Saturday, August 23, 2025

The Tale of the Mandarin Ducks by Katherine Paterson illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon


The cruel lord captures the beautiful Mandarin Drake. His mate is back on the nest guarding their eggs. The drake is placed in a cage but over time his plumage fades as he is desperately missing his mate. The lord has no interest in the drake and so the bird is placed in a far corner of the grounds. A young servant girl cannot see this bird suffer and so late at night she sets him free. Another employee of the lord is accused of the crime but when they are discovered together, both are condemned to death. Luckily two mysterious strangers arrive with an edict from the Emperor that it now illegal to execute any prisoners. The pair begin the long march to see the Emperor in the city but who are these mysterious strangers? 

A beautiful fable about kindness and that expression 'one good turn deserves another'. 

This story contains such a rich vocabulary - brocade; brag; lustre; delicacies; radiantly; retainers; and plumage. 

Blurb from the author webpage: Brilliant watercolor and pastel paintings in the style of eighteenth-century Japanese woodcuts illuminate this engaging retelling of a popular Japanese folktale. Coveting a mandarin duck for his magnificent plumage, a greedy lord captures and cages him for all to admire. But the wild creature pines for his mate. When Yasuko, the kitchen maid, releases the bird against the lord’s command, she and the one-eyed servant, Shozo, are sentenced to death. How the grateful drake and his mate return the loving couple’s kindness and outsmart the capricious lord makes for a wondrous outcome.




If you do have a copy of this book it would be good to share it with a group of Grade 3-5 students and then take some time to discuss the role of folktales to impart important wisdom. This video is not perfect but it is a way for you to hear the whole story and see the very special art by Leo and Diane Dillon. I think this book might still be available and in paperback for a good price. You can see more books by Katherine Paterson here

I think this book may have come from a charity book sale. I found it on the processing shelves of a library where I am working as a volunteer. Unfortunately, someone has torn out the front-end paper. I guess I will place this copy in a local street library rather than add it to my own bulging shelves. 


Friday, August 22, 2025

The Last Chance Hotel by Nicki Thornton


This is the US cover


This is the cover here in Australia

Do you have a nostalgic memory of reading Agatha Christie murder mysteries? Would you like to introduce this genre to your young reading companion aged 10+?  Then this might be the book for you.

It contains:
  • A orphan whose father has disappeared in mysterious circumstances
  • A murder in a locked room - it all seems impossible
  • A cast of disparate characters - all of them could be the murderer and all of them have fantastic names such as Dr Torpor Thallomius; Professor Penelope Papperspook; Gloria Troutbean; Darinder Dunster-Dunstable; Angelique Squerr; Gregorian Kingfisher; and Count Boldo Marred - thank you to the author for including this list at the beginning of the book - very helpful.
  • Poisoning
  • Seth, the young innocent boy accused of the murder - has he been framed and if who did this and why?
  • A spooky setting in an old hotel located in a remote place near a spooky forest
  • Unfairness in the form of the hotel owners who treat young Seth like a slave and even worse their dreadful daughter who enjoys meting out her cruelty
  • An attic bedroom
  • A wise cat
  • A bumbling detective - Inspector Pewter
  • The hotel oozes magic and there are other hints such as the talking cat and the mirror in Seth's room that seems to show more than just his reflection
I didn't devour this book in the way I expected. The ending is quite complicated and at times the way the plot kept being repeated was a little distracting. Also as other reviewers have said, it was very clear early on (spoiler alert) that Seth himself had magical ability even though he had no idea. I picked up this book at a charity book sale for just AUS$3. 

Publisher blurb: Seth is the downtrodden kitchen boy at the remote Last Chance Hotel, owned by the nasty Bunn family. His only friend is his black cat, Nightshade. But when a strange gathering of magicians arrives for dinner, kindly Dr Thallomius is poisoned by Seth’s special dessert. A locked-room murder investigation ensues – and Seth is the main suspect. The funny thing is, he’s innocent … can he solve the mystery and clear his name, especially when magic’s afoot?

... a nifty, magical spin on the classic locked-room mystery. Kirkus

A well-crafted middle grade mystery with a touch of magic enhancing its appeal. Fantasy fans will find a lot to love here. School Library Journal

If you enjoy stories set in old hotel these might be better choices:








Thursday, August 21, 2025

The Same Stuff as Stars by Katherine Paterson



“It means a lot to me,” she said, “you showing me the stars.” 
“It means a lot to me,” he said, “you wanting to see them.”


