The Man Who Lost His Head
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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.
The Man Who Lost His Head
Illustrated by Robert McCloskey
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.



