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My Place

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Starting in 1988 and going back 200 years, we are told the history of Australia by being told the history of one particular place, told by the generations of children who have lived in that one spot. Winner of Australia's Book of the Year 1988. Full-colour illustrations.

48 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1987

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Nadia Wheatley

46 books27 followers
Nadia Wheatley is an Australian author.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 49 reviews
Profile Image for Caroline.
564 reviews728 followers
April 20, 2020
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I have just spent a delightful forty-five minutes reading the children’s book “My Place”. Winner of many awards in its home continent of Australia, it is fully worthy of all of them. What a joy and pleasure it was!

The book spans two centuries, from 1788 to 1988, and covers the same quarter acre of land – as we see how it has changed throughout this period. This is done via the voices of the children living there, and we visit them in 10-yearly intervals to learn about their lives and situations. The book travels backwards through time.

Without being overbearing, each write up has hooks which position the children strongly in the era being described....

Sofia in 1968 has photographs of Paul McCartney all over her bedroom wall, because he is her favourite Beatle.

Col, in 1938, has the experience of seeing a neighbour getting evicted during the Great Depression.

Bridie, in 1928 and with much excitement, sees the arrival of electricity in her house.

Bertie, in 1918, has a brother who has lost a leg due to the War.

Benjamin, in 1858 was actually born in San Francisco. His family came here because of the gold rush.

Whilhemina in 1828, has a dad who used to be a convict, but he is now in charge of convicts himself, and runs a farm.

Sam, in 1798, is an eleven year old convict, sent to Australia from England for stealing a jacket because he was cold. He works for Mr. Owen, who sometimes beats him.

And finally, we go back to Barangaroo, in 1788, who is staying here with her Aborigine tribe.

These brief synopses do nothing to impart the warmth, charm and humour of these write ups….

Besides each child telling their wonderful stories, they also do a map of what the land looks like whilst they are living there, and thus - because we are going backwards - we see an unravelling of progress; as the landscape changes from a modern built-up townscape, through to farm land, and finally back to the wilderness of the aborigines. The one thing that stays constant is a much loved old fig tree.

I challenge any child to read this without wanting to make a map of their own environment. The maps are so individual and personal. You really feel they have been done by each of the children described - again they are full of charm, and usually dotted with idiosyncratic little notes.

This illustrations throughout the book are wonderful – I think done in pastels, vibrant and full of character. They augment the writing beautifully. At the bottom of the page shown below you can see one of the maps...

book

For anyone with young children, especially if you want them to learn a bit about Australia, this is a cracking read. It really brings Australian history to life.
Profile Image for Lisa Vegan.
2,913 reviews1,316 followers
July 8, 2012
My goal today was to read at least a half dozen of the couple dozen picture books I have at home, but I think it’s going to be just this one because it took me so long to read and view. This book was well worth the time I took with it. It’s a superb book.

This is definitely a book for readers because it is both so text heavy and because all the pictures/maps have captions for every little thing, so a lot of reading is involved. Pre-readers may also enjoy it but I wouldn’t recommend this book for reading aloud unless the listener(s) can also read along, and not really even then.

This book has two page spreads, including wonderful maps (that could have been made by children) and each time the reader turns the page they get taken back ten years, starting from 1988 and ending in 1788. Each section is narrated by a child who describes their life and place. And, for all 200 years it’s the exact same place in Australia. Readers will see the different circumstances of the children, and their similarities, and will see how the place dramatically changes over time. I have to say that creek spends way too many years being unusable!! At times the children’s stories are very poignant (the hardships are many and there are many deaths) and at times the accounts are very amusing. I loved this: “I’d quite like to be a savage.” (from the 1868 child) and many other parts too.

I appreciated the full circle of this starting and ending with Aboriginal children and the more straight line of showing how the place changed over time. I loved learning about the various immigrants over the years, and their varied circumstances.

Sometimes the every ten years seemed too short a time to show. The changes seemed drastic sometimes, possibly not 100% realistic (but maybe that’s how it really was) but sometimes I loved the time changes, especially when someone was mentioned in two time periods, such as at age 21 mentioned by that child and then back to at age 11 narrated by them 10 years earlier.

I adored the illustrations, especially all the maps of the place. I loved the kids and their surrounding, including the many animals. There is so much detail, and it’s all fascinating.

There is a short glossary in the back, and while I knew the meaning of the majority of the words, I learned a few new ones.

This would make a perfect book for older elementary school age readers who love maps, history, learning about people from different cultures in different times, Australia, and so much more. Great for kids about to make a trip to Australia. Great for kids who like reading about how other children live and have lived. Great for kids who like maps, and this book could be used as an inspiration for kids making their own maps of their places and also researching the history of their places.

