I cut out the copy of this article from the Saturday SMH Spectrum section and pinned it up in the library for the students to peruse. It's online here, with video too (and the picture above). John Marsden on the film of Tomorrow When the War Began. Much anticipated film.
It opens 2 September, next week. I've blogged in other entries about the trailers etc.
Last week, one of the kids was THRILLED to find that there were books for this film. Can't remember if I could find the first one for him; we have multiple copies, but there has been increasingly brisk John Marsden business in the last couple of months as the film gets closer.
The Blue Mountains west of Sydney NSW were used for some of the location filming - it will be fun to see if the kids pinpoint any particular places they know.
Cheers
Ruth
Showing posts with label Australian writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australian writing. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Official movie site: Tomorrow When the War Began
The official site for the film of Tomorrow When the War Began, based on the excellent book series by John Marsden, has just been launched. Find it here: http://www.twtwb.com/ .
How does the website fit in with the film's marketing: “Our goal was to engage the current fan base of the John Marsden novels and create a truly engaging interactive site that could feed their appetite for content and broaden our audience leading into the film’s release. Tequila understood our vision to interact, engage and create a site that fits with international standards”, said Cate Smith, Marketing Director Paramount Pictures Australia.
“Extending the narrative into the interactive space is really where we see the future of entertainment marketing. It’s a real privilege to work with like-minded people when working on projects like this,” said Russ Tucker, Tequila’s Creative Director. (source)
43 days left before the film premieres...
Cheers
Ruth
...about to toddle off and work with Year 7 on a biography assignment we've called: Who Are They? And Why Should I Care? Invented it for one class and the good news spread - today's will be the third class to do it. Woo hoo! The kids don't do another Powerpoint? groan!, but instead have set requirements including a model related to their person. Much more fun.
How does the website fit in with the film's marketing: “Our goal was to engage the current fan base of the John Marsden novels and create a truly engaging interactive site that could feed their appetite for content and broaden our audience leading into the film’s release. Tequila understood our vision to interact, engage and create a site that fits with international standards”, said Cate Smith, Marketing Director Paramount Pictures Australia.
“Extending the narrative into the interactive space is really where we see the future of entertainment marketing. It’s a real privilege to work with like-minded people when working on projects like this,” said Russ Tucker, Tequila’s Creative Director. (source)
43 days left before the film premieres...
Cheers
Ruth
...about to toddle off and work with Year 7 on a biography assignment we've called: Who Are They? And Why Should I Care? Invented it for one class and the good news spread - today's will be the third class to do it. Woo hoo! The kids don't do another Powerpoint? groan!, but instead have set requirements including a model related to their person. Much more fun.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Tomorrow When the War Began: HQ Theatrical Trailer
John Marsden's Tomorrow When the War Began series has a lot of fans who've been enjoying this latest trailer for the film (which will be in cinemas in early September 2010). I know it looks like it doesn't fit on the page, but play it - it does (you can fullscreen it too).
Found this on the Tomorrow-Movies (fan?)site here. They sourced it from here.
Cheers
Ruth
Found this on the Tomorrow-Movies (fan?)site here. They sourced it from here.
Cheers
Ruth
Friday, April 23, 2010
Scott Westerfeld
If I wanted to prepare the pretty-much-ultimate-and-authoritative blog entry on Scott Westerfeld. You know, Uglies,
Peeps
Leviathan.
You know, don't you? Yup.
Well, I wouldn't bother writing it, because the fabulous folk at CMIS have done it. Their Tuesday Spotlight on Scott Westerfeld is all you need.
I'm off to scull a Diet Coke and read the newspaper. My work here is done.
Cheers
Ruth
image source: www.bookdepository.com
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
First teaser trailer: Tomorrow When the War Began
(this is just an image. Link to trailer in next paragraph)
Yes, as of 9am this morning there is a teaser trailer for Tomorrow When the War Began (film based on John Marsden's very popular novels). I couldn't embed it, so don't click on the image above as it's just an image. If you want to see the trailer you will find it if you click here.
The trailer includes a website at the end, http://www.twtwb.com/ but when I just checked it I got an error message - maybe it will go live Any Day Now - worth bookmarking, anyhoo. According to imdb, the film's release date in Australia is 2 September 2010.
Just in time for Trailer Time at lunch today - woohoo!
Cheers
Ruth
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Children's Book Council of Australia 2010 Shortlist
Find it here.
