Monday, 7 October 2024

Weekend reading: 6 October

Every few weekends, I binge read the children's books I've checked out of the library and brought home.

Some are because I'm checking if they'll work for storytime. 

Some are new from Aotearoa creators.

Some are just because.... 

This weekend's reads were: 




A couple of old favourites, which I own: 

  • Old Pig by Margaret Wild and Ron Brooks. Allen & Unwin, 1995. 
  • The Bunyip of Berkeley's Creek by Jenny Wagner and Ron Brooks. Longman, 1973. 

The Bunyip lived in my memory for years, before I owned a copy. Friends bought me a copy, in Australia, in about 1993. And the staff of the bookshop had never heard of it. They had one copy tucked away. 



Other books read this weekend: 
  • The book of rules by Brian Gehrlein and Thomas Knight. Farrar Straus Giroux, 2021.  
    • Sent with love from my other nephew. 
    



Non-fiction / dinosaurs: 

  • Name that thing by Gareth Moore and Ryan O'Rourke. Magic Cat Publishing, 2023. 
  • Fly by David Lindon and Sara Boccaccini Meadows. Magic Cat Publishing, 2024. 
    • Aotearoa Klaxon sounds! 
  • Fighting with love: the legacy of John Lewis by Lesa Cline-Ransome and James E. Ransome. Simon & Schuster, 2024. 
    • This is one of those books I wish there were illustration notes for. 





Dinosaurs: 

  • Dinosaur knowledge genius by Dr Chris Barker and Riley Black. Dorling Kindersley, 2024. 
    • Side note: I'm a little disappointed that they have used a gendered pronoun for the T. Rex Sue. 
  • My encyclopedia of very important dinosaurs. Senior editor: Kritika Gupta. Dorling Kindersley, 2024. 
    • Note: this is a very thick book that is obviously aimed at younger readers. I'm not sure how many of them would pick it up, because the size is daunting. 
  • We went to find a T. rex by Catherine Cawthorne and Aysha Awwad. Hodder, 2024. 
  • Stegosaurus makes its way home by Elizabeth Gilbert Bedia and Marie Bollmann. Dorling Kindersley, 2024. 
  • Horridus and the hidden valley by Chris Flynn and Aaron Cushley. Museums Victoria, 2022. 
  • One day on our prehistoric planet: with a diplodocus by Ella Bailey. Flying Eye Books, 2024. 








A double dose of Margaret Mahy! 

  •  17 kings and 42 elephants by Margaret Mahy and Alba Gil Celdrán. Little Moa, 2024. 
  • Footsteps through the fog by Margaret Mahy and Gavin Bishop. Penguin, 2012. 


 

Books that made me cry: 

  • The garden of broken things by Freya Blackwood. Angus & Robertson, 2024. 
  • Everywhere with you by Carlie Sorosiak and Devon Holzwarth. Walker, 2022. 




Other picture books: 

