A companion title to Bob Graham’s celebrated picture book Max, whose superhero family has just got bigger!
Max has a new baby sister – Maxine! Max is there for her first words, her first steps and … her first flight! But as Maxine grows up and starts school, she doesn’t feel like she quite fits in. In fact, she’s not sure if she feels comfortable in her superhero guise at all. Can Maxine convince her family that not all superheroes wear capes? With a strong, incredibly smart girl at its centre, this is a book to inspire any child to dream big and be exactly who, and how, they want to be.
A 'companion book' for Bob Graham's beloved Max (which was 20 years old in 2020!), Maxine does stand alone but is not as rich if you haven't first read Max, as it does assume familiarity with the Lightning-Thunderbolt family as well as Max's own journey, referencing and echoing it at times. Like her brother, the protagonist Maxine doesn't immediately settle into her genetically destined role as a superhero and is uncomfortable at school because she doesn't meet social expectations. But also like Max, she comes into her own and 'can do anything she wants', realising that she doesn't have to be trapped within a destiny she doesn't fit. Maxine's message is more incidental than that of many of Graham's other books, such as his recent CBCA Picture Book of the Year-shortlisted Ellie's Dragon, though is still more concrete than some, lacking the abstract poetic language of books such as 2013's Silver Buttons. Maxine contributes to the 'it's okay to be different' genre, empowering its young female character with her own strengths; she is exceedingly bright, and gently pushes the boundaries of tradition, reminding her mother that 'things will always be changing'. The book, like many of Graham's others, features a positive representation of a loving and supportive family of likeable, distinctive characters. But while Graham is unquestionably Australian picture book royalty, Maxine doesn't quite rise up to his usual standard. Anica Boulanger-Mashberg is a freelance editor, writer, and reviewer, and has worked as a bookseller at The Hobart Bookshop for over 10 years.
Bob Graham is a Kate Greenaway-winning bookmaker who has written and illustrated many acclaimed children's picture books including Ellie's Dragon, The Poesy Ring, Home in the Rain, How to Heal a Broken Wing, How the Sun Got to Coco's House, Max, Jethro Byrde: Fairy Child and The Underhills. A Bus Called Heaven is endorsed by Amnesty International UK and was the winner of the Children's Book Council of Australia Picture Book of the Year Award – a prize Bob has won an unprecedented seven times. He has been awarded the prestigious Prime Minister's Literary Award in Australia twice, for Silver Buttons and Home in the Rain. Bob lives in Melbourne, Australia.
This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.