the book design - the end papers are terrific and I love the illustration on the title page. With your library group talk about the use of a cog to dot the 'i' in the title and the choice of font and use of capital letters. You might notice Emmie is wearing glasses - do these make her look smarter? Does it matter that the bell has a crack? Opposite the title page Emmie is surrounded by a tangle of wool - why does she look triumphant? Compare this with the second last page after your reading. And this is also a 'noisy story' which means it will be perfect to read aloud. 

Sprang! Crash! Bang! Boom! Bash! Swooped! Crash! Bang! Boom! 
Stamped! Stomped! Splashed! Yippee! Hooray!

This delightful story not only entertains but also inspires young readers, especially girls with a passion for STEM. Join Emmie on her roller-coaster journey of discovery, where every challenge is an opportunity to create, learn, and ultimately build a bridge of understanding with her newfound companion. Ultimately Emmie finds a way to coexist with the cat and discovers that empathy is the pathway to peace and friendship. A Book and a Hug

In your school library or Kindy or Grade One classroom it would be fun to explore either the topic of inventions or the topic of the rivalry between the cats and mice. With an older group you could investigate women inventors such as Joy Mangano; Hertha Ayrton; Ada Lovelace; Margaret Eloise Knight or Josephine Cochrane. I am sure you can think of many others. Take a look at this Pinterest from my friend at Kinderbookswitheverything. It is could also be interesting to talk about the reversal in this story where the mouse has the upper hand over the cat. Your senior students could look at Mr Maxwell's Mouse as a comparison text. 

Here are some sketches by Marjorie Crosby-Fairall from her book. 

I had Emmie Builds Something New in a basket of books I borrowed from a school library at the end of 2025. Today I saw someone on social media say this was their favorite Australian picture book of 2025 - that's a big call so I knew I needed to look more closely at Emmie Builds Something New. I do like Emmie Builds Something New - surely it will be listed as a CBCA Notable Picture Book in 2026. 

Here are other books illustrated by Marjorie Crosby-Fairall. I previously talked about Summer Blue.





The art in Emmie Builds Something New reminded me of this wonderful book:



Talking about cats and mice try to find this really old (very funny) book:


This one is great too:





Friday, January 2, 2026

The Higher Power of Lucky by Susan Patron Illustrated by Matt Phelan



Here is a word from this book which I love - splendiferousness


Lucky has never met her dad. Her mum died from a freak accident when she stepped on some electrical wires that had blown down in a severe storm. Lucky was only eight when this happened and so she has lots of unanswered questions. Lucky's father was previously married in France. When Lucky's mother dies, he asks his first wife to come and take care of Lucky. Brigitte does come but she thinks this will only be needed for a short time until a foster parent is found. Brigitte has come from France and so she faces an enormous shock when she finds herself in Hard Pan, California - population 43. This place is in the desert and Lucky and Brigitte live in a set of joined trailers. 

It is very clear Brigitte loves and cares for Lucky but Lucky is filled with doubt. She is sure Brigitte misses her own mother back in Fance and that one day, possibly very soon, Brigitte will leave. Lucky is desperate to stop this happening so she hits on a plan to run away expecting this to somehow convince Brigitte that she is needed.

Lucky has two young friends. A small boy named Miles who has been sent to live with his grandmother. Miles loves cookies and one special book - Are you my Mother?  I loved this book when I was a small child too. The trouble is Miles, aged five, cannot read and so he keeps asking Lucky and her other friend Lincoln to read it for him. Lincoln is a wise friend but his obsession is knots. Lucky does appreciate his wise words but she also is a frustrated with his focus on knots. Lucky also has a special loyal dog named HMS Beagle.