This is an incredibly busy book and it’s worth taking hours to read. I’d have poured over this many times as a kid and probably eventually memorized its contents.

I’d love other books such as this about other places, including my little area of the world. It hasn’t changed quite so much so quickly in recent years though, but I’d find it really interesting to go back 200 years and see the changes in land and peoples. I’d love books such as this for many other locations. This one was captivating!
Profile Image for Cheryl.
13k reviews483 followers
November 20, 2016
Oy. Working backwards was confusing. If I really cared, I'd work forwards on a reread next week. But really, my only question now is, What kind of tree is a Big Tree that lives for so very long like that? An 'early' picture shows mangroves.... And where is this, actually? There's a reference to Sydney Town and a mention of being close enough to see the ocean....
20 reviews
October 16, 2013
Topic 9, non-fiction narrative.
Wheatley, Nadia. (1987)My Place. Australia. Collins Dove, Melbourne.
This little book reveals a series of stories about the history of Children in Australia. Starting from 1988 the individual little stories go back in time dating back to 1788.
Each page demonstrates what the homes looked like and a map of the area in which the house is positioned. They seem to demonstrate some of the issues which affected the society at the time, tapping into the local issues and then following such issues of the immigrants coming to Australia, their language and their lifestyles. Although you get caught up with the story of the children sharing, it is also the pictures that you can spend time on searching for various changes. It is not till you stop and look a little closer that you realise that it is the land which is the main item.
The story shares about the various people who have lived on that patch of ground and the way in which it changed over the past 200 years.
I found this brilliant, for many of us we do not often stop and think of the changes that have happened over a fifty year period, let alone a two hundred year span. I found this book fascinating as it made me think about the various changes that I have seen in the past years.
This book would be excellent for children and adults to read as it is thought provoking and an interesting way to help reflect over the past.
For teachers this would be a brilliant tool for teaching the history of Australia as it can help to encourage children to think about the changes that have happened to their house over the years. It can assist in maths in many areas and it can also be used in Lote lessons to demonstrate the various changes of society and the various languages that have been used over time. Although the grammar is not exact it is shared through a child’s language which I feel makes it easy to relate to the child reading it. As an Adult I found myself going back to it to check it out and each time finding something new. This is an excellent book to read and reflect.
The story demonstrates the delicate issues with the fact that Aboriginal People were on the land first. It is gentle in the way that the people of the past have changed Australia, the effects that it has had on the land and the people. It shares of the different migrants that have come to Australia and even the thoughts that they have gone through.
A very thought provoking book of our past history in Australia. This could help children understand what it would have been like for those families, living in the house under the various circumstances that they came from. It could help them understand the sadness of the Aboriginal People of the past having their land taken away from them and it can help them understand some of the difficulties that migrants and refugees go through today.
An awesome idea of a book for history to teach children.
Profile Image for Abigail.
8,011 reviews265 followers
March 29, 2020
Author Nadia Wheatley and illustrator Donna Rawlins take the reader on a voyage through time in this classic Australian children's book, which opens in an urban neighborhood in (then present day) 1988, and offers a snapshot of the same location every ten years, stretching back to 1788. Each two-page spread features a different young narrator, discussing the make-up of their family, their activities, and the world around them. "My Place" is different in each time period being depicted, and nothing emphasizes that more than the maps, ostensibly drawn by each child narrator, that are included, thus allowing changes - in population level, building density, and types of industry/activity present - to be tracked visually, as well as textually.

An engaging and informative book, My Place draws a fascinating portrait of the changes effected by two hundred years of immigration to Australia, opening and closing, appropriately enough, with an Aboriginal narrator. The copy I read, which was sent by a kindly goodreads pal down under - thanks again, Kim! - is a 20th Anniversary Edition, which speaks to its lasting appeal. A textually advanced picture-book - I'd say the level was more middle-grade, than early reader - with incredibly detailed artwork that rewards close scrutiny, this is the kind of book to be slowly savored, and then read again and again. Some of the details that struck me on this first reading - the way that the children's companion animals varied, from generation to generation, but the need for them did not; the fact that the Millers were once the Müllers, something that quietly changed (with no overt commentary in the text) from 1908 to 1918; the ubiquity of hard work, in every generation profiled; the matter-of-fact acceptance of convict labor, in many of the earlier periods, and the appalling fact that some convicts were young children (like Sam), who were convicted of minor crimes like stealing a coat, in order to keep warm, and shipped off to lives of hard labor on the other side of the world - could give way, or better yet, be augmented by new impressions and details, on a second or third approach to the book.

