Colour My World!

colour-my-world-coverColour My World! (National library of Australia, 2009) is a picture book for preschoolers and junior primary children which celebrates colours and how they make us feel. Colours are all around us, but there is more to colour than meets the eye. Colours are often associated with feelings. Red can be warm and cheery, or represent anger or danger. Blue can be fresh and cheeky, or sad and cold. Illustrated with black-and-white images of children from the amazing Pictures Collection of the National Library of Australia, Colour My World! invites children to interact with colours and to think about how they make them feel and where they can find them in the world around them. This is an interactive book, with a charming text and questions aimed at encouraging children to think about the role that colours play in their life.  A section at the end of the book provides more information about colours, their different shades and connotations.

Reviews

‘Owen Reeder’s accompanying text establishes an emotional tone for the colour … Her language has wonderful rhythm and is full of interesting word choices. Each page culminates in an open-ended question … I read this book to my kindergarten class, and every question was a winner. It is a book that stimulates conversation and connection.’ Nigel Pearn, Australian Book Review, August 2008

‘An appealing book for the very young, designed to aid visual literacy.’ Dr Kerry White, The Source, 2008

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Lost! A True Tale from the Bush

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Shortlisted, Eve Pownall Award for Information Books, Children’s Book Council of Australia, Book of the Year Awards 2010

Honour Book, Eve Pownall Award for Information Books, CBCA Junior Judges Project, 2010

  

Tales of children lost in the bush have frightened and fascinated the Australian public since colonial times. In August 1864, three children––Isaac aged nine, Jane seven, and Frank just three––survived for nine long days and eight cold winter nights in the desolate mallee scrub of the Wimmera District of western Victoria. They walked for nearly 100 kilometres with no food or shelter and very little water. Against all the odds, the children were finally found, very ill but alive. This is their inspiring story. Lost! A True Tale from the Bush (National Library of Australia) retells a part of Australia’s colonial history for a primary school and junior secondary audience. It includes seven information sections which provide entertaining and informative insights into how children lived in the 1860s. It also showcases stunning artwork and photographs from the Pictures Collection of the National Library of Australia.

  

Reviews

Maurice Saxby, Magpies, November 2009: ‘Without undue pathos or sentiment Stephanie Owen Reeder clothes the bones of the story with warm, living flesh … A period piece is created without didacticism by skilfully added specifics … The landscape is poetically described in word and phrase … This is a wonderfully satisfying book to handle and … a handsome addition to the art of the book in Australia.’

Jack Waterford, The Canberra Times, September 2009: ‘It’s a beaut, with extra information mixed in about how kids lived in those days … well worth the investment for grandmothers and fond aunts thinking of exquisite Christmas gifts.’

 

Michael Cathcart, Bush Telegraph, ABC Radio National, 22 September 2009: ‘an absolutely charming book for kids’ (listen to Michael Cathcart’s interview with Stephanie Owen Reeder at www.abc.net.au/rural/telegraph/content/2009/s2693314.htm)

 

Robin Morrow, Australian Bookseller & Publisher, October 2009: ‘This will make a valuable addition to primary school libraries, and a beautiful gift book especially for families where it is shared and discussed as a read-aloud.’

 

Dr Kerry White, The Source, September 2009: ‘A book to share with children, and a wonderful gateway for classroom use to a more personal introduction to Australian history. Beautifully bound and presented, highly recommended.’ Reading Age: 7 to adult.

www.eightacresofeden.com: ‘For all you Aussie homeschool mums or if your children attend school and have to do a project on Australian pioneer life this is a fabulous resource.’

 

Maurice Saxby, Reading Time 54(2), May 2010: ’aesthetically pleasing and beautifully formatted book that should in time become a collector’s item’; ‘an important book historically, artistically … and as a research tool - but fundamentally because our literature is enriched by this fresh look at and rendering of a story that is embedded in the Australian psyche and deserves this deeply satisfying new treatment.’

 

 

Teachers Notes for Lost! A True Tale from the Bush

 

Compiled by Stephanie Owen Reeder (BA (Hons), Dip.ED, Grad.Dip. Lib. MEd, PhD

 Lost! A True Tale from the Bush is a fictionalised retelling of the true story of three children from the Duff family – Isaac, Jane and Frankie – who were lost in the bush in the Wimmera District of Victoria in the winter of 1864. Based on eye-witness accounts and newspaper articles from the time, as well as later versions of the story written over the years, Lost! relates the story from the perspective of both the lost children and those who were searching for them. The book is lavishly illustrated with paintings and drawings from the 1800s, drawn from the vast Pictures Collection of the National Library of Australia. Information sections at the end of each chapter document how children lived in the 1860s, looking in particular at housing, entertainment, food, transport, toys, schooling and clothing. An epilogue relates what happened to the children when they grew up, and a select bibliography provides suggestions for background reading. Lost! is a perfect book to use for introducing the study of Australian colonial history. The story itself contains information about how children lived at the time, and this is augmented by the information sections. The book lends itself to being read out loud in the classroom, chapter by chapter, with follow-up activities involving research, language, drama and art skills. A number of possible activities related to the book are outlined below.

