Book Loving Kiwis discussion
Administration
>
Question/Suggestion Zone
message 1:
by
Angie
(new)
Jan 25, 2012 11:08PM

reply
|
flag


Does that make sense?

Does this idea interest anyone in this group? We can obviously set our own time periods. Maybe two months would work best for some people.


e.g.





Ta dah!
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/8...

Thanks, Darkpool. Going to give it a whirl now.

Would anyone object to this happening?
Any feedback welcome...



Not BLK specific but
QUESTION: I have a copy of
that doesnt match this cover. Mine is green with the eyes that look over the island. This cover isn't on goodreads but its the same ISBN number. Do I add another edition or just use this one listed?
See cover image here
QUESTION: I have a copy of

See cover image here

QUESTION: I have a copy of

You're right Sharlene. The cover that was there is the 2010 edition where as the data on GR refers to the 2005 edition and should have the cover you've got. I've changed the cover now I'll add the 2010 movie tie-in edition shortly.
~Lesley

QUESTION: I have a copy of

You're right Sharlene. The cover that was there is the 2010 edition where as the data on GR refers to the 2005 edition and should have the cover you've got. I've changed the cover now I'll add the 2010 movie tie-in edition shortly.
~Lesley

Please help me choose a super novel that I can read to these bigger kids�.
ooh when I was a kid I loved reading the adventure stories by Willard Price. I loved animals and these stories taught me heaps of stuff.

Please hel..."
The Ghosts of Young Nick's Head by Sue Copsey
Red Rocks by Rachael King
The Tunnels of Tarcoola by Jennifer Walsh
and also by this author
Crooked Leg Road
These are a bit like the Arthur Ransome Swallows and Amazons stories.
These caught the imagination of my grandson who is in this age group - got him off focusing just on The Diary of ... and How to Train Your Dragon etc.
Turning the clock back a bit, my son liked the Paul Jennings books, and my daughter couldn't get enough of Nancy Drew and Trixie Belden!

The Emerald Atlas by John Stephens book 1 in the Books of Beginning series
Michael Morpurgo
Kensuke's Kingdom
Shadow (but I think we needed tissues here)
The Amazing Story of Adolphus Tips
Out of the Ashes
Escape from Shangri-La


Yep, my brother and I got a book each birthday. He got a Willard Price and I got Famous Five or secret Seven and then we'd swap. At school holiday time we'd play out versions of their adventures with our friends. I used to write my Mother notes in invisible ink - lemon juice and written with a seagull feather - lol

Yep, my ..."
Aaah, them were the days eh Kathleen - imagination.
We even acted out adventures we saw at the movies, on the odd occasions we went. One I recall vividly was where we had a chap further down the road who would lead his horse up the road until he got to a mound of dirt opposite our house. After a particular trip to the movies, we dug a hole in the top of said mound carefully replacing the turf on the top. We then sat ourselves on the fence and waited for the messages from the strategically placed 'sentries' that Mr M was coming. He arrived, we chorused Hello Mr M. to which he replied with his usual grunt, positioned his horse, climbed the mound and promptly disappeared. We scarpered to the safety of our fort and fell about laughing. We also wore our collective Mother's handprints on our behinds too.
We had another movie enacted adventure when my brother and his friends set fire to the pine tree covered hill in an endeavour to send smoke signals to the other indians waiting in the fort using a good woolen bed blanket. Not just handprints on behinds, but an all afternoon clean and polish of the local fire engine.
As my brother always says, that was a science lesson - he learned that pine needles are highly combustible,and fanning a fire causes it to really take off!

I don't think I can beat those though my friend and sister and I came pretty close.
Angie. Try Margaret Mahy. Those YA books of hers are great to read aloud.
There's also Maurice Gee's The Fireraiser and The Half Men of O which are great and Kiwi. Made into films and TV series too which might induce children to listen and then watch.


My Miss 11yo is currently reading Tomorrow When the War began. Inspired to read after watching the movie apparently.
She mainly just reads horsey books but recently enjoyed Under the Mountain and Inkheart

Mr. M was very short, hence the need for a mound to mount his horse. He was also a grumpy old ....
I reckon p.d.r. could have had fun with some of the stories featuring Mr M in her book of short stories about blokes. :) Could tell lots about him and other happenings that happened in the early settlement of my growing up area post WWII.

My Miss 11yo is currently reading Tomorrow When the War began. Inspired to read after watching the movie apparently.
She mainly just reads horsey books but recently ..."
Ahh Sweetp that was the title that was eluding me last night - Tomorrow When the War Began. Both my son and daughter liked that. The night that Under the Mountain played on TV the chores got done really quickly too - no chores done, no TV - and they loved that programme. Mind you so did I.

He needs his Kiwi background and it's a great film/series whatever.

My children have been too convinced by me, current research and their scientific backgrounds (research scientists) that the planet is stuffed and it's not fair to bring more children into a world we've ruined. My one grandson is an accident, but a much loved and welcomed one!