Initial reactions:
Cheers
Ruth
Initial reactions:
- the older readers list titles (most relevant for a high school library) aren't ones yet that have garnered much of a following among my kids - they've been in the collection for varying amounts of time, but none have yet set the world on fire. Hmmm. I'll cherrypick from the picture books and information books lists with my high schoolers in mind.
- I could sit here and reformat the list for publication on this blog as I've done in other years (A), or I could leave school at a respectable hour (B).
- (B). It's been a wet day, madly busy, a lunchtime that was crammed in the library, computer breakdowns all day. You're all well able to click a link, aren't you? Ciao!
Cheers
Ruth
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Tomorrow When the War Began - Australian release date
According to this site, the release date for the film/movie Tomorrow When the War Began in Australia is September 2010. I'll post a trailer on this blog when one is available (leave a comment with a link if you spot one before me).
Our library has multiple copies of this John Marsden series, and they're perennially popular - most kids who start will read the whole series.
A film still from the blog Persnickety Snark, which obtained them from the Telegraph; this is Homer and Ellie.
Cheers
Ruth
Our library has multiple copies of this John Marsden series, and they're perennially popular - most kids who start will read the whole series.
A film still from the blog Persnickety Snark, which obtained them from the Telegraph; this is Homer and Ellie.
Cheers
Ruth
Friday, December 4, 2009
My Place (TV series) tonight on ABC3
My Place, the picture book, is brilliant.
Fingers crossed for the TV version. Series 1 starts tonight on ABC3, 13 parts covering half the book (success will likely translate to the second half being filmed, one gathers).
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Read more about the TV series here in an article by Greg Hassall from the Sydney Morning Herald (also the source of the image above).
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Cheers
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Ruth
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PS I won't mention that it clashes with Collectors on the ABC, because that's why we have DVD recorders and programs with repeats...
ADDED LATER: If you couldn't find ABC3 on your DVD player, you might need to run the setup program that finds channels again - since ABC3 is new, it wasn't there if you ran the setup months/longer ago when you acquired the DVD player. You might even find other channels launched since you ran the setup. Bonus! (And you can guess exactly why I mention this. Yup, I'm going through the DVD player's channel guide and wondering where ABC3 might be found... - it's the set-top box/digital receiver, not the telly).
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
An interview with Shaun Tan
Michelle Pauli in The Guardian has a long, thoughtful exploratory interview with Shaun Tan, covering his life and work in engaging/illuminating detail. Read it here. I found this via a mention on Alien Onion, an excellent blog.
School Library Journal has a long, thorough and definitely worth reading review of Shaun Tan's work by Elizabeth Bird.
You know what? Don’t go asking me who this book is for. Don’t ask me what the age range is, or how you’re going to catalog it, or what kind of person you could give it to for a birthday present. You want an easy book that slots into your preconceived notions of what constitutes children’s literature? Well forget it, sister. This isn’t it. Tales from Outer Suburbia is a book for every human being you know, from the age of nine and up. It’s heartbreaking, and funny, and weird, and smart, and unlike any other book you’ve read up until this point in time. It’s what happens when someone tells you a dream they just had and you end up crying and laughing at the description all at once. It’s brilliant, and I’m inadequate to describe it to you, though I’ll do my best to try.
Find it here.
I've mentioned his work admiringly before on this blog, and am still charmed that you can get a free .pdf from the publisher of the wonderful, strange, quirky, clever story Eric, from Tales from Suburban Road. Go on. Read it.
Cheers
Ruth
School Library Journal has a long, thorough and definitely worth reading review of Shaun Tan's work by Elizabeth Bird.
You know what? Don’t go asking me who this book is for. Don’t ask me what the age range is, or how you’re going to catalog it, or what kind of person you could give it to for a birthday present. You want an easy book that slots into your preconceived notions of what constitutes children’s literature? Well forget it, sister. This isn’t it. Tales from Outer Suburbia is a book for every human being you know, from the age of nine and up. It’s heartbreaking, and funny, and weird, and smart, and unlike any other book you’ve read up until this point in time. It’s what happens when someone tells you a dream they just had and you end up crying and laughing at the description all at once. It’s brilliant, and I’m inadequate to describe it to you, though I’ll do my best to try.
Find it here.
I've mentioned his work admiringly before on this blog, and am still charmed that you can get a free .pdf from the publisher of the wonderful, strange, quirky, clever story Eric, from Tales from Suburban Road. Go on. Read it.