rockhampton-artwork1Here is some of the stunning artwork produced by five- and six-year-olds at Rockhampton Grammar School. After reading Lost! the children were encouraged to create artwork based on the emotions in the book, including loneliness, fear, sadness, caring, relief and joy. Artists Ellie, Lily, Holly and Kaitlyn produced this beautiful ‘Vision of Relief’. The children’s work is truly inspirational! Many thanks to their teacher, Adair Mehlhose, for both inspiring the children to be so creative and for allowing me to share their artwork.

Environmental studies

1. Study mallee tree forests, their habitats and special characteristics. Draw a map of Australia and indicate the areas where mallee trees grow.

2. Identify, study and draw the wildflowers that grow in your area and the native animals, reptiles and birds that live there.

3. Research water sources in the bush. How can people ensure that they do not suffer from dehydration when they are lost in the bush?

4. Identify what bush foods are available in your area. Cook and sample examples of bush food, as well as damper, parrot pie and kangaroo stew.  Discuss the differences in the food eaten in the 1800s and now. How much food do we produce ourselves and how much do we buy from shops? Why have things changed?

5.  Research the changing weather patterns in your area over the last 100 or 50 years. Have the weather patterns changed? Are you getting more or less rain? What impact does this have?

Social studies  

1. Make a list of the games and toys children play with today. Does the list include any of the toys and games played by children like Isaac, Jane and Frankie?

2. Research one of the games you are not familiar with, and play it.

3. What chores do children do around the house today? Are they similar to the ones that the children in Lost! had to do?

4.  What has changed in the way we live at home since the 1860s? Is it easier being a child now compared to in the 1860s? If so, why?

5. Compare the modes of transport used in your area today with the transport used in the 1860s. How much faster is it to travel today than it was then? Make a map showing the roads and railways in your immediate area.

6. Have a cooeeing competition in the playground to see who can cooee the loudest. Measure how far away the loudest cooee can be heard.

7. Which Aboriginal tribe or group lived in your area in the 1800s? Research how they lived. What did they eat? What family structures did they have? What sorts of shelters did they build? What stories did they tell? What art work did they produce?

History

1. Which bushrangers were active in your state or territory in the 1800s? Research and document their story.

2.  Was gold mined in your area? Research the Australian gold rushes. When and where were they? How did people live on the goldfields?

3. Research how schools have changed since the 1860s: examine classrooms, furniture, teaching aids, writing implements, subjects studied, books, discipline, school uniforms, etc, and then draw two pictures: one of an 1860s’ classroom and one of a present-day classroom.

Health and safety

1. Find out how you should prepare for a long walk in the bush. What should you take with you? What should you do if you get lost? Should you stay where you are and wait to be rescued, or should you try to find your way home?

2. Find out what you sould do if you are bitten by a snake. What should you do to avoid snakes?

Writing activities

1. Write a story about a monster that lives in the mallee-tree forest or your area, including information on what the monster looks like, how the it survives, what it eats, where it sleeps and what noises it makes.

2. Write a story about a day in the life of a child living in the 1860, and include descriptions of the following: their house, who they live with, where they sleep, how they wash themselves, where they go to the toilet, what they do when the sun goes down.

3. Make a list of the rhymes that children learn today when they are small; and then make a book featuring the class’s favourite childhood rhymes, with illustrations by class members.

4. Write a story or a play about a bushranger. It can be based on a real bushranger or a fictional character. Include information about where the bushranger lived, what he wore, what weapons he carried and who he held up. What happened to him in the end?

5. Write a story about children lost in the bush today. What do they do to survive? How are they tracked? How are they rescued?

6. Write a newspaper article about the children’s ordeal and how they were found.

Art activities

1. Draw a picture or make a model of a mallee-tree monster. Consider the following: How big is it? How does it get around? What colour is it?

2. Use bark from trees or paddle-pop sticks to make a model of a bark hut like the one that the children in the story lived in

3. Collect squares of material from old clothes that are being thrown out. If everyone in the class brings in a few squares, there will be enough to make an interesting patchwork quilt

4. Make a board game based on getting lost in the bush.

5. Produce artworks based on the emtotions found in Lost! These include loneliness, fear, relief and love (see example above).

