Silent One, , Penguin Group New Zealand, Limited, 1986, 0140342036, 9780140342031, . .

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The Short and Bloody History of Highwaymen , John Farman, 2002, Juvenile Nonfiction, 96 pages. Presents a detailed account of the daily life of a highwayman, and introduces some of the famous men and women who earned their living as robbers in Great Britain in the ....

The Short and Bloody History of Pirates , John Farman, 2002, Juvenile Nonfiction, 96 pages. A humorous presentation of the history and life of pirates from the mid-seventeenth to mid-eighteenth centuries..

Once upon a village , Augustus Adebayo, Dec 31, 1988, , 108 pages. .

Up the Duff The Real Guide to Pregnancy, Kaz Cooke, 1999, , 480 pages. The one, the only brilliant Aussie bible on being 'up the duff'. Kaz gives you the up to date lowdown on pregnancy, birth and coping when you get home. No bossy boots rules ....

Man of straw , Joy Cowley, 1970, Fiction, 227 pages. .

Wizard for a Day , Sheryl Jordan, Dec 1, 1996, , 140 pages. Denzil borrows a spell to bring his friend, Samantha, back in time, but finds out he doesn't know how to send her home..

Wolf-woman , , 1994, Nature, 162 pages. Raised by wolves, then stolen by humans and forced into slavery, a young woman must choose between the world of animals and that of human beings..

The Short and Bloody History of Knights , John Farman, 2002, Juvenile Nonfiction, 96 pages. Presents information on various kinds of knights, the history of knighthood, the Crusades, tournaments, daily life, and more..

Joy Cowley writes , Joy Cowley, 1996, Biography & Autobiography, 24 pages. A brief biography of the children's author Joy Cowley and her life in New Zealand..

Snake and Lizard , Joy Cowley, , Sep 1, 2008, , 85 pages. Presents the adventures of Snake and Lizard, who, from their first meeting find themselves constantly arguing, but once they get to know each other, they realize they really do ....

The Silent One , Yvonne L. Hansen, Dec 1, 1997, , 144 pages. .

Dance Me to the End of Love , Leonard Cohen, Aug 15, 2006, , 32 pages. 10 years ago, Welcome Books published the star of its Art & Poetry Series, Dance Me to the End of Love, a deliriously romantic song by Leonard Cohen that was brilliantly ....

The mandrake root , Joy Cowley, Jan 1, 1975, Fiction, 309 pages. .

Mona Minim and the Smell of the Sun , , Robin Jacques, Aug 1, 1993, , 94 pages. A house ant gets taken by the garden ants when she wanders away from her nest and her advice when she returns home is that everyone must see the world for himself..

Fiji A Novel, Lance Morcan, James Morcan, 2011, , 282 pages. .

I read this book for Year 9 (Form 3) literature. This book is a great book for young teens and is beautifully written. The language used is very descriptive and a joy to read. While the story itself is not too different from other books written about young, islander adults, it stands out due to the beautiful language.

Joy Cowley, a fiction writer for children and adults, was born in Levin and educated at Palmerston North GHS and Pharmacy College. She has been published so widely and to such acclaim that she received a Commemoration Medal in 1990, the OBE in 1992 for her services to children’s literature, the Award Lecture in 1993 and an honorary doctorate from Massey University in 1993. In 2004, s...more Joy Cowley, a fiction writer for children and adults, was born in Levin and educated at Palmerston North GHS and Pharmacy College. She has been published so widely and to such acclaim that she received a Commemoration Medal in 1990, the OBE in 1992 for her services to children’s literature, the Lecture in 1993 and an honorary doctorate from Massey University in 1993. In 2004, she received the A W Reed Award for Contribution to at the Montana New Zealand Book Awards.

She has written 41 picture books, which include The Duck in the Gun (1969), The Terrible Taniwha of Timberditch (1982), Salmagundi (1985), and The Cheese Trap (1995). The Duck in the Gun and Salmagundi are explicitly anti-war books. She has been actively involved in teaching early reading skills and helping those with reading difficulties, in which capacity she has written approximately 500 basal readers (termed reading books in her native New Zealand).[citation needed]

Cowley was awarded a 1990 Commemoration Medal for services to New Zealand, and in 1992 she was awarded an OBE for services to children's literature.[4][5] The following year she was granted an honorary doctorate (D.Litt) from Massey University, and was awarded the New Zealand Suffrage Centennial Medal.[1][4] In the 2005 Queen's Birthday Honours List, Cowley was appointed a Distinguished Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit (DCNZM) for services to children's literature.[6]

