Access Keys:

 
 
St John Fisher Primary, a Catholic Voluntary Academy, Sheffield
Teaching Assistant Vacancy (Fixed Term) | Please click here | 'Dinosaur' the premiere - please click here | The latest 'Wake Up! Shake Up!' videos, for Term 2, can be viewed here!  | 'Hallam Bridge' newsletter | Please click here  | Want to find out more about our school? Please call to arrange a meeting with the Headteacher and a tour (0114 2485009). Thank you. | 2025-2026 SJF Calendar please click here. | SJF Recommended Book List 24-25 Please click here  | Summer Curriculum Showcase: click here | Latest Newsletters: Click here | Our School Office is open between 8.30am and 4.30pm
open new window
pause
play

Our Latest SJF Feature Books of the Week!

16th Jul 2023

Please click here for our 2022-23 SJF Book List.

The Day War Came 

Nicola Davies

Waterstones Says

Having previously addressed the complex and emotive issue of immigration in The King of the Sky, Nicola Davies delivers an intensely powerful and mature story about flight from war and the misconceptions surrounding refugees. Sensitively illustrated by Rebecca Cobb, The Day War Came is a highly thought-provoking read.

A powerful and necessary picture book - the journey of a child forced to become a refugee when war destroys everything she has ever known.

Imagine if, on an ordinary day, war came. Imagine it turned your town to rubble. Imagine going on a long and difficult journey - all alone.

Imagine finding no welcome at the end of it. Then imagine a child who gives you something small but very, very precious...

When the government refused to allow 3000 child refugees to enter this country in 2016, Nicola Davies was so angry she wrote a poem. It started a campaign for which artists contributed drawings of chairs, symbolising a seat in a classroom, education, kindness, the hope of a future. The poem has become this book, movingly illustrated by Rebecca Cobb, which should prove a powerful aid for explaining the ongoing refugee crisis to younger readers.

Azzi In Between 

Sarah Garland

Waterstones Says

Azzi and her parents are in danger. They have to leave their home and escape to another country on a frightening journey by car and boat. In the new country they must learn to speak a new language, find a new home and Azzi must start a new school. With a kind helper at the school, Azzi begins to learn English and understand that she is not the only one who has had to flee her home.

She makes a new friend, and with courage and resourcefulness, begins to adapt to her new life. But Grandma has been left behind and Azzi misses her more than anything. Will Azzi ever see her grandma again?

Drawing on her own experience of working among refugee families, renowned author and illustrator Sarah Garland tells, with tenderness and humour, an exciting adventure story to be enjoyed by readers of all ages.

Endorsed by Amnesty International.