Cheers
Ruth
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Tomorrow When the War Began: film/movie
As reported in Read Alert here, there is a film / movie version of Tomorrow When the War Began in the works. I've lost count of how many sets of this John Marsden series I've bought - in the last ten years in this library, I'd have bought at least three complete sets, and only retired the copies that were, as they tend to get, utterly exhausted and falling apart from being loved to death. When we have holiday borrowing, and double borrowing comes into play, it's a popular pick to borrow the LOT.
Read Alert draws on an entry from Dark Horizons you can find here, and in turn that draws on a longer report from Hollywood Reporter you'll find here. The director is Stuart Beattie, co-writer of the film Australia, and the plan is apparently to make a trilogy of films from the first three books then move to a television series for the rest. Filming to start in September. John Marsden's site links to a shorter version of the HR report from Reuters that you'll find here.
And it already has a page on the Internet Movie Database: click here. Bookmark that one if you want to check back on developments.
Cheers, Ruth.
PS I've detailed very carefully the trail of info, what I've found where, as I always try to do, and added value by finding more links/info myself. If this is the first place where you read about this, and you want to merrily blog it yourself, gosh it would be nice if you could note/acknowledge where you first read it, as I have done. I've had a few people recently who've lifted things from my blog (sometimes even word for word) and used it on their blogs without attribution. Please be courteous in your use of information...plagiarism ain't purty. Play nice. Thank you.
Read Alert draws on an entry from Dark Horizons you can find here, and in turn that draws on a longer report from Hollywood Reporter you'll find here. The director is Stuart Beattie, co-writer of the film Australia, and the plan is apparently to make a trilogy of films from the first three books then move to a television series for the rest. Filming to start in September. John Marsden's site links to a shorter version of the HR report from Reuters that you'll find here.
And it already has a page on the Internet Movie Database: click here. Bookmark that one if you want to check back on developments.
Cheers, Ruth.
PS I've detailed very carefully the trail of info, what I've found where, as I always try to do, and added value by finding more links/info myself. If this is the first place where you read about this, and you want to merrily blog it yourself, gosh it would be nice if you could note/acknowledge where you first read it, as I have done. I've had a few people recently who've lifted things from my blog (sometimes even word for word) and used it on their blogs without attribution. Please be courteous in your use of information...plagiarism ain't purty. Play nice. Thank you.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
My Place: the TV series
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From this ABC-TV press release:
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28/04/2009
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MY PLACE, ABC TV’s new 13-part, half hour children’s drama series, started shooting yesterday in Sydney.
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Joining the line up of child actors in MY PLACE is a stellar cast that includes: Susie Porter (East of Everything and Little Fish), Dan Wyllie (Love My Way and Underbelly), Sacha Horler (Love My Way and Grass Roots), Dan Spielman (Mary Bryant and Tom White), Russell Dykstra (Clubland and Romulus, My Father), Leon Ford (All Saints and Changi) and Hayley McElhinney (Blue Heelers and Young Lions.)
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MY PLACE, based on the award-winning book by Nadia Wheatley and Donna Rawlins, is a captivating series telling the story of one house in South Sydney as told by the children who have lived there for over 130 years. The series is being produced by the award-winning Australian filmmaker, Penny Chapman (Blue Murder, The Track and Brides of Christ.)
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Read more here, including info about the planned interactive website.
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If you don't know the book, it's brilliant. I've always had at least one copy in every high school library I've run.
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Cheers, Ruth
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Image source
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
CBCA Shortlist 2009
The Children's Book Council of Australia 2009 shortlist has just been published.
Book of the Year: Older Readers (These books are for mature readers):
D.M. Cornish: Monster Blood Tattoo Book Two: Lamplighter
Anthony Eaton: Into White Silence
Jackie French: A Rose for the Anzac Boys
Melina Marchetta: Finnikin of the Rock
James Mononey: Kill the Possum
Shaun Tan: Tales from Outer Suburbia
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Which have I loved best, by far? (not that I have any influence).
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Read the list in full here. And the (longer) Notables list for older readers is here.
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I read it first on the Read Alert blog here (see, it pays to refresh your own blogroll!)
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Book of the Year: Older Readers (These books are for mature readers):
D.M. Cornish: Monster Blood Tattoo Book Two: Lamplighter
Anthony Eaton: Into White Silence
Jackie French: A Rose for the Anzac Boys
Melina Marchetta: Finnikin of the Rock
James Mononey: Kill the Possum
Shaun Tan: Tales from Outer Suburbia
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Which have I loved best, by far? (not that I have any influence).
