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THE UPSIDE DOWN HAT by Stephen Barr

THE UPSIDE DOWN HAT

by Stephen Barr ; illustrated by Gracey Zhang

Pub Date: March 22nd, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-4521-8202-5
Publisher: Chronicle Books

A young boy's versatile hat is the only possession he's got and the only one he needs.

Sitting on a hill surrounded by palm trees, a “boy who had everything” awakens to find all of his possessions gone, from his sewing needle to his birds to his orange stilts. Even his shoes appear to be missing. All that's left are the clothes on his body and a green hat next to him in the morning sun. What follows is a journey to find his belongings during which the boy discovers the many uses of the hat—the thing he now values the most—and what's really important. The unnamed boy takes “a thousand more steps” among “ten thousand strangers” on a quest that tries hard to seem mythical. There is a false note to the dream sequence leading to the muddled ending that leaves the story’s moral unclear. Debut author Barr keeps the language simple and lyrical. Watercolor illustrations vibrating with wobbly lines suggest life and motion in unidentified places that include pillars in ruins and a vibrant outdoor market. The boy, portrayed as having light brown skin and living near a desert, immediately turns to begging with the hat when he can't find help, which could be viewed as stereotypical. The last double-page spread, however, depicting the boy on stilts clomping into the distance wearing the hat while his avian friends play in a birdbath, is a joyous conclusion that defies nitpicking. (This book was reviewed digitally).

The boy's hat is wondrous and needed; the book is good but not essential.

(Picture book. 5-8)