Guest Post by Emma at My Book Corner: Celebrating NAIDOC Week 2012 – Reading List

Wednesday, July 4th, 2012

Celebrating NAIDOC Week 2012 – Reading List

by Emma Perry at My Book Corner

NAIDOC (National Aborigines and Islanders Day Observance Committee) can be traced all the way back to the 1920s.

NAIDOC week celebrations are all about celebrating the culture, history and achievements of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. This year’s theme is Spirit of the Tent Embassy: 40 years on.  Discover more about this year’s theme and about the wonderful array of events happening all over the country at NAIDOC‘s official website.

As NAIDOC week reaches it 40th anniversary we feel completely compelled to shout out, very loudly, about some totally awesome books written / illustrated / created by some incredibly talented Indigenous Australians.

Browse our list for some inspiration, knowledge and great literature …. enjoy!!

Older Children 12+

Maybe Tomorrow  - Boori Monty Pryor & Meme McDonald – from Australia’s Inaugural Children’s Laureate you can’t skip this book. Engaging, funny, heartfelt and poignant. A must read.

Am I Black Enough For You? - Anita Heiss – aimed at adults and teenagers alike this is a celebration of identity.  Using her wry sense of humour Anita Heiss – a successful and entertaining author - breaks down stereotypes and presents a personal and compelling memoir which should storm to the top of everyone’s TBR pile.

Grace Beside Me – Sue McPherson - Delicate yet gutsy, entertaining yet heartfelt, Fuzzy brings us in to her world in this coming of age novel.

Chapter Books 7-11

The Diary of Mary Talence, Sydney 1937 – Anita Heiss - the author’s sensitive portrayal of Mary as she recounts how she arrived at Bomaderry, lived there for five years, then moved to live with a white family in Sydney allows readers to gain an insight in to what life was like in 1937.

Kakadu Calling – Jane Garlil Christophersen - A wonderful collection of short stories which is ideal for those readers who are just getting to grips with chapter books.

My Girragundji – Meme McDonald & Boori Monty Pryor - A great start for those who are moving on to chapter books; this story deals with the universal themes of fear and courage set against an exciting backdrop of Boori’s mother’s homeland, Yarrabah.

The Barrumbi Kids – Leonie Norrington - Pure and simple, this is good quality fun and enjoyment centred around the antics of the Barrumbi Kids.

Picture Books for Older Children

Our World: Bardi Jaawi: Life at Ardiyooloon – One Arm Point Community School – The different styles of writing, presented in bitesized chunks, provide an informative and entertaining guide to this community. Our World comes alive with drawings and illustrations covering everything from fishing, crocodiles and how to make damper, to how to dress a snake bite!

Maralinga – The Anangu Story - Yalata & Oak Valley Communities, with Christobel Mattingley - The Maralinga story, the nuclear bomb testing, is one most people know ‘something’ of, but this book provides so much more detail and an incredible array of information.

Stolen Girl – Trina Saffioti - Stolen Girl captures the emotions of just one girl who was a part of something much larger – 100,000 Australian children who were taken from their homes and have been referred to as the ‘Stolen Generation.’ Also suitable for younger children.

Shake A Leg - Boori Monty Pryor & Jan Ormerod – styled in the vision of a graphic novel, this is the ideal vehicle for this book and its messages. The key focus is on the words and the voices, reflecting their historical importance in passing on traditions and knowledge. Winner of the Prime Minister’s Literary Award 2011.

Picture Books 4-6

Once There Was A Boy – Dub Leffler – this stunning picture book made it in to My Book Corner’s Best Books of 2011. Why? Exquisite illustrations and a gentle, touching storyline. Perfect.

Fair Skin Black Fella – Renne Fogorty - A simple message, may be. An important message? Absolutely!  In just 28 pages Renee Fogorty challenges the use of the term half-caste and challenges the negative pre judging of a person based on skin colour.

The Mark of the Wagarl – Lorna Little - The Wagarl is the big boss, the birdiya, of the water ways who is to be respected and feared. We learn of his journey from the sea, to the rivers to the caves where his role is to look after the other snake families.

