June 21

‘Rat Catcher’ by Chris Ryan

Rat catcherDo you like a book that ignites and excites you? If so, I think that the book ‘Rat Catcher’ by Chris Ryan is the book for you. This book is set in South America in the city of Quito. Poverty is a big problem in this city and many kids are roaming on the streets. These kids have to deal with even worse problems because there is a very evil, bad man named Rat Catcher and this man thinks that these streets kids are worth nothing.   Team Alpha are a bunch of the most intelligent kids in the world who protect kids on the street from the Rat Catcher.

This book was thrilling and exiting because it made you sit on the edge of your seat. I got glued to the book when the kids were in danger because it was entertaining, such as when Paulo, one of the members of the Alpha team, goes undercover as a homeless child and she meets a girl named Eliza who get abducted and she then decides to go with her. This part of the novel was very exiting because the team has to stop the rat as well as save Paulo.

I really liked this book because it was full of action and thrills and if you like that you would definitely love this book. Chris Ryan does a great job in this book to keep the reader entertained. When more books are released I think that they will be very entertaining and fun to read.

By Nash A., Year 8

November 20

‘Back on Track’ by Margaret Clark

BACK on trackThis is a true story about a girl living a tougher life than most of you reading this now. Her name is Simone. She lives in a violent home and she is only 15 years old. Simone met a boy who promised her a new life, a good life. He wants to take her with him to the city to get away from her sister and her sister’s violent boyfriend, both of whom are drug addicts.

Simone is a very tough young girl who won’t let anyone treat her wrongly and is determined to turn her life around with the help of a boy that she has met and had ‘love at first sight’ with.

This is a beautiful story full of many emotions such as surprise, happiness, sadness and it even involves fear with unexpected events within her personal life and friends that she comes across throughout her journey.

Back on track will really make you think about what you have that makes your life easier and what you may take for granted that many people like Simone and her family might actually need more than you.

Be warned – if you pick this book up you will not be able to put it back down until you’ve finished because it is so interesting and I found this true story about a girl and her life more intriguing than any fiction book about wizards or secret agents.

This story had an effective use of realism to really put the reader in Simone’s shoes. It may not be as relatable as possible, but it still makes you feel sympathy and empathy. When Simone talked about her life with her family it makes you feel more grateful for the family that you have.

Arjun, Year 9

November 5

‘Back on Track’ by Margaret Clark

BACK on track      Say hello to Simone Fawkner. She is in the 9H from hell at Roxdale High School. She is in that class for a reason, and that reason is that she is emotionally and socially disadvantaged. She is not your typical type of girl. She gets into trouble with the law and her only friends are drugs. At the moment she is in a pretty rough state. Do you think she will ever get back up on two feet?

     Does this sound like your type of book? Then ‘Back on Track’ is the book for you.

     In the suburb of Roxdale, things aren’t starting out well for Simone. She has just witnessed her mother’s death in her favorite armchair, with a bottle of whisky beside her. To this point Simone’s life was a wreck and Simone got to the point of not bothering with life anymore. What she has left is all this guilt in her stomach because she believes that she killed her own mother. Simone now lives with her older sister. She has a troubled life at home, as she gets abused by her sister’s boyfriend for no apparent reason, but she believes he has a drinking problem. All she thinks is that she needs someone to love her. Later on she meets a young, beautiful and superstitious guy. His name is Mike. They text and call 24/7 until one day he randomly stops calling and texting. Simone is getting frustrated and moves to a big city called Palmino where she believes Mike lives. Through the middle of the book she meets a gang in Palmino. The head leader, Grace, introduces Simone to her group. At first they didn’t like Simone but after a while they started liking her. Towards the end of the book she was faced with many challenges. Some of the challenges were: getting raped twice, drug addiction, getting pregnant and losing some of her closest friends.

 

I really enjoyed the book, ‘Back on Track’ because it’s a story about a young girl who has a troubled life, but she never gives up no matter what stands in her way. I was attached to this book by the way Margaret Clark describes the scenes and places. This book always kept me interested, as there was always something new and exciting on the next page. I would recommend this book to young teens that are interested in crime and thriller novels. This book was truly a great read and I would love to read other books by Margaret Clark. I would rate this book 3 out of 5 star.

 

Courtney L., Year 9

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     Where would you go? What would you do? How would you react?