In 2002, she was awarded the Roberta Long Medal, presented by the University of Alabama at Birmingham for culturally diverse children's literature.[1][4][11] In 2004, she was awarded the A. W. Reed Award for Contribution to New Zealand Literature, and in 2010, she won the Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement in the Fiction category.[4]

Cowley has won the overall Book of the Year award three times at the various incarnations of the New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards: first for The Silent One in 1982; then for Hunter in 2006; and finally for Snake and Lizard in 2008.[4][12] The latter two books were entered into the Junior Fiction category, in which she also won the category award for her books Ticket to the Sky Dance in 1998, Starbright and the Dream Eater in 1999, and Shadrach Girl in 2001.[4] Cowley also won the Children's Choice award in this category for Friends: Snake and Lizard in 2010.[4] She won the now defunct Fiction category in 1992 for Bow Down Shadrach, and the Picture Book category in 2002 for Brodie.[4] An additional five of her books have been short-listed as finalists in the Picture Book category at the awards, and an additional three in the Junior Fiction category.[4]

Cowley's book The Video Shop Sparrow was included in the 2000 White Ravens List, administered by the International Youth Library, and five of her books have been finalists for the from 1995 to 2010.[4] She won Best Script Television Drama at the 1994 TV Guide Television Awards for Mother Tongue, a 52 minute film shot in 1992, and set in 1953, about an 18 year old couple who fall in love — though the woman (played by Sarah Smuts-Kennedy) is Catholic, and the man (played by Craig Parker) is Jewish.[1][13][14][15]

Cowley has been married three times.[1] First at 20 years old to dairy farmer Ted Cowley, with whom she had four children: Sharon, Edward, Judith and James.[1] After their marriage ended in 1967, Cowley married Malcolm Mason, a writer and accountant who died in 1985.[1] In 1989, Cowley married her current husband, Terry Coles.[1] She lived with him, and an assortment of animals, for many years in the Marlborough Sounds, but in 2004 they moved to a wharf apartment in Wellington so Coles could be nearer medical services.[1] As Coles' health deteriorated, Wellington's stairs and traffic became too much for him, and the couple moved again to Featherston, where Cowley now lives.[1] She has 13 grandchildren and is still writing full-time.[1]

The Silent One is Jonasi, sent from the sea as a baby to grow up in an isolated Pacific village. Separated from the villagers by his silence and their prejudices, Jonasi finds solace in his underwater world where he develops a special relationship with a huge white turtle. However, the superstitious villagers see both Jonasi and the turtle as evil spirits. A series of natural disasters and a struggle for leadership within the village sweep Jonasi toward his strange destiny.

It's Christmas, and that means Mrs. Wishy-Washy wants her animals as clean as shiny new tacks. In fact, if they don't scrub themselves from foot to head before she returns from shopping, they won't get their presents! But it's sooo cold in the big red barn. Duck knows a better bath-one with warm water and pink bubbles. But if Mrs. Wishy-Washy finds out, they can kiss their Christmas presents good-bye!...

The 2013 Myer Christmas Animated Windows have been unveiled today in the Bourke Street Mall revealing a beautifully animated tribute to a much-loved children’s book, ‘Gingerbread Friends’. Myer CEO Bernie Brookes, alongside the Face of Myer, Jennifer Hawkins, unveiled the 2013 Myer Christmas Animated Windows to an excited crowd, eager to be amongst the first to see this year’s top-secret theme revealed.

Joy Cowley is a New Zealand language and reading specialist. She has written more than 500 books for beginning readers, many of which have been honored internationally. The Cheese Trap won the AIM Children's Book Award for Best Picture Book (1996) and Red-Eyed Tree Frog won the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Best Picture Book (1999). She has won New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards for Best Junior Fiction for Ticket to the Sky Dance (1998) and Starbright and the Dream Eater (1999). The Mouse Bride (1998) is being produced as an animated program for New Zealand television.

Kirkus Review - "The Silent One is a deaf, twelve-year-old foundling Jonasi--a pariah on his South Pacific island because the superstitious local folk ascribe sinister powers to him. His comfort is the sea, and now he has a second: a white turtle--a ""demon"" too?--that has taken to following him. Chiefs son Aesake, who has been away to school, knows that deafness is a natural condition and that the white turtle may be an albino; but he recognizes that the danger to Jonasi is also real (once, the islanders are about to use him for bait to catch the turtle)--so it's arranged for Jonasi to be sent away to a school for the deaf. Aboard the departing ship, however, the Native Affairs officer spies the white turtle following and wants it caught for its monetary value. As the man rages, Jonasi jumps overboard, and turtle and boy disappear. Some sense of locale (Cowley is a New Zealander)....."

