Sunday, 22 June 2014

The Windy Farm



I knew that a picture book from Doug MacLeod would be special, I knew that it would be quirky and funny, and it is. I've been meaning to read Doug MacLeod for ages. I saw him speak at the Melbourne Writers Festival back in 2012, and enjoyed his dark humour and knew that I would enjoy his books when I got to read them. I liked him so much I gave him his own label, before I read any of his books. It's a shame that it's taken me two years to read him, and now all I've managed is a picture book. But heh, it's a start.

The Windy Farm is as funny and quirky as I expected it to be. A poor family live on a remote farm on a windy hill.




It's so windy that the family nearly blows away (except Grandad), even the pigs nearly blow away. One day half the farm house literally does blow away.

Doug MacLeod was inspired to write The Windy Farm after he visited a wind farm in Ballarat. He tells an important story about sustainability, and the utility of renewable energy in a world dependent on finite fossil fuels. He was aware that this is a subject that could become too preachy in picture book form and so wanted Craig Smith to be the illustrator, to provide humour in the pictures- and he certainly achieves that.

The Windy Farm is shortlisted for the 2014 CBCA Picture Book of the Year (winner to be announced August 15 2014).

Saturday, 21 June 2014

Calleen Art Award

A few weeks ago I showed you some of my recent day trip to Cowra. While we were there we did a few other things as well. I'd always wanted to see the Cowra World Peace Bell, but never had time before.

A copy of the Japanese Peace Bell at the UN in New York
It's made from melted coins and weighs 477kg!




We went to Cowra Regional Art Gallery for the first time. It's a small gallery, 3 modest rooms, but they usually have really cool exhibitions on. When we visited they were showing the finalist paintings from the Calleen Art Award and the Central West Regional Art Awards. There was some really interesting stuff.


Matthew Quick - Coronation
Highly Commended- Calleen Art Award


Georgina Pollard - miss-tint II (2014)
Highly Commended- Calleen Art Award


Liz Cuming - Kimberly Amazing (2014)


Genevieve Carroll - Over the Table Blue Dandelions (2014)
Winner Central West Regional Art Award


Naomi White - End of Day (2014)
Winner Calleen Art Award

Neil Taylor - Flesh from Fire (2014)
And my absolute favourite!

Anita West - Blueberry Ash
It was on sale (they all were). If only I had a spare $8,700 then I'd snap it up. 

Cowra Regional Art Gallery
77 Darling Street Cowra
Tuesday - Saturday 10-4
Sunday 2-4
Free entry



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Friday, 20 June 2014

Silver Buttons



I'm not sure why it's taken me a while to get to the Bob Graham party. Perhaps I'd just never read the right books before. Perhaps I needed to go to the totally amazing Bob Graham Retrospective A Bird in the Hand at CMAG when I was at the CBCA Conference last month (I really need to tell you about all that) before I was ready. Whatever the case I think I'm there now, and need to go back and read the books I've read before and found a bit wanting. Clearly the problem was on my end.

Now that I have come to the Bob Graham party I found Silver Buttons a charming book. Telling the story of just one minute in a family, it expands to shows us that exact one minute in the street, and the town…

Silver Buttons is a marvellous lesson in perspective, how we are all living separate lives full of moments, but no moment is the same for all of us, even if we are together. It is also a fine graphic, illustrative perspective- Bob Graham cleverly hides small moments within the larger pictures, making Silver Buttons like an I Spy kind of adventure- young children love poring over the detail in pictures, and I'm sure would have picked up on this quicker than I did.







It is 9.59 on an average Thursday morning and in a terrace house Jodie is drawing a duck, at the very moment when she is about to put the third and last silver button on her duck's boots, Jodie's brother Jonathan is about to take his first step. It is a small, domestic moment, and we see the moments that all sorts of different people are having all over the city.

Bob Graham's granddaughter Rosie drew the dapper duck requiring the third silver button. While reading Silver Buttons I thought of the recent campaign, We Need Diverse Books. While the main characters, Jodie and Jonathan are white, many of the lives and moments we see are for people of diverse backgrounds. Perhaps this is why Silver Buttons has been endorsed by Amnesty International UK.

Silver Buttons has been shortlisted for the 2014 CBCA Picture Book of the Year (winner to be announced August 15). I think it's my current favourite, but then I have still only read four of the six titles.

Thursday, 19 June 2014

King Pig


Nick Bland has been everywhere in picture books over the last few years. Author and illustrator of the hugely successful The Very Cranky Bear, and author of the CBCA Early Childhood Book of the Year 2012 The Runaway Hug (see my review).

King Pig is a kind-of modern day Emporer's New Clothes. King Pig just can't understand why the sheep don't adore him.



But I think we can. 

King Pig just wants to be liked, but doesn't really know how to go about it.