6. Make paper dolls out of cardboard and make them two sets of clothes: clothes from the 1800s and clothes from the present day.

Drama activities   

1. Make hand puppets and a puppet theatre, and perform a puppet show based on the story of Isaac, Jane and Frankie and their adventures in the bush.

2. Research and then perform some of the circus acts that would have been performed in the 1860s.

3. Make costumes and perform a scene from the life of a bushranger.

 See also Inside the Shortlist: 2010, published by the Children’s Book Council of Australia

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I’ve Got a Feeling!

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Included on the IBBY Outstanding Books for Young People with Disabilities booklist 2011

When children feel an emotion, it is written all over their faces and reflected in their body language—the set of their eyebrows, the shape of their eyes and mouth, the way they hold their body and what they do with their hands. I’ve Got a Feeling! (National Library of Australia) is an entertaining and interactive lift-the-flap book about emotions. With its engaging verses, colourful illustrations and pertinent questions, it encourages children to think about what makes them feel happy, sad, angry or even bored. Activities are provided at the back of the book for children to explore their emotions through art and imaginative play. This is a perfect picture book for toddlers and preschoolers who are still learning to understand and control their own emotions and to empathise with how others are feeling. It is also recommended for children with autism spectrum.

Can be purchased online at www.nla.gov.au, click on Bookshop. Also available through other online booksellers and at most major bookshops.

 Reviews

Dr Kerry White, The Source, www.magpies.net.au/magpies:  Will appeal to a wide range of young children. Babies will love the clearly drawn faces, preschoolers will like the verse and the guessing component while early primary children will gain most from the photographs and questions in the final pages.  Reading age 1 to 7.

 

Tania McCartney, Kids Book Review, www.kids-book-review.blogspot.com: ‘gorgeous book for young ones’; ‘beautifully crafted book resplendent with adorable retro-style illustrations that really pack an emotional punch’ - recommended for babies to toddlers and preschoolers.

Heidi Cortner Boiesen, IBBY Outstanding Books for Young People with Disabilities 2011 Catalogue: 36-37: ‘With large, expressive drawings and clear rhyming text this book helps children to recognize their own feelings and explore the feelings of others.’

http://amlib.eddept.wa.edu.au: ‘Vivid colours, large expressive faces and rich descriptive and action vocabulary make this interactive fold-out book a stand-out for young children.’

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The Flaming Witch

 

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A traditional Indonesian tale published by Random House (1997)

Based on an Indonesian folk tale from the 14th century, this is the story of Rangda, a powerful witch who curses the whole kingdom when no one will marry her daughter because no-one wants a witch as a mother-in-law! The king tries to fight fire with fire, but soon realises that only wisdom can defeat the witch’s terrible power. Illustrated with stunning watercolur paintings by Indonesian artist Dadang Christanto, this is a stirring tale which, like all good traditional tales, takes the reader to another land and another time. And, of course, it has a happy ending.

Reviews

Reading Time 41(4):  The text and illustrations convey the spirit of the Balinese story and dance splendidly … The illustrations are characterised by vigorous action, exquisite composition and meticulous attention to authentic detail … The vividly written story is rather too scary a tale for the very young but tougher minded older children will relish the dramatic conflict in it … the ancient tale just begs to be read aloud … It is an enrichment of literary experience for Australian children to encounter the folklore of Indonesia in this exciting way.

Viewpoint 5(4): 49: … it is highly satisfying to spend time with this story - my few words can hardly summarise its immense appeal, which does not arise only from its originality, but also from the universal nature of the tussle between good and evil.

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Recent publications and upcoming events

Reviews and other publications

  • ‘Glories of Gibbs and gumnuts’, The Canberra Times, 26 November, 2011: Panorama 28-29
  • ‘Family and Friends’, Australian Book Review, November 2011: 68-67
  • ‘Perfect Partnerships’, The Canberra Times, 29 October 2011: Panorama 32
  • IBBY Outstanding Books for Young People with Disabilities 2011, catalogue compiled by Heidi Cortner Boiesen. IBBY Documentation Centre of Books for Disabled Young People, Sandvika, Norway, 2011: 36-37 (I’ve Got a Feeling!)

Latest releases:

  • The Vision Splendid. Canberra, National Library of Australia, September 2011
  • Amazing Grace: An Adventure at Sea. Canberra, National Library of Australia, November 2011

Upcoming Events:

  • Book Reading and Launch, Amazing Grace, Bookshop, National Library of Australia, 10.30 am, Saturday, 10 December 2011

Forthcoming Titles:

  • Dance Like a Pirate (NLA Publishing, 2012)

Availablity:

 

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National Library - “Lost” Interview

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Feeling Fine!

