Children of the Rush
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Angela Thompson
Publisher: | Dragon Brothers Books |
ISBN: | 9781991166807 |
Format: | Paperback |
Publication: | 2022 |
Ages: | Year 5-8 |
Themes: | NZ History, friendship, racism |
Highly Recommended
Reviewed by Angela Thompson
Opening sentence
WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT GIRL? It takes me a second to realise that the gold miner is speaking to me.
'Children of the Rush' is set in 1861 in Otago. Michael and Atarangi are both children grieving a lost parent, who first meet in Gabriel’s Gully, a gold mining settlement in Central Otago. Michael and his father are mining a claim. Atarangi and her mother work in the local hotel, which caters to miners. Michael and Atarangi both have special powers central to the plot.
Told in the first person by Atarangi and Michael in alternating chapters, they form a firm friendship and together investigate how so many miners are robbed of recently found gold.
From a historical point of view, the author documents racism towards Māori through the story of Atarangi and her mother. Michael’s story shares his struggle of being responsible for a grieving father and the family needing to relocate from Dunedin to Gabriel’s Gully, as well as how difficult mining for gold was at this time. The main characters' kindness, empathy for others and bravery shine through with the reader being able to see the story from two completely different viewpoints and perspectives.
I cannot wait to read this with my class, and delve into the local history Children of the Rush highlights for our part of Aotearoa. Common greetings and phrases in Te Reo Māori are shared between characters and it is so good to have a dyslexic friendly, larger font typeface in this novel. All that said, first and foremost this is a thrilling read that I could not put down. I am really looking forward to reading book 2 to see how these characters and the story develops. Such a great read!
Told in the first person by Atarangi and Michael in alternating chapters, they form a firm friendship and together investigate how so many miners are robbed of recently found gold.
From a historical point of view, the author documents racism towards Māori through the story of Atarangi and her mother. Michael’s story shares his struggle of being responsible for a grieving father and the family needing to relocate from Dunedin to Gabriel’s Gully, as well as how difficult mining for gold was at this time. The main characters' kindness, empathy for others and bravery shine through with the reader being able to see the story from two completely different viewpoints and perspectives.
I cannot wait to read this with my class, and delve into the local history Children of the Rush highlights for our part of Aotearoa. Common greetings and phrases in Te Reo Māori are shared between characters and it is so good to have a dyslexic friendly, larger font typeface in this novel. All that said, first and foremost this is a thrilling read that I could not put down. I am really looking forward to reading book 2 to see how these characters and the story develops. Such a great read!
Publisher: | Dragon Brothers Books |
ISBN: | 9781991166807 |
Format: | Paperback |
Publication: | 2022 |
Ages: | Year 5-8 |
Themes: | NZ History, friendship, racism |