The Silver Donkey

Novel by Sonya Hartnett
0-670-04240-4
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The Silver Donkey is a 2004 children's novel by Sonya Hartnett, set during World War I.[1] It won a CBCA award and has been adapted for the stage.

Plot summary

The book traces the journey of an English soldier who comes across two young girls, Marcelle and Coco, in the rural French town of Wissant. The girls help the soldier, who suffers from psychological blindness as a side-effect of post-traumatic stress, to plan a way to cross the English Channel back to his brother. The girls bring him food and in return he tells them moralistic tales about courage, perseverance and trying your best against all odds. Though his stories are fiction, one is not: the story of his younger brother John who while extremely ill, finds a small silver donkey whilst digging in the garden. The soldier carries the silver donkey with him everywhere for luck, hope and inspiration, which the soldier claims will spread to Coco when he gives her the donkey.

The story can be seen in two ways: from an adult's perspective or from that of an innocent child. The soldier could be lying in order to get the girls to help him, or he could be telling the truth.

Reception

The book won the 2005 Courier Mail award for young readers and the 2005 CBCA Book of the Year award for younger readers.[2] It also won the 2007 COOL Award Fiction for Years 7-9.[3]

Adaptation

In 2006 it was adapted into a successful musical by Australian writing/directing team Matthew Frank (music) and Dean Bryant (book and lyrics).[4] Produced by the Children's Performing Company of Australia and Echelon Productions, the musical played a limited season in Melbourne, Australia before embarking on an ambitious journey touring the United States, performing in San Francisco, New York City, Orlando, Washington D.C. and Las Vegas. The original cast members were all between the ages of 10 and 20. The Original Studio Cast Recording for the show was completed for publicity and licensing purposes in late 2006. Recorded cast members include James Bryers as Lieutenant, Andrew Kronert as Ernie, Josie Lane as Ruth, Lugi Emile Lucente as Joseph, Chris Scalzo as Sky, Annie Johnstone as Marcelle and Georgie Darvidis as Coco.

In September 2008 the show returned to America with a mainly new Australian cast, traveling to Boston, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco to perform the show.

References

  1. ^ The Silver Donkey at WorldCat
  2. ^ The Silver Donkey, Reading Enriches Learning, Curriculum Corporation
  3. ^ "The Silver Donkey". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2021-09-02.
  4. ^ The Silver Donkey, Theatermania, 2006


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Works by Sonya Hartnett
Picture books
  • The Boy and the Toy (2010)
  • Come Down, Cat! (2011)
Junior fiction
Teen and young adult fiction
  • Wilful Blue (1994)
  • Sleeping Dogs (1995)
  • The Devil Latch (1996)
  • Princes (1997)
  • All My Dangerous Friends (1998)
  • Stripes of the Sidestep Wolf (1999)
  • Thursday's Child (2000)
  • Forest (2001)
  • Surrender (2005)
  • The Ghost's Child (2007)
  • Butterfly (2009)
  • The Midnight Zoo (2010)
Adult fiction
  • Trouble All The Way (1984)
  • Sparkle and Nightflower (1986)
  • The Glass House (1990)
  • Black Foxes (1996)
  • Of a Boy (2002)
  • Landscape with Animals (2006)
  • Golden Boys (2014)
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Children's Book of the Year Award for Younger Readers
1982–1989
  • Rummage by Christobel Mattingley (1982)
  • Thing by Robin Klein (1983)
  • Bernice Knows Best by Max Dann (1984)
  • Something Special by Emily Rodda (1985)
  • Arkwright by Mary Steele (1986)
  • Pigs Might Fly by Emily Rodda (1987)
  • My Place by Nadia Wheatley (1988)
  • The Best-Kept Secret by Emily Rodda (1989)
1990–1999
2000–2009
2010–2019
2020–present
  • The Little Wave by Pip Harry (2020)
  • Aster's Good, Right Things by Kate Gordon (2021)
  • A Glasshouse of Stars by Shirley Marr (2022)
  • Runt by Craig Silvey (2023)
  • Picture Book (1955–present)
  • Early Childhood (2001–present)
  • Older Readers (1946–present)
  • Eve Pownall Award for Information Books (1988–present)


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