Welcome to the blog of the Tasmanian branch of the Children's Book Council of Australia!

Saturday, 16 May 2026

Books in Battle: Championing Verse Novels in the Middle School Library

Join Michelle Davies as she shares a successful and engaging program to hook middle school readers onto verse novels.


This round of wide reading sessions with Year 6 had a clear purpose: to introduce students to verse novels as a rich and distinctive narrative form, and to connect that experience to their classroom poetry unit. What I didn’t anticipate was just how much impact it would have.

 

Why Verse Novels?

A verse novel combines the storytelling of a novel with the style and rhythm of poetry. Where a conventional novel builds its scenes from paragraphs, a verse novel builds them from poems. The story is the same kind of story. The language just moves differently, and for middle school readers, the difference turns out to matter enormously.

 

Literacy researchers have identified verse novels as a highly engaging format for teens, largely because they feel visually approachable. The short lines, white space and varied layouts make them less overwhelming than dense blocks of prose, which can be especially helpful for reluctant readers or students who lack confidence in reading. There’s also a sense of quick progress as pages turn easily, helping students build confidence and momentum as they read.

 

The poetic structure also invites readers to slow down and “hear” language, making it a natural fit for reading aloud, a quality that would prove central to everything that followed.

 

Enter: The Book Battle

 

As part of our wide reading program, our three Year 6 classes visit the library each week. In a recent session, I had two main goals: to introduce students to verse novels and connect that experience to their classroom English unit on poetry. The Book Battle was designed to achieve both, drawing on the competitive energy middle schoolers bring to just about everything they do.

 

The premise is simple: two verse novels go head-to-head. I read the opening chapter of each aloud, students listen, then vote for their favourite. The winner advances. Over six lessons and four rounds, the field narrows from eight books to four quarterfinalists, then two semi-finalists, and finally one champion, with each successive chapter building as the stakes rise.

Results were projected live onto our library screen, and the atmosphere lifted straight away. Students leaned forward, some cheering, others turning to friends in disbelief as the rankings shifted. The energy in the room was everything.

 

When the winning book was finally announced, it was handed to the classroom teacher to be read aloud in the weeks ahead. The students already knew how it began. They were already invested.

 

 

Three Classes, Three Champions

 

What surprised and delighted me most was this: all three Year 6 classes heard the same books, the same chapters, and voted independently, yet each class produced a different champion. When this was revealed, the discussion that followed was exactly the kind of rich literary conversation we aim to foster. Reading is subjective. Taste is personal. Yet the books we love are worth arguing for.


The buzz extended well beyond the library. Students who had voted a book out in round one were suddenly curious about why another class had championed it, and demand for the verse novel collection quickly followed.


After the final vote

There is no right answer in a Book Battle. The outcome isn’t decided in advance, and no external award defines the winner. Students, through their collective choices, determine which book earns its place in their space. That sense of ownership is, I believe, one of the most powerful ways to build reading identity in middle school.

What stayed with me long after the champion was crowned was watching students leave the library carrying a book they had chosen, argued for, voted for, and claimed as their own.

It doesn’t get better than that.

 

Michelle Davies

Librarian (Middle & Senior School)

The Hutchins School

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Are you going? Have you booked your place?

How lucky are we in Tasmania to have not just one or two, but four shortlist talks, given by our judges or some of our very knowledgeable practitioners. 


Each one will celebrate the best of the fabulous range of titles published in 2025 for readers up to the age of 18. It won’t matter which part of the state you live in, there will be a talk somewhere near you. If you’re a CBCA member the talks are free. Non-members will be charged $5, a minimal charge for a wonderful few hours. Bookings are essential.


Wednesday 13th May is the first one, from 4-6pm at Hutchins Senior School Nettlefold Library. It will be led by Anna Davidson (judge for the Early Childhood category) and Dr Mark McLeod (judge for the Picture Book and New Illustrator categories). They will have fascinating insights into this year’s process and how the books are chosen. There’s sure to be an opportunity to question them if your favourite book missed out on being shortlisted. 


A week later, Wednesday May 20th it’s Ulverstone’s turn at Leighland Christian School Library, again 4-6pm.  This time, the speakers will be Kym Diprose (judge for the Younger Readers category) and Dr Mark McLeod (judge for the Picture Book and New Illustrator categories). Come and hear why your favourite book was or wasn’t included.


The third talk, in Launceston this time, will be at Riverside Primary School Library 4-6pm. The discussion will be facilitated by a group of current and former teacher librarians and librarians, all of whom are avid readers: Jennie Bales, Nella Pickup, Jessica Marston and Jessica Cross. Though this group can’t give any direct insights into the judging process they know their books, so it’s sure to be an inspiring afternoon.


The last talk will cover the Older Readers category, as well as relevant books from the other categories, and will be led by Carol Fuller (a former judge) and Jennie Bales. It will be held in Launceston, at Scotch Oakburn Senior School, John Morris Library, Wednesday June 10 from 4-6pm.   


Hope to see you there … Book here to secure your place….

 


Maureen Mann

Retired teacher librarian, avid reader and regular presenter at previous short list book discussions.