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Rainfish

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

'You don't kill them rainfish 'cause they'll bring trouble. Rainstorms and floods and bad things.'

Aaron lives with his mum and older brother in a small town on the edge of a rainforest in tropical Far North Queensland. He's sick of being the little brother, left out of all the interesting stuff the older kids get up to.

So when he meets Damon he's keen to impress him. It's all going well, until Damon suggests they break into the church. Aaron's nervous and uncomfortable. But he can't back out now—he's only just beginning to be accepted.

When the theft is reported in the local newspaper and the police knock on the door, Aaron finds himself hiding the truth in a tangle of lies. And before long his deep sense of guilt and fear of being found out overwhelm him.

And then, when he discovers that the mudcod in the old bath in the backyard—the fish he'd caught in the river in the rainforest—are the rainfish of local legend, he becomes convinced that he is responsible for the terrible rainstorms and floods that devastate the town.

Rainfish is a delightful middle-grade novel exploring childhood innocence—a warm and humorous portrayal of a young boy trying to undo an impulsive mistake.

Andrew Paterson is a medical doctor. He was brought up and currently lives and works in Far North Queensland, where Rainfish is set. He has a graduate diploma in Creative Writing from the University of Melbourne.

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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2022
      An impulsive decision weighs heavily on a boy living with his mum and brother in rural Queensland, Australia. After socially awkward Aaron is swept up in the hijinks of an older boy, he becomes mired in guilt over their theft of a gold rosary from the local church. His big brother Connor's determination to find those responsible for the theft dogs Aaron even as both boys struggle with sorting out how they feel about Mum's new boyfriend Pete's abruptly moving in with them. Pete takes Aaron and Connor fishing for mudcod; later, their neighbor Byron, whose grandmother is an Aboriginal woman, relays a legend that says catching these fish, which she calls rainfish, will bring floods. When disastrous flooding hits his town, Aaron fears that he is responsible. The main characters are White, and the treatment of the Aboriginal legend is through this lens. Aaron's lack of knowledge about Indigenous Australians has resulted in his absorbing racist ideas, shedding light on racial dynamics of the time. Awash in references to 1980s pop culture (The A-Team, Star Wars, Transformers), this quiet, lyrical novel is as much a snapshot of a specific place and time as it is an introspective look into Aaron's intense feelings. Aaron's perspective feels filtered through an adult's remembrance of youth; as a result, adults may connect more easily to this story than young readers. A meditation for patient readers on one boy's experiences. (Historical fiction. 12-adult)

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2022
      Grades 4-7 Aaron, 12, lives with his mother and older brother, Conner, in Queensland, the northeastern state of Australia. Possessed of a vivid imagination, Aaron is good at entertaining himself, but he longs for "cool" friends. So when when Conner's friend Damon invites him to hang out, Aaron jumps at the chance. Unfortunately, Damon's idea of hanging out is to burgle the church, taking a handful of small items, including the priest's gold rosary. Sworn to secrecy, Aaron is immediately wracked with guilt. Later, when torrents of rain flood the town, he feels as if it is his fault. Finally, when Damon stands by when a "cooler" boy bullies Conner, Aaron finds his courage to stand up for Conner and for himself. Told from Aaron's point of view, the novel is both tender and funny, conveying Aaron's struggle with his conscience, which he envisions as a black panther stalking him. Surrounded with characters who are quirky but convincing, Aaron realizes that his life is what he makes of it, and his dilemmas have a universal quality.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Books+Publishing

      May 11, 2021
      Debut middle-grade novel Rainfish is set in the 1980s during the uncomplicated glory days of Transformers and Star Wars, when ‘being offline’ meant you left your phone off the hook. The reader, however, is hooked from the get-go, immediately drawn into the protagonist’s world. Aaron lives with his mum and older brother in a nondescript town in northern Queensland. With his mum at work and his brother always reading, Aaron is lonely and a bit bored on the summer school holidays. He runs into an older boy, Damon, whose bad influence and approval outweighs Aaron’s conscience. Together they commit an offence that has significant ramifications within their tight-knit community. Excellent storytelling abounds in Rainfish: the plot flows easily, resulting in a lovely leisurely pace throughout, and the characters are well rounded—Aaron’s mum is strong and realistic, and the sibling relationship between Aaron and his brother has the right amount of one-upmanship. Aaron himself is a personable and wryly observant narrator. This book, by first-time author Andrew Paterson, will appeal to kids aged 10 and up wanting a simple but imaginatively written story that they can relate to, regardless of the era in which it is set. Rainfish is one of those books you don’t want to end but at the same time do, only to be sure the story concludes the way you hoped it would. Katie Haydon is a library officer in Geelong and a former assistant editor of Books+Publishing. Read her interview with Andrew Paterson about Rainfish here.

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