Reviews

Poopy Pants and Potty Rants by Dale Thomas

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Illus. by Alison Mutton. Albert Street Books, 2020. ISBN: 9781760876883.
(Age: 2-5) Highly recommended. With gorgeous illustrations by Alison Mutton, this hilarious story is one to bring a smile to the faces of all parents and would be an ideal gift for those with young children. AFL star Dale Thomas has written a heart-warming story about the trials and joys of toilet training. Rather than concentrating on his football career, he has written a humorous and encouraging book that will be a helpful guide for parents and one that gives a very positive slant on being a father.
Hey there, kiddo! The time is right for you.
You're going to learn the big-kid way to do a wee and poo!
From then on, the story goes through a series of familiar but funny occasions of all the times that toilet training is necessary. Both the narrative and the illustrations create an upbeat look at toilet training. There are little hints along the way about toilet training and a reward chart and 120 stickers can be found at the back of the book.
The illustrator has used her extensive skills in portraying Dale Thomas himself and his little daughter Tilly as he tries to show her how to go to the toilet. The warmth of the family unit, with scenes of family barbeques, children playing boisterously and father and mother cheering the little girl on are delightful. Readers will be entranced by the pictures of daily life, and love to follow the antics of the little cat and dog that are featured on most pages.
Poopy Pants and Potty Rants is a winner! It made me smile the whole way through and will be a must have for parents who are trying to toilet train a child.
Pat Pledger

Puffin Little Explorer: The Ocean

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Penguin Random House Australia, 2020. ISBN: 9781760897666.
(Age: 6-10) Little Explorer: The Ocean is one of the newly released titles in the Puffin Little series celebrating 80 years of Puffin. So far, this series has contained titles about Composting, the Solar system, Snacks (cooking), Robotics and The Anzacs all aimed at readers from the age of about 6 years of age according to the publishers.
The content of this unpretentious nonfiction book is accurate and well-written in a way that makes it easy to read from front to back. The books have a contents page, glossary, a fast facts section and a short quiz at the end of the book but no Index. The illustrations are black or blue line drawings and pictures which complement the old-fashioned look of this series. This could also be the reason they are so well priced for a nonfiction book at just $12.99 per title.
The book includes information about the difference between oceans and seas, what lives in coastal waters, open ocean, deep ocean and the polar waters. I loved the chapter towards the end of the book which sets out the careers that children can aim for if they wish to work in and around oceans. The section about caring for our oceans is also a welcome inclusion.
It is detailed and comprehensive with quite difficult language and a large amount of text for a book that is aimed at readers as young as 6. At first glance inside this book I assumed this title to be more suitable for children aged over 8 but the Puffin who narrates through the book keeps reminding the reader that they are a Little explorer and Penguin advertises the series is for early readers. I think children as old as 10 would find the information in this book helpful for research and reluctant readers may find this format more approachable than a traditional nonfiction book. Themes: Oceans, Biodiversity, Sea Creatures, Seas.
Gabrielle Anderson

Spotlight by Solli Raphael

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Penguin, 2020. ISBN: 9781760898410.
(Age: Adolescent) Highly recommended. This is an wonderfully enlightening and extraordinary book, partly resonating with readers through Solli's passionate performance pieces and partly through his addressing us in his call to all human beings of the world to consider and act to keep our world, our land, forests, seas and all creatures safe. Solli Raphael, 15 years old, has been a slam poet for some time, using his voice to call us to acknowledge how and what we should be doing right NOW. While he also addresses adults, his call to action is very much presented as a challenge to young people all over the world. The photo on the cover shows Solli with his hand on his heart, and indeed his eyes, and his heartfelt plea alert us to his passion: the imminent threats that we face if we fail to act; the dire need to protect our world, all the people and creatures that live on this world; and of course the land, air, sea and sky.
His diverse options include forming particular groups to act in specific areas, asking us to consider addressing local schools, adolescents and adults, asking all people to plan, to make decisions, and to act. This plea is redolent with his intense concern and determination to make us aware of the threats that we face if we fail to enact change. Addressing many groups using his slam poetry, writing letters, and suggesting specific action, he challenges us to plead with our family, friends, neighbours, politicians, and people all over the world, to band together and pledge to act to save this wonderful but threatened world in which we live.
This is a striking book, full of practical tips, and full of passion. Indeed, Solli's thoughts and suggestions are so relevant in these times, across the whole world in terms of our actions, and our choices. His hope is that we will listen, think and act - not only to protect our air and our seas, but also to safeguard all the people of the world, all the lands of the earth, particularly challenging us to make specific choices to protect our atmosphere as well. This powerful book is very highly recommended for adolescent readers, and indeed for their parents and indeed for politicians and all adults of this precious planet Earth.
Elizabeth Bondar