     These are all questions you would have to face in Margaret Clark’s novel, ‘Back on Track’.

     The novel setting varies from chapter to chapter, from the little run down town of Palmino NSW, to the paradise city of the Gold Coast, QLD.

     The main character of the novel is from a broken family. Her mother has passed away and her father is nowhere to be seen. She knows that she has to fend for herself, there’s trouble around each and every corner, and she knows this and has to survive the life of being a dreaded ‘townie’. 

     Throughout the novel, it poses different questions to you and keeps you connected. These questions can range from you thinking what she is going through, and what is she thinking. Is she losing it?

     This novel kept you enthralled throughout, from the complex descriptive language to each and every twist, it keeps you engaged and craving for more. If you’re into heavy drama, true stories and an edgy plot then this is the book for you. I would advice this novel to either man or woman, above the age of 15 as it possesses its own descriptive language and can be somewhat dark at times. This book will keep you on the edge and wanting more. It makes you wonder where she’s going to go next, what she’s going to do and most importantly, will this young girl ever get back on her feet and ‘Back on Track’.

 

Kurt M, Year 9

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Drugs, rape and abuse – three things that we don’t want to suffer in our lifetime. Back On Track written by Margaret Clark explains all three of these actions. Say hello to Simone Fawkner, a girl with an awful past.

‘Why does this happen to me?’ She asks herself all the time. Back On Track is set in a high school at the start of the book and moves its way around Australia.

  Simone Fawkner is a 15-year-old girl attending Roxdale High School in class 9h for the emotionally and social disadvantaged. Things are getting bad for Simone lately. First her mother dies, then she gets abused, moves to Palmino with her so-called ‘boyfriend’ and many more events happen.

  Her new boyfriend lures Simone with promises of a better life if she moves to the big city with him, running away from home where her drug addicted sister and her sister’s abusive boyfriend live. She arrives in Palmino with hope that she can start over. But no, that wouldn’t make the book interesting, would it now? No. What happens when her boyfriend turns abusive? She will have to learn the ways of living on the street with her gang.

 I enjoyed this book very much and I think that you would too. Read along with Simone and discover her life and how she works to make her future better. I recommend this book to teenagers and young adults.

– Rebekah

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     Meet Simone, a fifteen year old that’s been through more than most do in their whole lives. Mom’s dead, living on the street, and addicted to drugs. Life’s tough but Simone is tougher and she is back on track. If this seems like the book you would want to read about for days straight using every bit of spare time you get to read then ‘Back on track’ is the book for you!

     Life isn’t easy for Simone, 15 years of age and already her dad has run away, her mom has died and she can’t count on her older sister for a place to call home because her boyfriend beats them up.  Simone gets hooked up with this boy through her friend and she falls for him almost instantly. He tells her he loves her and can give her a fresh start if she comes and lives with him in Palomino. She gets his number and sleeps on it. The next morning she is packed and on a train, so excited! No more school! No more sister’s boyfriends! Just her and her new boyfriend Mike.

     She gets off the train it is pouring rain and she can’t find Mike anywhere. Arriving at the youth camp she gets confronted by a girl called Grace they end up having a punch up then becoming best friends. Grace takes Simone under her wing until Simone finally meets Mike again. But it doesn’t go how she expected. Mike and his mate lock her in a car and take advantage of her violently. She ends up pregnant, addicted to drugs and the most well known bikie in town is keen on her. But that’s not going to stop Simone. She gets her life back on track goes back to school and studies hard.

     I really enjoyed this book because it was so realistic and it is a side of society that doesn’t get exposed often enough. My eyes were glued to this book for hours straight by the way Margaret Clark described the scenes but didn’t describe the characters too much so that your imagination was allowed to run wild with it. I would recommend this book to teenagers and young adults although it is suitable for persons from 14 years up.

Sam, Year 9

June 11

‘Mission: Rat-Catcher’ by Chris Ryan

Rat catcherA.L.P.H.A FORCE

        RAT CATCHER by CHRIS RYAN

 

“He opened the compartment in the dashboard and took out dull, black, snub-nosed pistol with a silencer screwed onto the end of the barrel.” –  Rat Catcher by Chris Ryan.

