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Blog: (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Shaun Tan, Ziba Came on a Boat, Eve Bunting, Karen Lynn Williams, Khadra Mohammed, The Arrival, Holiday House, Catherine Stock, Ted Lewin, Robert Ingpen, Liz Lofthouse, Michelle Lord, Shino Arihara, Mary Hoffman, Four Feet Two Sandals, One Green Apple, John Marsden, R. Gregory Christie, IBBY Congress, Susan Guevara, Tony Johnston, Tilbury House, Jude Daly, Frances Lincoln, Playing War, Clarion Books, Shen's Books, Linda Gerdner, Sarah Langford, A Song for Cambodia, Rukhsana Khan, Matt Ottley, Home and Away, Karin Littlewood, The Colour of Home, Lea Lyon, Jeremy Brooks, Let There be Peace: Prayers from Around the World, The Island, Cinco Puntos Press, Sarah Garland, Armin Greder, Doug Chayka, Annemarie Young, Anthony Robinson, June Allan, children's books about refugees, Ronald Himmler, Pegi Deitz Shea, children's books about peace, Stuart Loughridge, Allen & Unwin, Azzi In Between, Tamarind Books, MWD article, Lee & Low (US), Grandfather's Story Cloth / Yawg Daim Paj Ntaub Dab Neeg, Eerdman's Publishing, Mohammed’s Journey: A Refugee Diary, Lothian Books, children's books about war, Voice from Afar: Poems of Peace, The Roses in My Carpets, Ben Morley, Boyd's Mill Press, Brothers in Hope: The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan, Carl Pearce, Chue and Nhia Thao Cha, Debra Reid Jenkins, Dia Cha, Dia's Story Cloth: The Hmong People's Journey to Freedom, Frances Park & Ginger Park, Gervalie's Journey: A Refugee Diary, Joyce Herold, Kathy Beckwith, Mali Under the Night Sky: A Lao Story of Home, Mary Williams, Meltem's Journey: A Refugee Diary, My Freedom Trip, My Name is Sangoel, The Silence Seeker, The Whispering Cloth, Viking (Australia), You Yang, Youmi, Poetry, Young Adult, Anita Riggio, Picture Books, Articles, Non-Fiction, Middle-Grade, Add a tag
Blog: (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Matt Ottley, Home and Away, children's books about refugees, MWD Reviews, MWD book reviews, Lothian Books, Books, Young Adult, Picture Books, John Marsden, Add a tag
Home and Away
written by John Marsden, illustrated by Matt Ottley
(Lothian Children’s Books, 2008)
The definite scribbling out of the word “Home” in … Continue reading ...
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Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: I don't wan't to go to school, Julia Donalson, Kate Miller-Heike, Kate Mulvany, lally katz, Sieb Postuma, The Scarecrows' Wedding, The Snail and the Whale, The Very Lonely Firefly, Tiddler, Where is Rusty?, Book News, school, theatre, shaun tan, The Gruffalo, Eric Carle, Gecko Press, Jane Godwin, First Day, John Marsden, aaron blabey, margaret wild, Masquerade, Axel Scheffler, Very Hungry Caterpillar, Starting School, Kit Williams, Anna Walker, kim gamble, Ahlberg, Stephanie Blake, Stick Man, the rabbits, The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse, Mister Seahorse, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Joy Lawn, Add a tag
It’s holiday time so some shows based on outstanding children’s books are currently being performed in Sydney and surrounds, as well as in other cities around Australia. A highlight is The Very Hungry Caterpillar (Penguin), a production created around four books by Eric Carle: The Very Hungry Caterpillar, of course, The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse – […]
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Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Kafka, The Great Gatsby, John Marsden, Romeo and Juliet, Emma, King Lear, Isobelle Carmody, Growing Up Asian in Australia, Her Father's Daughter, Laurinda, Unpolished Gem, Author Interviews, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Joy Lawn, alice pung, Black Inc, Add a tag
Thanks for talking to Boomerang Books about your outstanding first novel Laurinda (Black Inc.), Alice Pung. Thanks for interviewing me! You are well known for your excellent non-fiction, Unpolished Gem, Her Father’s Daughter and as editor of Growing Up Asian in Australia. Why have you sidestepped into YA fiction? Growing up, I went to five different high schools, […]
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Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Sonya Hartnett, catherine jinks, John Marsden, Gus Gordon, Melina Marchetta, Jaclyn Moriarty, richard flanagan, tim winton, marcus zusak, eleanor catton, david mcrobbie, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Book Reviews - Fiction, graeme simsion, karen foxlee, hannah kent, Joy Lawn, evie wyld, patrick holland, Book News, shaun tan, Add a tag
I’ve just returned from visiting some major cities in the USA. It was illuminating to see which Australian literature is stocked in their (mostly) indie bookstores. This is anecdotal but shows which Australian books browsers are seeing, raising the profile of our literature.
Marcus Zusak’s The Book Thief was the most prominent Australian book. I didn’t go to one shop where it wasn’t stocked.
The ABIA (Australian Book Industry) 2014 overall award winner, The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion was also popular. And a close third was Shaun Tan’s inimical Rules of Summer, which has recently won a prestigious Boston Globe-Horn Book picture book honour award. Some stores had copies in stacks.
I noticed a few other Tans shelved in ‘graphic novels’, including his seminal work, The Arrival – which is newly available in paperback.