Here are some text quotes:

A breeze rattled the found object wind chimes at the Found Object Wind Chime Museum and Visitor Center, and the high desert air carried that sound in front of it, all the way across town, down to the three trailers at the very end of Hard Pan. Just the sound of those chimes made Lucky feel cooler. But she still had doubts and anxious questions in all the crevices of her brain, especially about how to find her Higher Power. If she could only find it, Lucky was pretty sure she’d be able to figure out the difference between the things she could change and the things she couldn’t, like in the little prayer of the anonymous people. Because sometimes Lucky wanted to change everything, all the bad things that had happened, and sometimes she wanted everything to stay the same forever.

Lucky got Brigitte as her Guardian when she was eight years old. The reason was that Lucille, Lucky’s mother, went outside one morning after a big rainstorm, and she touched some power lines that had blown down in the storm. She touched them with her foot.

Or, let’s say that her Guardian just gave up and quit because Lucky did something terrible. The difference between a Guardian and an actual mom is that a mom can’t resign. A mom has the job for life. But a Guardian like Brigitte could probably just say, “Well, that’s about it for this job. I’m going back to France now. Au revoir.” There poor Lucky would be, standing alone in the kitchen trailer, at rock bottom. Then she would have to search for her own Higher Power and do a fearless and searching moral inventory of herself, just like Short Sammy and all the other anonymous people had had to do.

Her eyes, skin, and hair, including her wispy straight eyebrows, were all the same color, a color Lucky thought of as sort of sandy or mushroomy. The story she told herself to explain it was that on the day before her birth, the color enzymes were sorting themselves in big vats. Unfortunately, Lucky decided to be born a little ahead of schedule, and the enzymes weren’t quite finished sorting—there was only one color-vat ready and the color in that vat was sandy-mushroom. So Lucky got dipped in it, head to toe, there being no time for nice finishing touches like green eyes or black hair, and then, wham, she was born and it was too late except for a few freckles.

Seen from a little distance, Lincoln looked better, in Lucky’s opinion—you could imagine how he’d look when he grew into his ears. Like, as he got older his head wouldn’t look as big and his neck would definitely look less scrawny. So far he didn’t look like a president, which was what his mother was hoping and which was why she named him Lincoln Clinton Carter Kennedy. Lucky knew he’d rather be president of the International Guild of Knot Tyers. Mothers have their good sides, their bad sides, and their wacky sides, but Lucky figured Lincoln’s mother had no way of knowing at the time he was born that he would turn out to be so dedicated about knots.

She suddenly understood that she’d been doing everything backward. She’d thought you looked for your Higher Power and when you found it you got special knowledge—special insight—about how the world works, and why people die, and how to keep bad things from happening. But now she knew that wasn’t the right order of things. Over and over at the anonymous meetings she’d heard people tell how their situation had gotten worse and worse and worse until they’d hit rock bottom. Only after they’d hit rock bottom did they get control of their lives. And then they found their Higher Power.

There are sad moments and moments of great tension in this story but there are also some very funny events such as the snake in the clothes drier (Brigitte is terrified of snakes); and when Lincoln decides he needs to fix the sign outside town - "Slow children at play" to say "Slow, children at play". The free government food is hideous but also utterly crazy especially the tasteless yellow cheese. 

The Higher Power of Lucky has 160 pages so it is a very quick book to read but somehow I just didn't want it to end. And I was so pleased that I totally wrongly predicted the ending. 

There has been some controversy about this book in the US because early in the story Lucky overhears one of the people speaking at the 12 Steps Program (she loves to hear the stories from people with various addictions about how they found their 'High Power' after hitting 'rock bottom'. Short Sammy's story involves his dog and a snake and includes the word 'scrotum'. Lucky listens outside the Found Object Wind Chime Museum and Visitor Center, where she works clearing up rubbish after each group comes for their meeting. Read an interview with Susan Patron here about this issue. Sadly, Susan Patron died in 2023. You can read more about the plot and find discussion questions on the publisher page

