ALA Booklist
(Wed Jul 05 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Fia knows that her mom thinks Fia's hair is a mess, but she refuses to brush it. Her long, brown, tangled tresses contain multitudes ws, leaves, sticks, and ribbons d if they look like a bird's nest, that's because a small bird has taken up residence there and laid three eggs. Fia does everything she can to keep her feathered friends comfortable: she sleeps sitting straight up, serenades them with songs, and takes bubble baths without washing her hair. The family soon leaves the nest, and Fia is left briefly bereft before determining to make her own change, too. After some brushing, snipping, and cajoling, Fia has fashioned herself a shorter, sleeker style. Cheerful illustrations capture the ever-expanding hair in all its glory and increasing hilarity as the adorable birds make themselves at home. It's wonderful to see Fia given the agency to embrace her hair on her own terms, and it could easily launch a discussion on beauty standards. A sweet, silly story that will have any child resistant to combs and brushes cheering.
Kirkus Reviews
A young girl has a bird's-nest 'do.Fia "refuses to brush her hair," much to her mom's consternation. A gray bird soon takes up residence in the White-presenting girl's scraggly, bushy coiffure. Soon the bird lays eggs-one red, one yellow, and one blue-in Fia's "tangle-knot nest," attracting attention, some of it judgmental but most of it encouraging, from others, including a TV crew. Fia takes good care of the nest, refusing to wash her hair in order to keep it safe, and eventually the eggs hatch into red, yellow, and blue birds. When the birds leave, Fia finally decides that it's time for a new style, to her mother's relief, and her shorn tangle-knot becomes a tree-bound nest. This could be a very relatable story for any child who hates running a comb through frizzy knots or who longs to have a live-in pet (or four), but the prose gets bogged down by unnecessary dialogue tags and written descriptions that are better shown through the jaunty, energetic illustrations. However, it also raises thought-provoking questions about whether a child of color would receive the same admiration if they showed up to school with an unkempt head of hair, and many children will likely get distracted wondering where the birds go to the bathroom. Fia's mother presents White; the supporting cast is diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)A fantastical but flawed fairy tale. (Picture book. 4-7)