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Issue Details: First known date: 1986-1995... 1986-1995 Magpies : Talking About Books for Children
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Issues

y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 36 no. 5 November 2021 23556868 2021 periodical issue It is a pleasure to have the shortened days of winter over and the warmer days of spring finally arriving. (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 36 no. 4 September 2021 23415210 2021 periodical issue 'There has been a whiff of 'back to normality' in the air as the book reviews flowing in from our reviewers in preparation for the September issue display a wide range of interesting content.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 36 no. 3 July 2021 22684668 2021 periodical issue 'There's nothing quite like a picture book for concise truths that reverberate with readers of all ages. Who hasn't, at the end of a class-reading of a new addition to a school or public library, experienced the call for 'more': 'more' of the story, 'more' of a collective sharing of a narrative, 'more' ways of 'seeing' the literary character lift stories to a new level.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 36 no. 2 May 2021 21989199 2021 periodical issue 'The days are shortening and the temperature dropping. Apart from sweeping up dead leaves he garden needs very little attention. The now very old cat Jeoffry is daily huddling up closer and closer to the heater. Our daily walks are shorter and no dawdling tolerated.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 36 no. 1 March 2021 21612911 2021 periodical issue 'Welcome to another year of Magpies with, despite a sense of 'unusual times', publishers are up and running, promising an interesting range of books on the way.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 35 no. 5 November 2020 21611464 2020 periodical issue 'I sometimes wonder if, in our reading life - including sharing favourite books with students, family and friends - we box ourselves into a little bubble of complacency and, on occasion, need to be jolted into widening our reading too.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 35 no. 4 September 2020 21610221 2020 periodical issue 'I have to admit that I like the solid feel of a bound book in my hands when embarking on a new reading adventure, despite the fact that I am an inconsiderate reader.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 35 no. 3 July 2020 21608932 2020 periodical issue 'Expecting to be caught in a general slow-down it is a pleasure to find ourselves still receiving books for review. One cannot overestimate the satisfaction of opening a parcel offering adventure beyond the front fence and ways into worlds well beyond our current situation.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 35 no. 2 May/June 2020 19762424 2020 periodical issue

'Swept along by history in the making we find ourselves in a new world that demands isolation: no leisurely gossiping, no warmth from a quick greeting hug, no sense of all's well.' (Editor's comments, Introduction)

y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 35 no. 1 March 2020 19761540 2020 periodical issue

'There is a certain feel to the first issue of Magpies for the year as we resettle into the rhythm of the process of sending out books to out reviewers, gathering together the ensuing reviews, placing them into the magazine and sending it off to the printer: all with the knowledge that behind every review and article is the accumulated experience of out panel of reviewers. What a comforting thought!' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)

y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 34 no. 5 November 2019 19761161 2019 periodical issue 'There is something different about the last journal for the year. There is, of course, the excitement of another year successfully negotiated: new titles have been added to the lexicon of children's books, some have bounced back onto bookseller and library shelves, others have slipped into retirement hopefully to reappear at a a future time in new garb as publisher's give them a new life.' (Editor's Comments, Introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 34 no. 4 September 2019 19760412 2019 periodical issue

'Clearing my old 'things to do/think about' folder, I came across an email from Jo Goodman who sadly passed away some years ago. It was brief: Here's an anecdote for you: bloke in overalls and work boots, books under arm, seen whizzing up the steps to Eltham Library. Gets to 'self-opening doors', stops and calls out, 'OPEN SESAME' - and it worked! They opened!'

(Editor's Comments, Introduction)

y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 34 no. 3 July 2019 17193856 2019 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 34 no. 2 May 2019 17193473 2019 periodical issue 'I am not one who takes much notice of 'truisms' printed on tea towels but a gift of one that read, If you have a garden and a library you have everything you need, quoting no less than Cicero, underlined the idea that wisdom, or comfort or just plain enjoyment of something that tickles our fancy can be found in some very odd places. The accompanying illustration is just right, featuring—as it does—a minimalist garden built around an old tree that is providing a backrest for a person engrossed in a book. For me, the icing on the proverbial cake is a single magpie staring at the reader, prompting the idea that perhaps it is reading aloud to the viewer, sharing the wit and wisdom to be found in it: or perhaps it is a story involving a romance, or daring-do, or it may have any one of the attributes of the almost infinite number of books that are there to be found and read.' (Editorial introduction)
 
