Earlier this year, Nella posted her personal reading list for the year with some alternative and varied selection criteria. She continues to challenge and encourage us to read outside our comfort zones and broaden our horizons. If you can't identify a title for each category then read on for some tasters from Nella's selections. There are some excellent leads for further great reads from early childhood through to older teens to cap off the year. Are you up to the challenge?
First book in a series
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Aussie outback
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YA with no romance
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Green cover
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Set in Tasmania
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Mental Health
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On your TBR pile
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Award winner
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Truly frightening
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Would make a great movie
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400 + pages
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Investigate the original range of genres on the 2017 Reading Challenge - A Personal List post.
First
book in a series
Six
of Crows Leigh Bardugo Orion
Nominated for the
CILIP Carnegie Medal 2017. I have a love-hate relationship with series
books; thankfully this is part of a duology although I may be tempted by the
other books set in the Grishaverse.
Criminal prodigy Kaz Brekker is offered a chance at a deadly
heist that could make him rich beyond his wildest dreams - but he can't pull it
off alone. Chapters are told from the differing POV of all six heist team
members.
Aussie outback
Mrs
White and the Red Desert Josie Boyle & Maggie
Prewett
Magabala Books
When a group of desert children invite their school teacher,
Mrs White, home for dinner to show her why their homework is always grubby,
no-one expects what is to come!
YA
with no romance
You Don’t Even Know Sue Lawson Black Dog
(2013)
Alex is the misfit of a bullying family. He prefers water-polo to
rowing; he loves his little sister Mia. Through random flashbacks, we learn how
and why Alex is in hospital
recovering from an accident. Heartbreakingly real.
Green
cover
Florette
Anna Walker Viking
Mae moves from a house with a garden into a city apartment
surrounded by cobblestones. Outside Florette, a florist shop, Mae finds a tiny
plant growing from a crack between the path and the front wall of the shop. Mae
takes it home, plants it in a jar. This is the beginning of Mae’s new garden.
Gaolbird: The True Story of William Swallow Convict & Pirate
Simon Barnard Text Publishing
Fantastic story that deserves to be
told - truth really is stranger than fiction. William Walker aka William
Swallow was an English convict taken to ‘the far end of the earth’, Van
Diemen’s Land, in the 1820s...three times. Illustrated in exaggerated cartoon style.
Mental
Health
Girl
in Pieces Kathleen Glasgow HarperCollins
Gritty debut novel about the horrors of self-harm and the
healing power of artistic expression
Everything Leads to You Nina LaCour Penguin Random House
Emi Price is a talented young set designer; she finds a
mysterious letter at an estate sale, and it sends her chasing down the loose
ends of a movie icon’s hidden life. And along the way, she finds Ava.
Award
winner
Winner Aurealis Awards -
Best Children's Fiction 2016
When
the Lyrebird Calls Kim Kane Allen
& Unwin
While helping her grandmother, Madeleine finds a pair of
shoes in a hidden compartment. Wearing these shoes while a lyrebird calls in an
old grotto she timeslips to Lyrebird Muse, the grand home of the Williamson
family just prior to the Federation of Australia.
Truly
frightening
Forgetting
Foster Dianne Touchell Allen & Unwin
Forget monsters and aliens.
True fear is found in everyday events. A powerful story of a
seven-year-old boy whose father develops Alzheimer’s disease. Everything in Foster’s life changes,
his father starts forgetting things and his mother stops laughing.
Mr Romanov’s garden in the sky Robert Newton Penguin
Lexie lives in a ‘Commission’ apartment, with her junkie
mother. Lexie remembers better times with her father —games of pretend camping,
taken seriously with map reading and with Lexie given the choice of location
(which is always Surfers Paradise). Other residents include the Creeper, an
elderly man with a rooftop garden (Mr Romanov) and know-it-all Davey Goodman.
The three travel to Surfers Paradise pursued by police. Sentimental and compelling
400
+ pages
Windfall
Jennifer E Smith Pan Macmillan
At 416 pages, this just meets the criteria. Jennifer E Smith’s YA novels (she also
writes middle grade books) are heart-warming and
generally about first love. Alice
buys her best friend Teddy a lottery ticket for his 18th birthday.
He wins. A story of loss, death and Alice’s need to live up to her perceptions
of her parents’ selflessness.
Nella Pickup
Avid reader (and inspiration to us all to...keep on reading)
From the editor: Why not share your alternative suggestions. Under the First in a Series category I have recently read Tokens and Omens by Jeri Baird and am eagerly awaiting the sequel - out next month.
Planning to inspire my 5/6 classes with a Term 4 Reading Challenge - thank you for the inspiration!
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