 

Feeling Fine!

 

 

Feeling Fine! (National LIbrary of Australia) is an entertaining board book about emotions. With its colourful illustrations and engaging word play, it encourages children to recognise faces that are happy, sad, angry or even scared. This is a perfect interactive board book for babies and preschoolers who are learning to understand their own emotions and to recognise how others are feeling. It is also recommended for autism spectrum children. Feeling Fine! is a board book version of I’ve Got a Feeling!, which was included by the International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY) in the prestigious booklist Outstanding Books for Young People with Disabilities 2011.

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Books for Adults

Writer

·         The Vision Splendid, Canberra, National Library of Australia, 2011

·         Little Treasures: Bookplates, Flowers, Animals, Book of Hours, Birds, Maps (set of six gift books), Canberra, National Library of Australia, 2008

 

Editor

·         The Inside Story: Creating Children’s Books, co-edited by Belle Alderman, Children’s Book Council of Australia, Canberra, 1987

 

Contributor

·         1001 Children’s Books You Must Read Before You Grow Up, edited by Julia Eccleshare, HarperCollins, Sydney, 2009

·         The Good Reading Guide: 100 Critics Review Contemporary Australian Fiction, compiled by Helen Daniel, McPhee Gribble, Sydney, 1989

 

Biographical and bibliographical information

·         Website: www.stephanieowenreeder.com 

·         Freelance Register, Canberra Society of Editors, at www.editorscanberra.org

·         AustLit: The Resource for Australian Literature, at www.austlit.edu.au

·         Contemporary Authors: A Bio-Bibliographical Guide to Current Writers in Fiction, General Nonfiction, Poetry, Journalism, Drama, Motion Pictures, Television, and other Fields, Vol. 169, Gale Group, Detroit: 352–353

·         The Writers Directory 2005, 20th Edition, Volume 2, Gale Group, Detroit, 2005: 1401

·     Something about the Author: Facts and Pictures about Authors and Illustrators of Books for Young People, Volume 102, Gale Group, Detroit 1999: 174–5

·    ‘Know the Author: Stephanie Owen Reeder’, interviewed by Rae Carlyle, Magpies, 26 (5), November 2011: 4-7

 

 

 

 

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Short stories

·         ‘The parliamentary cat: a modern folk tale’, illustrated by Erin McGuire, in The House at Work, Parliamentary Education Unit, Parliament House, Canberra, 2001: 144–148

·         ‘The empty leg’, illustrated by Astra Lacis, Blast Off: New South Wales School Magazine 88(3), April 2003: 81–83

·         ‘Under the frangipani tree’, illustrated by Noela Young, Touchdown: New South Wales School Magazine 84(7), August 1999: 220–222

·         ‘Kala Rahu and the Moon Maiden’, illustrated by Gaye Chapman, Countdown: New South Wales School Magazine 84(2), March 1999: 56–60

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The Vision Splendid

vision-splendid-coverThe National Library of Australia’s Pictures Collection contains a treasure trove of sketchbooks from the nineteenth century. They range from impressive leather-bound albums, with marbled endpapers and gold engraving, to battered, pocket-sized sketchbooks. Each sketchbook tells the story of both its artist and the places and people they depicted. Opening these books is like taking a trip back in time, and seeing the Australian and New Zealand landscapes through the eyes of someone who has just stepped off the boat after a long and sometimes harrowing passage across the ocean to a new world.

            Most of the images have been wonderfully preserved. The colours are still bright, often luminous, and the different artists’ interpretations of both built and natural landscapes provide engaging insights into the colonial world, where horses were the main mode of travel, ‘homesteads’ were often nothing more than cottages or bark-slab huts, and farming was backbreaking physical work.

            The Vision Splendid showcases the sketchbooks of 22 artists who recorded their time in Australia and New Zealand in often breathtaking detail and with great enthusiasm. They range from well-known professional artists such as Eugene von Guerard and Albin Martens, to amateurs about whom very little is known, such as John Goldfinch and Edward Thomson. These engineers, military men, solicitors, public servants and pastoralists all delighted in recording what they saw, and then sharing it with family, friends and the wider public. The Vision Splendid presents both the artwork and the life stories of these sometimes remarkable but often quite ordinary people for an even wider audience to share.

Book for adults

Available September 2011 $34.95

Reviews

‘Stephanie Owen Reeder is a Canberra-based writer and illustrator who deseves credit for compiling the artwork and prducing a text that will be inviting to the general reader.’ Courier Mail, 8 October 2011

‘A handsome coffee table book depicting 19th century Australia.’ North Shore Times, 30 September 2011

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