A notable shortlisted book for the Australian Children’s Book of the Year 2025

Courage, loyalty, family in “Tigg and the bandicoot bushranger” by Jackie French

Rating: 4 .5 / 5

Recommended age range: 9-16 years

Warnings: none

Genre: Fiction stories for children – Adventure

“Tigg and the Bandicoot Bushranger” by Jackie French

Jackie French, well-loved author, household name, Senior Australian of the year for 2015, OBE, and previous laureate of children’s books, has done it again by writing a book in which I learned a great deal about the role of the Chinese in early Australian history on the goldfields. I also enjoyed it simply as recreational reading.

This story has a bit of everything in it – adventure, mystery, a great plot and interesting characters. It would lend itself well to being made into a movie for the big screen. I can just imagine the currawongs and birds that are described so well in this book, the scenes of the Australian bush and the rollicking hills as background for the drama of the life of the main character, a young girl called Tigg.

Main character Tigg is a 12 year old orphan brought up by “Ma Murphy” who runs the ‘Pot ‘o Gold’ shanty supplying provisions to anyone heading to the Victorian goldfields.

Life in a rough shanty is not safe for a young girl or unmarried woman, and so Ma Murphy helps Tigg to disguise herself as a male bushranger.

Binding her chest to keep it flat and putting on a yellow straw wig with cabbage tree made hat, she is able to put on a deep-voice and Irish accent to imitate a young Irish man…but not for long because she is soon shot in the shoulder and must go into hiding.

To evade the troopers she then seeks the assistance of one Henry Lau from Hong Kong who hatches a plan to disguise her as one of the many Chinese miners walking the long walk from Robe in South Australia to Victoria.

As so often happens in life, Tigg changes her mind about who she is. Half out of necessity and half out of longing, she longs to just be herself – a girl.

“Suddenly she couldn’t resist. She’d been a boy for so long! What did a dress even feel like?

“She tied the ends of the tent together firmly, then peeled off her shirt and trousers, and then the bandages she had been wearing for two years now to keep her chest flat.”

“…she did very much want to be a girl, and not just because disguising was increasingly difficult. She’d love to try on bright silk dresses, like those she’d glimpsed on dancers passing the Pot ‘o Gold. It would be fun to let her long hair fall free except for a satin ribbon. A girl might one day be part of a family. She longed to have a family, people who cared about her and each other and had picnics or Christmas dinners together.”p.92

I learned a great deal about the role of the Chinese in early Australian history on by reading this book. I learned that the Chinese were innovative, clever, and entrepreneurial. They established market gardens and helped irrigate farms, selling their farm products to gold prospectors. Whilst there were racist attacks on them, at the same time they were widely respected in Australian society.

The Chinese were: “some of Australia’s most respected shopkeepers, lawyers, doctors and other professionals..” They were also extremely knowledgeable about irrigation techniques and were skilled in “…stonemasonry, well-digging and irrigation, as well as cooking and other arts.” p. 294

Notes at the end of the novel complement the story and reveal interesting paradoxes of history. For example, French shows 1850s Australian society was quite hierarchical and sectarian. Even though the majority of people were WASP (white Anglo-Saxon Protestant), French notes that: “..in many Australian counties people as white-skinned as the Roman Catholic Irish were still not counted in the census.” (p.298)

Christmas is nearly here!

With Christmas just around the corner here are a couple of beautiful Christmas picture books. Although published some time ago they are still favourites of mine.

‘Spot’s Christmas’ by Eric Hill needs no further introduction – kids love it!

Rating: 5/5

Recommended age range: 2-5 years

Warnings: none

Genre: Picture books for children

Join Spot as he puts up the Christmas tree, bakes cookies, draws cards, sings carols, wraps presents and leaves milk and cookies for Father Christmas!
‘Fa la la La’

According to Wikipedia , author Eric Hill first conceived of the idea of ‘Spot’ when he noticed his 3-year-old son enjoyed lifting up a paper design. The Spot books are based on a comic with a liftable flap for a child to open and peer under. The Spot books rapidly became bestsellers and due to their popularity were made into a tv series and franchise.

Spot has been read to many children in preschool storytimes at libraries over the years and never fails to please.

The other picture book I must mention is ‘The Christmas star’ by Swiss author Marcus Pfister. He is also the well-loved author of the well-known story: ‘The Rainbow Fish’ . ‘The Christmas Star’ is a wonderful religious story where children can follow the shining star as it guides shepherds, wise men and animals to the stable where the holy child has been born.

The Christmas Star by Marcus Pfister

Both picture books are still available on eBay as used Books. They are good oldies that, if in good condition, make lovely presents.

A beautiful picture book story for Christmas
The three shepherds are visited by angels.
Setting the scene at the beginning of the book…
The stars ‘..suddenly…began to move!’
It ‘..swept a radiant glow across the deep blue night.’
A wise man from the East follows the star, and is joined by by two others
In a poor and lowly stable the little child was born.

My name is Lizzie Flynn by Claire Saxby and Lizzy Newcomb

Based on the real life Rajah quilt made by convict women on board the Rajah whilst on their journey from England to Van Diemen’s Land (now “Tasmania”) in 1841.

The story spares nothing of the roughness and harsh conditions on board the convict ships. When a storm begins, ‘the hold becomes a groaning mass of writhing bodies, souped in a mix of vomit and filth.’ This book is not for the faint hearted, and as such is more suitable for upper primary, with explanations by an adult as to what is going on in the story.

One of the convict women, Molly, dies after having a fever. “They bury her in the heaving waters.” A Bible or religious book is shown in the illustration, with a Christian cross on the cover.

The main character becomes even more determined to not ‘pass from this world as if I had never been here.’ She works on the quilt, and when they arrive in Australia she is pleased that it will be a memento of the dying woman “Molly” and herself.

At the end of the book is some information about the Rajah quilt. It states that it was ‘lost for 147 years before being rediscovered in a Scottish attic.’

It is now housed in the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra.