'The best books, reviewed with insight and charm, but without compromise.'
- author Jackie French

Saturday, 21 December 2024

Review: Bluey and Bingo's Christmas Cookbook

Bluey and Bingo’s Christmas Cookbook: Yummy Recipes, for Real Life, is a delightful offering for children interested in testing their cooking skills and increasing their interest in food.

Beautifully designed for little hands, the book has wipeable, bright coloured pages and images, sectioned into easy-to-follow instructions and recipes. 

This is initiative enough to send mothers and children off to kitchen cupboards to check for ingredients.

Tips on the importance of preparation before starting, set the scene.

Friday, 20 December 2024

Review: Clementine's Christmas

Clementine is excited by all the activity in the house.

It is Christmas Eve. The family is gathered to share the joy and love that unites them. 

Preparations are ready for the morning, except for the one thing that remains for Granny to finish. 

But she can’t find her wool.

Clementine and her family search for the missing purple skein of wool. 

They look high and low, beneath the coloured paper chains that hang from pictures, and around the tree. At last! Success! 

Review: Hazel's Treehouse

Hazel’s Treehouse is a beautiful hardback book, the perfect size for holding in small hands and with just enough texture and colour on the cover to make it feel very special indeed.

In this collection of delightful short stories with exquisite, timeless and funny line drawings, we meet Hazel and her friends.

‘Hazel is nine years old, as long as her bunk bed and as kind as a marshmallow.’

Hazel shares a treehouse in the bush with Pokey the ‘feelings’ echidna, Odette the pademelon, Walter the wombat and little Tiny, the honey possum. Together the friends get up to all sorts of mischief and adventure – in the very best of ways.

I personally don’t know of any 6-year-olds who wouldn’t want to live inside this beautifully rendered treehouse with a menagerie of Australian animals as their best friends.

Thursday, 19 December 2024

Review: Over or Under?

Over or Under? by Pip Harry and Hilary Jean Tapper is a distinctly Australian story, from the landscape to the scenarios.

Maisie is learning how to swim safely. With her Dad by her side she practices jumping waves and knowing when it's better to dive under them. 

When Maisie hesitates to dive under a bigger wave, she discovers the strength of the water as it tumbles her about and dumps her. Maisie's fortunate that Dad's there to pull her to safety.

Vale, John Marsden

Acclaimed Australian author John Marsden has died, age 74.

John had a remarkable impact on young readers in Australia and globally. From his first novel, So Much to Tell You, the best-selling young adult series Tomorrow, When the War Began, and Letters From the Inside, to picture books like The Rabbits and Prayer for the Twenty-First Century, John's writing put a spotlight on stories and issues to powerful effect.

Wednesday, 18 December 2024

Review: Our World Full of Wonder

There is a Place…. That’s how each stunning entry is introduced as we set out on our journey to explore the wonders of our world.

All this beauty has been made accessible to children through the brilliance of Jess Racklyeft’s illustrations.

Jevita Nilsen’s alliteration intensifies the poetic prose and draws attention to the referred images of the twelve locations addressed.

As readers tour our wonderful world, each There is a Place… takes your breath away. 

It begins with aurora borealis.

Tuesday, 17 December 2024

Announcement: A Very KBR Christmas Wishlist 2024

As the world seems to grow more confining and life more confounding, we here at KBR take a moment to ponder, as always, the pure simplicity of childhood. It's wonderment, its curiosity. Its magic. Despite all the madness, it is hard to imagine a world without these precious notions. 

And so, this year's Team's Christmas Question was simply:
If you could ask Santa for one thing and one thing only for Christmas, what would it be? 

Grab a fruit mince pie or two or three, sit back and enjoy our team's responses. 

From all of us to all of you who have read, shared and enjoyed our reviews and features throughout 2024, a very MERRY CHRISTMAS!

May your New Year be filled with light and joy and a magic that sustains and endures forevermore. 

Monday, 16 December 2024

Review: The Completely Chaotic Christmas Of Lottie Brooks

The Completely Chaotic Christmas of Lottie Brooks is one of a bestselling series, penned and illustrated with amusing stick figures by Katie Kirby.

It’s easy to see why these books are delighting readers young and old – the writing is fresh, funny and fabulous.

Lottie Brooks is one of those tween characters who is sometimes all-bluff, sometimes all-heart, and you sort of fall in love with her either way.

