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The Man Who Lost His Head

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BfK No. 181 - March 2010
BfK 181 March 2010

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration is from Brian Wildsmith’s The Hare and the Tortoise (© Brian Wildsmith 1966) published by Oxford University Press and re-issued in 2007 (978 0 19 272708 4, £5.99 pbk). Brian Wildsmith’s work is discussed by Joanna Carey in this issue. Thanks to Oxford University Press for their help with this March cover.

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The Man Who Lost His Head

Claire Huchet Bishop
Illustrated by Robert McCloskey
(NYRB Children's Collection)
64pp, 978-1590173329, RRP £9.99, Hardcover
8-10 Junior/Middle
Buy "The Man Who Lost His Head (New York Review Children's Collection)" on Amazon

The first page of this picture book consists of a single line, ‘Once upon a time there was a Man who lost his head’, above McCloskey’s bold, realistic, black and white drawing of the Man sitting up in bed desperately groping for the missing appendage. It’s a startling opening to a bizarre story in which the Man fashions himself a series of heads so that he can seek the real object at the village fair. After several demoralising encounters, he meets a wise urchin whose systematic interrogation of the problem leads to a suitably strange resolution.

This is a wonderfully odd book. First published in 1942, and reissued in the fascinating NYRCC series of classic children’s books, the vivid words and drawings here depict several layers of strangeness: a vanished rural America; the carnival chaos of the fairground; the nonchalant way in which the headless Man’s dreadful plight is responded to until he meets the mysterious waif. There is, perhaps, an unparaphrasable allegory about self-knowledge hovering here, but children will enjoy the story for its mixture of nightmare, laughter and wordplay.

Reviewer: 
George Hunt
5
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