Wonderfully illustrated King Pig is a funny tale about how to be a friend, it is shortlisted for the 2014 CBCA Picture Book of the Year.

Wednesday, 18 June 2014

The Princess and the Goblin


I've been vaguely aware of this book for some time, but didn't really know all that much about it really (i.e. almost nothing). George MacDonald has faded from the public view somewhat with the passage of time, but he is widely regarded as one of the founding fathers of fantasy (not my genre of choice it must be said), and an inspiration to the Inklings. MacDonald was a friend and mentor to Lewis Carroll and instrumental in the publishing of Alice in Wonderland, a friend of Mark Twain, and an inspiration to Tolkien, E. Nesbit and Madeleine L'Engle among many. Reading George MacDonald lead C.S. Lewis to religion, and indirectly brought Narnia to us all. However like many authors now predominantly famous as children's authors, MacDonald primarily wrote for adults- fiction, poetry and sermons.

George MacDonald was born in Scotland in 1824, he trained as a minister, but was prevented from preaching after he was accused of heresy, and he turned to writing to support his wife and 11 children. The Princess and the Goblin was published in 1872 in serial form in Good Words for the Young, a magazine that George MacDonald edited at the time.

MacDonald's daughter Irene (second from right) with Lewis Carroll
Picture source

The Princess and the Goblin tells the tale of Princess Irene, living in a remote large house with servants, while her king-papa is out doing Kingly things. Her mother was "not strong" soon after she was born, and appears to have died sometime after, but then all great children's books dispense with the parents on page one. Irene is now 8 years old, she has more toys than we could imagine, but still tires of them and gets bored, and so she enjoys roaming the mountainside where she lives, and visiting the primroses. But she must be back to the house well before dark to avoid the dastardly goblins that live within the mountain.

MacDonald uses an omniscient first person narrator to tell Irene's story, and while that can be a bit intrusive at times, and sometimes 19th century writings can be a bit purple prosy, there is much to astonish the modern reader in the details and imagination on display. I love the descriptive passages about Irene's great-great grandmother, a kind of fairy god-mother figure (or maybe god, or is it really like Jane Eyre's Bertha?). Whatever she represents I find it rather amazing that a 19th century Scottish minister dreamt up a magical grandmother spinning spider webs in an attic room. She has a fire that burns in the shape of roses, and she may be or may not be a pigeon.

Irene wondered what she was going to do with her, but asked no questions- only starting a little when she found that she was going to lay her in the large silver bath; for as she looked into it, again she saw no bottom, but the stars shining miles away, as it seemed, in a great blue gulf. 

Every princess needs her knight of course, and Irene meets up with a 13 year old miner's son, Curdie. They help each other, and battle the goblins together. The goblins are great characters too- driven underground by severe taxes imposed by a long ago king- they still bear a grudge against his descendants, and as they have become "misshapen in body they had grown in knowledge and cleverness." They have an intriguing weak spot, and an aversion to verse.

Original artwork by Arthur Hughes
Picture source

It is with the battling of the goblins that The Princess and the Goblin becomes most allegorical, with discussions of belief and faith.

'Then you must believe without seeing,' said the princess;
'People must believe what they can, and those who believe more must not be hard upon those who believe less.'
George MacDonald wrote a sequel called The Princess and Curdie. His other most famous children's work is At the Back of the North Wind. His fairy tales are apparently "minor masterpieces" according to the Cambridge Guide to Children's Books in English, particularly The Light Princess.

239/1001

Sunday, 15 June 2014

85 Classic Childrens Books

Can there ever be too many book lists? I don't think so. This one is from Listchallenges.

As always, the books I've read are in red.


1. A Bear Called Paddington - Michael Bond (see my review)

2. A Little Princess - Frances Hodgson Burnett

3. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll

4. Anne of Green Gables - L.M. Montgomery

5. Bambi - Felix Salten

6. The Biggles Books - Captain W.E. Johns (see my review)

7. Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School - Frank Richards

8. Bridge to Terabithia - Katherine Paterson

9. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - Roald Dahl

10. Charlotte's Web - E.B White

11. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang - Ian Fleming (see my review)

