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The great dome of the sky, black, star-sprinkled, arched above him, appearing at that moment so limitless, so vast and free, that the fences and cages of Taronga were dwarfed, reduced to the point where they barely seemed to exist..Every so often, there comes a story so brilliant and lively and moving that it cannot be left in the past. Rediscover the magic of our country's most memorable children's books in the Penguin Australia Children's Classics series of stories too precious to leave show more behind. show less

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4 reviews
A fascinating post-post-apocolyptic YA book (before YA was even a thing) set in Sydney, Australia. "Taronga" follows the journey of Ben (a young man who has a psychic connections to animals) as he attempts to find his place in the new world. Ben eventually makes his way to the old Taronga Park Zoo, where his connection with Ellie, an aboriginal girl, and the animals, give him hope in his otherwise bleak existence.

I really enjoyed the book and loved the retro eighties feel - the cover of my book is a "Ken Done" illustration, and if you took the path taken by Ben from the Blue Mountains, through Windsor and into Sydney these days, there'd be very little bush and loads of outer suburban housing - ain't progress grand!
A post-holocaust tale set in Sydney's Taronga Zoo. Ben is a boy with a mysterious power over animals. Everywhere he goes he finds conflict, fighting, ruthlessness. Taronga zoo is no different. In Taronga Ben meets Ellie, an aboriginal girl, and together they hatch a plan to escape. This book is concerned with how the powerless can face the powerful, showing that the power to hurt and hinder is empty. The book ends on a hopeful note.
This story glimpses a future after some kind of global catastrophe. It is set in Sydney, Australia, and all social systems have broken down. It is a frightening, uncivilised world, full of looting, violence and chaos. Ben has lost his parents and runs away from Greg, who has been exploiting Ben’s special telepathic ability to communicate with animals for senseless killing. Ben ends up in Taronga Park which, at first, appears to be a haven compared to ‘the outside’, but is soon revealed to be the most sinister place of all. Amongst all the sinister characters, the reader is fascinated by a positive relationship between Ben and an Aboriginal girl, and with a fierce tiger whose spirit will not be broken.

Although the novel is full of show more violence, it actually conveys a message of anti-violence. Despite the bleakness and negativity throughout, the ending gives the reader some hope for an optimistic future. show less
The apocalypse has happened and Ben has survived. He has a gift; he can whisper to animals. Somehow, he makes his way to Taronga Zoo where he discovers a world gone mad, but where he can use his gift to survive and thrive. For all fans of Hunger Games.

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58+ Works 1,348 Members
Victor Kelleher was born in London in 1939 and moved to Australia in 1976 via Africa and New Zealand. He was formerly an associate professor of literature, but chose to write full-time from his home He writes books for both children and adults including Papio, Baily's Bones, The Red King, Taronga, Fire Dancer, The Ivory Trail, Brother Night, show more Dogboy, and Goblin in the Snow. He has won numerous awards including the Ditmar Award for Best Australian Novel for Beast of Heaven in 1985, Kids Own Aust Literature Award (KOALA) in 1991 for The Red King, the Children's Peace Lit Award (PEACE) in 1989 for The Makers, and the CBC Book of the Year in 1983 for Master of the Grove. He also writes under the pseudonym of Veronica Hart. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1986
People/Characters
Ben; Ellie
Important places
Taronga Zoo, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; New South Wales, Australia; Australia
First words
Ben crept stealthily down the hillside, picking his way between the boulders and the young gums, making for the cover of a straggly line of river oaks.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)While far beneath them, their coats aflame in the golden light that still flooded out across the plains, Raja and Ranee stole silently towards the mountains, moving deeper and deeper into the land, as though marking out those new, as yet invisible paths along which Ben and Ellie were soon to wander.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Kids, Tween
DDC/MDS
823Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction
LCC
PZ7Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres

Statistics

Members
150
Popularity
217,299
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.63)
Languages
English, Norwegian
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
10
ASINs
2