I’ve always loved Ben Brown and Helen Taylor’s books. So far their books have been mostly about native New Zealand wildlife and they’re beautiful books. Their latest book, The Great Orlando, is something completely different, but absolutely stunning.
From the very first page you know that this is not a happy story. ‘The Great Orlando,’ otherwise known as Sunday Jones lives in a ‘rough, broken house with an unkempt lawn and a dead lemon tree in the front yard.’ His father is a cruel, miserable man, but his mother cares for him, protects him, and tells him bedtime stories of The Great Orlando. When his mother dies, Sunday Jones is left with his father who makes his life a misery. When he gets the chance to enter the school talent show, he transforms himself into The Great Orlando and is finally able to escape his miserable life.
The Great Orlando is a dark, multi-layered story about a boy who wants to escape. Ben and Helen introduce us to Sunday Jones, a boy with a father who makes life hard for him, but holds onto the dreams his mother gave to him through her stories. Ben Brown weaves his magic on the reader with his words and shows us a snapshot of Sunday’s life. I particularly like the way Ben describes the mother’s love for her son. This story also shows us how versatile Helen Taylor is. It’s a completely different subject matter to her previous illustrations but they match the text perfectly and I really love them. They’re quite dark and eerie, which matches the tone of the story, and I like the symbolism she’s used throughout the book (the shadow of the bull in the background and the butterfly). The Great Orlando is the perfect picture book to share with older readers who will appreciate both the story and the illustrations. I hope The Great Orlando sees some success outside of New Zealand for this talented duo.
4 out of 5 stars

Read me for NZ Book Month!
Fred is a lovely, fluffy, white caterpillar who loves games, especially Hide-and-Seek. He’s really good at Hide-and-Seek because he can hide himself very well. Apart from hiding, he spends most of his day munching on leaves. Then one day he looks up to find a beady-eyed black crow, called Gerald, staring down at him hungrily. Fred must do what he does best to escape Gerald’s hungry beak.
Shaun Tan, Margaret Wild, and Chris Van Alsberg are some of the masters of sophisticated picture books. Their stories are told through both words and pictures and they make us think and question. Edge of the World is a stunning new sophisticated picture book by Ian Trevaskis and illustrated by Wayne Harris, about grief and the power of art to heal wounds.
We’re introduced to the very cute Zoe and her loveable dog Beans in their first outing, Where is Binky Boo? Zoe loves her dolly, Molly, but so does Beans, ever since he lost his toy, called Binky Boo. Molly is the only toy he wants to play with, and when Zoe isn’t looking he takes it to show his doggy friends. But when Zoe washes Molly, Beans refuses to play with it. Beans is very unhappy, until they discover something ‘a little woolly something with a particular smell’ sticking out of the sandpit.
In The Magic Hoop, Zoe tries to get Beans to jump through her hoop, but Beans won’t have a bar of it. Zoe tempts Beans to go through the hoop using all his favourite treats, but when she throws Binky Boo through the hoop, the toy disappears. Beans jumps through to find his toy and magically turns into a rabbit. Zoe decides she doesn’t want a rabbit so makes Beans jump through again. Beans turns into a mouse, a crocodile and then an elephant! But elephants are big and the hoop is small. Will Zoe be able to get Beans back to normal or will he be stuck as an elephant forever?
Their most recent adventure was Christmas themed. In Zoe’s Christmas List, Zoe and Beans travel to the North Pole to deliver her letter to Father Christmas, and meet a cute, fluffy friend along the way. Their next adventure (due out in June 2012) is called Pants on the Moon and sounds fantastic! The illustrations are gorgeous and the stories are that rare blend of both cute and funny. Zoe is brimming with confidence and a love for adventure that children can relate to. Children will beg for them to be read again and again, and I’m sure parents will be only too willing to. Perfect for reading one-on-one or as a read-aloud for groups (a particular favourite at my library Story Time).


Kyle Mewburn deserves an award for being New Zealand’s hardest working children’s author this year. He’s had so many books published in 2011, from picture books to junior fiction novels. His Dinosaur Rescue series (with which he collaborates with the brilliant Donovan Bixley) is probably the best series for junior readers to come out of New Zealand in recent years. Kyle’s latest book is a picture book about a cow that tries to make friends with the moon, called Moon Cow.