Fairy tales gone bad: Zombierella by Joseph Coelho

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Illus. by Freya Hartas. Walker Books, 2020. ISBN: 9781406389661.
(Age: 9+). Recommended for readers who appreciate dark humour. Warning though that this book may upset sensitive children.
In time for Halloween, this is the first of a planned series of three dark fairy tales. A librarian discovers an unloved collection of books that are deteriorated, cracked and swollen. The question is whether foul changes on the outside of a book mean the story inside is changed too?
Starting with the story of Cinderella, we see the answer is yes. The overall tale is somewhat familiar yet has become twisted and rotten.
Cinderella lives with her 'fake' mother and sisters who treat her badly and are deliberately disgusting. A prince announces a series of balls to find a wife, and the 'fakes' all swan off to the first ball.
A freak accident creates Zombierella. She makes it to the ball too and meets the prince. She endures more ill treatment before we find out whether she lives 'happily ever after'.
Joseph Coelho (poet, playwright and younger children's author) has created a darkly funny story as his first book for middle-grade readers.
He uses a range of devices to maintain interest: the story is written entirely in verse, switching between rhyming and free verse. The text flows easily and is simple to read while still including delightfully descriptive language (for example the family never 'say' anything - they phlegm, drone, flap and more).
For sensitive children, warning that there are multiple deaths (of people and animals), amputations, digging up graves, bones sticking out and innards on the outside of a body. The family treat each other badly and the mother inflicts a terrible injury without a second thought.
There are dark illustrations on every page that bring the story to life (so to speak!) - these are detailed and moody but are also cartoon-like which ensures they are not too realistic or graphic.
Themes: Death, Relationships, Fairy tale (fractured), Verse, Family.
Kylie Grant

The dictionary of lost words by Pip Williams

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Affirm Press, 2020. ISBN: 9781925972597.
(Age: Secondary/Adult) Recommended. The story of Esme is set against a time of immense change for women in Britain. She is part of the tide sweeping the nation as it grapples with women's suffrage then braces for war, a war which saw an acceleration of those changes when women were drafted into the workforce.
Esme sits with her lexicographer father as he works in the Scriptorium, a shed in Oxford where words are collected, discussed, debated and given a place in the compilation of the Oxford English Dictionary, or sometimes cast aside. Sitting beneath the table where the scholars work, young Esme comes across a rejected slip with the word 'bondmaid' and she scoops it up to put in Lizzie's trunk, the first of many words pertaining to women, rejected by the lexicographers. Lizzie has looked after her since her mother died, and Esme questions whether Lizzie is a bondmaid, a question which keeps resurfacing.
Over the years, Esme becomes one of the researchers in the Scriptorium, a position usually only taken by men and she needs special permission to enter the Oxford libraries, usually only open to men. She meets an actress and is often seen at the theatre watching her, only to become pregnant to her brother. Her child is adopted by a couple who then move to Adelaide, and Esme returns to her life in the Scrippy. Over the years she becomes more aware of the position women have in society and emboldened, argues, usually unsuccessfully, for words to be included in the dictionary.
She keeps on collecting words that are rejected, and she collects some for herself. Her ear becomes attuned to new words, especially by women unnoticed by scholars, and she writes them down with an example of its use along with the author of the word and the date. Lizzie's trunk becomes a repository of women's words, words that will never find a place in the dictionary being compiled.
This wonderful tale, with the endearing characters of Esme and Lizzie set alongside the reality of the Scriptorium, Dr Murray and his researchers, resonates with authenticity as we watch the compiling of this dictionary paralleling the emancipation of women but oblivious to it. It is ironic that such a momentous change is barely recognised by these men sitting in judgement over which words will be included, and Esme's lost words underscore this irony, her 'Dictionary of Lost Words' published privately by her husband as a token of his love and esteem.
Throughout the story, words are presented which provoke thought and deliberation, bringing the reader to question why these were not included, and giving another layer of interest to an already highly involving story.
Themes: Women's suffrage, Emancipation, World War One, Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford, Lexicography.
Fran Knight

