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Jon Klassen - Community Reviews back

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My Never Ending List
My Never Ending List rated it 4 years ago
Ahhhh, the ending of this book is just super. I don't really think you need to read these books in order to enjoy them, as I feel each book in this series is super, all on their own. I do recommend that you look, I mean really look at the illustrations on each page as they really do compliment the s...
My Never Ending List
My Never Ending List rated it 4 years ago
Ha! Now that was a hoot! I loved how confident little fish was during the whole book. He sure was full of himself and his abilities. He actually stole a hat from a bigger fish and then, wore it upon his head. He then, justified his actions, leaving us readers having to decide which side of the argum...
lauradewana
lauradewana rated it 6 years ago
This Is Not My Hat by Jon Klassen is about a small fish that has stolen a hat from a big fish while it was resting. The story follows the little fish as it tries to justify its wrongdoing. The small fish makes comments such as "The hat looks better on me anyway" and "That fish will never find me." T...
FatherCraneMadeMeDoIt
FatherCraneMadeMeDoIt rated it 6 years ago
For more reviews, check out my blog: Craft-CycleI had no idea what this book was about going into it. I saw it at the library and needed an audiobook that was approximately three hours for my commute. The back cover didn't really give much information, but I was intrigued by the cover art. I was not...
Dive Into a Good Book!
Dive Into a Good Book! rated it 6 years ago
A bear has lost his hat. It's small and red and pointy and he wants it back. In search of his hat, he begins to question each animal he encounters. "Have you seen my hat?", the bear continues to ask. The bear thinks that he will never get his hat back, until he realizes that he has seen it somewhere...
Kaethe
Kaethe rated it 7 years ago
The three books in the Hat trilogy are a single perfect entity: the same story (essentially) told from three different points of view. So simple, in tone and art, so nonjudgemental. Klassen makes Hemingway and McCarthy look like poseurs. Library copy
Kaethe
Kaethe rated it 8 years ago
Set amidst a dystopian hellscape of repetition and conformity, Barnett and Klassen's story evokes a quiet terror in the unwary reader. Look into Triangle's mad, staring, eyes and see the sort of dread that comes to us all after thirty-six hours of bad coffee and no sleep. The prose has been sucked...
Reading is my ESCAPE from Reality!
Reading is my ESCAPE from Reality! rated it 8 years ago
The first time I saw them, I thought they were angels. - first sentence Well, this was a bit quirky. I liked it, but I didn't love it. Steve is a worrier, and what he worries about most nowadays is his baby brother. His parents are worried too. The baby has things wrong with him, and he isn't s...
Joyia's Book Corner
Joyia's Book Corner rated it 8 years ago
I Want My Hat Back is a silly adventure of a bear searching for his missing hat. Receiving a 90L on the Lexile readability scale, it should be easy to read for students from kindergarten through third grade. This would be a great book to teach inference, as the surprise twist is never explicitly sta...
Ronyell (a.k.a Rabbitearsblog)
Ronyell (a.k.a Rabbitearsblog) rated it 8 years ago
Genre: Animals / Sharing / Comedy Year Published: 2016 Year Read: 2016 Publisher: Candlewick Press Series: Hat Trilogy #3 I have to say that this was the year that Jon Klassen’s “Hat” series has really amazed me and I was lucky enough to read all of Jon Klassen’s “Hat” books all at onc...
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