     Do you like books that get you on the edge of your seat? If so, this may just be the book you’ve been waiting for. The book ‘Rat Catcher’ is set in the great marvelous city of Quito. The city Quito is amazing as a city but has major poverty problems especially with street kids.

     But now street kids have to deal with more than just hunger. They have to deal with a man known as the rat catcher. The rat catcher is an evil mad man who believes street kids are rats and have no right to live but not only is he the rat catcher he’s also someone alpha force trusts and someone who is their nemesis.

     Alpha force is a professional team made of some of the most intelligent kids on earth; these members are Alex, Li, Paulo, Hex and Amber. Together they are the alpha force. Alex is the one with great leadership skills. Li is fearless and determined. This is shown very well when Paulo goes missing. Paulo is the one who goes out solo. Hex is the hacker for alpha force. Amber’s the one who keeps the team together because alpha force is all she cares about after her parents died.  Together the alpha force goes on a terrifying mission to catch the evil drug baron but then they find out the rat catcher is linked to this.

Overall this book was fantastic and it would be hard to find another action packed thrill that’s better than this so I’m giving this book five stars.

 

Reporting in Daniel D., Aquinas student    

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‘Five kids form an elite team of youngsters brought together to battle injustices in the world. Together they join a covert SAS operation in south america, fighting to catch an evil drugs baron. And together they infiltrate a tight-knit community of street kids to gain information, then head up into the isolated mountains where a terrifying and twisted hunt is to test their individual skills to the max. The team is in action…’ – (Blurb of ‘Rat-Catcher’ book.)        

     Join Alex, Li, Paulo, Hex and Amber as they fight an evil drugs baron that kidnaps children. When the capital city of Ecuador, Quito is threatened, the ALPHA force decides to step in and save the city. Their own special skills will be put to the challenge as they spy on street kids to find out who the rat catcher and the drugs baron really are. The rat catcher is a dangerous killer, and must be stopped before he annihilates all the street kids in the large city of Quito. These youngsters must grow up fast if they want to stop the drugs baron from kidnapping street kids, or put a stop to the ‘rat catcher’ that kills street kids without a second thought of what he might be doing. The ALPHA force must use each of their special abilities if they wish to stay alive during the mission, let alone complete it. The question is – will they make it without the help of an adult?

     This epic book by Chris Ryan is one of his best so far. And, like all his other great books, has the awesome thrill all through the book. I recommend this book to children and teens of 10 to 18 years old who like thrilling, action packed books. This was a great book. I would rate it 4 out of 5 stars.
– Rod Oliver, year 8

November 6

‘Back on Track: The Diary of a Street Kid’ by Margaret Clark

‘No place like home. But what if home is unsafe and violent?’ (Back on Track: Diary of a Street Kid, by Margaret Clark)

The story is set in the streets, where a girl, Simone, aged 15, used to live with her older sister, but she got tired of all the harassment from her sister’s boyfriend, having no friends at talk to, no one to hang out with. So she moved out. She was lured by Mike, her so called boyfriend, to a new big city to live happily together but that didn’t happen. Before she moves, at her school an author came to her school and told everyone in her class that starting a diary is good for letting out information that is troubling you and that’s what she did, so this book is written in diary entries.

Her new life involved living on the streets, in drains, and old abandoned houses, living on little food and water, but yet having enough money to have drugs and alcohol. Simone has nightmares about her mum’s death mostly every night.

I enjoyed reading the book because it has explained to me what can happen in an older teenager’s life, that drugs and alcohol are really bad for you and that bad things can happen if you’re not careful.

This book would suit the ages 13 and up because it can be a bit rude for younger ages but 13 year olds would understand it. This book can be either a boy’s or girl’s book but probably more of a girl’s book. I do believe this can be an inspirational book to teach people about what happens when you do the wrong thing.

Shae, Year 9

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Back on track, a story written by Margaret Clark, is a about a girl who runs off with a boy called Mike and becomes involved in a world of drugs and violence. The main character is fifteen years old Simone who ran away from home because she hated it. Simone lives with her auntie because her mother died about eight months earlier. As well as hating home life, she’s hating school as well and is convinced by her boyfriend Mike to fun away with him. The story is set in the big city of Palmino.

The book is her diary about the new things that are happening to her and around her while living on the streets. I recommend the story for girls and boys aged 13 and up who like books based on true life stories. I enjoyed reading this book and believed it should be read because it tells us not to get attached to that lifestyle. We need to make the right decisions in life otherwise the consequences could be damaging to us and the people around us.