Bandits by Sha'an D'Anthes

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Hachette, 2020. ISBN: 9780734419675.
(Age: 4+) Recommended. Fern lives in a drab, colourless city where everything looks the same and everyone keeps to themselves. She loves to read, especially reading of times long ago when there were trees where there are now buildings. One night bandits steal into the city to steal, scattering rubbish all through the streets. She follows the bandits out of the city and finds that they live in a forest full of colour and trees. She is unsure but the two bandits introduce themselves and she looks at the rubbish they have collected from the city. She is astounded that they collect rubbish until they show her that the rubbish is still usable to plant and grow more trees.
She remains with her new friends, realising that the world is more vast than she thought and she helps with tree planting.
This arresting book with its colour filled pages, will encourage children to think about the things they waste. Food waste is a growing problem and this book will initiate discussion about this issue in the classroom, leading to children taking their own steps with the school and at home. There are more books being published at the moment alerting younger readers to the issue, nonfiction (What a waste by Jess French and Family guide to waste-free living by Lauren Carter), and fiction (The Tindims of Rubbish Island, by Sally Gardner and Jelly-boy by Nicole Godwin, for example.)
And in this book, Fern finds like-minded people who become her friends, working to undo the damage done to the planet.
Sha'an's first book was Zoom (2017).
Theme: Waste, Recycling, Friendship.
Fran Knight

Everything in its right place by Tobias McCorkell

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Transit Lounge, 2020. ISBN: 9781925760606.
(Age: Senior secondary / Adult) Recommended. Ford McCullen is a teenager growing up in the rough neighbourhood of Coburg, in the shadow of Pentridge Prison. However thanks to a legacy from his grandmother (his father's mother) he gets to attend the posh school in Toorak, including violin lessons. It is this dichotomy that is at the heart of the book. The scene is set for us from the first chapter when an encounter with Moose the tough kid of his neighbourhood, and a wild ride on the back of a quad bike, sees him waving goodbye to his violin.
Ford lives with his mother and his grandparents; his mother is not coping, and his estranged father's various male partners are not easy to live with. In fact there are some quite horrible scenes of abuse in his father's place, but the whole story is told with a kind of humour that accepts that is just the way life is. Life is rough, Ford's mates are into drink, drugs, and hooliganism and Ford drifts along with them.
His grandparents have great expectations of him, but his teachers, and even his school friends, do not. They are actually surprised if he performs well or if he says something intelligent. Because that is not the kind of person they take him for.
McCorkell's novel deals with issues of class, teenage delinquency, abuse, and mental illness, but it is not hard to read. The humour carries it along, and while there are poignant moments, we know that Ford will survive, perhaps even surprise everybody including himself.
Themes: Families, Identity, Coming of age, Mental health, Abuse, Class divisions.
Helen Eddy

Song of the crocodile by Nardi Simpson

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Hachette, 2020. ISBN: 9780733643743.
(Age: Adult/Senior secondary) Highly recommended. An interweaving of spiritual stories of ancestors and totems, and the down-to-earth daily experiences of an Aboriginal family confined to the outskirts of Darnmoor, a hard country town representative of so many towns in Australia where racism is an undercurrent unrecognised by the townspeople but with an ongoing impact on the lives of the Indigenous people, this story brings alive three generations of the Billymil family.
For me the portrayal of the bright curious and cheerful little girl Mili was so magical - you could see her happy face, her thoughtful questions, and her love for her elders and her cousins, a really bright little spark. All of which makes so devastating the casual violence that is inflicted upon her. Reading about her you understand how spirits get broken, how life just becomes too hard, and uncaring sets in. The other amazing character is Wil, full of energy and optimism, hardworking and determined, and so full of love and kindness towards a wife who is broken and a son that is not his. There are many more characters who will capture your heart; probably most poignant of all is Paddy, lost between two worlds, heading towards danger.
Simpson's talent is in making her characters come to life, with language so authentic, you can hear their voices, and their conversations, and join in their humour. This deftness with conversational language is combined with an ability to describe not only the workplaces, the town and the physical environment, but the magical spiritual world that flows beneath and around it all.
It is a hard story, of hard work, endurance, and suffering. The spotlight is shone squarely on the degeneration of a culture with alcoholism and depression, alongside the ugliness of racism and the whitewashing of history. But the hearts of the people are true, and the spirit of the country may have its revenge in the end.
This is a very moving story, harshly realistic and magical at the same time. The writing is beautiful, incorporating Yuwaalaraay language naturally throughout. The author is clearly a talent to look out for; this debut novel was winner of the 2018 black&write! writing fellowship.
Themes: Aboriginal culture, Country, Racism, Identity, Marginalistion, Violence, Rape.
Helen Eddy

