Showing posts with label adult. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adult. Show all posts

Sunday, July 30, 2023

Review: The Things That Matter Most

Title: The Things That Matter Most

Author: Gabbie Stroud

Publisher: 1st August 2023 by Allen & Unwin

Pages: 368 pages

Genre: general fiction, adult, education, school

Rating: 4.5 cups


Synopsis:


The staff of St Margaret's Primary School are hanging by a thread. There's serious litigation pending, the school is due for registration, and a powerful parent named Janet Bellevue has a lot to say about everything. As teachers they're trying to remain professional, as people they're fast unravelling.


There's Tyson, first year out of uni and nervous as hell, Derek the Assistant Principal who's dropped the ball on administration, Bev from the office who's confronting a serious diagnosis, and Sally-Ann who's desperate for a child of her own.


Thank goodness for kids like Lionel Merrick. Lionel is the student who steals your heart and makes the whole teaching gig he's cheerful, likeable and helpful - and devoted to his little sister Lacey. But Lionel has a secret of his own. As his future slides from vulnerable to dangerous, will someone from St Margaret's realise before it's too late?


As secrets threaten to be exposed and working demands increase, each staff member begins to lose sight of the things that matter most.


A moving and compelling novel about teachers and their students by the acclaimed author of the bestselling books Teacher and Dear Parents.


My Thoughts


Being a teacher and, might I add a teacher at the end of her career, I have read and been impressed with everything Gabbie has written thus far about the teaching profession. Her books, Teacher and Dear Parents, were must reads. Gabbie has now extended her repertoire to a fiction novel and gosh! It is everything you could wish for and makes for compelling reading that will break your heart. 


‘You will fall in love in ways you didn’t even know … And you will fail. They should teach you that too. Somewhere very early on in the course. They should prepare you for it, make you do an assignment about it or write an essay. You will fail as a teacher. It is inevitable. Describe five ways you will deal with your certain and ongoing failure. Cite references. Three thousand words.’


Gabbie takes all her knowledge and experience from writing the previous two books and steps into the arena of molding it into a fictional tale that ticks all the boxes. This is a book for teachers, for parents, for the media and for society in general. This is a book with a plot that captures all the love and the loss, all the stress and the success - everything that encapsulates this profession. 


‘Forget the theorists and the child development. They should make it known that teaching is an emotionally exhausting way to make money. You should live with others so you can talk about your day and take it in turns to cook. That should be the very first thing at the very first lecture on the very first PowerPoint slide that they show you.’


Gabbie continues to pursue her advocacy for this wondrous profession and although the circumstance may be extreme and difficult to presume in reality, it's this hard stance and strong words and actions that have made Gabbie into the fighting voice she is for this embattled profession. All the topics and themes covered in her previous two books are here, wrapped around a fictional tale that shines a new and heartbreaking consequence of the strains on this current system. 


‘He’d been teaching for forty years, but suddenly now he had to prove he was accredited - accountable. He had to produce evidence to show he was doing his job, had to have data to justify his choices.’


There are a few debut fictional novel flaws. The main school stereotypical characters are there - graduate teacher, experienced teacher, empathetic teacher, the annoying parent …. even the grumpy office lady. Yet on top of that she endowed each of them with further personal issues which, for me, was just that one step too far. I would have preferred to concentrate on the many, many issues schools face on a daily basis without the marriage or health issues which pulled away from the main message.  Yes, they are connected but I did not want to lose focus from the main school based message. 


‘He also hated the change of plans. It happened all the freaking time. The one constant thing about teaching was change, he decided. Constant change. It messed with his head.’


Is this book perfect? No. Does she push the limits of what could really happen? Most certainly. But gosh it is a great effort and I hope Gabbie continues to pen further fictional tales along similar themes as it will take some time for her message to get across. Keep fighting the good fight Gabbie!


‘Teaching and caring are one and the same thing. People don’t realise that. They’re squeezing out the time we need for caring. It’s all documenting and accounting and data. It makes the job something else, takes away from the caring.’







This review is based on a complimentary copy from the author in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own. The quoted material may have changed in the final release.


 

Monday, February 21, 2022

Review: The Trivia Night

Title: The Trivia Night

Author: Ali Lowe

Publisher: 22nd February 2022 by Hachette Australia

Pages: 352 pages

How I Read It: ARC book

Genre: mystery, contemporary, adult

My Rating: 4 cups


Synopsis:


Question: How long does it take to tear someone's life apart?

Answer: Sometimes just one night.


From the outside the parents of the kindergarten class at Darley Heights primary school seem to have it all. Living in the wealthy Sydney suburbs, it's a community where everyone knows each other - and secrets don't stay secret for long.


The big date in the calendar is the school's annual fundraising trivia night, but when the evening gets raucously out of hand, talk turns to partner-swapping. Initially scandalised, it's not long before a group of parents make a reckless one-night-only pact.


But in the harsh light of day, those involved must face the fallout of their behaviour. As they begin to navigate the shady aftermath of their wild night, the truth threatens to rip their perfect lives apart - and revenge turns fatal.


THE TRIVIA NIGHT is agripping, domestic page-turner full of shocking reveals, perfect for fans of Liane Moriarty and Sally Hepworth.


My Thoughts


The Trivia Night is the debut novel by Australian, Ali Lowe. She cleverly mixes together the fallout from a fancy-dress trivia night at a primary school fundraiser. When a table of four couples - bringing grudges, angst, flirtations, rumours and ‘swingers’ to the table - a little too much alcohol loosens lips (in more ways than one!)


‘Honestly, guys, trivia night is quite literally the best night of the school year. I promise you: it’s going to be a night to remember! ’


Ali takes the dramas of primary school parents from a rich beachside town and brings them to life. Classic set up so far …. everyone knowing everyone else’s business and how the actions from this one night will change lives forever. From playground politics to a pact that will witness friendships, marriages and indeed lives pushed to the brink. 


The novel is told through the recollections of three of the women involved. First person narrative from Amanda who is new to the school; her friend Alice the events coordinator presented through the recorded notes from meetings with her psychologist; and Zoe in letters/emails penned to her sister. This provides the reader with a well rounded insight into each of the couple's lives - some you will like, some you definitely will not. This is what keeps it interesting throughout with highly engaging writing. 


One of the outcomes I was not expecting was the humour. It was truly funny in parts. From the overall big picture of competitive parenting, down to the nitty gritty of interactions and associations. Ali has her dialogue right on point in places. In complete contrast to this, are the varied serious subjects touched on throughout, particularly towards the end -  alcoholism, infertility, domestic abuse and suicide. Testament, I believe, to Ali’s craft in expertly combining the two. 


‘I looked behind me at the group of aghast faces in a cluster on the bottom step. Heard a stifled giggle and then saw Victoria emerge from the middle of the group like Roald Dahl’s Grand Witch, her face white and her eyes like fire.’


My only issue surrounds the ending - it just didn't quite make the mark for me. I don’t want to spoil it but it fell into the underwhelming, easy out, predictable box that took away one star. All up, however, The Trivia Night goes from a start of frivolous fun, to a darker and far more poignant journey each of the women follow. All up a perfect balance of humour, intrigue and drama. 


‘He was right, and we both knew it. Somewhere along the line we had become unstuck, I had become unstuck. But I wasn’t ready to talk to him about it. I wasn’t ready to own it.’






This review is based on a complimentary copy from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own. The quoted material may have changed in the final release.