Jessica year 9

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It all started when Simone’s aunty got brutally hurt, when her mum committed suicide, when she was having nightmares about her mum, wanting to find her dad and maybe even going out looking for her brother or sister?

Simone wanted to leave the house. She was going to meet up with her so-called boyfriend Mike Walton at the train station. She waited and he never showed up. Simone is a girl who lost everything: her mother, father, sister, brother, everyone. Her aunty was there for her all the way, until that night it all changed; the phone call, the fighting, everything! Simone was another normal teenager.

I like this book because it was actually really interesting, at first I thought it was another typical teenage book that everyone releases, trouble with family, went to live on the street, instead goes back home because they can’t live like that same old… but this story was a bit over the limit. It tells a story, but also make sure that you don’t give it to children that are under the age of 13.

Natala, Year 9

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I really liked the book, ‘Back on track: diary of a street kid‘ because it was a true story about a 15 year old girl named Simone Fawkner who attended Roxdale High School, and lived in the Melbourne suburb Palmino with her mum. One day after she came home from school she found her mum dead in their house. She then had to go and live with her aunty, whose boyfriend is a drug user and alcoholic. A few weeks after living with her aunty she decided to meet up with a guy who she is in love with and they had only meet briefly before. She then soon finds out that he is not the nice guy she thought he was and that he was only using her. She is then left to live on the streets with the other street kids and is forced to make a living by thieving from shops and people’s cars.

The story always had my full attention, which made it even easier to imagine the scenes playing out in my head.

I recommend this book for teenagers to young adults maybe between the ages of 13 to 19 or maybe even older who are interested in true story and edgy novels.

Maddy, year 9

May 10

‘Mission: Rat-catcher’ by Chris Ryan

The team is in action!

The story is set in South America. The Alpha Force head up into the isolated mountains to stop the evil drug baron. The main characters in the book are Alex, Li, Paulo, Hex and Amber, five kids from an elite team of youngsters, who join a covert SAS operation in South America, fighting to catch an evil drug Baron.

I liked this book because it was a adventure and thrill book with a small group of people and I like those type of books.

I would recommend this book from the ages 11-15 just because it is a really confusing book.

Alby, Year 8

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May 16

‘Sink or Swim’ by Ron Bunney

sink or swimThis book is about a kid who is homeless and he goes around stealing food just to survive, but one day he gets caught by a guy called Earl. Instead of Earl calling the cops he offers the kid a job on his fishing boat and lets the kid live in his shack. This changes the kid’s life and gives him somewhere safe to sleep. I thought this book was interesting but repetitive. There is no real change in the story. I would rate this book seven out of ten and recommend it for ages 9+. It is a good book but it is not a great book. Peter, Year 8

‘Sink or swim’ is about a homeless kid who robs people for food and supplies, eventually gets hired and gets fishing management from a man called Earl.  This book would be recommended for ages 10+ This book wasn’t really my type of book but it was a decent book to read. The book is about changing a life. There is no change in the moral of the story. My opinion of its rating would be 6 out of 10 so far. This book didn’t have a good introduction but as I read further into the book I hope it will become a better book. Alfred, Year 8

May 9

‘Mission: Rat-catcher’ by Chris Ryan

Rat catcherI’m not too keen on teenagers, but the teenagers in the book are exactly like people you see every day. They confuse you and have no idea what they are talking about. As much as I dislike teenagers, the way the teenagers in the book work together is incredible. I did enjoy reading the book because of the action in it and the thrill. The more I read the more I can not put it down. Griffin, Year 8
 

I enyoyed the sci-fi novel ‘Rat Catcher’ so much that I am reading it again. This is a serious book yet I was reading 30mins a night and I was never bored. There are two points that I’d like to make. Firstly, I understood the action. The writer Chris Ryan gave intenses description of movement and climbing in the mountain, in freezing conditions. He writes so well because he is an ex-SAS hero and he had many remarkable experiences. Lastly,in the first chapter I felt interested because the Alpha Force were training how to enter a building without getting caught. This is different from any type of training that teenagers would be familiar with so it was interesting. By Chris, Year 8

http://www.chrisryanadventures.co.uk/