Embrace the Cold Rebus Puzzle Competition

Do you love Winter?

Do you love solving puzzles?

Do you love books, movies & TV?

Each week of Winter a visual puzzle, called a Rebus Puzzle will be posted on Parra Reads and on display in the Libraries to challenge and spark your imagination. Each puzzle will feature a Winter theme and be based on a book, movie or TV show (sometimes all three!). The answer for each puzzle will be posted each week when the new weekly puzzle is released.

Can you guess these puzzles?

Puzzle 1

 

 

 

 

 

Puzzle 2

 

 

 

 

 

We are also running a puzzle competition for adults who create their own Winter themed Rebus Puzzle. The top 3 puzzles judged to be the most original will be awarded a prize. For the full terms and conditions and entry form visit our Library Catalogue Competition page.

 

 

 

Answers
Puzzle 1 = Ice Station by Matthew Reilly, Puzzle 2 = Ice Station Zebra by Alastair MacLean

Posted in All

All About Books – Autumn 2017 edition is now out!

The new Autumn 2017 edition of our reading guide, All About Books is now available. For your FREE copy ask a Library Staff member at any of our branches.
It is filled with lots of reading ideas to inspire you over the season and has a little something for everyone…check out our special Books to Screen section, so many wonderful titles are being made into a movie or tv series this year.
Can’t get to the Library and don’t want to wait until your next visit? Click on the cover to download your copy.

Read Watch Play – March 2017 #waterread

The Read Watch Play blog is the home of a monthly reading group that encourages everyone to ‘read’ & tweet about what they are reading.

Each month has a different theme, even if you don’t tweet why not use the themes as reading inspirations.

‘Reading’ can encompass anything that provides enjoyment, knowledge, understanding, and relaxation…be it a book, a movie, a game, or a piece of music.

Book Review: To kill a mickingbird by Harper Lee

Summary
‘Shoot all the bluejays you want, if you can hit ’em, but remember it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird‘. Atticus finch gives this advice to his children as he defends the real mockingbird of this classic novel – a black man charged with attacking a white girl. Through the eyes of Scout and Jem Finch, Lee explores the issues of race and class in the Deep South of the 1930s with compassion and humour. She also creates one of the great heroes of literature in their father, whose lone struggle for justice pricks the conscience of a town steeped in prejudice and hypocrisy.

Comments
While this story seemed to lack the ‘punch’ of a modern story, there were quite a lot of pros for this book.  We enjoyed the overall simplicity of the writing, the simple setting and the quiet strength of the main characters. We’d all wished we had a father like Atticus.  We can also see the impact this book would have had when it was first released and understand completely why it is studied in schools. While we have come a long way, the subject matter is still very much relevant today.

For some of our readers, it did lack the ‘pace’ of today’s stories.  Overall though, we rated this book a commendable 7!  This is definitely a book that everyone should read it at least once.

Rating – 7/10
Read by – Cultcha Club