Piranhas Don’t Eat Bananas by Aaron Blabey

Published: 1st September 2015Goodreads badge
Publisher:
 Simon and Schuster
Illustrator: Aaron Blabey
Pages: 24
Format: Picture Book
★   ★   ★   ★  – 4 Stars

Everyone knows that piranhas don’t eat bananas — except for Brian. This little fish loves to munch not only on bananas, but on fruit of all kinds Brian’s piranha friends think he’s crazy. Piranhas don’t eat bananas — their sharp teeth are for eating meat And there’s a scrumptious pair of feet dangling in the water nearby…

First up, I adored the illustrations. Who knew you could show so many expressions on a fish. Kudos to Blabey for giving me pure delight just looking at those little green faces.

I had no idea what this book was about before I picked it up, I see so many of Blabey’s picture books with alluring and interesting titles that I add them to my list and vow one day to get there. I am so glad I have finally got there because this book was amazing and so much fun to read.

I loved how enthusiastic the little piranha was about sharing his fruit with his friends, despite being rejected each time because bums and knees are more appetising. Disney’s Tarzan taught me that piranha’s are native to South America so our bums and knees are safe here in Australia unless there is a severe ecological crisis, but I liked how fun the story was about the joys of nibbling on people.

There wasn’t any malice or taunting, this is a fun book about one piranha’s love of fruit but not about the other piranha’s teasing them for the choice. The rhyming was fantastic, the narrative flow got you turning the pages but the rhymes were clever, the dialogue was clever, and the story, while simple, was fun.

The illustrations were brilliant. As I said, the expressions on these little green piranha faces was divine and I liked how they were individuals. Each fish had their own personality and looking at the pictures was as enjoyable as the text, even if the illustrations were simple, they filled the page and complimented the text so well that you don’t even notice.

This might be my favourite Blabey picture book, I loved everything about it, I even loved the little information pages where Blabey with both humour and interesting fact, tells the reader about piranhas as well as bananas and how the two rarely meet, citing both the dangers of banana skins, and the lack of piranha usually feasting on them.

You can purchase Piranhas Don’t Eat Bananas via the following

QBD | Booktopia | Blackwell’s

Dymocks | WorderyAngus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

I Need A Hug by Aaron Blabey

Published: 1st December 2015Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Scholastic Australia
Illustrator: Aaron Blabey
Pages: 32
Format: Picture Book
★   ★   ★  – 3 Stars

‘I need a hug. Will you cuddle me, Lou?’ ‘What? With those spikes? Get away from me! Shoo!’ All this little porcupine wants is a hug. But with such prickly spikes, will she ever get the cuddle she craves?

I am fascinated how I can love some of Aaron Blabey’s work and dislike others. I am not a huge fan of Pig the Pug. At All. I don’t know what it is but that dog gets on my nerves. And yet, I love Blabey’s other works. This book in particular is amazing because it doesn’t go where you expect it to go.

With an echidna looking for a hug there’s laughs abound. Of course no one will hug him, they dismiss him, they are rude to him, they practically flee from him. You feel so bad for this echidna.

The rhyming verse makes this an easy page turner, but Blabey has a remarkable skill in saying a lot with only a few lines of verse. There is emotion and heart, a whole story is captured in a few words. It’s funny but filled with heart at the same time.

The illustrations and formatting doing great work conveying story and meaning as well. The characters move around the page to show action and the text shows emotion and tone through stylisation and size choices. That is a benefit of picture books, they are allowed to play with form so much more than many novels. Not that this has a lot of change to regular form, certainly I have seen more dramatic shifts, but I was reminded how clever it can be in telling a story. Especially one like this where heart and humour work together so well.

The ending is beautiful. I love how two ostracised people find comfort in one another. I liked that they had each other, and I also actually quite enjoyed how no one else learnt their lesson about being rude and mean spirited. It is always wonderful if you can show people changing their minds or being taught about their wrong behaviour/opinions, but sometimes you can’t convince people to like you, to be nice or compassionate, but you will find others like you who will support you. Which is a great lesson to show kids, especially one hidden in an otherwise humorous book.

