The Texts for Secondary
Method: English 2Y Second Semester 2013
For UWS students opting for 2Y, here are brief notes to help you select the text for your assignment.
Week 2 - 7th August
10 Futures by Michael Pryor. Woolshed Press, 2013.
ISBN 9781742753768. 229 pp.
This is an
anthology of ten linked science fiction short stories. Each story is set at a
different time in the future, dating from 2020 to 2120. Pryor explores a range
of possible futures, each an extension of something that is happening now. The
stories are linked by the use of the same protagonists in each story: teenagers
Tara and Sam. This could be used for Stage 4 or Stage 5, depending on the
reading ability of students, and is a great text for Sustainability.
Town by James
Roy. UQP, 2007. ISBN 9780702236372.
312 pp.
This anthology of thirteen interlinked
short stories is a popular choice for Stage 5 study, especially in
comprehensive schools. Each story takes place in a particular month - from
February one year to February the next - and all are set in an unspecified
fairly generic Australian country town. The protagonists are all teenagers:
main characters from one story can appear as minor characters in another. The
stories are very accessible and relevant to adolescent concerns and interests.
Maralinga, the Anangu Story by Yalata, Oak Valley Community with
Christobel Mattingley. Allen & Unwin, 2012 (2009). ISBN 9781742378428. 72
pp.
This is a
factual illustrated text that is accessible for readers from primary school age
up. Well-known children's author Christobel Mattingley worked with the Anangu
people to help them tell, in words and pictures, the story of what happened to
their community when nuclear bomb tests were carried out on their lands in the
1950s. This text is suitable for both the Indigenous and the Sustainability
cross-curricular perspectives.
Growing Up Asian in Australia edited by Alice Pung. Black Inc., 2008.
ISBN 9781863951913. 288 pp.
This non-fiction
anthology is a collection of true stories about the experiences of Asians in
Australia – from ABCs who have been here for generations, but who still look
Asian, to very recent migrants. There are dozens of stories, grouped under
thematic headings. All the stories are quite short – many are only three pages
long – and they cover a diverse range of experiences and a wide variety of
tone. In Victoria this is a Year 12 text but it is appropriate for use in Stages
5 or 6.
Week 3 - 14th August
I Am Thomas by Libby Gleeson and Armin Greder. Allen
& Unwin, 2011. ISBN 9781742373331. 32 pp.
Told in the first
person, this picture book is the story of a boy who doesn't belong. He is
constantly told that he will amount to nothing and that he doesn't fit in - at
home, at school, at church, in the broader society. He refuses to conform.
Libby Gleeson's words are reinforced by Armin Greder's often ugly
illustrations. Variable font sizes emphasise Gleeson's words and Greder makes
interesting use of framing, of positioning and of colour. This is aimed at
teenage readers and explores issues of identity and belonging.
Vampyre by Margaret Wild and Andrew
Yeo. Walker Books, 2011. ISBN 9781921529221. 32 pp.
'I am Vampyre./ I live in darkness. / I long for light.' This
is another picture book for adolescent readers and it too uses first-person
narration - the voice of a young vampyre who longs to break away from his
destiny. Wild's sparse text is more like poetry than prose and Yeo's
illustrations are haunting. Again, the themes explored include issues of
identity and belonging.
Ubby’s Underdogs: The Legend of the
Phoenix Dragon by Brenton E. McKenna. Magabala Books,
2011. ISBN 9781921248313. 160 pp.
This fantasy graphic
novel by an Indigenous author is set in Broome and draws on the lives and
stories of that diverse community. Ubby is a tough streetwise Indigenous girl
who is the leader of ‘a rag-tag group of misfits who make up the town’s
smallest gang’. This is a fast-moving action comic for teenage readers.
Tyranny: I Keep You Thin by Lesley Fairfield. Walker Books, 2011.
ISBN 9781406331134. 119 pp.