Before you read this book it is essential to read the introduction but I do need to say it made me cry. Katherine Paterson visited a jail many years ago and talked to a group of inmates about her book The Great Gilly Hopkins. Here is part of her introduction:

I do know that no child makes it without at least one caring adult in his or her life. ... “What’s your name?” I asked a young man handing me his book. “Oh, it’s not for me,” he said. “It’s for my daughter. Her name is Angel.” ... I wrote this book for the many Angels in our world. I hope they find it. And I hope those of us who are more fortunate will take a wiser, more empathetic look at the Angels in our midst and remember that we all are made from the same stuff, the stuff of stars.

Angel and her brother Bernie have very difficult lives. They keep moving house, dad is in jail, and mum seems to have no idea how to care for her kids so all of that responsibility falls onto the shoulders of eleven year old Angel. In the opening scene they go to the jail to visit her dad but then we learn that this will be the last visit - not because he is being released but because Verna has decided to move on again. This time, after a long drive to a remote farm house, they end up with an elderly relative Angel vaguely remembers - this is her great grandmother and things are about to become even more difficult for Angel. 

Things that I loved about the way Katherine Paterson has written this book:

  • Little Bernie always repeats important words three times - he is so used to no one listening properly to what he has to say.
  • I could almost taste all the food in this book - from the disgusting to the delicious. And I desperately wanted Angel to fill a glass with milk - she shouldn't have to keep worrying that there won't be enough for her brother. Luckily they do eat some delicious popsicles. 
  • The Star man is a very special character who shows his love through his kind actions even though he knows his mother has decided he does not exist. Thank goodness he leaves food and milk on her doorstep each week. Spoiler alert - his funeral will leave make you cry.
  • The town library (and the school library) are so important in this story as is the beautiful librarian Miss Liza. I would love to hug her tiny, damaged body. 
  • Angel should not have to take on such enormous responsibilities of care for her young brother, but it is just so special the way she is always trying to keep him safe and happy - she truly loves him.
  • Angels' huge toy bear named Grizzle is almost another character in the story. I loved the way he bought comfort to the kids, but I did want someone to give him a bath. 
  • Even though there are really heavy themes in this book every now and then Katherine Paterson gives her read a tiny smile moment such as when Bernie says to Angel “How come you get to choose?” “Because I’m the biggest.” “You’re always the biggest.”
  • There is a reference in this story to making Maple Syrup which took me right back to another book I read this year Just Like Jackie.
  • I also find an old book series called The Stupids by Harry Allard illustrated by James Marshall (1974) - I didn't realise this was a real book! Well done to Miss Liza for sharing this book with Bernie - the right book at the right time!
  • Miss Liza also gives Angel a perfect book - Know the Stars by AH Ray (1962). She left the library with three books and a heart too full to speak.

Here are a few text quotes to give you a flavour of this story:

Bernie was watching entirely too much television. Angel knew about the evils of too much TV for kids. It was like getting only sugar in your mental diet—like not eating all the five major food groups. Ms. Hallingford, Angel’s fifth-grade teacher, was big on the major food groups. She’d also said TV could be a really serious hindrance in a child’s mental development, in the same way not eating right could stunt your physical growth. Angel grabbed the remote and punched the red button.

“Hurry up, and I mean both of you. I swear, sometimes you kids act like snails on Valium. . . . Get a move on, will you?” How could Angel hurry? She stared dumbly into the closet. Verna had said she could take only what fit into the green plastic suitcase that Welfare had given her last year so she wouldn’t have to carry her stuff around in a garbage bag.

It was one thing to leave your kids in an all-night diner by mistake. It was something else to leave them in the country on purpose. That would be too much like Hansel and Gretel.

Everything was going to be all right. ... She knew it, sitting on those steps eating a cherry Popsicle, a real backpack on her back with books inside waiting to be read, and groceries in all five major food groups waiting to be bought. She didn’t have anything to worry about today, and she wasn’t going to get all stressed out about tomorrow. Not while she had the chill syrupy taste of a cherry Popsicle in her mouth.

But now she knew it was true. At least in her head she knew it was a fact. All the things that had happened to her and Bernie hadn’t been their fault. She was sick and tired of thinking it was her fault when they got left at cold apartments and all-night diners and grandmas ... 

