Joe Todd-Stanton is from Brighton and grew up drawing with his mum. He studied Illustration at the University of the West of England, afterwards moving to London where he currently lives. His debut The Secret of Black Rock, won the 2018 Waterstones Children’s Book Prize Illustrated category and The Comet won the Yoto Carnegie Shadowers Choice Award 2023. He has written and illustrated many books for Flying Eye Books, as well as illustrating books for other authors.
""A joyful remedy for our times – an uplifting eco-fable of repair, renewal, and second chances."" — Mikey Please, The Café at the Edge of the Woods ""Todd-Stanton tells a devastatingly beautiful story of abandonment and belonging, while also offering a gentle commentary on consumerism and planned obsolescence. [...] This is a masterful blend of storytelling and illustration that will definitely tug at the heartstrings."" — STARRED, Booklist Review ""A broken robot goes in search of its forgotten home in this thoughtful picture book about how nothing—and no one—is ever truly broken. In a futuristic world marred by the consequences of overconsumption, a decrepit robot wakes in a rubbish dump; it searches for the boy it was gifted to, only to find it has been replaced by a newer model. A mother and daughter rescue and repair the robot, giving it a true home—one where love endures."" — STARRED, Foreword Reviews ""Themes of consumerism, obsolescence, and redemption are grounded in genuine emotion throughout this cinematically rendered picture book about finding one’s people and one’s place in the world"" — Publisher's Weekly ""The skillful use of color early in the book, a palette of mostly grays and browns, sets up a celebratory explosion later, when Mio is not only repaired but also painted with a rich variety of colors [...] little ones will undoubtedly cheer Mio’s eventual restoration and renewed sense of purpose and belonging."" — Bulletin Center for Children's Books