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7 matches in All Departments
They huddle low, nostrils burning from the smoke. A wave of despair
flows over Tye. Nothing will survive this firestorm. The bush and
everything she loves will be lost. It's the summer holidays, and
Tye is staying at her grandparents' lodge at Chancy's Point in
Tasmania's beautiful Central Highlands. But her plans for fun with
best friend Lily and working on her pencil pine conservation
project are thwarted as fire threatens the community and the bush
she loves - and when Tye discovers Bailey, a runaway boy hiding
out, she is torn between secretly helping him and her loyalty to
her grandparents. As the fire comes closer and evacuation warnings
abound, Tye is caught up in the battle of her life. Will she and
Bailey survive? What will happen to her beloved pencil pines and
the wildlife at risk? Can she and her close-knit community make a
difference in a world threatened by climate change?
Mia is used to cyclone build-ups, but the noise and energy of the
wild rain squalls keep her awake half the night. What if the
cyclone hits before Mum gets back? As wild winds batter the coast,
Mia knows she must keep calm. The animals need her.
Thirteen-year-old Mia lives on a bush block in the Pilbara, where
she assists her mother's work as a vet and equine therapist.
Although she is used to the seasonal cyclones that threaten the
West Australian coast, nothing can prepare her for the ferocity of
Cyclone Veronica when she finds herself home alone and needing to
protect their property and the animals she loves. When her friend
Nick arrives, pleading for help, and her favourite horse is
injured, will Mia be able to withstand the greatest challenge of
her life? As the storm intensifies, can she save her beloved
animals?
A gripping story of one Australian boy's experience of devastating
drought. A few kookaburras laugh in the gum trees. Alex grins -
they don't often come up this far. His grandpa told him that if
kookaburras laugh late in the afternoon, it will rain next day.
'Ha, someone needs to tell the rain to listen, hey Tangi?' She
grins at him like it's a good joke. Alex wishes it was just a joke.
Thirteen-year-old Alex lives on a drought-affected property in
South Australia with his mom, his dad, his kelpie dog Tangi and
colt, Jago. When he meets his new next-door neighbor, Bonnie, he is
grateful to make anew friend and fascinated by the camels her
family has brought to the farm.. For years it hasn't rained enough
for them to put a crop in. And while all the farmers in the area
are suffering - his dad is struggling more than most. It's nearly
winter and the paddocks are still brown. But when Bonnie comes over
to visit and cook with him, Alex feels lighter inside. And his mom
loosens up a bit as well. As the drought stretches on, feral dogs
are causing huge problems for the farmers and their livestock.
Throughout the tough times, Alex must help his mom with the farm
work, and draw wisdom and strength from his support networks so he
can find a way into a brighter future.
The explosion jolts him awake. He sits up, gasping for air, heart
thumping. Was the blast real? Perhaps it had only happened in his
head, a bad dream. Demons of the dark, his father had called them.
'Push them away. They'll only poison your thoughts. Seek the light
and they can't hurt you.' Naveed is sick of war - of the foreign
powers and the Taliban, the warlords and the drug barons that
together have torn Afghanistan apart. He's had to grow up quickly
to take care of his widowed mother and little sister, making what
little money he can doing odd jobs and selling at the markets. When
he adopts Nasera, a street dog with extraordinary abilities, he has
a chance to help rebuild his country. But will a new friend's
betrayal crush his dreams of peace forever? From the winter of war
comes the spring of hope. 'Naveed brings a human face to a war we
have heard so much about. John Heffernan has allowed us an
important glimpse into the world of an Afghan child and an insight
into the complexity and beauty of the Afghan people. In Naveed, we
have a name for the thousands of Afghan children who are suffering
through this terrible war. Through his optimism, we are offered
hope.' - Neil Grant, author of The Ink Bridge
Amina lives on the edges of Mogadishu. Her family's house has been
damaged in Somalia's long civil war, but they continue to live
there, reluctant to leave their home. Amina's world is shattered
when government forces come to arrest her father because his art
has been officially censored, deemed too political. Then rebel
forces kidnap Amina's brother, forcing him to become a soldier in
Somalia's brutal ongoing war. Although her mother and grandmother
are still with her, Amina feels vulnerable and abandoned. Secretly,
she begins to create her own artwork in the streets and the
derelict buildings to give herself a sense of hope and to let out
the burden of her heart. Her artwork explodes into Mogadishu's
underground world, providing a voice for people all over the city
who hope for a better, more secure future. 'This touching story
brings home vividly the dangers of creating art that seeks to be
true - and all the more so during a vicious civil war, interwoven
with religious extremism. Thankfully, Amina's teenage curiosity and
courage also signal hope.' - Beverley Naidoo, author of Carnegie
Medal Winner The Other Side of Truth
Lyla has just started her second year of high school when a
magnitude 6.3 earthquake shakes Christchurch to pieces. Devastation
is everywhere. While her police officer mother and trauma nurse
father respond to the disaster, Lyla puts on a brave face, opening
their home to neighbours and leading the community clean-up. But
soon she discovers that it's not only familiar buildings and
landscapes that have vanished - it's friends and acquaintances too.
As the earth keeps shaking day after day, can Lyla find a way to
cope with her new reality?
'Open your eyes. We will not hurt you.' The boy quietens; his eyes
open. 'Where are you from?' The boy stares at them both; then says,
'Who will you tell?' Shahana lives alone with her young brother in
the shadow of the Line of Control, the border patrolled by
Pakistani and Indian soldiers that divides Kashmir in two. Life is
hard, but Shahana ekes out a living with her beautiful embroidery.
Then she finds a boy lying unconscious near the border. Zahid is
from across the Line of Control, and Shahana takes a terrible risk
by sheltering him. But how can she give Zahid up to the authorities
when she knows he'll be imprisoned - or worse? An unforgettable
novel about one young girl in war-torn Kashmir.
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