Word placement is everything - and Katherine Paterson is a master of this. Look at the highlighted words in this sentence which reveals so much about young Angel and her circumstances. She is getting ready for bed - which is the lounge room couch. She does not turn on the light because that will mean trouble from Verna, her mother: She yanked hard and lifted up the couch seat, turning it into her bed. ... Then she fumbled in the top drawer of the dresser for her nightshirt, really just one of Verna’s old T-shirts, and slipped it over her narrow shoulders.

Look at this sentence too - Angel is thinking about her responsibilities and also about the time when she first held Bernie. Katherine Paterson weaves in a reference which echoes Angels new found interest in astronomy: The thrill was long gone, but the duty had become like the sun in the solar system, the center around which all the other parts of her life revolved. Without it, she would likely fly to pieces.

The heartbreaking abandonment of Angel and her brother is sure to remind you of The Homecoming by Cynthia Voigt.

I am not very good at reading chapter headings especially in a book as good as this one where I just wanted to keep 'turning the page' so anxious for the outcome. But here are some of the chapter headings so you can see they are important and have been carefully worded by Katherine Patterson: A Is for Astronomy; The Swan; Miss Liza of the Library; Know the Stars; To School We Go; Draco the Dragon; Polaris; Consider the Heavens; Galileo Galilei; Falling Stars; Stardust to Stardust; Take Something Like a Star; Shining Stars.

A gently written tale of family caught in the most corrosive of situations, this is a story of guilt and reconciliation. Kirkus Star review

Publisher blurb (from author webpage): Angel Morgan needs help. Her daddy is in jail, and her mother has abandoned Angel and her little brother, Bernie, at their great-grandmother’s crumbling Vermont farmhouse. Grandma, aged and poor, spends most of her time wrapped in a blanket by the woodstove and can’t care for the children. That’s left up to Angel, even though she is not yet twelve. In this dreary world of canned beans and peaches, of adult worries and loneliness, there is only one bright spot—a mysterious stranger who appears on clear nights and teaches Angel all about the stars and planets and constellations. Angel’s quest to carve out a new life for herself and Bernie makes for a powerful, moving story that could arise only from the keen sensitivity, penetrating sense of drama, and honed skill of master storyteller Katherine Paterson.

I follow Katherine Paterson on Facebook and a few days ago she posted an article from a US Newspaper called The Mountaineer. In their religion section the reported talked about this book - The Same Stuff as Stars - by Katherine Paterson (2002). I have read lots of her books but not this one. I shared this with my friend and she hadn't read it either so we have both decided to find and read The Same Stuff as Stars. I added it to my Kindle library and read the whole book in one day - yes, it is that good - a completely engrossing story filled with heartbreak and deep honesty.

Here is part of the newspaper article (in case the link requires a subscription):

Newbery and National Book Award honored writer Katherine Paterson (“Bridge to Terabithia,” “Jacob Have I Loved”) illustrates this in her powerful, yet bittersweet, young adult novel “The Same Stuff as Stars.” I encourage you to find a copy and enter a story that broadens your understanding of what it’s like to live in childhood poverty and to wish for words of approval — to know you are beloved when you are abandoned and feel worthless. We all need to be needed. The story also captures the vastness of the universe in which we live. ...

Now that I hope I have convinced you to read this book you will have to visit a library or read the ebook version as it is now sadly out of print (published 2002) and I couldn't find any suppliers but here is the paperback ISBN [9780544540309] just in case you have another way of searching. 

After reading this book you need to find this title by Peter Sis:


You might also want to read the full poem: “Take Something Like a Star” from The Poetry of Robert Frost.

Companion books:


Ruby on the Outside


Alternate title The Faraway Truth




Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Australian School Library Day


The theme for 2025 is 'All the Literacies'. 

A well-resourced school library with supported staff is the most precious and effective resource a school can have when it comes to supporting reading literacy, reading for pleasure 
and whole school reading initiatives. 



It is Children's Book Week here in Australia and SO some media focus is on libraries and especially school libraries, so the timing of this celebration seems perfect. 

Australian School Library Day was started in 2022 by Students Need School Libraries. The purpose of Australian School Library Day is to celebrate and highlight the glorious variety of things that your school library staff do - especially those things that may normally be ‘hidden’ from view but are so essential to the far-reaching web of impact that the school library has in your school. By raising awareness of the benefits of a well-resourced and suitably staffed school library we hope to ensure that future generations enjoy them as well.

