He Taonga te Toka (A Guide to Rocks)

Author(s): Sacha Cotter, Josh Morgan, Kawata Teepa

NZ Children & Young Adult | Kids' Winter Reading Guide 2025

Lately, things have been getting Charlie down. It's like he's got a big rock that just won't go away. He talks to Dad about it, and Dad brings out a dusty old book wit h a lot of tough rules. The first rule is you don't talk about rocks (feelings). But the rules make things worse - Charlie's 'rock' gets bigger, and everything feels dark and scary. They need some new rules - fast.

Bookseller Review


A Guide to Rocks is a weighty tome. In this glorious picture book, the team who bought us Dazzlehands and The Bomb, in both English and Te Reo, deliver on all counts again. The composition on each page between illustration and text strikes a seamless balance for the story to progress. 


Here we have young Charlie being confronted with the age old dilemma of how to deal with his feelings. They can turn up in all shapes and sizes and soon resemble literal rocks that just hang around and won't go away. Those sharp, heavy clumps of stone can soon get on top of us if we let them, and Dad has some learning to do in this area as well. 


With a beautiful light touch in tone and such expressive facial reactions, Morgan and Cotter offer sage guidance on how to best deal with those burdensome rocks and remind us that a problem shared is a problem halved. Sacha Cotter and Josh Morgan have once again “dazzle”d and “bomb”arded us with their brilliance.


Reviewed by Roger at Little Unity, Auckland

General Information

  • : 9781775508359
  • : Huia (Nz) Ltd
  • : Huia (Nz) Ltd
  • : 300.0
  • : 30 June 2025
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Sacha Cotter, Josh Morgan, Kawata Teepa
  • : Paperback
  • : Josh Morgan
  • : Māori
  • : 44
  • : Kawata Teepa

More About The Product

Sacha and Josh have collaborated previously on four picture books: Keys/Nga Ki, The Marble Maker/Te Kaihanga Mapere, The Bomb/Te Pohu and Dazzlehands/Ringakoreko. Keys was a finalist in the picture book category and Nga Ki was winner of the Maori Language Award of the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults 2015. Nga Ki also won Te Tohu Taurapa Award in the LIANZA Children's Book Awards 2015 and was selected for the IBBY Honour List in 2016. Te Kaihanga Mapere won Te Kura Pounamu award of the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults 2017. The Bomb was the supreme winner, the Margaret Mahy Book of the Year, at the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults, 2019, where it also won the Picture Book Award. It won the Scholastic New Zealand Award for Best Children's Book, PANZ Book Design Awards, in 2019, and it won the Storylines Notable Book Award, Picture Book, 2019.