Children connect with songs and rhymes. This innate quality allows young readers and listeners the ability to play and experiment with sounds with ease. Not only do these lyrical stories lend themselves to a range of engaging and interactive experiences, but their audience is also given opportunities to learn the mechanics of language, sequences and […]
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Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Book News, poem, rhyme, song, Walker Books, Jackie Hosking, Janeen Brian, roland harvey, New Book Releases, Cheryll Johns, Scholastic Australia, Omnibus Books, Claire Richards, Colin Buchanan, Laura Wood, Marjorie Crosby-Fairall, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Tony Wilson, Ed Allen, Book Reviews - Poetry, The Croc and the Platypus, Romi Sharp, 10 Clumsy Emus, 10 Cheeky Possums, 10 Spooky Bats, Little Barry Bilby had a Fly upon his Nose, Silly Squid! Poems about the Sea, The Cow Tripped Over the Moon, Add a tag
Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Edward Lear, poems, nonsense, children's picture book, book launch, Jackie Hosking, The Owl and the Pussycat, julia donaldson, Walker Books Australia, New Book Releases, Dimity Powell, Marjorie Crosby-Fairall, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, The Croc and the Platypus, Add a tag
I commented recently on the Further Adventures of the The Owl and the Pussy Cat by Julia Donaldson and Charlotte Voake. Donaldson’s ineffable lyrical style does indeed take Edward Lear’s nonsense tale one step further and is a jolly expedition for the reader to navigate through. As you’d expect, it’s a very good picture book. Then I found an even better one.
With ute-fulls of respect to Donaldson and Voake, Jackie Hosking’s and Marjorie Crosby-Fairall’s debut creation of The Croc and The Platypus is a very, very good picture book.
Fans of Lear’s will relish the lilting musical quality of Hosking’s verse as she transports us as effortlessly as Julia Donaldson through the Australian outback with as an incongruous couple as the Owl and Pussycat; Croc and Platypus.
Hosking is spot on with this ingenious retelling of a childhood classic however, somehow makes it feel much more loose and flowing and bizarrely, even easier to read than the original. Her narrative sings with a down-to-earth gritty realism but is delivered with Lear’s same congenial, nonsensical joie de vive. Hub caps ring and didgeridoos blow as Platypus and Croc ‘play up a hullabaloo…baloo.’
I love Hosking’s incorporation of recognisable Aussie icons; Uluru, tea and damper and lamingtons to name a few as Croc and Platypus trundle across the plains eventually camping under the Southern Cross after cleverly procuring their tent. For those not so familiar with ‘click go the shears’ terminology, there’s even a neat little glossary.
Extra applause must go to Marjorie Crosby-Fairall for her truly epic acrylic and pencilled illustrations. The outback is vast and engulfing as are the illustrations of this picture book with gorgeously generous helpings of full colour, movement and sparkle on every single page.
Hosking’s appreciation of, commitment to and finesse with the rhyming word are self-evident. She works them all to perfection in this richly Aussie-flavoured celebration about embracing unlikely friendships and sharing stellar moments with those closest to you whilst enjoying a good old Aussie road trip.
The Croc and the Platypus has every reason to glow proudly alongside The Owl and the Pussycat, and dare I suggest outshine it.
Discover and rediscover all three books here. For those in Sydney around early July, make sure you don’t miss Jackie’s launch of The Croc and the Platypus.
Walker Books Australia June 2014
Add a CommentBlog: Scribblings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: poetry, pass it on, jackie hosking, pearl verses the world, toppling, Add a tag
If you've been dropping in regularly then you'll know that all month I've been hosting visting bloggers who have been dropping in to help me celebrate the release of Toppling by telling me (and you) what it is that they like about chidlren's poetry. Please welcome today Jackie Hosking, poet, chidlren's writer and editor of the Pass It On newsletter. Welcome Jackie. Why I like poetry. I’ve