Shinta Chō (Japanese: 長新太ちょうしんた, September 24 1927 - June 25 2005) was an award-winning Japanese children’s author and illustrator.[1][2] He won the Japan Picture Book Awards Grand Prize for Kyabetsu-kun (Cabbage Boy) in 1981.

Life

Chō was born Shuji Suzuki in Tokyo in 1928. He began illustrating cartoon strips in the late 1940s. He created the Talkative Fried Egg cartoon for a cartoon monthly in 1959. He also wrote children’s books, including The Gas We Pass: The Story of Farts (Japan 1978, USA 1994).[3]

Awards

[1][4]

  • 1959 - he won the Bungei Shunju Manga Award for Oshaberi na tamagoyaki (The Talkative Omelet)
  • 1974 - he won an honourable mention in the Hans Christian Andersen Awards for Oshaberi na tamagoyaki (The Talkative Omelet)
  • 1977 - he won the Kodansha Publication Culture Award for Children's Picture Books for Haru desu yo, Fukurō Obasan (Spring Is Here, Auntie Owl).
  • 1981 - he won the Japan Picture Book Awards Grand Prize for Kyabetsu-kun (Cabbage Boy)
  • 1986 - he won an award for Sakasama raion (Upside-Down Lion)
  • 1994 - he received Japan's Medal with Purple Ribbon in recognition of his work as an artist and illustrator
  • 1999 - he won a Japanese Picture Book Award for Gomu-atama Pontarō (Rubber-Headed Pontarō)
  • 2002 - he won the ExxonMobil Children’s Culture Award[1][5]

Children's books

  • The Gas We Pass: The Story of Farts (Onara / おなら)
  • Umph-a-Lumph, Meow (Tsumi-tsumi nya / つみつみニャー)
  • Chorus of Winter Buds (Fuyume gasshodan / ふゆめがっしょうだん)
  • The Easygoing Aquarium (Nonbiri suizokukan / ノンビリすいぞくかん)
  • The Cats and Their Flying Machine (Gorogoro nyan / ごろごろ にゃーん)
  • Up! Up! (Dakko, dakko, nee dakko / だっこだっこねえだっこ)
  • Rolling Kittens (Korokoro nyan / ころころにゃーん)
  • A Worm Named Buddy (Mimizu no ossan / みみずのオッサン)
  • Chomp! (Pakkun pakkun / ぱっくんぱっくん)
  • Dakuchiru, Dakuchiru
  • My Beach (Watashi no Umibe)
  • The Talkative Omelet (Oshaberi na tamagoyaki)
  • Spring is Here, Auntie Owl (Fukurō Obasan)
  • Cabbage Boy (Kyabetsu-kun)
  • Upside-Down Lion (Sakasama raion)
  • Rubber-Headed Pontarō (Gomu-atama Pontarō)

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Shinta Chō". Books from Japan. Archived from the original on 21 September 2017. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  2. "長新太(ちょうしんた)とは - コトバンク" (in Japanese). kotobank. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
  3. Obituaries in the Performing Arts 2005: Film, Television, Radio Theatre, Dance, Music, Cartoons and Pop Culture, by Harris M. Lentz III (McFarland, 2006), p. 67.
  4. "絵本賞 : 講談社" (in Japanese). Kodansha. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
  5. "Shinta Cho wins award". The Japan Times. 15 November 2002. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
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