The 2025 Australian School Library Day theme recognises that while school libraries are critical for reading literacy to be meaningful and enduring, they are also essential to EVERY long -term education strategy and every student deserves access to one in order to be the very best they can be, no matter where they live or what kind of learning challenges they may face.

Things I love to see when I visit a school library:

  • Lots of children using the space
  • School signs that show visitors how to find the school library
  • Front facing shelves that show off book covers

Concord Public Library


  • Displays that look fresh and in Term Three displays that celebrate the CBCA slogan
  • Tidy shelves - I find messy shelves off-putting
  • New books but also old books 
  • Book labels in clear print and spine labels right at the bottom of the spine so the books look uniform on the shelf (take at look at these two images)

Messy - almost makes me dizzy


Better!


Perfect!

  • Books in great condition 
  • Comfortable seating
  • Lots of light


  • Clear well-designed signage
  • Defined collections - nonfiction, easy chapter books, picture books etc and series boxes or sections
  • Library staff - a trained Teacher-Librarian and library support staff
  • Use of the correct terms - School Library and Teacher-Librarian




Take a look at some of my previous posts:



Here are some quotes from the book Raising Readers by Megan Daley:

"Well-resourced school libraries, with exemplary teacher librarians and library support staff, develop and sustain a vibrant reading culture, promote innovative use of digital technologies and are a participatory hub within the school."  

"School libraries are wonderful places which are the beating heart of many school communities and a refuge for those in need of time away from a busy school environment."

"Library displays should be dotted around the library, be ever-changing, professional, eye catching with all the books facing forwards and able to be borrowed from the display."

You might know I constantly 'bang on' about the correct term - Teacher-Librarian. Here are two of the tasks listed in ALIA statement about the role of the Teacher-Librarian that shows the scope of this vital school role:

Teacher Librarian  

A teacher librarian is dual qualified in the fields of education and librarianship. They hold a recognised teaching qualification that meets eligibility for teacher registration in their respective jurisdiction, as well as an undergraduate, graduate or post graduate university qualification in library and information science that ideally includes specialisations related to the school library context and meets eligibility for Associate professional membership of ALIA.  

Teacher librarians possess high-level curriculum knowledge and pedagogical expertise. In 
addition to the tasks that may be undertaken by library technicians and librarians, teacher 
librarians are qualified to:  

• foster and maintain reading culture and reading for pleasure across the school 
• specialise in literature for children and young people  

The Night War by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley




Miri is Jewish. She has been living in Germany with her mother and father but then Kristallnacht happens in 1938 and so the family flee to Paris. Sadly, if you know your history, the Nazis arrive in Paris and so the terror continues. The soldiers arrive to take Miri and her family away but her father has already gone into hiding and Miris cannot find her mother. Their neighbour Madame Rosenbaum takes her hand and they leave together with young baby Nora. Madame Rosenbaum knows all their lives are in danger so as they are being unloaded from the bus she tells Miri to hide and run and take her baby Nora to keep her safe. Madame Rosenbaum tells Miri they will be reunited in Switzerland. Miri has taken off the yellow star and when some soldiers march towards her a young nun takes her hand and explains she belongs in the local orphanage. Miri has been rescued but only for now.

It is not safe for Miri to stay with the nuns and so she and Nora are loaded onto a truck and driven far away to a small town. Miri is exhausted from days of hiding and so she falls asleep and cannot stop the drivers who pass young Nora onto a local family. Miri is taken to another Convent School run by different nuns. Her name is changed and she has to hide her faith but she is desperate to find little Nora. There are two other older girls living in the convent over the summer - but can Miri trust these girls with the truth about her life in Paris and her faith?

There is a castle in this town which has been taken over by the soldiers. It has beautiful but badly neglected gardens - for vegetables and for flowers. Miri, now called Marie, befriends an elderly lady who asks her to tend the flower garden - actually she is very demanding - but is she a real person? Her clothes seem outdated and strange and it feels as though no one else can see her. 

Meanwhile several of the nuns are working for the resistance and smuggling Jewish people and wounded enemy soldiers over to the free side of France - the Vichy. One of the nuns is hurt and so it is Miri who takes over the nighttime task of guiding people through the castle grounds and over the bridge to safety. These scenes are so tense you will be on the edge of your seat. 