One large store had an Oceania section, where Eleanor Catton’s Man-Booker winner, The Luminaries rubbed shoulders with an up-to-date selection of Australian novels. These included hot-off-the-press Miles Franklin winner All the Birds, Singing by Evie Wyld and Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites, plus expected big-names – Tim Winton with Eyrie, Richard Flanagan’s The Narrow Road to the Deep North and works by Thomas Keneally and David Malouf. Less expected but very welcome was Patrick Holland.I chaired a session with Patrick at the Brisbane Writers’ Festival a few years ago and particularly like his short stories Riding the Trains in Japan.
Australian literary fiction I found in other stores included Kirsten Tranter’s A Common Loss, Patrick White’s The Hanging Garden and some Peter Carey.
One NY children’s/YA specialist was particularly enthusiastic about Australian writers. Her store had hosted Gus Gordon to promote his picture book, Herman and Rosie, a CBCA honour book, which is set in New York City. They also stocked Melina Marchetta’s Looking for Alibrandi and Saving Francesca, John Marsden, David McRobbie’s Wayne series (also a TV series), Catherine Jinks’ Genius Squad (How to Catch a Bogle was available elsewhere) and some of Jaclyn Moriarty’s YA. One of my three top YA books for 2013, The Midnight Dress by Karen Foxlee was available in HB with a stunning cover and Foxlee’s children’s novel Ophelia and the Marvellous Boy was promoted as part of the Summer Holidays Reading Guide.
Elsewhere I spied Margo Lanagan’s The Brides of Rollrock Island, published as Sea Hearts here (the Australian edition has the best cover); Lian Tanner’s Keepers trilogy; John Flanagan’s Ranger’s Apprentice and Sonya Hartnett’s The Children of the King. These are excellent books that we are proud to claim as Australian.
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Blog: Wendy Orr's author journal (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: John Marsden, IASL, School Librarians, Page to Screen, Chris Bongers, David McRobbie, SLAQ, Add a tag
Chris Bongers, author Michael Bauer, me

Blog: The YA YA YAs (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: tomorrow when the war began, Reviews, Fiction, john marsden, Add a tag
It had been Ellie and Corrie’s idea, going bush for a few days over the Christmas holidays. They gathered some friends and supplies, went camping, and returned to find their homes deserted, their families missing. A fax Ellie finds at Corrie’s house seems to confirm the group’s worst fear: Australia has been invaded by a foreign army. The country is at war.
The fax from Corrie’s dad tells them to go bush again, and, living in the country, Ellie and some others in the group do have the skills they need to survive. After a few harrowing trips into town to do some reconnaissance and check on their homes, they head back out to the place they had been camping when everything went down. But soon they feel the need to do more than just survive. They want to fight the invaders.
John Marsden’s Tomorrow, When the War Began, the first novel in the Tomorrow series, is absolutely riveting. It’s told by Ellie, elected by the group to write down what has happened as a way of “telling ourselves that we mean something, that we matter. That the things we’ve done have made a difference. I don’t know how big a difference, but a difference. Writing it down means we might be remembered.” (p. 2)
Ellie tells us from the beginning that she is recounting events in chronological order and we know from the back cover that the country had been invaded during the original camping trip, so I did not feel impatient as I read this first part of the book, waiting for the action to begin. And there is a lot of action. Marsden writes in a style that is immediate and accessible, making Tomorrow, When the War Began a fast-paced read, exciting and full of tension. Chilling, too, in how realistic and plausible everything seems, how people are forced to change, and with a lingering sense of despair as the group can only hope that all their families are still alive, held with the rest of the town in the Showground. That their actions will make a difference. That they will all survive.
Cross-posted at Guys Lit Wire. A film version of Tomorrow, When the War Began is currently in production.


Blog: Art, Words, Life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: running, writing, Liz in Ink, Read Write Believe, the exercise of writing, New York City marathon, Add a tag
(This is me and my baby brother a few years ago before the Thanksgiving Day Turkey Trot-- 5 miles. I still slog my way around the block. This past fall my brother finished the New York City marathon-- his first!)
This week Sara at Read Write Believe and Liz at Liz in Ink have been doing a great series of posts called The Exercise of Writing. (If you haven't been following along, here and here are the places to start.)
Yesterday Sara asked- How is writing like your favorite sport? Here's my list of answers. Once I got going it was quite hard to stop- kind of how it is with writing and running!
Writing is like running because:
- It helps to warm up.
- Some days it's good to get it done early.
- There are slow runners and fast runners. (Different abilities, creative processes.)
- If you slip and fall it's good to just get up and keep going. (Rejections.)
- Except for the times it would be good to take a break. (Rest, relax and re-inspire.)
- The more you practice, the better you'll get.
- A long shower feels great when you're done. (Sense of satisfaction.)
- It helps to have goals.
- Hills are hard, but good. (Challenges.)
- Some days you'll catch that lovely high and coast along.
- Other days it's okay to just walk. (Perseverance-- you're still moving.)
- Be wary of cars-- they can be dangerous. (Critics. Nay-sayers.)
- Sometimes you'll get an annoying pebble in your shoe. (Doubts about a story. Or your abilities.) You could stop your momentum and shake it out. Or you could bear with it and fix it later.
- Whether you have the fanciest high-tech gear or just a ratty t-shirt and an old pair of sneakers, you still have to put one foot in front of the other.
- And finally, there will always be other runners who are faster, stronger and look better in spandex shorts. Are you going to let that stop you?
Oh, wow. I’d never heard of this book before, but the premise sounds amazing. I will keep an eye out for it!
Ooh, this book is a first, heady sip of dystophia for many, and is a classic.
I reviewed this one today too
This looks intriguing! I’ll keep an eye out for it.
I love this series. I didn’t know about the movie, either. That’s great news!