Publisher blurb: Lucky, age ten, can't wait another day. The meanness gland in her heart and the crevices full of questions in her brain make running away from Hard Pan, California (population 43), the rock-bottom only choice she has. It's all Brigitte's fault -- for wanting to go back to France. Guardians are supposed to stay put and look after girls in their care! Instead, Lucky is sure that she'll be abandoned to some orphanage in Los Angeles where her beloved dog, HMS Beagle, won't be allowed. She'll have to lose her friends Miles, who lives on cookies, and Lincoln, future U.S. president (maybe) and member of the International Guild of Knot Tyers. Just as bad, she'll have to give up eavesdropping on twelve-step anonymous programs where the interesting talk is all about Higher Powers. Lucky needs her own -- and quick. But she hadn't planned on a dust storm. Or needing to lug the world's heaviest survival-kit backpack into the desert.

Hard Pan may be lightly populated, but every soul is uniquely unforgettable, from 5-year-old Miles, shameless cookie hustler, to Lincoln, serious knot-tying addict. Readers will gladly give themselves over to Patron, a master of light but sure characterization and closely observed detail. A small gem. Kirkus Star review

After reading The Higher Power of Lucky please go out and find Are you my Mother?


The other two books are Lucky Breaks (2009) and Lucky for Good (2011) - the series is called Lucky's Hard Pan trilogy. The good news that book one can stand alone - it does leave the way open for the sequel but everything is beautifully resolved in this first installment. 



I have absolutely no idea how I discovered this book The Higher Power of Lucky - it is a title I recently added to my Kindle library. Maybe I saw it on a Newbery list because it was a Newbery winner in 2007. Over the Christmas week I read so many fantastic books - I will be sharing them here over the coming days - Flight of the Puffin by Ann Braden; The Wanderer by Sharon Creech; The Frindle Files by Andrew Clements; The Bletchley Riddle by Ruta Sepetys; The Might Miss Malone by Christopher Paul Curtis; Busted by Dan Gemeinhart; and Queen of Thieves by Johan Rundberg.

Thursday, January 1, 2026

January 1st and the Possibility of 365 Poems


On my shelf I have four poetry anthologies which provide you with a poem for each day of the year. If you know someone beginning their career as a teacher this year one of these would be a fabulous gift or if you work in a school library why not use these as a way to share poems with the teachers in your school or share one each day in your library.

 I decided to look at 1st January and here is a poem that appealed to me from A Whale of a Time:

The First Book by Rita Dove

Open it.

Go ahead, it won’t bite.
Well … maybe a little.

More a nip, like. A tingle.
It’s pleasurable, really.

You see, it keeps on opening.
You may fall in.

Sure, it’s hard to get started;
remember learning to use

knife and fork? Dig in:
you’ll never reach bottom.

It’s not like it’s the end of the world–
just the world as you think

you know it.


Busted by Dan Gemeinhart





“Squeeze the orange” of life
YOLO - You only live once


Oscar Aberdeen lives with his grandfather. You are sure to have read about kids in life circumstances like this in previous books. But in this story his grandfather lives in a retirement community called Sunny Days and it is filled with other senior citizens. Oscar has lived there for many years and so he has formed brilliant relationships with many of the residents. His 'normal' life means he joins in with all the seniors' activities from morning teas, to crafting and card playing. Retirement villages and aged care homes always seem to have almost insulting names like Sunny Days because while yes, these people might enjoy some sunny days all of us are destined to end our life journey eventually. In fact, Oscar is a bit of an expert when it comes to funerals and as this story opens that is where we find him - at the funeral of Mr Howell. This is the 49th funeral Oscar has attended. The big problem is Mr Howell has been running Sunny Days Retirement Community and because he has died it will now be taken over by his son. Again, you have probably guessed this will mean BIG changes for the community and the most serious change is a huge hike in the weekly fee. Oscar's grandfather only just gets by on his meagre pension so there is no way he can pay this. Will Oscar and his grandfather have to move away?

