Saturday, 23 November 2013

Picture Books



NZ Writer & Illustrator
Kyle Mewburn, illustrated by Patrick McDonald
A Perfect Chirpy Christmas
Random House 2013  $19.99pb 32pp
ISBN 978 1 7755 3495 2

Themes:  Northern Hemisphere Christmas/ Wishes


Flit is a small, oval shaped bird that longs for a White Christmas with all the trimmings. He sets off from his warm nest in the South to see life in the Northern Hemisphere. And what does he find?  A white Christmas was wonderful. But there was no Christmas more perfect than a Christmas with family and friends.  A gentle and subtly told story with meticulous images by a newcomer to this genre, Patrick McDonald, who was the winner of the 2013 Storylines Gavin Bishop Award for Picture Book Illustration.

Preschool up/ Age 4 up





I took this picture of Kyle and Patrick at the launch at the Children’s Bookshop at Kilbirnie last night.  Kyle told us that Flit’s wishes have a parallel in real life. Some time ago he and his wife wanted to experience the magic of a White Christmas so they left their warm home in Millers Flat and travelled to the Northern Hemisphere. However what met them was not sparkling snow – just cold and damp. This year they will celebrate in the (hopefully) broiling hot sun in Millers Flat, Central Otago.

Thursday, 21 November 2013

Change of Address




Next week, on Thursday November 28th I will, for a few hours become a person without a landline or a box number. Then, hopefully, the cogs will click into the right places and from then on I will be able to be contacted at:



Phone:             04 293 1247

Box Number:    PO Box 113 Waikanae

and, unchanged:

email:               barbaram@clear.net.nz

Mobile:             021 2173217



(It’s moving day that day and the forecast is for – wet and windy both where I am leaving from (Wellington) and where I am headed (Waikanae).

Fiction - Age 9 up


UK Writer & Illustrator
Cressida Cowell
How to Betray a Dragon’s Hero
Hodder Children’s Books 2013  $19.99pb 398pp
How to Train Your Dragon series
Penultimate title in the series
ISBN 978 1 4449 1398 9
Themes: Dragons/ Funny stories/ Series/ Vikings



This title is number 11 in the series about Hiccup Horrendous Haddock the Third who grew to be a fierce and strong Viking warrior but in the books he is still quite a young man and has much to learn – often at his peril. In this, the second to last story in the series, although Hiccup with his companions, is hiding high up in the mists of the Murderous Mountains and the fates seem to be gathering against him, he is determined to reach his dream and become King of the Wilderwest. This is a series that has kept its impetus, humour and appeal since the first book, How to train your Dragon was published ten years ago in 2003. There have been spin-offs in the form of a movie, a TV series and short stories but I think you get the very best of Horrendous from the real thing - the book. This would be a great book to share with a group but it would need to be told by a really skilled reader-aloud because of the tongue-twisting names of the characters and the pace of the plot.

Year 5 up/ Age 9 up

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Picture Book


NZ Writer & Illustrator
Vasanti Unka
The Boring Book
Puffin 2013  $25.00hb 32pp
ISBN 978 0 1435 0575 4
Themes: Words and their use
The words in the book are sooooo boring. So boring in fact that sharp eyes will be able to see it has already been withdrawn by Whakatane Public Library and cancelled by several others Then one day the words in the boring book rebel and decide to have some fun…This is a book which will enjoyed at several different levels  - older students may like to read the words in the two replicas of the boring book – that if they can stay awake to read them and younger people will love the way the book bursts into glorious colour once the words realize just how important they are.    
Year 1 up/ Age 5 up

Picture Books


NZ Writers & Illustrator
Scholastic NZ (text), illustrated by Miles Lawford
Maori lyrics by Kotuku and Te Okahurangi Tibble
CD song in Maori and English sung by Pio Terei
The Twelve Days of Kiwi Christmas
Scholastic NZ, 2013  $19.99pb  32pp
ISBN 978 1 7754 3167 1
Themes: Children’s songs/ Christmas music

In an exuberant ‘retelling’ of the familiar The Twelve Days of Christmas the reader is given a three-way treat. White sheep, Boogie boards, jandals, Hobbit extras, jars of marmite and meat pies from the local dairy (and more) nestle together in English, the second section of the book is in Maori and there is a bonus CD with the whole song sung in Maori and English. The illustrations, which take up three quarters of each full-page spread, are equally exuberant.

