The Secret of the Blue Glass by Tomiko Inui was shortlisted for the Marsh Award.
In my own special place there is no little prince from a distant star, nor a pleasant river bank from where sounds the clear strains of Pan’s pipes. My special place is the house in Tokyo where I was born and grew up, which was destroyed in an air raid during the war. I can still recall how, when I joined the mass evacuation of primary school children leaving for the countryside, I kept looking back at it longingly over my shoulder as I was led away. No trace remains of that house now, nor of the house in the shade of the big Zelkova tree next door. And I’ll probably never again get to meet that little imp of a girl who lives there.
Or so I believed for ten years, until one day I ran into an old friend by chance on the train and he happened to mention her to me. “She still remembers you, you know,” she said. “She sometimes wishes she could meet up with that boy next-door who was so good at the high bar. She sounded really quite wistful.”….
About the Author: Tomiko Inui (1924-2002) has won the Mainichi Publishing Culture Award and the Akaitori Award for Children’s Literature, and was a runner-up for the Hans Christian Andersen prize. The Secret of the Blue Glass is the first of her books to be translated into English.