This
black-and-white graphic novel for adolescent readers is about anorexia. Anna’s
enemy is personalised as a demon named Tyranny – the alterego who constantly
tells her that she is not thin enough. Graphically, Tyranny is a spooky
skeleton.
The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick. Scholastic, 2007. ISBN
9780439813785. 534 pp.
This hugely
successful novel broke new ground. It's a big book (although it can be read in
about an hour) and about half its pages are made up of visual text rather than
words. However, it is not an illustrated text: the visual text tells the story,
just as the words do. One follows the other, seamlessly. Set in Paris in the
1930s, this is - among other things - about the birth of cinema. It is
accessible to readers in upper primary but appeals to all age groups. Lots of
schools use it as a Stage 4 novel.
Week 4 - 21st August
Bluefish by Pat Schmatz. Candlewick Press, 2013
(2011). ISBN 9781406342086. 226 pp.
This
American novel for young adults tells the story of the unlikely friendship that
develops between three misfits. The main character, Travis, from a poor white
family, is new to the school
and desperate to hide the fact that he is unable to read. The story is seen
mainly through his eyes, in third-person narration. Bright and confident
Velveeta befriends him. It is only when we read her letters, to someone named
Calvin, that we realise that she too is hurting. The third character is black
boy Bradley who breaks the stereotype: he's from a wealthy middle-class family
and is a total nerd. This is a simple read, frequently quite moving, about lack
of self-esteem and the price of illiteracy.
Light Horse Boy by Dianne Wolfer, illustrated by Brian
Simmonds. Fremantle Press, 2013. ISBN 9781922089137. 120 pp.
Heavily based on
historical research, this is an illustrated book about a young man who went off
to World War I. Because of his experience as a farmhand, he becomes involved
with the Light Horse Regiment. The story is told through multiple written and
visual texts: fictional letters and postcards, real photos and newspaper
extracts from World War I, passages of conventional narrative, black and white
sketches, maps and telegrams. The text is suitable for class set use in Stage 4.
The Golden Day by Ursula Dubosarsky. Allen & Unwin,
2011. ISBN 9781742374710. 150 pp.
This is a
beautifully written, haunting mystery beginning in Sydney in 1967 and ending on
the 11th November, 1975. The setting is an exclusive girls' school and a small
class of girls who are taken to the park by their teacher. Their teacher
disappears, and her shocking, unexplained loss binds the girls together. Their
personal story takes place against a background of historical and cultural
events of great significance. This richly layered novel is for competent
readers.
New Guinea Moon by Kate Constable. Allen & Unwin,
2013. ISBN 9781743315033. 275 pp.
This is set in
New Guinea in 1975, just before that country gained independence from
Australia. The main character, a sixteen-year-old Australian girl, goes to
spend the holidays with the father she has never known. Tony is a pilot for a
small airline in the Highlands. Julie discovers a new world and becomes aware
of the tension between the patronising Australians, many of whom have lived in
New Guinea for years, and the locals who are eager for independence. This is an
enjoyable coming-of-age story about family and first love.
Week 5 - 28th August
The Bridge by Jane Higgins. Text Publishing, 2011. ISBN 9781921758331. 352 pp.
This excellent
post-apocalyptic novel is the first from New Zealand author Jane Higgins. The
oil has run out on earth and there have been water wars. The story is set in a
divided city, constantly at war: on one bank of the river live the elite in
Cityside; on the other bank, in Southside, live 'the hostiles', refugees from
'Oversea' and the 'Desert'. Nik has had a privileged education in Cityside, but
not all is what it seems, and his identity and loyalty are to be severely
challenged. This is an exciting thriller where black and white are not always
clearcut.
First Light by Rebecca Stead. Text Publishing, 2011. ISBN 9781921758256. 336 pp.