Preschool up/ Age 4 up

Friday, 15 November 2013

Meet Maia Book Tour



Belgium Writer & Illustrator
Tine Mortier, illustrated by Kaatje Vermeire
Maia and What Matters
Book Island 2013  $29.99hb         28pp
ISBN 978 0 9876 6966 7
Themes:         Friendship/ Grandparents/ Lies/ Perseverance/ Strokes
I am posting this review on the last day of the week long Meet Maia Book Tour and what a hard thing that is to do. So many of the good things about the book have already been said so I will have to hope that there are some people reading this who have not been following the tour as I set the scene. Maia had always been impatient right from the moment she was born, there in a wicker chair under a cherry tree.  Her first word was a demand -  ‘cake’. We don’t hear all that much about Maia’s mother but as she was too engrossed in her book to move from her seat in the cherry orchard just as Maia was being born, it is not all that surprising. Maia’s best friend, companion and partner in ‘crime’ is her grandmother who also loves cake, exploring the wonderful garden and swinging up to the sky. They are best friends. Then one day Grandma has a stroke and shortly after this Grandpa dies. Although she no longer can communicate with the adults, Grandma makes it known to Maia she wants to see Grandpa and to touch his hair once more. Impossible say the adults but never underestimate the power of a determined and impatient little girl. We see they have made it to Grandpa’s side as shown in perhaps one of the most poignant illustrations in the whole book.
I can’t say enough good things about this production from the brave and non-sentimental story it tells to the amazing images covering each generous page which not only reflect what is happening but takes the reader beyond the story to explore more ideas. This is a story about the lies adults tell children probably hoping to protect them from hurt and about the resilience of children and the ways they cope and find the truth. There will be adults who feel this is not a topic for a children’s picture book but hopefully they will be few.  I shared the story and the pictures with a six-year-old last weekend and the experience was all positive!
In my opinion this is a truly beautiful book.
Year 1/ Age 5 up






Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Picture Books



NZ Writer & Illustrator
Tania Atkinson, illustrated by Viv Walker
Over the Hill to Greytown
Wai Art Press, 2013  $20.00pb 28pp
ISBN 978 0 4732 5252 6

Themes:         Greytown, New Zealand/ New Zealand history/ Repetitive stories/ Rimutaka Hill Road/ Stories in rhyme/ True stories



Around 1850, three seedling gum trees were stolen from outside the Rising Sun Hotel in Greytown.  They had been left there by a recently arrived English migrant, Samuel Oates and his companion, Fairweather, who had walked all the way from Wellington pushing a barrow over the rudimentary Rimutaka Hill  track with the trees and other goods. They had dropped in to the pub to quench their thirst. The trees were planted out in Greytown by the thieves and one can still be seen today in the St Luke’s Anglican churchyard. .

Tania Atkinson and illustrator Viv Walker have taken this great story and turned it into a nursery rhyme picture book for younger New Zealanders although older children will enjoy it as well.  On the way over the hill, Samuel Oates who for the sake of story is now travelling alone, gives rides in the barrow to a host of animals, birds and at one stop, two small children and all the time the barrow gets bigger and bigger to accommodate them. This is a wonderfully repetitive story to read aloud with much opportunity to join in. I read it to four-year-old twins last weekend who, if they don’t like what I am sharing with them simply join hands, get up and walk away. This time they sat entranced and shouted out the words as the pattern became clear to them. The charming illustrations have been meticulously matched to the story and the end pages show Samuel, his wife and children growing older as the tree and their house grows much, much bigger.

There is a great air of cheerfulness about this whole publication and the added bonus of a possible trip to see the tree in Greytown all add to its charm.

Preschool up/ Age 4 up








I was privileged to be asked to launch this book last night in Wellington (it had already been launched (twice) in the Wairarapa) and about 40 people piled into the ever-hospitable Children’s Bookshop out at Kilbirnie.

Tania and Viv are in the middle of the image. I can’t imagine what I was saying but it seems to be making them laugh and, in the case of John McIntyre, smile.

Lynne Jackett took the photo.