There is so much to take in here, that it's difficult to know where to begin! A rich, rich book, one that will give young readers an appreciation for the grand sweep of Australian history, while also filling in some of the human stories and details that make up that larger narrative, My Place is a work (I believe) of fiction, but would make an excellent selection for a young person's history class. Just outstanding!
Profile Image for LauraW.
763 reviews20 followers
January 14, 2011
This is another picture book that is better poured over than read aloud. The premise is a look backwards in time for a single location - tracing the people who lived in one house over time, and then back beyond that to who lived there, even before the house was built. My favorite part is the map that is found on each page, showing how the location changed over the years. I love maps.

If you are looking for story, you have to construct it by looking carefully at the changes. More straightforwardly, this book speaks to a people who cherish PLACE in their lives.
Profile Image for Maggie.
792 reviews33 followers
March 23, 2017
Brilliant children's book showing the same suburb visited each ten years, beginning from the present day and travelling backwards until pre colonial days. This book could be read forwards or backwards. It is jammed with history but doesn't feel like a history lesson. Each decade is accompanied by a detailed illustration showing the changes time has made. No wonder it won the Children's Book of the Year. Find a copy at your library and enjoy a wonderful children's book, even if you don't have any children near by.
Profile Image for Aidan EP.
117 reviews4 followers
January 16, 2023
This is one of the most moving picture books I have ever read. I also dug this out of the loft today - unlike “Are We There Yet?” I had completely forgotten it existed - and I was blown away. It brings history to life in a truly unique and special way, connecting a myriad of little stories (big stories to the people that involve them) through a place across a long stretch of time. Through the book, Wheatley allows us to see history, and see history how it really is - not obscure dates and arbitrarily divided stories, but a continuous string of human experiences, running the gamut of joy all the way through wonder to hardship and grief.

The decision to start from 1988 and work backwards was excellent, and worked exceptionally. I also like that it is heavily based on a real place (an area of St Peters, in Inner West Sydney - the brick pits are now Sydney park and the creek/canal flows into the Cooks River). This is very much a book about Sydney as much as it is about the people who lived in Sydney.

We also see the transience of human life in the face of place. The Big Tree is an unchanging marker of how the places we live can change, but they have been there long before us and will continue to exist far after us. Is it really “my place”, then, or is it closer to what is touched on in the final vignette - that it is the place we “belong” to?

It’s also quite interesting to read a children’s book targeting the great Australian silence that was written in 1988. Wheatley addresses the place of First Nations Australians with sensitivity and respect, and it is interesting to see it addressed in such a way alongside the bicentennial - when I believe such concerns were not mainstream. Excellent stuff.

Overall one of the best picture books of all time, and something that I think has the capacity to introduce a love of history to any child. This is another book I hope to share with any children that may be in my future. Brilliant stuff.
Profile Image for Karen.
446 reviews10 followers
August 3, 2019
This book conveys a beautiful sense of the passage of time through 20 vignettes, each a decade apart, from 1988 backwards to 1788. The narrator in each "scene" is a child of approximately 10 years old.

These vignettes tell of both continuity and change - having a big, beautiful tree as the one unchanging thing in that landscape is a very nice touch. It's fun, almost like detective-work, to keep track of names that are repeatedly mentioned, and connecting them to various families. I also got a strong sense of how young Australia is as a country - in only 200 years we had gone from an unspoilt natural environment, through European settlement, repeated migration and technological advances, to the metropolitan, busy, multicultural society we are today.

This 20th anniversary edition contains an updated timeline that includes the Mabo decision and the Rudd Government's apology to Aboriginal people (2008). It's been another 10 years since then. I wonder what would have been the scene captured to represent the year 2018?
Profile Image for lethe.
618 reviews119 followers
October 20, 2017
I had come across My Place in a review of Here by Richard McGuire by Richard McGuire, which was my favourite book of 2015. Because it sounded interesting (a kind of Here for children) I put it on my Book Depository wishlist. A few weeks ago while looking through that list I saw the price was a mere €6.20 and decided to order it. And I’m glad I did.

Written on the occasion of the Australian Bicentenary, the book relates 200 years of Australian history by focusing on a particular place (a house somewhere in present-day Sydney) and the (fictitious) children who have lived there, starting off in 1988 and jumping back in 10-year leaps to 1788.

Each double-spread is devoted to a decade, and introduces a child telling about his or her life and showing a hand-drawn map of the surroundings. Sometimes the child from the decade before is an older relative, and sometimes he or she is from a different family (because of course families move).

The maps and the children’s stories make clear how much has changed in a relatively short time, but also the things that have stayed the same. There are a few constants, one of them the big fig tree that is never cut down. I loved the sometimes very subtle details, for example the Miller family who before WW1 were still named Müller.

There is some mild criticism of the way Aboriginals were treated. In 1888, during the Centennial celebrations, a neighbour tells the child Victoria that Australia is much older than 100 years and that “other people were living here, long before all of us”. In the 20th Anniversary edition of 2008, of which my 30th Anniversary edition is a reprint, the timeline in the front is updated to include 1998 and 2008: “Australia says Sorry to Aboriginal people”.