The Silent One by Joy Cowley is a book that will touch your heart and help you gain a new understanding for those individuals who are different than you. Jonasi, a young islander had waited for the day when he would be allowed to go with the men of the village to hunt the wild pigs. When the day arrived Jonasi was all but accepted. The Silent One is captivating. To anybody who has ever been lonely and shut outside from the world around them, this book will reach you. Throughout the story you will cheer for Jonasi and pray for ! his well-being and safety. You will encourage his friendship with the white turtle and somehow write the ending of the story before you finish the book. Don't be surprised if you find yourself writing the same words the author did. For somehow we are all connected and want the same things for not only Jonasi, but for ourselves. The Silent One has my highest recommendations for any reader and especially the one who has once had a lonely heart yearning for a friendship that would take them away from one world into a better one. END

'There is something the matter with your voice.' 'Ga-runch! Ga-runch!' said Snake. 'I've got a frog in my throat!' she whispered. Lizard said, 'Oh, I know how to fix that, 'and he gave Snake a mighty slap on her back. The frog shot out of Snake's mouth. It landed in the grass and, quick as a blink, it hopped away. 'My supper!' cried Snake. 'That was my supper!'

Joansi is a uniquely gifted boy sent from the sea as a baby to grow up in an isolated Pacific village. Unable to speak, Joansi retreats to his underwater world where he develops a special friendship with a huge white turtle. But when Jonasi and the turtle are seen as evil spirits by the superstitious villagerss, Jonasi relaises there is only one way to save the turtle - and himself.

Shadrach is a very old circus-trained Clydesdale horse - and the favourite family pet. When Hannah discovers that Shadrach has been sold to a dog food factory, she decides to mount a heroic rescue and enlists the help of her two younger brothers. From the beginning their plans go seriously wrong. By the time they've argued with the repulsive Wuff Stuff man, hidden Shadrach in a church and a caravan, and floated him on a mussel barge they're in desperate need of rescuing themselves.

There are two new arrivals on the farm: Shadrach's young filly, Gladly, and a boy named Eden. Gladly is welcomed with open arms, but Eden's arrival, direct from a Social Welfare home, throws the family into turmoil. Hannah is carried away in a rush of optimistic generosity, and Mikey and Sky are deeply suspicious. Hannah is willing to share her family with Eden but is not prepared to share her precious horse. Sky and MIkey form a hostile alliance and Hannah copes by weaving wonderful new stories for Eden. But Hannah doesn't foresee that the invitation into her imaginary world will lead Eden and Gladly into great danger.

Hannah is now sixteen and looking forward to university. Sky and Mikey are growing up fast and Eden still has a close relationship with Gladly, Hannah's precious horse. But before Hannah farewells childhood forever, the family security is shattered. Their mother, Sophie, seems gravely ill and no one knows what to do. But when Mikey, Sky and Eden are pitted against the wild will of nature, each member of the family must search deep within to find courage. Will the spirit of Shadrach be strong enough to help them?

The Silent One is a mythological children's drama about the friendship between a deaf mute boy, Jonasi, and a rare white turtle. The boy's differences lead to suspicion from his Rarotongan village. When the village suffers drought and a devastating storm, the boy and turtle (also considered an ill omen) are blamed and ostracised. Adapted by Ian Mune from a Joy Cowley story, the beloved film was the first New Zealand dramatic feature to be directed by a woman (Yvonne Mackay). In the excerpt here, Jonasi is excluded from a boar hunt and first meets the turtle.

I was 14 yrs when this book was used in school as a Literature Novel and from that day on I loved the novel so much. Back in School after finishing the Novel we were shown the film "the Silent One" Till today I hold this book as a special memory and kept it with me for so long never to part with it. Its one of the famous book in schools back home in Fiji Islands. totally adored the movie. The book touches my heart.

McKay displays some audacious touches for a first-time filmmaker. [...]. Twenty-five years after its release, very little about the film has aged badly. [T]he overall impact is undeniable – The Silent One is a rare example of an indigenous culture being honoured onscreen with respect, emotion and insight. http://kgarch.org/813.pdf http://kgarch.org/hab.pdf http://kgarch.org/e3n.pdf http://kgarch.org/9a.pdf http://kgarch.org/8ka.pdf http://kgarch.org/8j9.pdf http://kgarch.org/d6g.pdf http://kgarch.org/10ff.pdf http://kgarch.org/84e.pdf http://kgarch.org/a79.pdf http://kgarch.org/3gn.pdf http://kgarch.org/a7a.pdf http://kgarch.org/c97.pdf http://kgarch.org/e7.pdf http://kgarch.org/b6d.pdf http://kgarch.org/113l.pdf http://kgarch.org/fe.pdf