Tag: reading

Thanks J K Rowling

I have finally completed the latest Harry Potter. I guess it has only been a week, yet it was really burning a hole in my attention span so to speak. I kept wanting to read it and attempting to steal time from other activities. I had a delightful surprise this week at school when a friend put her copy (she had finished it) on my desk with a block of chocolate after hearing me complain about sharing with my son. He finished the same day! So I had a copy at home and at school and slotted in reading in every spare moment.
I was totally satisfied with the conclusion to the story and am very grateful to J.K. Rowling for the many hours of pleasure she has given me and my loved ones. We have all read it now and can discuss how it ended. It is the general consensus in my family that we are satisfied with how it ended up.

Queenie – One Elephant’s Story

The beautiful and nostalgic picture book ‘Queenie-One Elephant’s Storyby Corinne Fenton and illustrated by Peter Gouldthorpe was shortlisted for the Eve Pownall Award for Information Books. It was also a notable for the picture book category.

It tells the story of an elephant that lived at the Melbourne Zoo, delighting audiences for almost 40 years. Teachers notes provide many links to the curriculum. It’s a delightful story and a beautiful book.

My Big Birkett by Lisa Shanahan

Older Readers Shortlist – Read
The Sweet, Terrible, Glorious Year I Truly, Completely Lost It as it is known in some parts is the final book from my challenge to read the Older Readers section of the CBCA.
Performing
There are many parts of this book I truly appreciated. The author describes the feeling of the final night of performance beautifully:

“After the curtain fell on the final scene, I had that same feeling I get on Christmas night; fierce joy, stabbing regret and an intense longing to do it all again, folded together like nuts, raisins and glace cherries in a fruitcake.”(p281)

I have seen young performers experience this many times and I think Lisa Shanahan captures the experience of being in a school musical or play very well in this novel. Like “Don’t Call Me Ishmael” she makes lots of great references to classical literature of Shakespeare’s ‘Tempest”.
Humane
My Big Birkett is a multi faceted story that has heart wrenching moments. It illustrates the family of notorious troublemakers, that are the part of most communities, in a compassionate way. I love this paragraph also that is how I feel so many times:

“One of the things that scares me most is the feeling I’m going to drown in the flow of other lives. You can be celebrating because your sister’s given birth to a healthy baby or you’ve won lotto or the lump in your knee isn’t cancer after all, and yet, across town someone is devastated because their grandma died, or they failed an important test or they have no food. Sometimes when I think about these competing lives, even in my own town, let alone the whole world, I feel too tired to move.”(p290)
My Choice
I found this book a lot like “One Whole and Perfect Day”, an excellent read. My choice from this section would be one of the red books.