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THE BOY WITH FLOWERS IN HIS HAIR by Jarvis

THE BOY WITH FLOWERS IN HIS HAIR

by Jarvis ; illustrated by Jarvis

Pub Date: April 26th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-5362-2522-8
Publisher: Candlewick

A hurting child regains his joy with the help of compassionate friends.

The story is told from the perspective of a dark-haired, tan-skinned boy who is the best friend of David, the titular pale-skinned boy with a mass of colorful blooms decorating his hair. Both David and his unnamed companion are part of a happy, bustling classroom that includes children with various hair textures and skin tones. No one bats an eye at David’s unusual coif, not even when it attracts bees or is hilariously inhabited by a family of birds. “But one day, something happened,” an allusion to an unspecified trauma. Once upbeat and talkative, David grows quiet, uninterested in play, and the flowers fall out of his hair. He starts wearing a hat to cover his “twiggy, spiky, and brittle” head. At first, David’s classmates are unnerved by the change and avoid him. But when his best buddy stays by his side and begins crafting painted paper flowers for David’s hair, the other children quickly join in. Slowly, David’s spark returns, and eventually his original blossoms do, too. His best friend keeps a box of the paper flowers “in case he ever needs them, because he's my best friend, and I am his.” Accompanied by beautiful, uncluttered digital images against lots of white space, Jarvis’ simple, gentle story gives adults room to explain David’s hardship to young readers in their own ways. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A sweet example of how to be a kind and supportive presence in the life of a struggling friend.

(Picture book. 4-7)