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Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Children's Books | Adventures of a Subversive Reader
src: subversivereader.files.wordpress.com

Playing Beatie Bow is an Australian children's book written by Ruth Park and first published on 31 January 1980. It features a time slip in Sydney, Australia.


Video Playing Beatie Bow



Setting

The story concerns a 14-year-old girl named Abigail Kirk (formerly Lynette). While distraught over her parents' separation, she travels back in time as the result of a scary playground game. She finds herself involved with a shopkeeper's family in colonial Sydney-Town in the year 1873, where she meets Beatie Bow, a girl whose name appears in the game she was playing. Much of the book is set in real-life locations around Sydney's historical Rocks district.


Maps Playing Beatie Bow



Reviews

According to a review by a scholar of today, Playing Beatie Bow falls somewhere between a children's book and young-adult fiction.

A blog reviewer based in Queensland considers, "The real key to this [story line] is the coming-of-age of Abigail. In building up the wall to protect herself, she's really shielded herself from other people around her and the things which hurt or affect them. Spending time away from her own problems helps open her eyes up to other people - and the very real things which shape their stories."

In 1986, the book was turned into a feature film also called Playing Beatie Bow. Made by the South Australian Film Corporation, the film starred Imogen Annesley as Abigail, Peter Phelps as Judah Bow and Mouche Phillips as the title character Beatie Bow.


Children's Books | Adventures of a Subversive Reader
src: subversivereader.files.wordpress.com


Characters




Awards

  • Won - CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers (1981)
  • Won - Canberra's Own Outstanding List: Fiction for Older Readers Award (1994)



References




External resources

  • Book covers, Old Sydney, film stills: Retrieved 5 November 2015
  • Review containing a detailed plot summary: Retrieved 5 November 2015
  • Article recalling a school trip to Argyle Street area where the book is set: Retrieved 5 November 2015
  • The full 1986 film is available on YouTube. Retrieved 26 July 2016.

Source of article : Wikipedia