You can purchase I Need A Hug via the following

 QBDBooktopia | Blackwell’s

DymocksAngus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

Top Five of 2023

Last year I made the decision to change up my Top Five lists because a few of the books I was simply adoring hadn’t actually breached the five star mark. Which in itself is a fascinating discovering since I am the one scoring these books. These books stuck with me, I found myself thinking about them all the time but somehow they never got a top score. My new plan was to include books that I thought were amazing reads even if I didn’t give them five stars (again, my own logic makes no sense, don’t look at it too closely).

I think realising I had a lot of rereads last year so not having anything to really shout about was weird. Not that rereads are bad, but it’s always nice to have new books to shout about. Having said that, new plan in tow as I went through my reads of 2023, this time I actually have five new reads of top scoring books I want to shout about. Go figure.

I had one book in my Top Five early on, the rest I had to look through my list a few times but I think I’m quite happy with my choice. Picture books I was substantially short on reading last year, but the ones I read were pretty great, just not as amazing as I have experienced in the past. Having said that, a couple snuck is as top reads of the year.

These are my top reads of 2023.

Imogen, Obviously by Becky Albertalli

This was a must read when I read the blurb and I am so glad it held up. There is a wonderful mix of queer rep in this story as well as a wonderful example of the dangers of being too defensive of labels, communities, and not allowing people to feel safe enough to explore who they might be. I love Albertalli exploring new environments to show it isn’t only high schoolers discovering who they are and taking chances. This university story follows Imogen as she takes scary steps to make new friends and adapt to changes in her world. The emotional and societal observations hit all the right notes and the characters bring this story to life making it feel universal despite the US setting.

 

Dracula Daily by Matt Kirkland

I have been talking about Dracula Daily for a couple years now and finally Kirkland released his book that brought together the amazing online community our year long read produced in 2022. This is the same classic story that has been around for a century but is told chronologically the way Dracula Daily produced via email. Instead of emails it’s now in one convenient place but it also includes the commentary from around the world. It also includes the jokes, the typos, the artwork, not to mention the in-depth analysis that made you realise the level of detail and depth in this classic that is often overlooked in film adaptations and what people assume the book is about. I loved both my reads of Dracula this way, and I love this book even more seeing how it brought people together to create something unique like this.

 

Royals by Tegan Bennett Daylight

I adored this book. Bennett Daylight balances the satisfaction of providing answers with keeping some mystery alive and it works phenomenally. There is an easy enough premise but I loved how this story is told and how things are revealed. The story of a group of teenagers trapped in a shopping centre has the potential to be so many things and Bennett Daylight hits them all. The characters are diverse and unique and they bring as much to the story as the environment does. I know I will be rereading this story a lot because I truly could never tire of this amazing story.

 

 

The Eleventh Hour by Clint McElroy

It’s a given these books are going to end up in my Top Five each year they are published. The team does a fantastic job translating this story from podcast to visual medium and they’ve smashed it once again. This a continuation of The Adventure Zone series and takes our trio of heroes onto their next adventure. For all the goofs, jokes, and magical D&D content, this a powerful story about consequence and how decisions we make impact our lives.

 

 

Maybe Next Time

A very clever take on the time loop trope and I loved how Major builds on what you expect from the trope to making it her own. There is heart and humour, but what I loved was how Emma deals with the world around her and how it would be easy to see fault in her but at the same time you understand the situation she is in. This didn’t go where I expected which was great and I loved going on the journey and seeing the characters evolve around the story.

 

 

 

Honourable mentions

If I See You Again Tomorrow by Robbie Couch

The First to Die at the End by Adam Silvera

 

PICTURE BOOKS

My Own Way by Joana Estrela

Piranhas Don’t Eat Bananas by Aaron Blabey

Including these books because they were so close to a 5 star it feels wrong not to include them, especially since I’m short.

I Saw Pete and Pete Saw Me by Maggie Hutchings

What Happened to You by James Catchpole

 

Don’t Call Me Bear by Aaron Blabey

Published: 1 January 2016Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Scholastic Press
Illustrator: Aaron Blabey
Pages: 32
Format: Picture Book
★   ★   ★   ★  – 4 Stars

This is the book for me because it highlights my own pet peeve about calling koalas koala bears. It frustrates me to no end, so I sympathise with this koala. It’s worse too because for all the people joking about it, or saying it knowing it isn’t true, there are people out there believing it. There can only be koalas. Unless there is some cross species with a drop bear that gets a koala bear sub species a koala is a koala is a koala.

