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Satoshi Kitamura Books

The Smile Shop, by Satoshi Kitamura, is a wonderful book which will appeal to both young child and adult reader as they follow the boy around a bustling market, trying to decide how to spend his pocket money, before the eventual pay-off that kindness and connection are more important than cash.

 The boy’s internal monologue will be instantly familiar to children as he queries and wonders at the world around him, and worries what to do after his pennies are lost (“How would you feel? What will he do?).

Beyond the beautifully concise wording and enticing storyline, The Smile Shop is filled with detailed but deceptively simple images. The busy market, diverse characters, and expressive faces remind me of Quentin Blake in his ability to convey emotion and character with a few simple lines (the grumpy nun at the grocers stall a particular favourite). Muted colours rule throughout, including a switch to monochrome when the money is lost, with just the boy standing out in his bright red scarf and blue jumper, the centre of his own world, as children are.

Taken as a whole, this simple story with a big message will be a wonderful addition to any EYFS or KS1 bookshelf.

Funny, thought-provoking and bursting with curiosity, Wise Up! Wise Down! is a lively conversation between two internationally renowned poets, illustrated by treasured artist Satoshi Kitamura.

How can laughter be more powerful than a sword? Why do days have names but not weeks? And do pigeons ever get a craving for cake? Two friends, internationally acclaimed poets John Agard and JonArno Lawson, take us on an inspiring, hilarious and wondrous journey through poetry, asking questions and attempting answers as they discover that life really is a forever and ever adventure.

A funny, philosophical look at the universal subject of money by award-winning non-fiction writer Martin Jenkins, illustrated by Satoshi Kitamura. In the Yap Islands in the South Pacific money can be a stone with a hole in the middle. It can be a string of shells, a bundle of cloth or a copper slab. It’s the stuff that makes the world go round and doesn’t grow on trees. In this fascinating and thought-provoking book, Martin Jenkins explores the history of money from its earliest beginnings to the electronic banking of today. Along the way we learn about hunter gatherers, barter, clay tablets, goat swapping, precious metals, hard bargains, IOUs, interest, coins, Romans, taxes, inflation, paper money, currencies and exchange rates. Satoshi Kitamura’s quirky, satirical drawings perfectly complement the dry humour of the text and in the end we are reminded that money only exists because we believe in it.

It was an ordinary morning when the ordinary boy woke up, and it was an ordinary journey to school – but then Mr Gee bounced into the classroom and everything changed. Mr Gee plays rousing music which thunders around the classroom, and asks what it makes them think of. The dull grey world has been transformed into one of colour and excitement. ‘Write a story about it!’ laughs Mr Gee. And the ordinary boy began to write: the words just tumbled out of him pell-mell. And the places he went to, and the things he saw were extraordinary!

The Yes is a powerful picture book that cleverly illustrates the power of a positive attitude. All the nos” teem and seethe and pick and nip, but The Yes ignores them and carries on with what it wants to do. All children I have read this book to have responded strongly to it. Some have seen “the nos” as external negative influences, some have seen them as internal negative thoughts. All though have internalised the message that it is important not to let negative messages take over and dominate. A useful book for exploring self-belief and self-doubt.

This engaging picture book tells the story of a boy who falls down a hole to find himself back in time 15,000 years. He wakes in a prehistoric camp and finds out about life in a Stone Age village.

Stone Age Boy is a hugely popular book with lower KS2 classes and helps to encourage children to engage with how life might have been different during Stone Age times. Extra facts and information are peppered throughout. There is also an accompanying 2-week English unit available from KS2History.

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