Set firmly to
begin with in a vividly imagined real world - first New York, and then the icy
desert of Greenland, this novel takes the reader into an entirely credible
world of sci-fi fantasy and an extraordinary community who have lived under the
Arctic ice for centuries, since fleeing religious persecution in Europe. The
story moves between two twelve-year-olds from very different backgrounds, whose
lives eventually intersect in complex and satisfying ways.
Genesis (The Rosie Black Chronicles Book
1) by Lara Morgan.
Walker Books, 2010. ISBN 9781921529399. 454 pp.
This is set 500
years into the future in a Newperth that is divided into the haves, the
'Centrals', the have-nots, the 'Bankers', and the fringe dwellers, the Ferals. This
is a long but gripping read as the main character, Rosie, is on the run with a dangerous
secret, unsure of whom to trust.
Cinder (The Lunar Chronicles Book 1) by Marissa Meyer. Penguin Books, 2012.
ISBN 9780141340135. 387 pp.
This might be chick lit, but it's
wonderfully intelligent chick lit, playing deliciously with genre. It is a
clever re-telling of the Cinderella story, transposed to some future time in
New Beijing. Cinder is a cyborg, despised by her nasty stepmother and one of
her two stepsisters. She is an engaging character and it is not surprising that
there is a growing attraction between Cinder and the handsome Prince Kai, a
budding romance threatened firstly by the fact that Kai does not know that
Cinder is a cyborg and secondly by the evil Lunar Queen Levana's determination
to marry the prince for political reasons. The plot twists and turns
delightfully as Cinder fights to save her prince and Earth itself. This is
especially popular with girls.
Nanberry: Black Brother White by Jackie French. HarperCollins, 2011.
ISBN 9780732290221. 320 pp.
This is set in the early years of the colony in Sydney. Most, but not
all, the characters are real historical figures, including the protagonist,
Nanberry. Aged perhaps 9 or 10, Nanberry was orphaned by the plague that
virtually wiped out the Indigenous people in the immediate area of the first
settlement in 1789. He was adopted by Surgeon White and lived between the two
cultures. This is an interesting exploration of the first contacts between
blacks and whites.
Hitler's Daughter by Jackie French. HarperCollins, 1999. ISBN
9780207198014. 144 pp.
This uses the
story-within-a-story structure to explore the interesting idea of what Hitler's
daughter might have been like - if he had had one. The framework involves three
country kids telling stories while they wait each morning for the school bus.
We accept the story about Hitler's daughter because we know from the beginning
that it's clearly a made up story. This is an excellent introduction for young
readers to Hitler and Nazism.
The Girl from Snowy River by Jackie French. HarperCollins, 2012. ISBN
9780732293109. 319 pp.
Set in the Snowy
Mountains in 1919, this shows the shadow that World War I left hanging over
Australian families and communities. Seventeen-year-old Flinty is forced to
look after the family farm and her two young siblings while older brother Andy,
damaged by the war, is 'gone with cattle'. This is a terrific picture of time
and place.
Pennies for Hitler by Jackie French. HarperCollins, 1999. ISBN
978020732292096. 311 pp.
Georg is the son
of an English academic who has lived happily in Berlin for fifteen years. But
Georg's father is of Jewish heritage and life changes forever for Georg in
1939. He is forced to flee Germany, first for war-torn England and then for
Australia, where he has to take on a new identity in order to survive. This is
an interesting perspective on World War II, from the point of view of a child
who had been educated to honour Hitler.
Week 6 - 4 September
The Ink Bridge by Neil Grant. Allen & Unwin, 2012.
ISBN 9781742376691. 288 pp.
This
ambitious novel is organised into three sections: the story of Omed in
Afghanistan under the Taliban and his desperate – and unsuccessful – attempt to
find asylum; the story of a traumatised Australian teenage boy, Hector; and a
final section in which an older Hector goes to Afghanistan to try to search for
Omed. The first two parts are limited third-person narrative, the world seen
first through Omed’s eyes and then through Hec’s. But the third part is
first-person narration in Hec’s voice – the voice of a writer who is telling
both Omed’s story and his own. This is an interesting experiment in
metafiction.
Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey. Allen & Unwin, 2009. ISBN 9781742372624. 394 pp.
Set in a small Western Australian community in the 60s, this
is a terrific thriller. Thirteen-year-old Charlie is woken in the middle of the
night by Jasper Jones, the town's notorious teenage outcast. Jasper is in
serious trouble and he comes to Charlie for help. There is a body in the bush,
and Jasper knows that the police will accuse him of murder. This was written
for adults but is an interesting choice for study with Year 10. Some people
refer to it as the Australian To Kill a
Mockingbird.
The Dead I Know by Scot Gardner. Allen & Unwin, 2011.
ISBN 9781742373843. 214 pp.
This absorbing novel
begins in a funeral parlour where school drop-out and general misfit, Aaron, is
about to start work. The funeral director has taken Aaron on only as a favour
to the school counsellor, who is a friend. Aaron’s school reports are dismal:
even the counsellor expects very little of him. He appears to be completely
antisocial and he has failed all his subjects. But the story is told by Aaron
in the first-person and the reader discovers that Aaron is very different from
the persona he presents to the world. This has some terrific scenes of black
humour and some intensely sad moments as well.
All I Ever Wanted by Vikki Wakefield. Text Publishing,
2011. ISBN 9781921758300. 208 pp.
This is a quick
and easy read. It's
the summer school holidays and sixteen-year-old Mim's mum is on the couch and
her brothers are in gaol. Mim knows she doesn't want to turn out like any of
them. As the hot summer continues, Mim finds herself involved in trouble with
the local crims, trouble with a boy and trouble with her best friend, while her
relationship with her mother continues to deteriorate. Despite the setting,
this is a warmly positive novel.
Week 7 - 11th September
The Watch That Ends the
Night: Voices from the Titanic by Allan Wolf. Candlewick Press, 2013 (2011). ISBN 9780763663315.
430 pp.
This
superbly researched account of the sinking of the Titanic is told in verse-novel form, using twenty-two different
voices. The voices are those of real historical people who were on board,
ranging from the wealthiest of passengers to a refugee girl whose money has
been stolen. There are voices from the crew as well as the passengers, some of
them surprising: several times we hear the voice of the ship's rat. The most
surprising voice of all is that of the iceberg itself. Despite the fact that we
know the ending, this is an absorbing read.
Cold Skin by Steven Herrick. Allen & Unwin,
2007. ISBN 9781741751291. 264 pp.
Herrick has
written a traditional crime novel in verse. When a girl's body is found beside
the river in a small country town, almost every male in town is a suspect. The
story is told in multiple voices. There are clues and suspects but the
resolution is a surprise.
Just in Case by Meg Rosoff. Penguin Books, 2007. ISBN 9780141318066. 231 pp.
Teenager David
Case is minding his baby brother Charlie when he realises that Charlie is
tottering on the ledge of the open window. David rescues Charlie just in time,
but he suddenly realises how fragile life is. He's convinced that Fate is out
to get him. To confuse Fate, he changes his name to 'Justin' - just in case -
and transforms his identity. This is a highly original novel in which one of
the main voices is that of Fate itself.
Into White Silence by Anthony Eaton. Random House, 2008.
ISBN 9781741663259. 416 pp.
This quite long
book appears to be a factual account of a doomed voyage of exploration to the
Antarctic in the 1920s. Author Anthony Eaton claims to have been visiting the
Australian base in Antarctica when he came across a journal, which he says he
is reproducing for us. The account is so convincing that readers have been
known to google the name of the ship and the explorers, but it is metafiction:
an excuse for Eaton to introduce some fascinating characters and to explore the
drive that leads people to push themselves beyond the limits.
Week 8 - 18th September
Trash by Andy
Mulligan. David Fickling, 2010. ISBN 9781849920568. 211
pp.