Hello Jimmy! by Anna Walker

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Penguin Random House Australia, 2020. ISBN: 9781760893422.
(Ages: 4-7) Highly recommended. Anna Walker's intensely beautiful illustrations are again on display here and are matched with a gentle, moving story about a young boy and his father, who he lives with only sometimes. In the first few pages we are introduced to the two characters and get a little glimpse into their life together. Sometimes they talk, sometimes they don't, Jack's dad seems to work a lot and smile only a little and he hasn't told a joke in a long time. The house is quiet and Jack wonders if his dad might be lonely. The house, gorgeously portrayed by Walker, will seem typical to many kids; there is food on the floor under the table, electrical cords lying around haphazardly and shoes, clothes and toys strewn around.
And then, 'One Tuesday night when Jack arrived, his dad had a surprise' and for the first time in the story his dad also wears a smile. It's a parrot named Jimmy and it's loud, it laughs at his dad's jokes and his dad seems so much happier now that the parrot is here. 'He's amazing!', says his dad. Jack wished he was amazing too.' So one night, tired of the parrot and its omnipresence, Jack opens the window and lets it free, only to feel bad and go looking for it in the morning. When his dad finds him he makes it clear that it is Jack who matters. The last few pages show Jack and his dad enjoying life together in a much more positive light (his dad is smiling and they are interacting happily) and Jack realises how loved he is.
There is a wonderful subtlety to the family circumstances here but there has obviously been a parental separation and the impact of that change has affected the relationship between Jack and his father as well as their emotional wellbeing. This is a sensitive topic but one that will be relevant for many children. It will provide a safe way to discuss life changes with those dealing with similar situations as well as an opportunity to explore different family formats with all children. Themes: Family relationships, Loneliness, Belonging, Love.
Nicole Nelson

A Tale of Magic by Chris Colfer

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Hodder & Stoughton 2019. ISBN: 9781510202122.
(Age: Young Adult) Highly recommended. Actor and musician Chris Colfer continues his second career as a bestselling children's author with A Tale of Magic. This is Colfer's first offering outside of his immensely popular Land of Stories series. While set in the same universe and acting as a quasi-prequel, readers do not need to be familiar with the Land of Stories series to enjoy A Tale of Magic.
The narrative centres on Brystal Evergreen, a bookish and intelligent teenager living in a patriarchal and oppressive society. In the Southern Kingdom, ruled over by King Champion XIII and a cadre of crotchety and sexist High Justices, Brystal's life is a never-ending cycle of domestic duties and preparation for her future role as wife and mother.
Until one day Brystal, who loves to read but is forbidden from doing so due to draconian laws outlawing female literacy, applies for a cleaning job at a library. So begins an adventure involving secrets, magic, trials and servitude, culminating in Brystal's enrolment at the newly opened Madame Weatherberry's Academy of Magic. For the first time in her life Brystal begins to form friendships and become comfortable is expressing who she is. However, when Madame Weatherberry disappears, Brystal and her magical classmates must find a way to save their teacher and, while they're at it, the rest of the world.
A Tale of Magic is a vivid, fun and exceedingly enjoyable novel. Colfer excels at world-building and readers will be enchanted by the colourful characters and scenes he brings to life. This book is highly recommended, particularly for fans of magical school narratives, such as Harry Potter and Nevermore. Themes: Magic, Magical Creatures, Witches, Family, Friendship, Adventure.
Rose Tabeni