Definitely a book to keep and reread. It is wonderful, not just for children and not just for Australians.
Profile Image for Sally Edsall.
376 reviews11 followers
May 10, 2017
This book came out in 1988 during Australia's bicentennial of the European invasion of Australia. It shares a title with a book by Sally Morgan, an Aboriginal women whose search for her own identity and place was published at the same time. This book can be read in either direction. For younger children, it may be easier to start at then end an move forwards. For older children, part of the fun is in uncovering the history of the place - an inner urban area of Sydney.

The book emphasises the timeless continuity of the place, and that even though we might be the temporary custodians of a piece of land, we share a common history and linkage through our humanity, and our Aboriginal history. Lushly illustrated by Donna Rawlins, and words by Nadia Wheatley. A valuable asset to any school library, primary or secondary, and public library, as well as the shelves at home.

My son first showed interest in t at about age 4, and returned to it periodically - ie over 2 years. It will stay with him for many years yet!
Profile Image for AD.
344 reviews10 followers
June 29, 2018
This picture book is a clever way to explore Australian history. It starts in 1988, looking at a terrace house in Sydney from the perspective of 10-year-old Laura, who lives there. Each double page spread tells you a bit about the house and life of the inhabitants, and it's the same house on each page, but as you turn the pages you also turn back the years. The stories of the different Australians who have lived in this spot are followed right back to 1788, when Barangaroo used to live in the same spot with his family during the summer. The repetitive format shows how similar we all really are, and the map of the area, drawn by each child-occupant, shows how the landscape has changed over time.
Profile Image for Deb (Readerbuzz) Nance.
6,461 reviews336 followers
August 27, 2011
My Place depicts a neighborhood in Australia and its changes over time. Wheatley starts with present day (or, rather, what was present day when the book was first published) and moves back ten years for each two page spread. I, like most Americans, know absolutely nothing about the world outside the U.S. of A. so almost all the historical events depicted in this book were new to me. I enjoyed that. I enjoyed taking a small trip through a small part of Australia with Wheatley and Rawlins. Well done.
Profile Image for annie.
99 reviews
February 24, 2017
In primary school, my teacher read this to the class and I absolutely loved it, so much that I searched for it in op shops everywhere until I could have a copy of my own.

It's just a really cool way of showing not just children, but anyone, the changes through Australian history- good and bad -and the reader can go back and spot the little connections between each decade as well.

Really anyone would find something interesting in this book, but I highly recommend reading this to primary school age children, perhaps grade 2 and up.
Profile Image for Wrigley.
46 reviews2 followers
February 2, 2009
The book will turn out different than you expect, at least different than I expect.

[c - maps are right up my alley. This book starts in 1988 and dedicates a 2 page spread to showing the lives of the children who live in this place each decade back to 1788. Each child draws a map of the area and we get to see how it changes from decade to decade. We also get to know just a little bit about the families who live in "my place" for more than one decade.:]
Profile Image for Amy.
455 reviews
August 20, 2017
Heidi actually really enjoys reading this one on her own. I didn't think she would find it very interesting as I think the format is just a BIT over her. Perhaps not? More of a condensed history of Australia based on brief family life excerpts. Some of it was very specific to a particular circumstance so I felt like I had to explain a lot to clarify this. Although again, Heidi has mentioned more than once that she really loves this book.
Profile Image for Liz Murray.
635 reviews5 followers
December 26, 2016
I love the concept of this book. The story starts in present day (1980s) and goes back ten years at a time to tell the story of the people who live in this place (house/land). It is a story of immigration, and of Aboriginal Australians. It isn't a picture book to read in one sitting but it is a book you can use with the upper primary grades to talk about the history of this country through a specific lens.
Profile Image for Munchy.
52 reviews1 follower
April 23, 2019
Read as part of the Around the Year in 52 books challenge. Week 6: a book with a duel timeline.

A story from my childhood, kept by my grandfather on his book shelf, I read that book so many times. Was interesting to read from an adults perspective, I had fun trying to piece the relationships between the characters together.
Profile Image for Jessica.
50 reviews2 followers
June 6, 2012
Fairly detailed book. Could use it for a community unit or map unit for your kids. Instead of reading entire book, just highlight the parts that coincide with what you are studying in the classroom. Probably for more advanced readers.
332 reviews5 followers
August 16, 2011
Loved this book and the way it reveals layers of culture.
Profile Image for Faye.
530 reviews1 follower
May 30, 2012
Just loved this beautiful story. Great to teach students the history of their country. Beautiful pictures, great words, what a great text.
87 reviews3 followers
August 6, 2015
Read this when I was helping children learn to read as it opened imaginations and prompted them to seek new stories. Never failed.
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