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Read the list in full here. And the (longer) Notables list for older readers is here.
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I read it first on the Read Alert blog here (see, it pays to refresh your own blogroll!)
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NSW Premier's Literary Awards 2009
The NSW Premier's Literary Awards include two categories of particular interest to teacher librarians.
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Ethel Turner Prize for Young People's Literature:
2009 shortlisted writers are...
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Patricia Wrightson Prize for Children's Literature:
2009 shortlisted writers are...
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Ethel Turner Prize for Young People's Literature:
2009 shortlisted writers are...
- Dianne Bates: Crossing the Line
- Michelle Cooper: A Brief History of Montmaray
- D.M Cornish: Monster Blood Tattoo Book Two: Lamplighter
- Alison Goodman: The Two Pearls of Wisdom
- Nette Hilton: Sprite Downberry
- Joanne Horniman: My Candlelight Novel
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Patricia Wrightson Prize for Children's Literature:
2009 shortlisted writers are...
- Urusla Dubosarsky & Tohby Riddle (Illustrator): The Word Spy
- Bob Graham: How to Heal a Broken Wing
- Sonya Hartnett and Ann James (Illustrator): Sadie and Ratz
- Glenda Millard and Stephen Michael King (Illustrator): Perry Angel's Suitcase
- Tohby Riddle: Nobody Owns the Moon
- Shaun Tan: Tales from Outer Suburbia
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Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Australian Children's Laureate and Australian Children's Literature Alliance
A CHILDREN'S laureate to champion reading among kids will be appointed from next year under a program established by an alliance of authors, teachers, librarians, publishers, booksellers and arts administrators.
The newly formed Australian Children's Literature Alliance hopes the initiative will promote Australian children's and youth literature, as well as convince schoolkids of the importance and pleasure of reading.
Read more: Kids' lit seeks its laureate, by Justine Ferrari in the Australian 16/2/09.
Australian Government/Australia Council press release here.
The newly formed Australian Children's Literature Alliance hopes the initiative will promote Australian children's and youth literature, as well as convince schoolkids of the importance and pleasure of reading.
Read more: Kids' lit seeks its laureate, by Justine Ferrari in the Australian 16/2/09.
Australian Government/Australia Council press release here.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Poetica - podcasts of Australian poets
To quote from the ABC email about this:
A Pod of Poets is a unique partnership between ABC Radio National's Poetica http://abc.net.au/rn/poetica program and the Australia Council for the Arts that brought eleven
Australian poets to the microphone to read and talk about their writing.
The project was inspired by Poetica's audience who consistently request podcasts of programs, a difficult request to fulfil because of copyright restrictions. Each of the forty-minute Pod of Poets episodes is read by the author and features only rights-free music, enabling the podcasts to be created.
"The Poetica podcast series A Pod of Poets will extend the connection between poetry lovers, students and some of Australia's leading contemporary poets," said Poetica presenter Mike Ladd.
"The intimacy of hearing the poets read and discuss their works is enhanced by images and sounds and transcripts of poems and interviews. This is a way of engaging with poetry in the 21st century and the series brings good poetry to the ipod generation."
The eleven podcasts recorded and produced by Poetica, include established and emerging poets: Robert Adamson, Les Murray, Joanne Burns, John Kinsella, Josephine Rowe, Craig Billingham, L.K. Holt, Aidan Coleman, Jayne Fenton Keane, Martin Harrison, Sam Wagan Watson, Kathryn Lomer, Esther Ottaway, John Clarke and Jordie Albiston.
The A Pod of Poets website (abc.net.au/rn/poetica) includes all podcasts, transcripts, photographs and biographical information about each of the poets.
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body.
In reponse to the first comment: storing these: I'd suggest getting your English teachers to download these into iTunes. I don't currently store podcasts at school, but it's certainly something to look at.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
PLR/ELR: Australian books in libraries
The 2007-8 Public Lending Right/ Educational Lending Right Annual Report might not be on the top of your to-read pile, but it's an intriguing look at what's popular in school and public libraries in Australia. It relates to books written by Australian authors, fiction and nonfiction, and on the general lists included, children's literature rates highly. The Appendixes cover popular books over the last year and over a longer time span.