Bad Mermaids: Meet the Sushi Sisters by Sibeal Pounder

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Illus. by Jason Cockcroft. Bloomsbury Children's Books, 2020. ISBN: 9781526616883.
(Age: 7-9) Recommended. The fourth book in this amusing series introduces Meri Pebble (the best spy mermaid in the Fortress Bay spy school, according to Meri anyway!). Meri pesters her supervisor into giving her a new mission and she is tasked with uncovering what is behind a crabogram that says the Famous Sushi Sisters are going to destroy all the humans. She and her friends - Beattie, Mimi and Zelda, (aka the Bad Mermaids) go undercover as a personal assistant and the GLAM squad to show that there is no truth to the idea that the Sushi sisters would even consider harming any humans. Meri is sure she can prove them to be the famous and seriously spoiled mermaids who just do pranks for their TV show and nothing more. But the mermaids soon realise the Sushi sisters are up to something and wonder how the sisters got their hands on some very strange pets like their mercats (half mermaid half cat) and hamstars (half seastars half hamsters).
Meanwhile their human friend Paris is moving from California to a castle in Scotland which boasts a loch haunted by a mermaid. Paris' mother has given up making socks and taken up selling mermaid make-up to humans under the brand name Flubiere. She has even brought a tankful of Puffer fish to promote her brand to the fish-loving people of Scotland. Paris befriends the mysterious mermaid in the loch and helps her Bad mermaid friends in the process.
The books all have delightful references to all things fishy that young readers will enjoy. The lessons about being a good friend and not getting taken in by the glamour and glitz of famous people are carefully woven into the story as Beattie learns the hard way that being the cool girl with the Sushi sisters is not all it promised. Themes: Espionage, mermaids, seahorses, magic, friendship.
Gabrielle Anderson

The Night Whistler by Greg Woodland

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Text Publishing, 2020. ISBN: 9781922330093.
(Age: Senior secondary/adult) Highly recommended. Mick Goodenough has been sent to the country town of Moorabool quite a come down from his former role as a detective in the city. Probationary Constable Goodenough is now the lowest on the pecking order, but it takes him no time to notice the station is badly run.
One of his dogs, a German Shepherd is found dead. A boy Hal, new to the town, finds the body which has been tortured and its throat cut. Hal later discovers the site has an unpleasant history. It was the scene of a terrible family murder/suicide with only one surviver.
Mick Goodenough would like some investigation into the killing of his dog but his sergeant shows no desire to waste police resources on the animal. But with some digging Mick finds there is quite a history of missing pets turning up maimed and killed, but no record of any investigation.
Hal's father, John Humphries is newly employed by a local food processing company and with his mother and younger brother have just settled into life in a country town. A life Hal's mother is none too keen on. After the company family Christmas party the nuisance phone calls begin. They always begin with whistling and become more personal toward Corrie Humphries.
Mick has become worried. The pet mutilations and now the phone calls indicate an escalation by the perpetrator. He fears the next victim may well be human.
Greg Woodland's murder mystery is set during the mid 1960s, when the pace of life is slower and the New South Wales police is well known for corruption. The atmosphere is very Australian: country town, summer, racial tension and a belief by white locals that there was no safer place to live.
The story is told  by Hal and Mick Goodenough, both adding their unique perspectives as new comers to a situation that becomes increasingly desperate. Woodland's first novel is one which hooks the reader because of a chemistry by which he has the reader sympathising with the two main characters.
Themes: Crime, Corruption, NSW, Police, Pets, Stalking.
Mark Knight

The human body survival guide (Your body is really gross - but also pretty awesome!) by George Ivanoff

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Penguin Random House Australia, 2020. ISBN: 9781760896744.
(Ages: 8-Adult) Highly recommended. Everything you always wanted to know about bodily functions, in excruciating detail, can be found in this entertaining book by George Ivanoff. It follows on from the first book in this nonfiction series called The Australia survival guide: Australia is trying to kill you, this book will save your life! published in 2019.
George is onto a winner here with all the facts about the most mundane of human anatomy presented in a highly amusing way. He introduces the "Gross-o-meter" which is a scale included on each page to rate how gross the particular section is according to the author; it rates from Un-gross through a 5-step scale to Ultra-gross. The book is divided into four sections : On the outside: about skin, wrinkles, cuts, nails, sweat and body image; On the inside: cardiovascular system, digestive systems, muscles and the brain; Better out than in: about body secretions and excretions (something kids all find riveting) and Everything else: a mix of facts about parasites, the body being an ecosystem, bionic body parts and much more. There is nothing about the Reproductive system. These short chapters have some very funny titles e.g. The wrapping, Food churning grossness, Red Spurty stuff, Pooping it out, Special invited guests, etc. which will definitely attract all children to this book. It also includes a Glossary and Further reading section at the end but no Index. It is very informative and includes case notes for real life examples of some things and little orange post-it notes to point out extra interesting things.
The book has the look of an old handbook as the illustrations inside are monochrome with large splashes of orange/red being the only bright colour. The photographs used are also black and white and this makes it very approachable for everyone who finds full colour pictures of body parts and insides confronting. There are some promotional videos by the author which libraries may find useful to introduce these books to their clients. Themes: Human anatomy, Physiology.
Gabrielle Anderson

