Book Read Free

A Prayer for Blue Delaney

Page 20

by Kirsty Murray


  My own parents, like the mums and dads of the 1950s, grew up in a depression and came of age during a war. My grandparents’ experiences were closer to those of Billy Dare, who was born in an era of horse and cart and yet died at the dawn of the space age. The children of the 1950s, the baby boomers, have shaped history and their stories are still a work in progress. Perhaps the most exciting stories, which are yet to unfold, belong to the children of today.

  Have you read

  the other books

  in the

  Children of the Wind

  series …

  Children of the Wind Book 1

  BRIDIE’S FIRE

  Bridie looked up at the swirling stars. It was as if the sky and the whole world was opening up before her. In her rough boy’s clothes, she wasn’t Bridie O‘Connor, an Irish waif. She wasn’t an orphan girl at sea, a stranger in a new land.

  She wasn’t even a servant any more. She could be a whole new Bridie. Nothing could quench the fire in her now.

  ‘Enticing and exciting . . .

  a masterpiece.’

  Stephanie, Year 9

  ‘A well crafted and finely

  tuned historical novel.. .

  a rollicking adventure.’

  Children’s Book Council,

  Notable Books 2004

  CBCA Notable Book 2004

  NSW Premier’s History Awards 2004

  (shortlisted for the Young People’s History Prize)

  WAYBRA shortlist 2005

  Children of the Wind Book 2

  BECOMING BILLY DARE

  On the road with a travelling circus, on the run with a wild child, and sleeping rough on the mean streets of Melbourne, Paddy learns to live by his wits. Each adventure brings him closer to discovering his true gift.

  ‘I really loved

  Becoming Billy Dare.

  These books just

  keep getting better.’

  Ruby Meredith, Year 10

  The Children of the Wind

  series is truly exhilarating.’

  David, 12

  ‘A thoroughly entertaining

  and authentic portrayal

  with well-realised and

  intriguing characters.’

  Children’s Book Council, Notable Books 2005

  CBCA Notable Book 2005

  OTHER BOOKS BY KIRSTY MURRAY

  Zarconi’s Magic Flying Fish

  Before he came to Zarconi’s, Gus didn’t even know

  he had grandparents, let alone ones who juggled knives

  and ate fire. Now he’s caught up in their world

  of magicians, stilt-walkers, tattooed tent-hands, elephant

  turds - and there’s a snake-girl who might become his

  best friend or his worst enemy.

  Winner WA Premier’s Book Award 2000

  (children’s book section)

  Market Blues

  One day Sam is a kid with a straightforward life,

  next moment he’s sucked into a time warp and flung

  back a hundred years. Meeting Flea, Gertie and the gang

  is just the start of a crazy adventure with Sam on the run

  from police, sleeping outside the morgue, laying bets

  on horse races, fighting thieves and larrikins. An accident

  in a shooting gallery confronts him with the hardest

  choice he’s ever had to make. Can he change

  the past - and his own future?

  CBCA Notable Book 2002

  Aurealis Award shortlist 2001

  Selected by the Australian Centre for Youth Literature as

  one of the 150 Most Treasured Victorian Books

  Walking Home with Marie-Claire

  Whether it’s spent wagging school or just hanging

  out on the beach, Marie-Claire can make any day an

  adventure. But why won’t she let anyone visit her house,

  and why won’t she listen when PJ tries to steer them

  out of trouble?

  CBCA Notable Book 2003

  WAYBRA shortlist 2004

  Tough Stuff

  True stories about kids and courage

  From the wolf girls of India to a teenage Olympic

  champion; from Iqbal Masih, the inspirational

  12-year-old crusader for human rights, to the Dalai

  Lama; from outback Australia to Auschwitz,

  Tough Stuff is packed with true stories that show

  what kids are really made of.

  It’s about children who protested, rebelled, prayed,

  saved lives, earned a fortune, lost everything, became

  world-famous, or survived war and oppression. It’s about

  kids making a difference in the adult world.

 

 

 


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