12. Coraline - Neil Gaiman

13. The Complete Adventures of Curious George - Margaret and H.A Rey

14. Dear Zoo - Rod Campbell

15. Doctor Dolittle - Hugh Lofting

16. Each Peach Pear Plum - Janet and Alan Ahlberg

17. Fantastic Mr Fox - Roald Dahl

18. First Term at Malory Towers - Enid Blyton

19. Five Children and It - Edith Nesbit

20. Five on a Treasure Island - Enid Blyton

21. Goldilocks and the Three Bears

22. Goodnight Mister Tom - Michelle Magorian



23. Green Eggs and Ham - Dr Seuss

24. Grimm's Fairy Tales

25. Hans Christian Andersen Fairy Tales

26. Heidi - Johanna Spyri (see my review)

27. How the Grinch Stole Christmas - Dr Seuss

28. Jack and the Beanstalk

29. James and the Giant Peach - Roald Dahl (see my review)

30. Just So Stories - Rudyard Kipling

31. Just William - Richmal Crompton

32. Kidnapped - Robert Louis Stevenson (see my review)

33. Lassie Come Home - Eric Knight

34. Little Lord Fauntleroy - Frances Hodgson Burnett

35. Little Women - Louisa May Alcott

36. Madeline - Ludwig Bemelmans

37. Mary Poppins - P.L Travers

38. Matilda - Roald Dahl

39. Nancy Drew - Carolyn Keene

40. Noddy - Enid Blyton

41. Old Bear - Jane Hissey

42. Perrault Fairy Tales

43. Peter Pan - J.M Barrie

44. Pinocchio - Carlo Collodi (see my review)

45. Pippi Longstocking - Astrid Lindgren (see my review)

46. Pollyanna - Eleanor H. Porter (see my review)

47. Shiloh - Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

48. Stuart Little - E.B White

49. Swallows and Amazons - Arthur Ransome (see my review)

50. The BFG - Roald Dahl




51. The Borrowers - Mary Norton

52. The Cat in the Hat - Dr Seuss

53. The Coral Island - R.M Ballantyne (see my review)

54. The Enchanted Wood - Enid Blyton

55. The Hobbit - J.R.R Tolkien (see my review)

56. The Hundred and One Dalmations - Dodie Smith

57. The Iron Man - Ted Hughes

58. The Jungle Book - Rudyard Kipling

59. The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe - C.S Lewis

60. The Little White Horse - Elizabeth Goudge

61. The Pheonix and the Carpet - E. Nesbit

62. The Railway Children - E. Nesbit

63. The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson Burnett (see my review)

64. The Secret Seven - Enid Blyton

65. The Sheep-Pig - Dick King-Smith

66. The Snowman - Raymond Briggs

67. The Story of Tracy Beaker- Jacqueline Wilson



68. The St Clare's Books - Enid Blyton

69. The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck - Beatrix Potter

70. The Tale of Peter Rabbit - Beatrix Potter

71. The Velveteen Rabbit - Margery Williams

72. The Very Hungry Caterpillar - Eric Carle

73. The Water Babies - Charles Kingsley

74. The Wind in the Willows - Kenneth Grahame (see my review)

75. The Wombles - Elisabeth Beresford

76. The Wizard of Oz - Frank L. Baum

77. Tom Brown's School Days - Thomas Hughes

78. Tom's Midnight Garden - Philippa Pearce (see my review)

79. Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson

80. The Night Before Christmas - Clement Moore

81. Watership Down - Richard Adams (see my review)

82. What Katy Did - Susan Coolidge

83. Where the Wild Things Are - Maurice Sendak

84. Where's Spot - Eric Hill

85. Winnie-the-Pooh - A.A Milne


51/85. Not a bad effort, but there's always much more reading to be done. Happily a number of these are already on my reading horizon.

Dec 2014 53/85

June 2018 56/85


Saturday, 14 June 2014

The Birds of Vondelpark

This time last year we were preparing for a big trip to Europe. I was pretty excited. And rightly so. It was an absolutely amazing holiday. I've only ever shown you tiny glimpses of it really. Particularly my first trip to Holland. So different to France of course. We loved our time in Holland.

I was of course keen to see some different birds in Holland. In Amsterdam we went to Vondelpark one afternoon. A large park in central Amsterdam. I was a bit disappointed with the park itself- it smelt really quite strongly of beer in some places. The majority of parkgoers seemed to love it though. Master Wicker just reminded me that he renamed this park Bogaan Centraal. Apt.


My first sightings of Egyptian Geese (Alopochen aegyptiaca)
-introduced obviously, it was early summer so there were many geese
families

I'm still not quite sure if that red spot around their eye is creepy or cool.

Eurasian Coot (Fulica atra)
Very familiar to Australians, there are some out the back of my house,
and I've shown you them in Tasmania before

You don't always get a chance to see the ungainly, messy
(and particularly difficult to photograph) Coot youngsters though

Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea)
Possibly a juvenile Grey Heron

 Black-Headed Gull
(Larus ridibundus)
An exciting spotting at the time-
many, many more to be seen in Paris

Eurasian Jackdaw (Corvus monedula)
I think I've seen this before in Ireland

Another introduced bird, the Rose-Ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri)
a surprising glimpse of the tropics in Europe
there are quite large feral populations in many centres!

Gulls can be tricky when you really don't know the area. I think this is
an European Herring Gull (Larus argentatus)

Not all of the birds were happy to be in the park, some were angry birds.
I'm not totally familiar with all these birds, and am prepared to be considered wrong on some of the IDs.

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