One resident that no one really interacts with is Jimmy Deluca. He is loud, he is always swearing, he smokes hideous cigars and drinks (a lot) but he now needs Oscar to help him and in return he offers Oscar a huge amount of money which might mean Oscar and his grandfather can keep their home.

Jimmy has a 'bucket list' of things he needs to achieve. He owns an amazing car (you can see it on the cover of the book) but he needs help to escape from Sunny Days because he is classified as 'monitored and restricted' which means if he goes out through the main building front door alarms will alert the staff. 

Oscar, along with Natasha, (daughter of the new Sunny Days owner) hatch a plan to break Jimmy out of Sunny Days but Oscar has no idea that he will be pulled into a totally wild adventure involving gangsters, cigars, Jimmy's hairless cat Mr Buttercup, breaking into the backyard of a suburban house, playing poker with dangerously high stakes, leaving a restaurant without paying (this is mortifying for Oscar), and even buying a bra!

Here are a couple of text quotes:

"I was in a heckuva pickle. I didn't want to smuggle known lowlife Jimmy Deluca out the door, in plain view of the cameras. Get busted, get in huge trouble, disappoint Pops and all my Sunny Days family. Law-breaking troublemaker? That wasn't me."

"I let out a low whistle. Jimmy Deluca's car was ... well, it was a beaut. A gem. An absolute humdinger. It was baby blue, with a cream coloured top. It had chrome. It had curves. It had white-walled tires. It had style. It was like one of those cars you'd see in a parade, or at a classic car show or something. Yeah, I was impressed."

"I broke Jimmy the Wrench out of a secure facility. Ran out on a restaurant bill. Got punched by a sleazeball. Puked up an entire ravioli dinner. Trespassed on private property. Lied to my grandpa. Got clawed by a hairless cat. Stole a car. Even bought a bra. ... Oh (and) I'm currently wanted by the police."

This book will make you laugh (I laughed a lot); and you will marvel at the clever plot twists which bring together pieces of Oscar's life experiences; and then Dan Gemeinhart will, yes you might have guess this, he will make you cry. This is also one of those 'time is ticking' stories because the staff is due to check on Jimmy is 6.30pm so they only have around four hours to complete Jimmy's list. Speaking of lists - I highly recommend you add this book to your 'to read list' and also to your school library. It will be enjoyed by readers aged 10+. Read the blurb on the publisher page. Listen to an audio book sample

This story is also truly FUNNY. I cannot overstate that fact. Finding humorous middle grade books that don’t feature wacky or slapstick humor can be challenging, and sometimes readers just want a different kind of funny. I laughed (out loud) so many times throughout this book and I know kids will be giggling along as they read, too. Reading Middle Grade

Companion books:





I confess I should have had more faith in Dan Gemeinhart but when I saw this book in a local independent bookstore last month I did not buy it because I really didn't like the cover! I was WRONG, so wrong. Luckily, I read a few reviews. I previously loved Dan's books. 








I was visiting a small country town in southwestern NSW and I spied Busted on the shelf in their very well stocked newsagent and so as you have guessed I grabbed it AND I read the whole book in one afternoon over Christmas. 

I have been trying to remember a book I read with a boy who also lived in an aged care or retirement home and the residents all taught him different skills but then the school authorities demanded that the boy go to school, and this is all so hard for the boy - adjusting to life with his peers.  (This might be the Gordon Korman book I shared above). 

Here are few other titles I am going to look for that might link well with Busted:





Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Christmas and New Year Greetings from IBBY around the World

 


Art by HCAA Nominee Bruce Whatley





Armenia


Canada


Estonia


Greece



Japan


Mongolia


Slovakia



Sweden


United Arab Emirates



Russia






The Hounds of Penhallow Hall: The Moonlight Statue by Holly Webb illustrated by Jason Cockcroft


Blurb: For Polly, moving to Penhallow Hall is the fresh start she’s been longing for since the death of her father. Her mum has got a job managing the stately home and once the last of the visitors leave for the day the place is all theirs! One night, Polly sleepwalks into the garden and wakes to find her hand on the head of one of the stone dogs that guard the steps down to the lawn. Then she feels him lick her cheek! The dog introduces himself as Rex, an Irish Wolfhound who lived at Penhallow many hundreds of years earlier. And he is not the only resident ghost – Polly has also glimpsed a strange boy around the place. With Rex’s help she finds herself unravelling the story of his beloved master, William Penhallow, who was killed in the First World War aged only 17.

