Advocates call for the full implementation of an expert report on special care, and welcomed plans for legal reform to get state agencies working together.
The government seems to be considering making helmets and hi-vis mandatory for people using some category of bikes, though it’s not totally clear which.
This book is about a boy, Mickey “Moany” McMoan, counting down the days to a big football match. Every chapter he gets more and more excited.
Mickey practices football almost every day and is even lucky enough to get new football boots.
His teacher is very cranky all of the time, which sometimes makes his life difficult. (My teacher is really nice. His is not.)
There were lots of things that I enjoyed about this book. He really, really, REALLY likes Saturdays and Sundays (and I like weekends a lot too).
I also enjoyed the part when he wore his new football boots and got them dirty, then used his brother Mark’s toothbrush to clean them! This was a bit mean but it was funny!
There was also the time when somebody fell into a big puddle, or there was the time that someone brought prank caramel chew-chew over and everyone started sneezing. The jokes made me smile a lot.
There were a lot of burglaries in Moany’s town too, and that was interesting.
The Bunny vs Monkey, Treehouse, Dog Man, Narwhal and Jelly, and Captain Underpants series are the books that I love to read.
I like colourful pictures in the books I read – sometimes the pictures in this book were too small (even though they were well drawn).
This book wasn’t really my style, but I would recommend it to my friends and my big brother Arnie.
They like books a lot like me, they like sports and especially humour with pranks. And they like climbing trees (there is tree climbing in this book too).
Know a book reviewer, aged between 7 and 12 years, who would like to tell the world whether a recent release is the best or the worst or just meh? Please get in touch with Claudia Dalby at claudia@dublininquirer.com.
Coen likes playing with his friends, swapping Pokemon cards, playing drums, climbing trees, looking at nature, riding his bike with no hands and reading books. His favourite song is Paper Planes by M.
The inspiration? "I was like, Oh my God, what's happening with my life?” says founder Sarah Ó Tuama. “Like, is this what being an adult is? It's so boring.”
Hopefully it’ll create something like a musical bridge between Ireland and Japan in some way, says Emmy Shigeta, whose lyrics are sung almost entirely in Japanese.