Kensy and Max : Full speed by Jacqueline Harvey

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Penguin Random House Australia, 2020. ISBN: 9781760890025.
(Ages 8-10). Recommended. Kensy and Max, the super child spies, are back in the sixth book in this very popular series.  In this new book the twins find themselves on a mission to Zermatt in Switzerland after there is a strange gas leak in the Houses of Parliament during their school excursion.
When they arrive in Zermatt Kensy and Max are tasked with befriending Soren, the child of a very suspicious couple who are suspected of being involved in an arms smuggling ring.  But the mystery deepens for them when a secretive figure that was spotted in London turns up in Zermatt and seems to want to kill Max.  There is also the mystery of who is behind the hacks that are plaguing many large corporations around the world.  Along with the exciting, page-turning action in this book there is also a softer side which explores family relationships through the story behind Soren and his relationship with both his very self-absorbed parents and their kind housekeeper Sylvie.  Readers will enjoy the spy tools and special gadgets used by the twins and their family to give them the upper hand and solve the case.
These books can be read as a stand-alone book but some understanding of the characters that pop up is enhanced if they are read in order.  As with previous books the chapter titles are written in a special code, different in each book.  This book uses the Qwerty Code where the alphabet corresponds with the QWERTY keyboard and is explained in the back of the book. Themes: Spies, Twins, Siblings, Snow skiing, Mysteries.
Gabrielle Anderson

The biscuit maker by Sue Lawson

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Illus. by Liz Anelli. Walker Books, 2020. ISBN: 9781760650438.
(Age: 4+) Highly recommended. A wonderful sense of place is aroused with the biscuit maker and appreciative audience settled firmly on the front cover against a street of houses. The houses are repeated on the endpapers, several streets worth, with the houses drawn as children might draw them, without perspective. A lovely touch, I thought, and loving maps as I do, evoked an immediate response to the setting.
Eventually opening the book, after my mind trawled through the discussions I would have with the children listening to the story, I was intrigued with the direction the story took. Not just a story about grandmas and children baking, but a beautiful tale of coming together, of neighbours, neighbourhood and friendship. Benedict Stanley and his cat, Audrey Mae, say good morning and hello to the passers-by each day but they are too busy to notice and hurry past, jogging or going to work or reading a paper. So Benedict and his cat tend their garden until their legs weary and they must rest. A boy walks past telling them that the tooth fairy will visit him overnight. Benedict goes inside and cooks him some celebratory biscuits, leaving them on his doorstep. After this he cooks biscuits for many of the people in his street, and people begin to wonder who the biscuit maker is. One day, Benedict takes to his bed and the biscuits stop coming. People are concerned about what has happened to the biscuit maker, and why the biscuits have stopped. When Audrey Mae yowls outside Rory's house he realises something is wrong. He and other neighbours knock at Benedict's door, bringing food to him. As Benedict and Rory share a cake or two, the neighbours tuck into the garden, doing the sorts of things Benedict would have done if he were feeling better. The neighbourhood bustles with friendship and helping each other as they ready themselves for a New Year's Eve street party.
This wonderful story of finding friends, of communicating with your neighbours, of community, of watching out for the elderly, will warm the hearts of the readers, especially apt after the year we have had with its emphasis on helping those living nearby.
Each page shows a different facet of life in the street: kids getting ready for the grand final, a kitten falling from a rooftop, one family having triplets, a child who has lost a tooth. All happen within the neighbourhood but it is only Benedict who is aware of the range of incidents and acts upon them. Anelli offers us a crowded street scene, full of life and events, fascinating and detailed, a range of ages and backgrounds, of families and house styles, all prompting the reader to look at their own neighbourhood with renewed eyes.
Anelli's mixed media illustrations sing with friendship and cooperation, showing a disinterested neighbourhood coming to life when one person makes an effort. Benedict shows what can be done with the smallest of gestures, eliciting a response from those living next door, reviving the old community spirit that has lapsed. The book exhorts us to reignite the spirit of cooperation between neighbours. Children will love seeing the different aspects of street life, and single out the range of biscuits made by Benedict, turning to the back of the book for the recipe to try out for themselves. Teacher's notes are available.
Theme: Friendship, Neighbours, Cooperation, Community, Biscuits.
Fran Knight