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 34 no. 1 March 2019 17193249 2019 periodical issue We tend to look less to nonfiction to find exemplars of literary, even poetic, writing than we do to fiction, yet opening the first of John Edwards two volume work John Curtin's War it is immediately obvious that nonfiction can be equally a hallmark of that genre: it begins with a description of a photograph of Curtin and his first ministry taken in October 1941: in this photo he cannot hide the cast in his left eye by looking down or turning side-on to the camera... we know Curtin is in his good blue suit not only because it is the one he usually wears on formal occasions but also because he has only three, and this is neither the brown nor the blue with the white pencil stripe ... of his six ties he has chosen one that is plain and dark. With that masterly and engaging summary we, the readers, learn that Curtin was aware of the importance of image and we can see that the man had flaws and had developed stratagems to control them. And, when we read down the page Edwards tells us, accurately, that we cannot see what he is but we can see what he is not. No grandeur, no triumph. All words that go to the heart of the man. (Editorial introduction)
 
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 33 no. 5 November 2019 17150973 2019 periodical issue 'This edition of Magpies is the last that Julie and Colleen, our friends and compilers of the NZ section of Magpies, will be responsible for. Sadly, their decision to step down is due to issues of health. I remember receiving a letter from Julie 25 years ago out of the blue saying that her parents owned a children's bookshop in Auckland and she always looked forward to receiving their copy of Magpies and thought it would be of interest to many of their customers. Who could receive such a warm letter and not respond? We knew little about New Zealand other than it was beautiful and very green. We soon learned that it is a society that values education and reading and that many of their writers and illustrators, including Margaret Mahy, Joy Cowley and Gavin Bishop amongst many, were well known to librarians and children around the world.' (Editorial introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 33 no. 4 September 2018 17150765 2018 periodical issue 'We are all aware of the value of literature in the process of developing imaginative thought and for the many interpretations of the world around us, including both intimate and those played out in a multiplicity of societies - not to mention the pleasure of reading as an occupation.' (Editorial introduction)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 33 no. 3 July 2018 17043317 2018 periodical issue As I watched a toddler the other day who seemed, not so much struggling to communicate, as savouring the taste of the words he rolled around his tongue, it occurred to me that language is indeed a gift. Not a tossed-in sort of gift to go along with arms and legs, but something of almost unlimited use. (Editorial)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 33 no. 2 May 2018 17028695 2018 periodical issue Who could resist a book with the title The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu and Their Race to Save the World's Most Precious Manuscripts? It called out to be read and the prologue didn't wast time in setting the scene (and atmosphere) with a classic spy/detective set up of a road block and the protagonist, Abdel Kader Haidara, fearful of losing his cargo (not to mention his life). That cargo consisted of thousands of illustrated manuscripts on vellum dating back hundreds of years. (Editorial)
y separately published work icon Magpies : Talking About Books for Children vol. 33 no. 1 March 2018 17023472 2018 periodical issue

On an escalator heading for the second floor of a hopping centre recently, not thinking of much, my eye wandered over the wall tat bordered it. It was painted in a shade of warm beige but what caught my attention was an elegant piece of typographical design painted on it that was obviously not graffiti. In large white lettering it simply read 'Books show us how to live'. Nothing else. No advertising. Just a simple sentence that lifted the heart and to which I kept returning at odd moments of the day.

What a sweeping statement! What a place to find it! How to interpret the message?

I think books are sly things that certainly do contribute to an understanding of just about everything but, apart from nonfiction, often in ways that are not obvious. Picture books not only cover a multitude of life experiences from seeing yourself in characters that may, for younger readers be an animal, or a child just like themselves, and for older readers provides an experience that allows them to walk in another's shoes. Who doesn't appreciate the depiction of friendship, familial love and burgeoning self reliance that pervades many picture books through the simple act of naming things, or, at a later stage engaging with characters in early readers and then in novels as they experience life at different ages. How many children have learned of lives unlike their own, to value diversity, to see themselves in particular characters and perhaps benefit from reading about others that are different. It would certainly be unusual (if not down-right disappointing).

And then there is fantasy that technically is not 'real' but in which life is writ large and characters, whilst seemingly different, in fact live by codes of behaviour that may reflect our own, or, be so different that it makes us reassess our own.

Nonfiction for children, a more obvious form of learning, comes in many formats: narrative, point and identify, encyclopaedic and a vast range of educationally based material. The subjects they cover are vast, as is the physical presentation of the books themselves.

Taken together, story and the books that contain them, play a very large part in our lives. (Editorial)

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