This was bound to happen - I wonder why it took so long. I began this blog in 2008 and every month I read so many books. I picked up The Night War in a school library last week and by the end of the first page I knew I had read this book already BUT when I checked my blog I had not talked about it - I wonder why. So, this morning when my city visit plans were cancelled, I sat down and re-read the whole book 273 pages - in one sitting and as you can see I gave this book five stars - yes it is that good. In fact it is an utterly engrossing story with some deliciously tense scenes. This book is perfect for readers aged 10+.

Publisher blurb: It’s 1942. German Nazis occupy much of France. And twelve-year-old Miriam, who is Jewish, is not safe. With help and quick thinking, Miri is saved from the roundup that takes her entire Jewish neighborhood. She escapes Paris, landing in a small French village, where the spires of the famous Chateau de Chenonceau rise high into the sky, its bridge across the River Cher like a promise, a fairy tale.  But Miri’s life is no fairy tale. Her parents are gone—maybe alive, maybe not. Taken in at the boarding school near the chateau, pretending to be Catholic to escape Nazi capture, Miri is called upon one night to undertake a deadly task, one that spans the castle grounds, its bridge, and the very border to freedom. Here is her chance to escape—hopefully to find her parents. But will she take it? One thing is certain: The person Miri meets that night will save her life. And the person Miri becomes that night could save the lives of many more.

Each of these reviews has more plot details:



I adored two previous books by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley:






Tuesday, August 19, 2025

The Silken Thread by Gabrielle Wang



Gabrielle Wang has woven together an intriguing story in her book The Silken Thread. I use the word woven because there are several story threads and yes there is also an important reference to silk and silk threads from silkworm cocoons but really the strength of this book comes from both the way she weaves in and out of the past and present lives of these two children who live thousands of kilometers apart and the way she weaves in and gives us an insight into their complex family lives.  

I am not usually a fan of timeslip stories or ghost stories. In this case, though, The Silken Thread is not quite a timeslip in the usual way because Moonie, living in Melbourne, meets Little Dipper from China so it is not a different time just a different place. 

Little Dipper lives in poverty in a small village in China. He is a clever boy and the local school principal has identified him as a student who should go to school even though he is needed at home to help with the raising of silkworms and even though the family have little or no money. Little Dipper has two, much older, brothers but more importantly he did have a precious sister. Sadly Little Tian died in an accident. Little Dipper carries a great sadness about this, but Little Tian is never far away - he is still able to talk to her. Is she a ghost? His family are very superstitious, so he keeps her visits a secret.  When he travels to his lessons with his English tutor he has a set of instructions about how to deal with two spirits - the Slurp Slap Ghost and the even more terrifying Will O' the Wisp. His grandmother gives him special food packets and his brother tells him how to avoid the danger of the marshland. You could read Chapter 20 as a way to book talk The Silken Thread - this is when Little Dipper is trapped by the Will O' the Wisp.

Moonie lives with her older sister and two younger brothers in inner city Melbourne. Her grandmother lives with them too. Her father DeDi works at the local food market selling vegetables. The year is 1932 so Australia is in the grip of the depression. Moonie's mother MaMi has become very ill and has been sent away. Moonie and her siblings do not know where she is or when she will return. Things become even harder when a strange woman moves into their house. She seems to have bewitched DeDi and she is horribly cruel to Moonie's brother Floppy (Philip).

Moonie's Melbourne house is very old and Moonie has always been able to see ghosts of the former residents so she is not too shocked when a young boy appears in her room - is he a ghost too? 

Why has Little Dipper come to visit Moonie? Is there a way these two kids can help each other? 

I expect we will see The Silken Thread on the CBCA 2026 Younger Readers Notable list. Listen to an audio sample here

Publisher blurb: Moonie lives in Melbourne and dreams of designing dresses for movie stars. Eight thousand kilometres away, on Chongming Island in China, peasant boy Little Dipper cares for the silkworms on his family’s farm and hopes to learn English. On the day Moonie’s beloved Ma Mi goes away, Little Dipper appears in her house. Before they can speak, he is whisked back home. Aided by a magical silk cocoon, Little Dipper’s visits become a regular event and although neither knows how or why they are connected their bond grows each time. Will the silken threads of friendship be enough to help Moonie bring Ma Mi home, or to save Little Dipper from the troublesome ghosts who stand between him and his dream of learning English?