Set in the Philippines, this is narrated by
multiple voices, including those of three young boys who make a meagre living
scavenging on a huge tip in Manila. The tip is their home as well as their
workplace. One day one of the boys discovers a bag, containing an identity
card, a key and some money. The money is very welcome, but it soon becomes
clear that the bag is much more valuable than it appears, when hordes of police
descend on the tip offering large rewards for its recovery. The bag holds a
deadly secret and the boys’ decision to solve the mystery propels them into a
very dangerous situation. This is a great thriller with terrific characters.
The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf by Ambelin Kwaymullina. Walker Books,
2012. ISBN 9781921720086. 400 pp.
This
post-apocalyptic novel is set in a world that has been devastated by
environmental neglect. The new rigidly regulated authoritarian world does not tolerate
those who are different, so there are exiles who have become resistance
fighters. Ashala, a resistance leader, has been captured and is being
interrogated. There are lots of surprising twists and turns: all is not what it
seems. There is also a very interesting use of the story of the Rainbow
Serpent.
The Dream of the Thylacine by Margaret Wild and Ron Brooks. Allen
& Unwin, 2011. ISBN 9781742373836. 32 pp.
This picture
book for readers of all ages tells the story of the last Tasmanian tiger, endlessly
patrolling his tiny concrete and barbed wire cage, as he dreams of his lost
freedom in the beautiful forests.
Week 9 - 2nd October
Wonder by R. J. Palacio. Alfred
a. Knopf, 2012. ISBN 9780552565974. 313 pp.
This is an easy
and engaging read. August was born with severe facial deformities and, despite
many operations, still causes strangers in the street to gasp with horror.
Because of his disfigurement, he has been home-schooled. Now, at Year 4 level,
his family has reluctantly decided to take the risk of sending him to school.
The novel is narrated in August’s voice - and it is the voice that engages the
reader. The fact that August is only ten would normally be a disadvantage for
high school readers, but there is nothing childish about this voice. August is
bright and cheerful and accepting of his situation. He is also acutely aware of
how others react to him and is extremely courageous. As he struggles to make
his way in the hostile school environment, the reader cheers him on.
The Wrong Boy by Suzy Zail. black dog books, 2012.
ISBN 9781742031651. 256 pp.
Melbourne writer Suzy Zail uses her
Hungarian father’s wartime experience to tell a gripping fictional account of
what happened to the Budapest Jews who were sent to Auschwitz in 1944. Hanna,
the fifteen-year-old narrator, is a talented pianist and is forced to go each
day to the commandant's house to play for him. An unlikely relationship
develops with the commandant's sixteen-year-old son, Karl - the 'wrong boy'.
This is a book that helps the reader see the inhumanity of the Holocaust
through new eyes.
Butter by Erin Lange. Faber and Faber, 2013 (2012). ISBN
9780571294404. 343 pp.
This is a very
contemporary novel, one in which social media play a major role. It is narrated
in the first-person by a teenage boy who is known to everyone as 'Butter'.
Butter is seriously obese and has long been the subject of merciless bullying
at school. In desperation, he decides to take action, announcing on Facebook
that he intends to eat himself to death - live on webcam - on New Year's Eve.
This is blackly humorous and terrific about bullying, including cyberbullying.
It raises some important ethical issues about social media.
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green. Penguin Books, 2012. ISBN
9780143567592. 313 pp.
Narrated by
sixteen-year-old Hazel, who has been living with incurable cancer for more than
three years, this is a compulsive read. The narrative voice is hugely
appealing: this is a very bright and very funny girl who knows the
inevitability of her fate and is determined not to be maudlin. Her greatest
concern is for her parents: she describes herself as a 'grenade' that will some
day explode, destroying their lives. Hazel meets Gus, a cancer survivor, and
they fall in love. This is one of the great love stories in young adult fiction
and a serious look at the extent to which we are masters of our fate. There
have been lots of young adult books about
teenagers with terminal illnesses, but this is by far the best.