Angie, I've just downloaded this book at Booktrack where authors can enhance the reading experience by adding mood music and sound effects. If you could down load to a laptop or iPad it would make a wonderful class read.You would still have to read the story to them but accompanied by all the sound effects - raging storm, feet running uostairs, dog barking, thunder ....
Here's the link to read all about it. It works best if you download Google Chrome to use as your browser for this and to get the apps.
Lesley

Great minds think alike! I did just what you suggested a few days ago. Interestingly, I was at a workshop yesterday morning run by the Otago Literacy Association, and one of the speakers talked about digital literacies and mentioned booktrack. All the teachers were hurriedly scribbling down the name, whilst I sat there looking smug!
Bonus: I won a Michael Morpurgo book as a spot prize.
It may (or may not) be of interest to some of you - the 2014 NZ Literacy Association conference is being held in Tauranga from 28 September until 1 October. I'm going to see if my school will pay the conference fee, if I pay the rest.

It's great isn't it. I couldn't help thinking of class reads. I also downloaded The Selfish Giant (just to see) and the sound effects were exactly as I remember them being when we listened to the Sunday morning children's request session on the radio - The Selfish Giant, Little Flick, The Happy Prince ... just excuse me while I slip quietly back into the past �


To be honest, I read around this story enough when it broke to know there are claims (and possibly even evidence - from twitter, for instance) that Hale's version of the sequence of events is at best inaccurate. I'd trust it about as much as I'd trust the story of a kid I picked up in the playground for fighting... if he knew I wasn't going to be able to hear the other kid's side of the story.

Yes, she does sound a peckle in a pickle doesn't she?
Unfortunately I do know that one of my American writer pals has had a simliar experience with the same person/non-person.
And the major writers' boards all have someone telling a simliar story about others who are being or have been catfished.
Why is it called catfishing? It is an American term I do not know


I deleted some posts from this thread last night. I obviously missed some (weird because I definitely couldn't see them, but now I can?)
The Questions/Suggestions thread isn't the appropriate area to ask for reviews - I have asked Joanne to set up a thread for her book in the author corner folder instead, which she has done.
Nor is this thread the place to be "guessing" at GR policies and after discussion with another mod we felt it was best to remove the next few posts in case it was confusing to new authors stumbling on to this group. This is why I also did a post in the Mod Announcement thread re authors/reviews just to clarify what was acceptable in this group (and where is best to promote books and ask for reviews etc).
The thread is really meant to be Questions/Suggestions about BLK and how we work and what we're reading - not about GR itself. There are other groups where these kinds of issues might be better discussed like the ŷ feedback group or the ŷ Author Feedback Group. This group is about sharing the love of reading and connecting NZ readers with books, and readers with NZ books. I am not sure how discussions about psycho reviewers really fits in with that to be honest - certainly not really appropriate to this thread anyway.
This is the first time in almost a year of moderating this group I have deleted comments so it wasn't done lightly or without consultation with another mod. But in hindsight I should have put a comment here that I had removed some posts, I apologize.
If you want to repost the link in your own author thread pdr you can take the conversation there, or as above, perhaps another group would be better.


It would have been nice if the comments could have been sent back to us to reissue rather than disappear them without leaving an explanation. People do chat and wander off topic. I haven't got a copy of that link to re post or of th eother chatty bits!

The board has been very quiet for a while and it's hard trying to get things going and get other people interested and joining in without being able to just chat.

The board has been very quiet for a while and it's hard trying to get things going and get other people interested ..."
There are a couple of Boards already in existence where you could create a thread to chat about other than books read. Have a look at Not Just Books - Other Media and What Do You Think?
If you don't think either of these will fit the bill I've created another folder for chatting.

Its the blurb for a horror novel, so quite different to my normal historical fiction. I can promise that there isn't a sparkly (or otherwise) vampire in sight, nor are there love triangles or ancient curses. Its more a psychological horror, very little blood & guts.
Thank you
Kirsten wrote: "Hi team, I have a question. I'm writing my blurb, which is the most dire part of this whole author lark. I'm on draft #410 (it feels like it). Is there someone here who would be happy to run their ..."
Hi Kirsten - I didn't see this! I would have been happy to take a look! Next time flick me a message. :)
Now for the 2 reasons I entered this thread.
Could the moderators look at getting authors to use the Authors' Corner folder for promoting their work?
& also the currently reading books have been up since February. If you change their status from currently-reading to read they should disappear. :)
Hi Kirsten - I didn't see this! I would have been happy to take a look! Next time flick me a message. :)
Now for the 2 reasons I entered this thread.
Could the moderators look at getting authors to use the Authors' Corner folder for promoting their work?
& also the currently reading books have been up since February. If you change their status from currently-reading to read they should disappear. :)
If you've got any questions or suggestions to make this group even better, please leave them here
Books mentioned in this topic
Harrow the Ninth (other topics)Harrow the Ninth (other topics)
The Ghosts of Young Nick's Head (other topics)
The Ghosts of Young Nick's Head (other topics)
The Ghosts of Young Nick's Head (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ian Rankin (other topics)Daphne de Jong (other topics)
Tamsyn Muir (other topics)
Tamsyn Muir (other topics)
Michael Morpurgo (other topics)
More...