  • Little Owl's new friend by Debi Gliori and Alison Brown. Bloomsbury, 2022. 
  • Paul the peacock by Tilly Matthews. Happy Yak, 2024. 
  • Hunt for the whistle: a cleft adventure illustrated by Scott Pearson. Huia, 2024. NZ title.  
    • "This story was developed with the generous assistance of Allison Brown (Cleft New Zealand Te Manatōpū Ngutu Riwha o Aotearoa), Genevieve Boyer (Cleft New Zealand Te Manatōpū Ngutu Riwha o Aotearoa) and the Youth Advisory Group." 
    • And, alas, it reads like a story by committee, and one trying desperately to share their message. 
    • In the words of a panel I was on: worthy, but not notable. 
  • Jibber-jabber by Randall Enos. Creative Editions, 2018. 
    • I've been asked by a couple of my local day cares / early childhood centres, for stories / rhymes that would help with speech therapy exercises. This might be on the list. I have to think about encouraging audience participation with it. 
  • Ada, are you ready? by Daishu Ma. Walker Books, 2024. 
  • Lali's feather by Farhana Zia and Stephanie Fizer Coleman. Peachtree, 2020. Vox book read by Farhana Zia. 
    • I like how the non-English words are incorporated into the story, without explanation. 
  • The bread pet: a sourdough story by Kate DePalma and Nelleke Verhoeff. Barefoot Books, 2020. 
  • When Glitter met Glue by Karen Kilpatrick and Germán Blanco. Henry Holt, 2022. 
  • Hello Horse by Vivan French and Catherine Rayner. Walker Books, 2018. 
  • The dictionary story by Oliver Jeffers and Sam Winston. Walker Books, 2024. 
  • My big fantastic family by Adam & Charlotte Guillain, and Ali Pye. Nosy Crow, 2021. 
  • What do you wish for by Jaen Godwin and Anna Walker. Penguin / Viking, 2018. 
  • Godfrey is a frog by Alex Latimer. Oxford University Press, 2024. 
  • The crossodile by Rachel Morrisroe and Ella Okstad. Puffin, 2024. 
  • Bee you by Smriti Prasadam-Halls and Clare Fennell. Andersen Press, 2024. 
  • Fart Zoo by Leigh Hodgkinson. Walker Books, 2024. 
  • The Daily Sniff by Jane Cabrera. Holiday House, 2023. 
  • Witch's cat wanted: apply within by Joy H. Davidson and Nikki Slade Robinson. Scholastic NZ, 2016. NZ title. 
    • I liked this when I first read it. And, I still like it. Especially now I am co-human to two black rescue cats. 




















What is there to say about this? 

The remarkables: the most incredible children I have met - so far! 
Written and illustrated by Clotilde Perrin. 
Translated from the French by Daniel Hahn.
Gecko Press, 2024. 
Original title: Les incroyables






October Kiwi Kids Books: Day Seven

Share a New Zealand book for children or teens: for ages 5-7 years. 
Quin Majik and the marvellous machine
Author: Fleur Beale. 
Illustrator: Philip Webb. 
Publication: Mallinson Rendel, 2008; ISBN 9781877423239. 

Sequels: 
  • Quin Majik and the hairy roof rescue. Mallinson Rendel, 2009; ISBN 9781877423284. 
  • Quin Majik and the Tidy Street catastrophe. Puffin, 2009; ISBN 9780143305538. 


I know my library system has these as 7+ (well, one is 9+), but I think newly confident readers between 5 and 7, and those being read to, are the perfect audience for these older gems. 

Fleur Beale is rightly touted for her books for older readers, including teens. So these books are often overlooked, or forgotten. 

Time for a republish! 



Sunday, 6 October 2024

October Kiwi Kids Books: Day Six

Share a New Zealand book for children or teens: that is part of a series. 

The May series 
Author: Phyllis Johnston. 

  1. No one went to town. Illustrated by Christine Brown, with maps by Ernest Papps. Price Milburn, 1980. 
  2. Black boots and buttonhooks. Illustrated by Erneset Papps. Price Milburn, 1982. 
  3. A comet in the sky. Illustrated by Adriana Tuscia. The Tauranga Moana Press, 1985. 
  4. No lily-livered girl. Waiatarua Publishing, 1993. 
  5. The fortunate ones. The Phyllis Webby Trust, 2018. 


Old classics. The sort of books we grew up reading, but are not in fashion now.
However, there's something to be said for reading about our history, through the tales passed on.

If I was sharing these with young readers today, I would try to balance with books from a te ao Māori perspective. Or, at least start a discussion. 

Tales of our pioneering forebears, tends to gloss over / romanticise the dispossession and subjugation that comes with colonisation. 

Saturday, 5 October 2024

October Kiwi Kids Books: Day Five

Share a New Zealand book for children or teens: that taught you something new. 


Critters of Aotearoa: 50 bizarre but lovable members of our wildlife community.  
Author: Nicola Toki
Illustrator: Lily Duval. 
Publisher: Puffin, 2023; ISBN 9781776958023. 






I've known about blobfish for YEARS - but I didn't know they lived HERE! 

And, who wouldn't want to know about a Glow-in-the-dark freshwater snail limpet. 

Every entry in this book is fun and informative.