There really is something for everyone in Ford Street Publishing’s latest collection of Australian stories, poetry and artwork for teens – Rich and Rare. With pieces from almost 50 fab authors and illustrators, including Shaun Tan, Judith Rossell, Susanne Gervay, Gary Crew, Justin D’Ath and Michael Gerard Bauer (to mention a few), the anthology delivers […]
Add a CommentViewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Michael Gerard Bauer, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Book News, shaun tan, Gary Crew, anthology, Susanne Gervay, Paul Collins, Michael Gerard Bauer, Judith Rossell, Ford Street Publishing, Justin D'ath, Julie Fison, Rich and Rare, Add a tag
Blog: Stacy A. Nyikos (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: middle grade, humor, Australia, high school, German, Michael Gerard Bauer, Don't Call Me Ishmael, Ishmael Leseur, Add a tag
Don't Call Me Ishmael
Michael Gerard Bauer
MG/YA
If the cold, dreary, dark days of January have blanketed you, this is just the right read. Don't Call Me Ishmael is Bud, not Buddy hilarious and set in Australia, where, currently, it is summer! So pull up a chair and toast your toes on the warmth and humor of this story.
Basic plot: Ishmael Leseur, a Year Nine student (that's down under for ninth grader), suffers from ILS, Ishmael Leseur Syndrome, which is Ishmael's name for his particular brand of adolescent/early teeanage agony. It's made up of a "crawl in a hole" embarrassing story why he parents named him after one of literature's most renowned protagonists, a bully who teases him about said name, a girl whom he is crazy for but who doesn't know he exists, and a group of misfit friends who are constantly getting themselves into embarrassment squared messes.
I discovered this book in, of all things, German (although the author is from and story set in Australia, so no worries, you can easily get it in English). My husband comes from ye olde country and we've raised our daughters bi-lingually, which has meant a lot of audiobooks "auf Deutsch". I chose this title for its length. Shameful, I know, but it was six hours long instead of the meager two so many middle grade German audible books come in at. So there you have it, random parameters (barrage young ears with as much second language as possible) unearthed a humor goldmine.
I wish I could say I know how Bauer does it, but I don't, which is why I've gotten the other two books in this series to get behind his humor trick. He is spot on with adolescent funny. My daughters and I laugh out loud in the car on the way to school every morning. Me, maybe more. The agony of teenagerdom maybe hits a little too close to home for barrel laughs for them. Theirs is more the "somebody else is going through this?!?" ha-ha-whew.
So there you have it. Pick up a copy of Don't Call Me Ishmael and start 2015 off with a good laugh and an uproarious story. For more cheer in these bleak months, check out the reviews on Barrie Summy's website (and pray that groundhog doesn't see his shadow!) Add a Comment
Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: comic strips, illustrated novels, Michael Gerard Bauer, New Book Releases, Dimity Powell, Anh Do, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Joe Bauer, Eric Vale Epic Fail, Scholastic Austra, Secret Agent Derek Danger Dale the Case of Animals Behaving really really badly, WeirDo 2 Even Weirder, Add a tag
Junior book series – do they sell? Often it is a question of semantics. Do kids love them? That answer is a no-brainer and when they are as first-rate as these are, it’s no wonder why. Hot on the heels of the sensationally popular Eric Vale series by Michael Gerard Bauer is Secret Agent Derek […]
Add a CommentBlog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Paul Jennings, Dimity Powell, two wolves, Galactic Adventures, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Little Chef Big Curse, mid grade readers, moral dilemmas, Tilney Cotton, Morris Gleitzman, Tristan Bancks, Michael Gerard Bauer, Nit Boy, New Book Releases, Random House Australia, Mac Slater, Scholastic Press Australia, my life and other stuff i made up, Add a tag
Mid-grade readers, tween fiction, early YA; call them what you will, but books for 8 -13 year-olds must satisfy vital criteria. They require substance, humour be it belly-busting or cloaked as parody, and a completely honest rendering of imagination, no matter how fantastical the premise. Little Chef, BIG Curse and Two Wolves fulfil on all counts. Both are heftier reads for mid to upper primary aged kids (in excess of 200 pages). And ones I could have gleefully gobbled up again immediately I reached the end.
Little Chef, BIG Curse is the debut work of Tilney Cotton and possibly one of the most exuberant reads I’ve enjoyed in ages. I’m not sure if it’s because of the foodie in me or the zealous, ribaldry with which Cotton writes but Little Chef, BIG Curse is utterly delectable and insanely moreish.