She is a frustratingly endearing creature who creates crazy and embarrassing moments in every aspect of her life – the word ‘chaotic’ in the title is an understatement.

Lottie’s voice is clear and engaging, even when her actions are heart-stoppingly ridiculous. She constantly gets herself into awkward situations, giving readers the joy of watching her squirm out of them.

Saturday, 14 December 2024

Review: The Welcome Cookies

This warm hug of a book made me want to scoop up armfuls of welcome cookies, throw them into the blue sky and have them rain down on me with abandon.

It’s one of those very special stories where every page-turn is a cornucopia of discovery, filled with things to make your mouth water – and your tummy rumble.

Mabel loves visiting the Sugar Plum Café, and specifically she loves visiting Miss Plum because of her radiant smile (among other things, of course. She is a café owner after all!). 

Friday, 13 December 2024

Review: Fern's School for Wayward Fae: Bk 1 - The Graveyard Gift

Rosemary has been home schooled, so her world is smaller than it could’ve otherwise been.

Her mother sent her away. She was too different. Too much. Too difficult.

She is picked up by Fern and taken to the fairy realm.

Rosemary ends up at Fern’s School for Wayward Fae.

Half human and half fae, Rosemary has the power to see how people are going to die. It seems that all the students own a magical gift.

Partnered with Trym, a banshee who is deaf, can lip read and speak, and whose scream can kill, Rosemary begins a new life, a different one where she can be herself; be wanted and loved.

Thursday, 12 December 2024

Meet The Illustrator: Jenni Barrand

Name:
Jenni Barrand

Describe your illustration style in ten words or less.
Soft, warm, emotive and evolving stiil!

What items are an essential part of your creative space?
Paper, pencil, ipad pro, apple pencil, printer and wall space.

Do you have a favourite artistic medium?
I like sketching ideas quickly with pencil and paper then working from those on my ipad in proceate, where I use digital brushes of charcoal, pastel, watercolour, pencil and pen.

Wednesday, 11 December 2024

Review: When Santa Got Stuck In A Gum Tree

Well, this book is an absolute delight.

In essence, it’s as the title suggests - the tale of Santa becoming snagged on the branch of a gum tree, while the local natives try (and mostly fail) to help him down. 

Eventually, of course, the day is saved but not before some very funny situations which, let’s just say, include Santa losing his boots and pants.

Told in joyful, masterful rhyme, this book is a gem that begs to be read aloud. Author Jackie Hosking does not shy away from using sometimes long and wonderful-sounding words that make the reading experience a true pleasure.

Tuesday, 10 December 2024

10 Quirky Questions with author Margaret Wild

1. What's your hidden talent?
I would like to say levitation or time-travelling, but, alas, I’ll have to settle for an endless capacity for playing Scrabble.

2. Who is your favourite literary villain and why?
Becky Sharp from Vanity Fair by William Thackeray. She is clever, resourceful, selfish, 
remorseless, resilient and fascinating. I reread Vanity Fair every five years or so just for the pleasure of encountering Becky and her shenanigans yet again.

Monday, 9 December 2024

Review: Guinness World records 2025 – The Next Chapter Of Record Breaking 70th Anniversary Edition

One Christmas morning a long, long time ago my big sister unwrapped a shiny green copy of The Guiness Book Of Records and I was SO, SO, SO JELLY!

I got over it though, and then we spent whole days of the summer poring over that miraculous book – marvelling at the unbelievable photos and records, and vowing to one day break a record of our own (which we never did).

In 2025, Guiness World Records is celebrating its 70th year of publication. 

It contains a chapter celebrating the book’s evolution in terms of design and inclusions over seven decades, and all the special extras that you’d expect and love from such a publication – including items that didn’t make it to print over the years. It’s such a mind-boggling treat to wander through!

Friday, 6 December 2024

Review: Don't Let The Pigeon Drive The Sleigh

From Mo Willems’ best-selling Don’t Let The Pigeon… series, comes this cracker.

Father Christmas has to step away from his sleigh for a short while, and before he goes, he asks the reader to make sure that nobody steals it. Especially not the pigeon.

And, well, if you want to see a pigeon having a tantrum mid-strut, then look no further. This is the book for you.

Mo Willems’ much beloved pigeon series has delivered again, with ho ho hos and surprises aplenty.