
Readers with delicate sensibilities may object to the implied conclusion ("I would not eat a rabbit," the bear says stoutly, his hat back on his head, the forest floor showing signs of a scuffle), but there is no objecting to Klassen's skillful characterizations though they're simply drawn and have little to say, each animal emerges fully realized. I Want My Hat Back - Book Read Aloud Read Aloud Childrens Books And Fun Stuff 5.55K subscribers 493 58K views 1 year ago A picture-book delight by a rising talent tells a cumulative tale with a. Don't ask me any more questions." In a classic double-take, the bear doesn't notice the hat on the rabbit's head until several pages on: "I have seen my hat," he realizes, wide-eyed.

Most of the answers the bear gets are no help ("What's a hat?" one animal asks), but the rabbit's answer arouses suspicion: "I haven't seen any hats anywhere.

And so bear goes back into the woods to find his hat. When the deer asks him what it looks like, Bear realizes that he has, in fact, seen his hat. He asks various woodland creatures if they have seen his hat. is the UKs largest childrens book review community with over. I Want My Hat Back is about a bear who has lost his hat. Unadorned lines of type, printed without quotation marks or attributions, parallel the sparse lines Klassen uses for the forest's greenery. Read the latest reviews for I Want My Hat Back by Jon Klassen and Jon Klassen. Digitally manipulated ink paintings show a slow-witted bear asking half a dozen forest animals if they've seen his hat. In his first outing as an author, Klassen's (Cats' Night Out) words and artwork are deliberately understated, with delectable results. I Want My Hat Back by Jon Klassen 4.1 (28) Board Book 8.99 BN Exclusive 11.99 Hardcover 16.99 eBook 9.99 Audiobook 0.00 Board Book 8.