It’s an off-beat tale about hapless 11 year-old, Matty Swink who dreams of being a famous chef. He is practically enslaved by the foul-tempered, mean-spirited Fenella as her live-in dishwasher. With no means, family or support, Matty’s future seems confined to sleeping under the sink in Fenella’s diner. But dreams as big as Matty’s cannot be suppressed forever and when the King of Yurp announces a grand Cook-Off and the chance to break a 500 year-old curse on his only daughter, Matty finally forges his way to fame and freedom.
This is a zinger of a tale tickling with intrigue, bubbling with soul and simmering with an underlying sinisterness that kids will find electrifying. Cotton’s brilliant mix of colourful characterisation and original one-liners like, ‘roll with pumpkins’ produces a story that is full of punch, flavour and fun. Peppered with a generous helping of comical metaphors (‘breath like dog poo’ is a favourite), sprinkled with danger and seasoned with revenge, Little Chef, BIG Curse has all the humorous and gross ingredients of a Morris Gleitzman adventure and some. Top notch nosh! That gets 10 out of 10 from me.
Scholastic Press February 2014
Tristan Bancks’ junior adventure books including the My Life, Nit Boy, Mac Slater Cool Hunter and the Galactic Adventures series rival those of Paul Jennings, Morris Gleitzman and Michael Gerard Bauer. Like kids 8 – 13 years-old, I can’t get enough of his quirky, comedy-loaded, layback style. Two Wolves however is a decisive departure from previous offerings aimed at the slightly older reader, demonstrating more drama, stronger conflicts and more thought-provoking themes. It blew my breath away.
Using the Cherokee Indian allegory that we all have good and bad (wolves) dwelling within us as the catalyst for conflict, Two Wolves explores moral dilemmas, innocence versus experience and family blood being thicker than water. Which wolf ultimately wins the internal battle depends on which one we feed, as thirteen year-old Ben Silver discovers.
Ben aspires to be a detective but naively lives in a world of limited resources and shaky real-life experience. He re-lives much of his life through the lens of an internal camera, ‘playing on the cinema screen at the back of his eyelids’.
This movie-making processing of events allows him to deal reflectively and safely with some pretty confronting issues, the most recent being the inexplicable, unplanned retreat into wildness with his parents.
Life on the run with them and his young sister, Olive, soon deteriorates into a painful battle of survival and family ethics. Ben is desperate to figure out what his parents are fleeing from and why but is uncertain of what to do with the truths he may uncover.
Ben’s most daunting concerns, apart from remaining alive with Olive, are the choices he is confronted with; right vs. wrong, family loyalty vs. honourable action. How Ben decides to end his movie makes for a gripping novel heaving with adventure and mystery.
Bancks’ delivery of Two Wolves is tight and crisp. Fragmented internal thought and observation are favoured over rambling descriptive narrative which keeps the reader firmly in Ben’s moments of extreme agitation. Ben is a believable hero. His naïve, almost tongue-in-cheek humour works beautifully against the darker aspects of this story resulting in a novel tweens can and will relate to even if they have never been in Ben’s situation.
Can money buy happiness? What scruples do you possess when it comes to family, or having to confess to a crime? Does deceit ever pay dividends? Two Wolves is destined to keep kids pondering over questions like these for months. Sensational stuff.
Random House Australia March 2014
Add a Comment
Blog: Books for Little Hands (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Roald Dahl, Jeff Kinney, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Emily Rodda, Michael Gerard Bauer, Cathy Wilcox, Lee Fox, Ella Kazzo Will Not Brush Her Hair, The Ishmael and the Hoops of Steel, Alex Rider, Add a tag
How many books have you read? 100+
Have you read a book that you just couldn't put down, if so, what was it called?
The Ishmael series, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, and the Alex Rider series.
Do you have a favourite series? The Ishmael series
Who are your favourite authors? Jeff Kinney, and Michael Gerard Bauer
Which genre do you like to read the most? Action/Comedy
If you could turn any of your favourite books into a movie, which would it be?
Display Comments Add a Comment
What a great idea for a series. From the horse's mouth, as they say...
Hi Julie,
I love observing and chatting to kids about what they like to read. It gives a fascinating insight to writing for a particular age group/ target audience.