Tom vs. the Captain
The one bit of particularly good news today was the arrival in the mail of a package from amazon.co.uk. One of you writerly types (and I'm very sorry I can't remember which) mentioned a while back that two long-out-of-print Russell Hoban books were now available in the UK; a quick browse later, I had ordered myself three copies of How Tom Beat Captain Najork and His Hired Sportsmen and two copies of A Near Thing for Captain Najork (which I already owned one copy of).
These are among the best kids' books ever. They're magazine-sized (and, in this edition, softcover) picture books, written by Russell (Riddley Walker) Hoban (also the author of Bread and Jam for Frances, of course) and illustrated by Quentin Blake (probably best known for his illustrations for Roald Dahl books). The first book details what happens when young Tom's Aunt Fidget Wonkham-Strong calls in Captain Najork and his Hired Sportsmen to teach Tom a lesson. Thrills! Chills! Spills! Womble! Muck! Sneedball! Fooling around! (No, not in that sense. Silly.) The second book provides some further adventures of the main characters, and features the Headmistress of a nearby girls' boarding school; also, a two-seater jam-powered frog.
They're inspired silliness, and I owe an immense debt of gratitude to Nao and Stephen for introducing me to them lo these many years ago (and thereby causing me a great deal of frustration over the fruitless years of searching for copies to call my own). Also to, um, whichever one of you it was who pointed me at last to the culmination of my long quest.