But that is beside the point.

I am falling in love with Blabey’s rhyming style. I don’t recall liking it as much with the Thelma books, that was more typical picture book rhyme, and I certainly didn’t notice with Pig the Pug, probably because I dislike Pig the Pug so much I wasn’t enjoying any of it. But I’m glad I’ve finally started reading these books because I can learn to love Blabey instead for these remarkable picture books. I must track down some others and see if they are all this fun or whether there’s going to be hits and misses as I’ve already seen.

The writing makes this a great book to read aloud or to yourself, it flows wonderfully, you keep the rhythm going as the story read like a poem. Blabey gets the humour, the melody and the tone right even as his characters become exasperated and frustrated it still works perfectly.

It’s fascinating reading picture books and noticing how differently a story flows depending on the rhyme. There’s fast rhythms and ones that slow your pacing, then there’s some that read like a story but happen to have rhyming in it but you read it just the same. Then there’s others where you are compelled to change your tone and pace as you read, rhythm and speed changing on the various rhymes. It’s amazing how you can do so much with words on a page to make the reading experience different. This is why I like Blabey because even with rhymes in his books, they are all read in different ways with different rhythms.

What also makes this book great is it plays with the formatting, the font, and the size. The position of the characters and the layout of the full page illustrations all play into the reading experience. I adored the illustrations, they were cute, creative, and they told a story themselves. Koala is a great character, their frustrations and exasperation add to the delight of reading without ever become over the top. Their humour and temper work well, and being adorable in little outfits is always a bonus. There’s fun facts, there’s jokes and a little bit of history in there, but there’s also delight in watching the little koala try their best to educate and still falling short because it’s hard to escape how they look.

You can purchase Don’t Call Me Bear via the following

 QBD | Booktopia |

Dymocks | Angus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

The Return of Thelma the Unicorn by Aaron Blabey

Published: 1st October 2019Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Scholastic Australia
Illustrator: Aaron Blabey
Pages: 28
Format: Picture Book
★   ★   ★   ★  – 4 Stars

The world misses its favourite unicorn, but Thelma is reluctant to don her horn and sparkles again. However, with the support of her best friend Otis, she realises the importance of spreading love and joy — no matter what people think.

This is a great sequel because not only does it address Thelma’s ongoing desire to still be a unicorn and the apprehension she has given her experience last time, but it also solves the question about what the rest of the world did when their favourite unicorn suddenly vanished off the face of the earth.

Otis is back being Thelma’s number one fan and he is a great sounding board for what Thelma should do. He has a bigger role in this one and he is adorable in his love and affection for Thelma.

The argument Blabey makes is an interesting one. What did it matter that she wasn’t a real unicorn? She made people happy and isn’t making people happy a good thing? He balances it out though and Thelma has learnt from her past experiences because while she is scared, Otis grounds her and she remembers to also be herself, they can love her for being her.

Blabley great rhymes are back and I love how he uses the pages and the illustrations to work together in telling the story. There’s anticipation and suspense as you turn the pages, and the rhyming makes sense and with the right rhythm can be read with a nice flow.

The illustrations are big and bold with a lot of full pages and colour that stand out. There’s a few small, fun details too which are nice in the background. One thing Blabey can’t seem to decide on is whether Otis and Thelma wear clothes because seeing it switch from page to page is hilarious.

There is a pop culture reference in there which I get, but it was weird, but I can see people loving it. I think it was the accompanying illustration that weirded me out more than the eye rolling reference but I can’t complain because it’s a kids book after all.

There is a nicer message in this story because Thelma gets to keep being who she loves and she has found a balance in her life with a great support system around her. Otis and Thelma are an adorable pair and Blabey beautiful skirts around whether they are just friends or have gone further. I like he left it vague and I love that he has made a story where he shows Thelma’s dreams are indeed possible with the right kind of attitude and support.

You can purchase The Return of Thelma the Unicorn via the following

QBD | Booktopia | Book Depository

Dymocks | Wordery | Angus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

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