Here's the top twelve from the last year (ELR):
1 Fox, Mem: Possum Magic
2 Vaughan, Marcia K.: Wombat Stew
3 Rodda, Emily: Rowan of Rin
4 Klein, Robin: Hating Alison Ashley
5 Baker, Jeannie: Where the Forest Meets the Sea
6 Rodda, Emily: The Forests of Silence
7 Jennings, Paul: Unbearable: More Bizarre Stories
8 Gleitzman, Morris: Two Weeks With the Queen
9 Jennings, Paul: Unreal! Eight Surprising Stories
10 Marsden, John: Tomorrow, When the War Began
11 Park, Ruth: Playing Beatie Bow
12 Jennings, Paul: Round the Twist
I don't know offhand the publication date of any of these, but my guess is that they're all at least five years old, if not more, which is interesting to note too.
Here's the top twelve from the last year (ELR):
1 Fox, Mem: Possum Magic
2 Vaughan, Marcia K.: Wombat Stew
3 Rodda, Emily: Rowan of Rin
4 Klein, Robin: Hating Alison Ashley
5 Baker, Jeannie: Where the Forest Meets the Sea
6 Rodda, Emily: The Forests of Silence
7 Jennings, Paul: Unbearable: More Bizarre Stories
8 Gleitzman, Morris: Two Weeks With the Queen
9 Jennings, Paul: Unreal! Eight Surprising Stories
10 Marsden, John: Tomorrow, When the War Began
11 Park, Ruth: Playing Beatie Bow
12 Jennings, Paul: Round the Twist
I don't know offhand the publication date of any of these, but my guess is that they're all at least five years old, if not more, which is interesting to note too.
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Finnikin of the Rock by Melina Marchetta - review (and some musings on fantasy writing)
In one sentence: I wanted to like it more than I did.
Collecting it from the bookshop at the end of term, this was an eagerly awaited bit of holiday reading. As I mentioned back here , I'm a definite fan of Melina Marchetta's writing. Josephine in Looking for Alibrandi, and Francesca in Saving Francesca come off the page and into your head with such immediacy, in their flawed authenticity, with such clear voices, and both are books I reread every few years for the pleasure of spending time with them.
One of the non-school* books I've been (re)reading this year has been Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series. As with many fantasy/historical books, she has a world and a canvas and a considerable cast of characters. It can be a catch, that considerable cast of characters. Because I don't want to be fumbling with who's who, and where they fitted in, and what they did, and how I should feel about them. As a reader, I don't like feeling lost. In Gabaldon's books (and to be fair, I'm up to my umpteenth rereading of them, so I do know them well - but this remains true when I read each new one the first time too) I don't get stuck on who's who. Even if I do go back to remind myself of exactly what they did and how she tells it, I'm not floundering as to who they are and how they fit in to the story.
This morning, I galloped through Finnikin of the Rock. I'm a fast reader, but that doesn't stop me following/enjoying a book's story (ie. I don't think it's because I read it at my usual pace that I got lost). The story happens in a multi-kingdom world; the kingdom from which Finnikin and his companions have come, Lumatere, has had bad things happen, and the arc of the story is their journeying towards a restoration of good. Along the way, they have, as you would expect, assorted setbacks, challenges and adventures, meeting various people and acquiring the information necessary to return to Lumatere and prevail over the bad guys.
There is a quote from Primo Levi's work, If This Is a Man, which from memory references the Nazi persecution of the Jews**, at the start of the book, and for me this lay like a heavy hand on the narrative. Persecuted people seeking relief/redemption: but just like you gotta be careful if your school debating team thinks of mentioning Hitler (as some will do in relation to almost any topic), this is a big ghost to raise. The bad guys occupying Lumatere are, by and large, very off-screen, and maybe it would have been good to see them in action on the page, rather than seeing refugee camps resulting from the persecution, and hearing of black fog concealing Lumatere. I wanted to care more than I did.
So Finnikin and his companions give us a view of the assorted peoples and geographies of the Land of Skuldenore (and it's that sort of shape, in the maps at the front, and somehow the name doesn't work for me - are we inside a skull, a dream, what?) as they journey onwards clockwise through Skuldenore's various kingdoms, and a couple of fairly guessable mysteries are unravelled, (don't most readers know that if you ain't seen the whole body, maybe that person isn't dead?) and it seems to take rather longer than necessary for the hero and heroine to finally get together (there's a line between engaging obstacles and irritating ones to such things).