The Old Frangipani Tree at Flying Fish Point – Trina Saffioti - This gorgeous picture book will entrance you from the moment you open the hard cover when you’ll be engulfed by images of delicate flowers cascading towards you from the frangipani tree nestled behind. My Book Corner has received some wonderful comments on this one from members of our community.

You and Me: Our Place – Leonie Norrington - The front cover says it all really. Vibrant, mesmerising illustrations capture a glimpse of Australian culture.

Loongie The Greedy Crocodile – Lucy and Kiefer Dann - Loongie, the crocodile at Walaman Creek, manages to look both fierce and cheeky at the same time – I think it has something to do with those eyes!

Look See, Look At Me! – Leonie Norrington - A warm and delightful picture book about growing up from a child’s point of view.  It captures the excitement and pride surrounding those ‘small’ achievements.

This is by no means an exhaustive list, but we hope you have enjoyed reading about some of My Book Corner’s favourites.

Our thanks to Emma Perry at My Book Corner for allowing us to reprint her article and share her great list of books with our readers. Located in Australia, My Book Corner provides  book reviews on an entire assortment of children’s literature, ranging from the fun and quirky to the simply inspirational and unforgettable.  My Book Corner is a great place to visit and find out what is hot in the world of Australian kid and YA lit and we reprint some of their reviews on the PaperTigers website.  My Book Corner is a Partner with Australia’s National Year of Reading 2012.

Books at Bedtime: Reading Challenge (Update 4!)

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

I Am a Taxi by Deborah EllisOur fourth geographical area for our readaloud PaperTigers Reading Challenge book this month is the Americas and we chose Deborah Ellis’ I Am a Taxi. I was slightly concerned that it might prove too much for Little Brother (aged 7): but by making sure that we read the last few chapters during week-end morning “book sessions” rather than at bedtime, we had plenty of discussion time (drugs…) and no nightmares! Diego, the book’s 11-year-old hero, became a real person to my two boys. They absorbed details about Bolivia; they compared details of Diego’s life with their own; and they goggled at the encounters with nature in the jungle. It was salutary for me to observe that they did not really pick up on the sinister side to Smith until it was completely obvious, but trusted him as someone who was kind to Diego, which in the immediacy of dealing with jungle beasties, he was. This did, however, make the climax particularly shocking for them. It is a book that I think they will both pick up and read for themselves in a few years’ time – for now, it has been a very exciting readaloud for us all.

For more, take a look at what Shelf Elf and Elisabeth thought about it too.

Little Brother’s book also came from the Americas – Napí by Antonio Ramírez and illustrated by Domi. Here’s what he has to say about it:

Napi by Antonio Ramirez and Domi

Napí is about a little girl called Napí who loves to dream. She is a Mazateca Indian from Mexico. She likes herons and I think it’s beautiful when it says the trees bloomed with herons and it’s also quite funny. Napí often dreams she’s become a heron. The river dresses itself in different colours. The river smiles up at her and the rocks on the riverbank form teeth. In her dream she was followed by the moon and carried by the river and the moon had a face and the river had hands. The pictures had all the colours I know and some I didn’t. They are so spectacular! I give it 10/10!

La Bloga and Gina MarySol Ruiz have both published reviews in the past too…

Meanwhile, Older Brother (9) travelled to the other side of the world and read Kakadu Calling by Jane Garlil Christophersen, an elder of the Bunitj clan in Kakadu National Park, Australia:

Kakadu Calling by Jane Garlil Christophersen

These adventure stories are all set in the Australian Bush. I liked the book because all the stories had animals in them – a snake, a dingo and a hermit crab – as I love animals and it’s wonderful to me to be reading about wild animals in Australia. My favourite story was about a young boy who had to wait four full moons until his parents came to pick him up from his grandparents but he decides he wants to get home sooner and runs away. On his way he meets some buffalos and he wakes up to find a snake slithering across his chest. He wanted to run but he heard his father’s voice telling him to stay really still.

So, we have but one more book to go in our Reading Challenge 2008… We’ve been taking it gently but I would say there’s still time to leap in there; and at the end of the month, be ready to tell us your final booklists. We can’t wait to hear from you!