Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Meet us @ Children's Book Council of Australia conference - Sunday 4 May 2008

Kevin Patrick and Doug Holgate, the dynamic duo behind the Amazing Australia book series, will be appearing at the Children's Book Council of Australia's (CBCA) 9th national conference and expo, to sign copies of their books, Prehistoric Australia and Airborne Australia.

This year's event, held under the banner, All the Wild Wonders, will "explore the various dimensions of children’s books from the craft of the writing, to the illustrator’s art, to the importance of the publisher’s final production."

The CBCA conference, is being held at the Melbourne Exhibition and Convention Centre, 2 Clarendon Street, Southbank.

Kevin and Doug will be appearing between 1.30pm-2.00pm inside the You Yangs Exhibition Hall on Sunday 4 May to meet people attending the trade fair component of the conference, and sign copies of their books. So, be there, or be...umm....perpendicular?

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Return of the Nomad?

The April - June 2008 edition of Aero Australia magazine contained an intriguing news item, which claimed that Gippsland Aeronautics was seeking to purchase the manufacturing rights to the Nomad STOL (short take-off and landing) aircraft from Boeing Australia.

The Nomad was a controversial, although some say needlessly maligned, aircraft designed and built by the Government Aircraft Factory (GAF) in Australia. Design work on the aircraft commenced in the mid-1960s, with the first prototypes taking flight in 1971.

Intended for use by military and commercial operators, the Nomad was built to operate successfully from rugged environments, and could even be flown as a seaplane. However, the aircraft's history was plagued by a series of fatal accidents, and was subject to ongoing criticism about its allegedly major design flaws.

Despite being sold to several military services and civilian operators throughout Asia and Australia, eventually only 170 Nomad aircraft were built, before production ceased in the early 1980s. In 1985, the Government Aircraft Factory was renamed Aerospace Technologies of Australia (ASTA), and continued to operate under that name for a decade, until it was sold off by the Australian government in 1995 to Rockwell Systems Australia which, in turn, was purchased by Boeing Australia in 1996.

Both the GAF Nomad and the Gippsland Aeronautics GA8 Airvan are featured in Airborne Australia. It will be fascinating to see if this news story, as reported in Aero Australia, develops further. Who knows? If a follow-up edition of our book appears down the track, we might need to make space for a new, improved 21st century Nomad!

Interested readers should check their local library to see if they have a copy of Aero Australia Issue 2 (April - June 2004), which has an excellent article, 'Nomad: The Unwanted Child', written by the magazine's editor, Stewart Wilson, that charts the aircraft's troubled history. (Image courtesy of the Aeroplane Art Company)

We accept the Premier's Reading Challenge!

We were tickled pink to learn that Airborne Australia was one of the new book titles to be included for the Victorian Premier's Reading Challenge for 2008. The book was even featured in the special lift-out which appeared in The Age newspaper on Monday 7 April.

This event, now in its fourth year, is open to all Victorian school students from Prep to Year 10, and is designed to encourage schoolkids to broaden their reading horizons.

So, for example, school students from Years 3 to 10 must read 15 books between 30 January - 31 August 2008, with at least 10 of those books to be chosen from the Reading Challenge booklist. (Just make sure that Airborne Australia is one of the titles you choose, okay? Heh, heh, heh...)

You'll need to be a registered user at the Premier's Reading Challenge website, and log-in regularly to keep an online record of your reading throughout the event. and everyone who successfully completes the Challenge will receive a certificate of achievement from the Victorian State Premier, John Brumby (pictured above).

If you haven't already signed up, then get onto it straight away. And start re-reading Airborne Australia as a form of pre-Challenge training. Harrumph!