I picked this book up at a recent charity book sale. It was published in 2017 and so it is now out of print but you might find this series in your local or school library. 

This is a simple story but it did hold my interest. It is easy to read with plenty of illustrations and so would be enjoyed by readers aged 9+. It is a ghost story but it is not scary at all. Readers who enjoy books that feature very special (huge) dogs are sure to enjoy meeting Rex. 

My only comment is I was a little confused towards the end as to why William returned a young boy and not the age as a young soldier when he died. I have now discovered this book is part of a series so perhaps my questions will be resolved in further installments. 

  • Book 1: The Moonlight Statue (2017)
  • Book 2: The Lost Treasure (2017)
  • Book 3: The Hidden Staircase (2018)
  • Book 4: The Secrets Tree (2018)




Holly Webb is the author of over 100 books. She almost needs a whole section of the library just to hold all her books. She writes such a variety of stories for a wide range of ages. I highly recommend you look for her books next time you visit a library. 

Here are some I have read:








Tuesday, December 30, 2025

"My kids had other plans" Sydney Morning Herald December 30th, 2025


An article from the Sydney Morning Herald caught my eye today - and in part it made me happy but then it also made me rage a little because this mother (Cherie Gilmour a freelance writer) has missed a fantastically easy way to be present with her kids which is the focus of this piece entitled 

"I was the mother of holiday invention. My kids had other plans."

Here are some quotes from the article (which is behind a paywall sorry):

"I set my intention: the summer holidays will be fun and relaxing - a chance to reconnect with my kids. After all I'd be off work as well. I would be the ringleader of fun."

This mum then discovers it is not really fun so she heads off to yoga retreat.  Then ...

"I set myself a challenge, a whole day with my kids, being utterly present. We walked to the park, and I watched them climbing, playing pirates, investigating slater bugs and tiny flowers. I realised that my kids' ability to transform boredom into imaginative play is something I have utterly lost the capacity for when my phone, or even my job, is infinitely more stimulating."

CAN YOU SEE THE WORD - PHONE!

So, this mum has worked out she needs to be with her kids and NOT on her screen. You might think that is why I am raging (and yes I do rage about this regularly) but actually my rage today is because this mum (as far as this opinion piece presents) has not yet discovered the joy of reading to her kids. She can see them enjoying imaginative play - that's fantastic but at the end of the long day she just turns on a movie. That's okay too but what about also grabbing a book or two? This piece mentions a 'new' phenomenon called #corememories. Sharing book after book after book should be one part of this process. Cherie Gilmour explains the idea of #corememories is not only about the kids themselves it is also about giving parents those beautiful memories of their child during those fleeting years of childhood.

"If I lose the ability to be present with my children, when it's easier to park them in front of a screen, I miss the opportunity to create my own core memories of their precious childhood, which is dripping away like a melting glacier, one day at a time. The days are long but the years are short."

I spent some time with a few 35-year-olds this week over Christmas. It was wonderful to see them talking about the books they (as adults) read this year and to hear them also remember books we had shared when they were tiny such as There's a Hippopotamus on the Roof Eating Cake. I gifted a selection of picture books at their family Christmas event for the next generation of young children aged 2-9 and then loved seeing every adult picking up a picture book to read to one of these children. This happened over and over again. My heart sang! I do hope Cherie Gilmour has discovered the joy of reading to her own children and that her home is filled with fabulous books - that is one easy way she can be present with her kids, create memories and share the fun of exploring their imaginations.