Showing posts with label Rebecca Lim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rebecca Lim. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 March 2024

Our Family Dragon: A Lunar New Year Story

Our Family Dragon: A Lunar New Year Story by Rebecca Lim, illustrated by Cai Tse (Albert Street Books) HB RRP $24.99 ISBN 9781761180637

Reviewed by Nikki M Heath

A young boy is bursting with excitement for the coming of the dragon, as his family buzzes with preparations for Lunar New Year. What will happen when the dragon comes?

This is an approachable introduction to Lunar New Year traditions exuding love, life, and joy. The story covers food, red money packets, the Chinese zodiac and family fun, and has a heart-warming twist at the end. There isn’t much in the way of plot, but the reader feels welcomed into the family of the narrator and becomes invested in his dreams for the festivities.

The generous illustrations help to convey the way modern Australian families celebrate. The dragon dancing over the Sydney Harbour Bridge draws the reader in, and the sumptuous, detailed food illustrations are tantalising.

A must-have for any kindergarten or junior primary classroom and a delight for anyone wanting to explore Lunar New Year with the 4- to 8-year-olds in their life.

Wednesday, 27 December 2023

Two Sparrowhawks in a Lonely Sky

Two Sparrowhawks in a Lonely Sky by Rebecca Lim (Allen and Unwin), RRP $17.99 Young Adult ISBN 9-781761-180224

Reviewed by Susan Hancy

Hungry, frightened, homeless, and grieving for their ma, who has died of starvation and hard labour at the hands of the 1950’s communist China regime, 13-year-old Fu and 11-year-old Pei have only one direction that they can turn. South, to flee China, with only the hope that luck will somehow allow them to reach their father at the bottom of the world.

Two Sparrowhawks in a Lonely Sky is about a fictional family living in rural China. With the help of well-connected friend, the father of the family, who is a former Kuomintang intelligence officer and enemy of the new Communist state, flees to Australia in 1951. His wife, son, and daughter – Fu and Pei – are left behind, harvesting the land to deliver their required quotas while struggling to feed themselves. Knowing her time is near, Ma gives them the only documentation she has that may help them find their father – a menu, a letter, and a faded photo of him outside a skyscraper in Hong Kong.

On the eve of the Great Leap Forward in 1958, Ma passes away and the state takes possession of her house, pig and chickens. The local official determines that Fu can go to a family that needs a young boy to work in the fields and that Pei be married off. Despite her belief in communist values, a female officer from Beijing is outraged at the thought of an 11-year-old girl being forced to marry, so personally helps them escape to the Southern Sea, where she entrusts them to a strong and savvy seawoman to sail them to Hong Kong. 

In the bustling city of skyscrapers and electric lights, they need to persevere through abuse and rejection, shouted at in a language they don’t understand by “ghost” people (Anglo-Saxons), in order to capture the attention of the acting Trade Commissioner who, luckily for them, is sympathetic to their plight. But with Australia’s tough immigration laws, vocal citizens not open to accepting newcomers with a different skin colour and a treacherous ocean voyage in typhoon season ahead, the reader’s fingers will be crossed to find out whether Fu and Pei are able to reunite with their father.

Two Sparrowhawks is an eye-opening read, not only for the target audience of 11 to 14-year-olds, but also for older readers including adults who may not be aware of the details around Australia’s racist attitudes and immigration restrictions in past decades: happy to take refugees escaping hard labour or wars in their birth lands, only to subject them to hard labour in Australia with limited prospects of longer-term settlement. This novel also gives the reader insights into the culture, practices, and changes in China in the 1950’s.

In addition to Fu and Pei capturing my heart and leaving me curious about how their future life transpires, the motivations of the supporting characters who helped Fu and Pei on their journey are also interesting and I’d love to know what happens to them as well.  A sequel, please, Rebecca Lim!

Wednesday, 24 September 2014

The Astrologer’s Daughter

The Astrologer’s Daughter by Rebecca Lim (Text Publishing)
PB RRP $19.99
ISBN 9781922182005
Reviewed by Wendy Fitzgerald 

Melbourne based lawyer Rebecca Lim is the author of 14 books for kids and Young Adults. Her Mercy series involves the main character as an angel. Her Total Girl books are for younger readers about fashion and friends. This book, The Astrologer’s Daughter came out in July 2014. It follows a theme of astrology in a tangle of genres- mystery, thriller, adventure and love.

Lim cleverly drops us into the streets of China Town in inner city Melbourne - into the life of young Avicenna Crowe who is alone in a tiny apartment after her mother, Joanne mysteriously vanishes. We learn that Avicenna and her mother have moved around a lot and that Joanne had been stalked in the past. One side of Avicenna’s face is scarred from a house fire. Her father died in that fire. 

Just like her mother, Avicenna has the gift of reading the past, present and future. They are not really fortune tellers and they are not strictly psychics. They use astrology- a method that’s based on plotting a client’s birth information on a circular chart a bit like a clock face. 

‘Twelve houses, two-hour intervals with midnight at the cusp of the fourth house, noon at the cusp of the tenth…. Fill the interior with a map of the heavens as it was at the exact time, date and place of birth…’

I found the explanations of this process interesting but, to be honest, beyond my understanding. The police investigating Joanne’s disappearance are also sceptical of this gift and suspect foul play leaving young Avicenna desperate to find her own answers.

She decides to read the charts for her mother’s clients and conduct her own investigation. Her search takes her into dangerous territory- some unsavoury people and desperate clients all linked to the violent unsolved murder of a young girl.

Throw in a love triangle between Avicenna, her school friend Simon Thorn and a rich, handsome client and you have a compelling story with a thrilling, action packed plot. You will need to read the book to find how Lim expertly weaves all these elements together.  I would recommend it to kids 14 years and over.

Wednesday, 17 November 2010

Mercy

Mercy by Rebecca Lim (HarperCollins)
PB RRP $19.99
ISBN 9780732291990
Reviewed by Vicki Stanton
www.buzzwordsmagazine.com

It's no wonder that Mercy is ready to become an international hit. Rebecca Lim draws the reader into the story immediately with economical prose and tells the story of Mercy, the fallen and amnesic archangel, with great clarity and a very definite youth voice. This is an angel with attitude!

Written in first person present tense, the reader only knows what Mercy knows, feeling her confusion as she inhabits the body of an insecure but brilliant choir girl Carmen Zappacosta. Mercy does not fully understand her powers and does not know why she must shift from body to body. Is it to help the person whose identity she assumes, others around her, or is there an ulterior objective altogether?

Carmen has been billeted with the Daley family whose daughter Lauren, also an exceptional singer, went missing two years previously and is assumed dead by all except her twin brother Ryan. Mercy believes Ryan and tries to help him find Lauren putting herself in danger. A mysterious sub-plot running through the book, and I am sure throughout the series, is the appearance of other archangels, particularly Luc.

Even if you don't normally read fantasy, you will enjoy Mercy. Look also for the release of the sequels Exile and Muse in 2011.