book cover

Captain Toby

by Satoshi Kitamura

Interest age: 4 to 5

Published by Scallywag Press, 2021

  • Adventure
  • Picture books

About this book

It’s a stormy night and Toby can’t sleep: so stormy that Toby starts to imagine that his house is a boat, adrift in the ocean. Navigating the house/boat requires a lot of concentration, both from Toby and his pet cat, especially when they run into a giant octopus who seems intent on fighting them.

Fortunately, a submarine (Grandma and Grandpa’s house) equipped with knitting wool guns helps out just in the nick of time and helps subdue the octopus – just in time for breakfast.

This reissue of Satoshi Kitamura’s book from 1987 means that this fun, slightly surreal tale of a boy’s dream during a storm is once more available in the UK. Kitamura’s illustration is full of colour and creativity, and adults and children will adore both his moody skies and stormy seas as well as his not-very-scary octopus (who is actually quite adorable). Perfect for a stormy night’s bedtime read or at any time a fun read is required.

About the author

Satoshi Kitamura is both an author and illustrator. He was born in 1956 in Tokyo. He says that when he was young he read comics and admits that these have had a great influence on his style. He says he was also influenced by anything visual from a tin of sardines to the fine art of the East and the West. He was not trained as an artist, but at the age of 19 began to do commercial work. He moved to London in 1979 and worked mainly designing greeting cards. He started illustrating for Andersen Press in 1981. At this time he had an exhibition of his work at the Neal Street Gallery in Covent Garden, which Klaus Flugge visited and showed him the text of Angry Arthur.

Angry Arthur, written by Hiawyn Oram, was published in 1982 to great acclaim, winning the Mother Goose Award in 1983 and the Japanese Picture Book Award. In 1989, UFO diary was shortlisted for the Smarties Prize, an award he later went on to win for Me and My Cat, which was also shortlisted for the Kurt Mashler Award. In 2006, Satoshi’s collaboration with Colin McNaughton, Once Upon an Ordinary School Day, won The Japan Picture Book Award for best translated book. Satoshi’s book, Millie’s Marvellous Hat, was shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Award in 2010. 

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