Nevertell by Katherine Orton

NevertellNevertell by Katharine Orton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Opening in a Soviet labour camp during Stalin’s time, Orton has created a wonderful fantasy centring on a young girl, Lina, born in the camp. Whilst the opening scene is realistic, the story soon turns to a blend of Russian fairytale and adventure story as Lina is involved in an escape from the camp which brings her companions and her into the realm of the spirit world. The unexpected uniting of families and the beautiful descriptions add to the involving adventure and suspense to make a great read.

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Red Day by Sandy Fussell

Red DayRed Day by Sandy Fussell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A great middle-grade book which delves into a sometimes overlooked part of Australia’s World War Two history. Charlotte or Charlie lives in Cowra in the central west of New South Wales. She is a synaesthete which means she experiences words and people as having colours. She is not looking forward to having a Japanese exchange student to stay at her home, and misses her brother who died some years ago. Kenichi, when he arrives, turns out to be not so bad. He also triggers her synaethesia in strange ways so that she feels what happened during the breakout of Japanese prisoners from the Cowra internment camp. Both characters have family mysteries to solve which are resolved in satisfying ways. Fussell’s characterization of Charlotte, in particular, is warm and believable. An enjoyable read.

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My Life as an Alphabet by Barry Jonsberg

My Life as an AlphabetMy Life as an Alphabet by Barry Jonsberg
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Soon to be released as the film H is for Happiness, this is the autobiography of 12-year-old Candice Phee. Her English teacher has assigned her class the task of writing about themselves with one paragraph for each letter of the alphabet. Candice thinks this isn’t enough and opts for a chapter for each letter.
This was a CBCA Honour Book in 2014 and won the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award. I loved the quirky main character and her efforts to heal her dysfunctional family.

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Cicada by Shaun Tan

CicadaCicada by Shaun Tan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

It’s not as long or profound as some of his works, but Cicada holds a message about under-appreciated workers and those who are different. The central character works hard at work although his boss and co-workers don’t value him or see him as an equal. When he finally retires he has the last laugh. All to the Australian refrain of summer: the tok tok sound of cicadas.

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The Last Man in Europe by Dennis Glover

The Last Man in EuropeThe Last Man in Europe by Dennis Glover
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Jura, April 1947. Glover opens his novel with an ill George Orwell contemplating the opening of his latest novel in the remote Scottish island after returning there from treatment for tuberculosis. It is a novel which looks at Orwell’s writing life through the prisms of his books. Dominating is his final greatest work: Nineteen Eighty-Four. The picture that emerges does homage to the literary works and illuminates where they came from. Reading it reminds you of all the Orwell books you have read and triggers the desire to read the ones you haven’t. The title is the working title Orwell used for Nineteen Eighty-Four and also refers to Orwell himself as he feels the responsibility to warn the future about where it could be headed without taking heed of where totalitarian tendencies could lead.

I loved this book. Now I want to read more Orwell.

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Five Books

What a great website. What a great idea. Experts asked to nominate the five best books on their area. And what interesting choices they make. Many great lists for collection development as Robert Muchamore nominates 5 books for reluctant reader 12 year old boys and KJ Whittaker nominates the 5 best historical fiction novels for young adults. Geraldine McCaughrean writes about five of her own novels based on real events. Fairy tales, the environment and economics for kids, so much to explore. Glad I have discovered Fivebooks but what a shame it wasn’t sooner.

More Holiday Reading

The Hate U GiveThe Hate U Give by Angie Thomas
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is a powerful novel that gives its readers insight into race relations in the United States. The central character, Starr, witnesses the shooting of a friend by a policeman. When she was 10, Natasha, one of her best friends was killed in a drive-by shooting. Needless to say she is African-American and lives in an African-American area. The story takes us through the months after the police shooting as told by Starr.

Thomas builds a completely believable world with complex characters and motivations. Starr attends a white school out of the area so she lives in two worlds and is careful to behave appropriately in each. She doesn’t bring her white friends home, doesn’t let her Dad know she has a white boyfriend, and doesn’t tell her boyfriend about the deaths she has seen. The death of Khalil leads to a change in her relations with friends at school, people in the neighbourhood and members of her extended family. The title comes from a rap and is basically saying what you sow you reap. Raps and other pop culture references mean that this is great read for its teenage audience and I highly recommend it.

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Yellow by Megan Jacobson

YellowYellow by Megan Jacobson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Sunshine and Surf after the Storm
Yellow, Megan Jacobsen’s first novel, has been shortlisted for the Children’s Book Council of Australia’s Book of the Year for Older Readers – the secondary category. Whilst fantasy is still a very popular genre for teenagers, the popularity of writers such as John Green and Rainbow Rowell has seen a resurgence of the realistic young adult novel in which problems of peer groups, family relationships, sexuality and coming of age are central. Set in an Australian coastal town, Yellow is the story of fourteen-year-old Kirra as she grapples with bullying at school, family breakdown and her mother’s alcoholism. It combines an ultimately compelling realistic teen story with a supernatural element. The title comes from the colour of Kirra’s eyes and hence her father’s nickname for her but she is anything but yellow proving resilient and resourceful in overcoming the problems she faces.

The first thing you notice about Yellow is the striking cover. Covers are extremely important
in attracting teenage readers. Whilst an adult might overlook unimaginative cover design on an intriguing title, young adults are visually driven and a first novel without a reputation behind it will struggle to be picked up without an arresting cover.
The novel opens with Kirra being summoned for a session of the “Circle”. It is told in first person narrative form so the reader feels very close to her feeling of panic as her “friends” give her a dressing down for all her transgressions. It’s all very Mean Girls but doesn’t ring true, especially the references to the Spice Girls and Video Hits which date the novel right away. The characters are caricatures of high school girl bullies and the whole thing feels a bit derivative including the cynical observer/outsider who watches the whole thing and the reader knows is going to become a significant friend who Kirra will have some kind of upset with before reconciliation.
In chapter two Kirra’s surfer father is introduced: the laidback, line of least resistance, ineffectual father who has left Kirra’s mother for his pregnant girlfriend. Jacobson’s picture of the girlfriend, mouth pursed ‘like a cat’s bum’, vividly creates the character.

The adults seem more real than the teenagers and in chapter three the story really takes off when Kirra accidentally kills the girlfriend’s dog and answers the phone in a vandalized phone box. There is a boy at the other end who is apparently dead. He wants to find his killer, Kirra wants her family back together and they agree to help each other.
The phone box is an obvious plot device which isn’t convincing enough for me to suspend disbelief but the rest of the story gains a momentum that makes you want to read on. The suspense of Kirra’s attempts to find out about Boogie’s death and her determination to dry out her mother are compelling and original and the coastal community is drawn so vividly that this should find a readership amongst fans of realistic fiction that deals with problems. The waves come in sets. A series of ten, maybe fifteen eight-footers break at the outer edge of the distant reef, gaining power as they barrel across the coral shallows, and then crashing hard like a tackled footballer, all force and spittle and fury, followed by a lull. (Jacobson, 2016, p. 79)
This book has an authentic Australian voice and setting whether it’s the beach or the side of the road banana and avocado stalls with their honesty payment systems or the summer lightning storms. Kirra learns about her inner strength and the novel ends with an upbeat message of hope for expanded horizons beyond that of a small country town.

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