Penny Draws A School Play by Sara Shepard (Text Publishing). PB RRP $24.95 ISBN 9781922790408
Reviewed
by Kerry Gittins
Penny
thought things in Year 5 were going okay. With the help of her friends Maria,
Kristian, Petra and Rocco, and Cosmo her dog, she figures she can cope with
pretty much anything. And there’s always her doodling and her chats with Mrs
Hines, the Feelings Teacher if she gets a little anxious again. But little does
Penny know that life in 5th grade and at home is going to change in a BIG way.
She came
home from school one day in January and was told they were moving house! Her
mum was expecting twins, and they needed more room, so they had to move. But
Penny didn’t want to move away from her old house. What if the new owners were
messy or painted the walls hideous colours? What if one of the chandelier
crystals in her new room fell on her head in the middle of the night? What if
she couldn’t organise all her stuff for the movers in time?
Then the
5th grade replacement teacher Miss Kettle told the class everyone had to be
involved in the school play that her friend Petra had written. She wasn’t too
worried as she was cast as the bat and all she had to do was flutter. That is
until halfway through rehearsals, she found out the bat was also the narrator.
She would have to speak on stage!
And then
there was the problem with her new neighbourhood friend Chloe who hated her
friend Maria. How was she ever going to solve that? Problems were everywhere
and EVERYTHING was changing! What was she going to do?
In this warm, insightful, and at times laugh out
loud second book in the Penny Draws series, award winning author Sara Shepard
takes us along on Penny’s journey through the changes that rekindle her
anxiety. We are told in a simple and truthful way how this affects Penny and
her ability to cope. The strategy proposed by her Feelings Teacher, Mrs Hines,
doesn’t seem to work at first, and it is only as the story unfolds that Penny
realises how brave she has become and that everything will be okay. The concern
and empathy shown for Penny by her friends and family is the wonderful and
uplifting thread woven into the story that tugs at the heartstrings of the
reader and helps create a deeper understanding of the effects of anxiety.
Teaching themes could include anxiety, families,
friendship, acting, writing, diaries, dogs, coping strategies, and change.
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