Things I enjoyed about this book:

  • The references to food especially towards the end of the story.
  • The pattern of three which is how many times Little Dipper has to journey to Teacher Sun before he can finally enter her house.
  • The beautiful old water buffalo named Long Ma who takes care of Little Dipper
  • The descriptions of each family especially Little Dipper's family and the way they care for one another.
  • The alternating voices and stories of the two main characters.
  • The scene (spoiler alert) when Little Dipper defeats the 'evil' Miss Yip.
  • I am intrigued by the idea of 'rural school' in Melbourne in 1932.
  • There are some great little history snippets in this story about life during the Great Depression.
Here is a quote to give you an idea about life during these times:

"One of my chores is to wash the potties in the morning. Another is to cut up squares of newspaper and thread them on a string to use as toilet paper. If there is a photo of a person though, I throw that page away. I wouldn't like it if my photo was in the newspaper and someone wiped their bottom on my face. MaMi taught us to scrunch the paper up first to make it softer. Rich people, who have telephones in their houses ... use pages from old telephone books as toilet paper ... it is so luxurious ..."


‘The Silken Thread is a beautifully evocative sunshine burst of magical realism, illuminating the harsh and joyous realities of life in China and Australia during the Great Depression, while celebrating the hidden lives of Chinese Australians. Rich in detail, complex in theme yet delicately drawn, the novel celebrates the strange ties that bind us across cultures, time and language, highlighting the importance of learning, friendship, family and community. An enchanting pocket treasure to lose yourself in.’ – Rebecca Lim

Read this review from Storylinks which gives more plot details.

Gabrielle Wang was the 2022-2023 Australian Children's Laureate. I talk more about this here. Companion books:














Monday, August 18, 2025

Middle Grade Books



Let's think about the 2025 Book Week slogan:

Read a book for a wonderful adventure
Book in for an adventure inside a story
Books can take you on a wonderful adventure
Head into an adventure - book it now
Books contain wild adventures (and you don't even need to leave home)
Book an adventure and strap in for the ride
Book an adventure - the beginning of an amazing journey
Let the book take you on an adventure
Imagine places unknown - book an adventure - read that book today
Adventure to places old, new, inspiring, imaginative, scary, beautiful, inspiring - book it today

I volunteer in the library at one of our major metropolitan children's hospitals - the library is called The Book Bunker. I wish the hospital signage also said the word Library.  Parents and patients don't always discover us but when they do families are delighted to find a children's library in the hospital brim full of books for ages 0-17.

On August 14, 1997, the Scholastic Australia Book Bunker became the first of its kind in Australia, offering a warm, inviting and vibrant children’s library where patients and their families could come and read while in hospital. Since then, the children’s library has gone on to stock from Scholastic Australia and other publishers, both Australian and international, to ensure there is something to read for everyone. The Book Bunker is managed by Teacher-Librarians and volunteers. Source (edited)

Each time I visit I borrow one or two books. I thought for this post I would just share some covers and put the link to my blog post of some Middle Grade titles. Our books mostly come from the philanthropic office of Scholastic Australia which means we get some new Australian releases along with books from Chicken House (UK) and Scholastic US and New Zealand. I have worked at the library since 2018 but these titles are from 2023-2025.

You might like to click on the link of any covers that appeal to you. Children's Book Week here in Australia should first and foremost be about books and reading. About finding that one special book that hooks a child into reading. It might be an award winner (such as the CBCA winners announced for 2025 last week) or it might be a 'random' book found in a library. Where ever it comes from I do hope you and your young reading companion/s find a special book this week. 

The Silken Thread by Gabrielle Wang (Australian)

The Great Phoenix of London by Lindsay Gavin


When we flew away (YA title) by Alice Hoffman


Ghostlines by Katya Balen


The boy in the suit by James Fox


We do not welcome out ten-year-old overlord by Garth Nix (Australian)


Sisters of the Salt Marsh by Lucy Strange


Something somewhere by Richard Yaxley (Australian)


The Cloud thief by James Nicol


The one and only family by Katherine Applegate


North and the only one by Vashti Hardy


The Silver Sword by Ian Serraillier


The Unlikely Heroes Club by Kate Foster


The First Summer of Callie McGee by AL Tait (Australian)


The Wall between us by Dan Smith


Odd wolf out by Juliette Maciver


Ajay and the Jaipur Moon by Vasha Shah


Dandy the Highway Lion by Stephanie Sorrell


The Sideways orbit of Evie Hart by Samera Kamaleddine (Australian)


Storm Horse by Nick Garlick


The Spell Tailors by James Nicol


Bailey Finch takes a stand by Ingrid Laguna (Australian)