Meanwhile, I found myself losing track of who some characters were, and after the big battle towards the end, either couldn't remember who some of the people were who died, or why I should care, because I hardly knew them anyway. There were other characters I was clearly meant to care about, but didn't, and plot points whose point eluded me, and I can't remember why there are two goddesses worshipped in Lumatere, somewhat competitively; and thinking it over, I wonder if part of the problem, for me, was that although I'm sure Melina Marchetta has this world in great and wonderful detail in her head, this somehow didn't transfer to the page.
And so I felt lost, more than engrossed, and while I finished the book, and will certainly put it in the way of our many students who love fantasy books (and for whom voracious barely describes their reading appetite) it's not one I'll buy for myself (as I did with Alibrandi and Francesca), and I won't be investing in multiple copies for the library (as I did of those two in particular) unless it generates that level of demand.
It's a challenge, writing fantasy, to create a believable world. First it has to be real enough to you, and then it has to be real enough for your readers, who don't know it when they first come to it. You only have to see the success of successful ones - Hogwarts, or Middle Earth, to name two among many - to see how it can be done, how engaged readers become in these worlds, how real they are to them. Take Robin McKinley, who's created several believable and engaging fantasy worlds (more Damar, please! and more from the world of Sunshine!)
While the geography gives a context for the plot, it shouldn't necessarily feel as though it only exists to serve the plot (I still remember being annoyed that the mother in the Swiss Family Robinson seemed to have a Tardis-like canvas bag that she filled when the shipwreck was happening and which always seemed to have tucked in there whatever the plot, I mean family needed on their island. I cannot imagine how she fitted it all in there, nor how it was able to be carried anywhere with all that stuff inside). In Ursula Le Guin's Earthsea, the landscapes illustrate the narrative - Ogion's calm approach to the rain on Gont, the desertlike surrounds of the tombs on Atuan (not forgetting all that is implied in the labyrinths below) and so on. Skuldenore felt convenient, rather than real.
Let alone, when I think about it, the many other books based on places I've never been, where as a reader I still feel like I'm there, Chicago in The Time Traveler's Wife or wartime/postwar Guernsey in The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society to name two I've read this year. It's suspension of disbelief, and confidence the writer instils in you as they tell their story.
If you base your books on a world you know, then some stuff will just come to you because you do know it, inside out and upside down, because you've lived there. With a fantasy world, there's everything to create - how and where people live, how they interact, how society and hierarchies work; and the world's geographies and surroundings. That's the game and the challenge for the writer, and their responsibility to the reader***. And for me, somehow, I felt on the outside of Skuldenore, and distanced from many characters, and indifferent to them. I didn't want to, but I did.
If you've read it, I'd be interested in your thoughts. As/when I get comment from students next term, I'll add to this entry. On a minor note, I think the cover's lovely, but I wonder if the spangly twirly bits will be offputting to some of the boys. Dunno.
So am I disappointed in this one? Yes, I am. Would I read another Melina Marchetta book? Every time. I'm still a fan. The link at the bottom to the image source will also take you to a short video of the author discussing her ideas about this book. According to this blog entry , her next book is a sequel to Saving Francesca, with Thomas as the main character and set a few years on, when they're in their early twenties.
Added later: For an alternative, more positive review of Finnikin from a NZ children's bookshop, click here. I think my review is probably the one to which he refers, so it's good to offer you, the reader, different perspectives on the book.
*bit too much bodice-ripping for a school library, but I can't tell you how many people I've successfully recommended them to. First in the series is Cross Stitch, if you're in Australia or the UK, or Outlander if you're in the US or Canada. They're unclassifiable, in that they're historically accurate time-travel romantic military-history fiction damn good reads. Or something like that, with the first three centring on the Jacobite rising of 1745 and the later ones on the American War of Independence.
**it does. Here's the Wikipedia entry on Primo Levi.
***I'm writing a novel myself, a long-term project, and am finding just those challenges in creating its world, so this is something that's of interest to me from both reading and writing points of view.
Image source and link to an author video of Melina Marchetta talking about Finnikin of the Rock.
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Melina Marchetta's new book: Finnikin of the Rock
Update: Click here for my review of Finnikin of the Rock and some general observations on fantasy writing.
I've been a huge fan of Melina Marchetta's work since Looking for Alibrandi - which continues to be very popular with students. Saving Francesca is probably my favourite, while On the Jellicoe Road didn't quite draw me in so much.
