Reviews

The Book That Made Me: A Collection of 32 Personal Stories by Judith Ridge

angelofmine1974's review against another edition

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informative inspiring medium-paced

3.0

My review of this book can be found on my YouTube Vlog at:

https://youtu.be/2CvDcAYuU-o

Enjoy!

gabbyreadswithtea's review against another edition

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4.0

Glad I finally picked this up! Gave me a lot of insight to some of my favourite authors, and ones I want to make an effort to read from.

Sixth book read for The Reading Rush

librarybrooke's review against another edition

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emotional funny hopeful inspiring reflective fast-paced

4.0

nerfherder86's review against another edition

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3.0

An anthology of essays by Australian and New Zealand authors about the books they read (mostly as children or teens) that strongly influenced them to become writers, or that showed them characters like themselves, or just had a big impact on their lives. A few of the authors I recognized and have read their work, such as Marcus Zusak, Mal Peet, Shaun Tan, Randa Abdel-Fattah, Jaclyn Moriarty, and Kate Constable. The others were not familiar to me, and all of the essays make references to some Australian books and writers that I had to look up. But it was an interesting mix of essays. Each is accompanied by a childhood photo of the author, which was adorable! Shaun Tan's contribution is several cute cartoons of aliens and goofy characters all reading, answering the question "Why do you read?"--"I never know what I'll find!" or "I'm recharging my imagination," etc. And I liked Queenie Chan, the graphic novelist's segment, which illustrates her story about "cousin Munn" the doctor, who gave teen Queenie a manga about a real doctor. Up til then she hadn't realized you could do nonfiction in manga style. A couple of the essays are about books they discovered as adults, however, which to me wasn't as effective to include in a book aimed at kid and teen readers. But overall, a nice anthology.

cassie_the_weird's review against another edition

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5.0

Very enjoyable.

Full review coming soon

nerdy_birdy01's review against another edition

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4.0

I skimmed and read a lot of the essays. It’s quite refreshing. I really enjoyed this book

wordshaker12's review against another edition

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4.0

Generally a lovely anthology on books, reading and writing. I particularly liked the range - while there was a focus on children's literature, there were also writers who discussed spoken stories/tradition, picture books/graphic novels and discovering books at an older age. It's a bit hit and miss if you're not necessarily familiar with each specific book mentioned (though lots of my favourites were so yay!), but I do love the handy reference list at the back.

My favourites: Queenie Chan, Allison Croggon, Kate Constable, Cathy Cassidy, Ambelin Kwaymullina, Markus Zusak and Shaun Tan's illustrations!

babyleo's review against another edition

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2.0

A version of this review was published on Lost in a Good Book

I picked up this book because there were stories from authors that I love to read and the premise sounded really interesting. There’s always a risk with anthologies that a reader won’t enjoy all the stories equally and unfortunately this was the case for me. Sometimes it is only a few but I found with this collection I couldn’t engage with a lot of the stories. I wanted to enjoy them, I wanted to read about what books had an impact on these writers but I struggled to get through many of the stories. This may be my own personal issue and perhaps it was because they were personal essays and not fictional stories, but I kept putting the book down and finding reasons to skim.

I shouldn’t be too harsh, there are 32 stories in this anthology and some certainly were engaging; they were humorous and fascinating stories about how a single book, whether it was a massive dislike or a fascination with a concept, changed how the author saw the world and shaped who they wanted to be. Will Kostakis told how his hatred of a set book in primary school inspired him to write his own story, Benjamin Law wrote how he fell in love with Roald Dahl and reading things ten year olds probably shouldn't be reading, while so many more mentioned that books were their treasures and offered them an escape. There were stories from indigenous authors and how their culture and stories impacted them, and there’s also voices from minorities in Australia who talk about never seeing themselves in books and how the culture of their parents affected the books they were exposed to.

These stories opened my eyes to how different people had access to different books, some read the same books I had read as a kid, and certainly the age ranges between these authors offered a wider range of books again. The reasons how and why these books made an impact were interesting in themselves, I only wish I enjoyed more of them.

The format was not only essays, there were lists, comics, dot points, poems, and a few people had more than one book that shaped them. A nice surprise were the Shaun Taun illustrations sprinkled throughout. Tan asked random strangers why they read and seeing the responses sprinkled throughout with an accompanying sketch was an adorable and entertaining way to break up the stories.

Even though it wasn’t my favourite anthology, I still enjoyed seeing how so many books, especially ones I had read myself, had such an impact on these authors. Just shows you the true power of reading and how people can read the same book in so many different ways.

backonthealex's review against another edition

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3.0

This was a very interesting book to read. I've thought a lot about books that I have read and that have changed me in some way, so it was interesting to discover what books changed well-known authors. The 31 authors are all published, and well-known, but the book is geared toward mostly Australian and English writers, many of whom American children not be familiar with. That is the only drawback for me. I would love to see a similar book done with American and Canadian authors, including authors who had immigrated here as children.

rainbowbookworm's review against another edition

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5.0

Before reading this book I had only heard of three of these authors. However, I love the glimpses into their childhoods. There is a common story that links us readers together: That magical moment when we find the right book. The one that turns us into lifelong readers. This anthology celebrates that. I recommend it to everyone.