It was exciting to see Neil Gaiman live at the City Recital Hall in Sydney on the weekend. It was a satellite event of the Sydney Writers’ Festival (surely one of the world’s best writers’ festivals). As Jemma Birrell, Artistic Director, mentioned in her introduction, Neil has over 2 million twitter followers so no wonder […]
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Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: neil gaiman, Book News, Dave McKean, Stardust, coraline, Sandman, Odd and the Frost Giants, Graveyard Book, Signal to Noise, the rabbits, FourPlay, Mirrormask, Fortunately the Milk, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Book Reviews - Fiction, Joy Lawn, The Sleeper and the Spindle, Hansel & Gretel, Ocean at the End of the Lane, SWF, Tragical Comedy, Wolves in the Walls, Add a tag

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: PaperTigers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Senor Cat's Romance, Stuart Loughridge, The Rabbits, Shaun Tan, Where in the World, Sarah Langford, Simon French, Add a tag
I have not been as up-to-date as I might have been with posts about what is now last year’s Reading the World Challenge. This is partly due to time generally running away with me, and also being unable to keep proper track of our three Challenges running at once… So did we manage it? Well, I have to admit that unless we put all our efforts together, we didn’t quite; and we also went over on the time… reading aloud time is sadly having to jostle with other evening activities, and Saturday morning Book Sessions are now relegated to the holidays for the same reason. But that’s okay – we certainly read a broad range of books that might not have got to the top of the to-be-read pile otherwise…
Here are details of the rest of the books we all read (you’ll have to go back to here, here and here to find out the first ones…)
Together we read Goodbye Buffalo Bay by Larry Loyie with Constance Brissenden (Theytus Books, 2008). Even though I’d read it before, it was very hard to keep my composure for some of this traumatic but ultimately uplifting story, all the more engaging because it is both autobiographical and narrated in “Lawrence’s” engaging teenage voice. The first half of the book deals with Lawrence’s last year at a Residential School for First Nation children in Canada; and the second part is about how Lawrence then sets about finding himself again after leaving. It was the first time my two had become aware of residential schools and it provoked a lot of discussion about the treatment of First Nation people both in Canada and elsewhere. And as well as the ethical discussion, there was also plenty to talk about as regards Lawrence’s actual, individual experience. We all loathed Sister and we loved Sister Theresa. Then later, Lawrence’s different itinerant jobs, such as firefighting and working at a sawmill, were heroic in the boys’ eyes, and they were delighted at the end that his ambition to become a writer had so obviously come to fruition. We all of us cannot recommend this beautifully written story highly enough – and I would say that it would be a perfect book for reluctant readers, boys especially, as it is fairly short and succinct.
We also read and enjoyed Golden Tales: Myths, Legends, and Folktales from Latin America by Lulu Delacre (Scholastic, 2006) and Myths and Legends of Aotearoa, which I blogged about recently; and Little Brother and I read together the powerful and moving Grandfather’s Story Cloth/ Yawg Daim Paj Ntaub Dab Neegwritten by Linda Gerdner and Sarah Langford, illustrated by Stuart Loughridge (Shen Books, 2008).
Older Brother and Little Brother both read Señor Cat’s R