She has a new book out in October, Finnikin of the Rock, and you can read the first chapter in .pdf form here. Check this page for the link to another chapter to read online.
From this page of her website, a description of the novel's story:
At the age of nine, Finnikin is warned by the gods that he must sacrifice a pound of flesh in order to save the royal house of his homeland, Lumatere.
And so he stands on the rock of three wonders with his childhood friend Prince Balthazar and the prince's cousin, Lucian, and together they mix their blood. And Lumatere is safe.
Until the 'five days of the unspeakable', when the King and Queen and their children are slaughtered in the palace. And an imposter king takes the throne.
And a curse is put on Lumatere, which traps those caught inside and forces thousands of others to roam the land as exiles, dying of fever and persecution in foreign camps.
But ten years later Finnikin is led to another rock to meet the young novice, Evanjalin. A girl plagued by dark dreams, who holds the key to their return to the Land of light...
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I've been a huge fan of Melina Marchetta's work since Looking for Alibrandi - which continues to be very popular with students. Saving Francesca is probably my favourite, while On the Jellicoe Road didn't quite draw me in so much.
She has a new book out in October, Finnikin of the Rock, and you can read the first chapter in .pdf form here. Check this page for the link to another chapter to read online.
From this page of her website, a description of the novel's story:
At the age of nine, Finnikin is warned by the gods that he must sacrifice a pound of flesh in order to save the royal house of his homeland, Lumatere.
And so he stands on the rock of three wonders with his childhood friend Prince Balthazar and the prince's cousin, Lucian, and together they mix their blood. And Lumatere is safe.
Until the 'five days of the unspeakable', when the King and Queen and their children are slaughtered in the palace. And an imposter king takes the throne.
And a curse is put on Lumatere, which traps those caught inside and forces thousands of others to roam the land as exiles, dying of fever and persecution in foreign camps.
But ten years later Finnikin is led to another rock to meet the young novice, Evanjalin. A girl plagued by dark dreams, who holds the key to their return to the Land of light...
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Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Parallel importing/the Australian book market (and a teeny rant at the end)
Books in Australia aren't cheap, and the internet gives us access to know this more than ever before. As teacher librarians, our budgets aren't large, and every cent counts.
There are discussions going on about the book market in Australia, in relation to parallel importing.
Read Garth Nix's letter about it here, and Justine Larbalestier's blog entries Preventing the destruction of Australian publishing and The problem of being a small English-speaking country to be aware of the pros and cons from the perspective of these Australian authors.
Found out about this one from reading Justine Larbalestier's entertaining blog. She and her author husband, Scott Westerfeld (see yesterday's blog entry) live a bi-summeral life between New York and Sydney. See? Lots of things you can learn from blogs.
Also, while I'm talking books, as this teacher librarian blog seems to a lot: why is it that the techno-TLs (if they want to use an old fashioned term like 'teacher librarian' at all) rarely if ever talk about books, specifically fiction? I'd much rather have the narratives of skilful writers than the burblings of Second Lifers, and never once do I mistake the magazine-readingness of most blogs for the engagement of a fiction narrative. I'm no Luddite - as I think I've said in this blog before - but I wonder why the techno-TLs ignore fiction as they seem to do? Does it scare them? Don't they see how hungry human beings are, bone-deep, for stories?
There are discussions going on about the book market in Australia, in relation to parallel importing.
Read Garth Nix's letter about it here, and Justine Larbalestier's blog entries Preventing the destruction of Australian publishing and The problem of being a small English-speaking country to be aware of the pros and cons from the perspective of these Australian authors.
Found out about this one from reading Justine Larbalestier's entertaining blog. She and her author husband, Scott Westerfeld (see yesterday's blog entry) live a bi-summeral life between New York and Sydney. See? Lots of things you can learn from blogs.
Also, while I'm talking books, as this teacher librarian blog seems to a lot: why is it that the techno-TLs (if they want to use an old fashioned term like 'teacher librarian' at all) rarely if ever talk about books, specifically fiction? I'd much rather have the narratives of skilful writers than the burblings of Second Lifers, and never once do I mistake the magazine-readingness of most blogs for the engagement of a fiction narrative. I'm no Luddite - as I think I've said in this blog before - but I wonder why the techno-TLs ignore fiction as they seem to do? Does it scare them? Don't they see how hungry human beings are, bone-deep, for stories?
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