Review by Booklist Review
Bored with seeing the same old things every day, Mr. Posey decides to improve his view with a new pair of glasses. He enlists the help of his young neighbor Andy, and together they walk to the Cheer Up Thrift Shop, which smells of rose petals that somebody had kept in an old shoe. Mr. Posey approaches the glasses box and pulls out a pair with star-shaped frames. As soon as he puts them on, the world dramatically transforms into a star-spangled night sky. Nope! The next specs plunge him under the ocean, which proves a tad too exciting. Mr. Posey tries on several more pairs, but none is right. It's not until Andy points out how dirty Mr. Posey's old glasses are that his dreary dilemma is solved. Duncan's vintage-inflected digital artwork will pull readers into the swiftly changing scenes and hold their attention with the many details contained therein. Text-heavy pages make this best suited for older picture book readers; however, its message of seeing the world with fresh eyes holds broad appeal.--Julia Smith Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Routine and sameness are wearing on Mr. Posey, a bespectacled, balding older man.Mr. Posey longs to see the world as his young neighbor Andy sees it, with effervescence and possibility! He decides replacing his glasses may help and invites Andy along for the adventure. They walk through their diverse neighborhood (Mr. Posey presents white, and Andy presents black) to scour the local thrift shop for the right pair. With each set of lenses that he tries, Mr. Posey is transported into a world quite different from his own. A star-shaped pair shows him the night sky; a round pair makes him feel the world is whirling around him. Some even defy the laws of physics! In the end, after Andy points out how dirty Mr. Posey's original glasses are, he is able to see just fine with them after all. Mr. Posey's humdrum slump is expertly communicated through the illustrations. His bathroom waste bin overflows, his flowers droop, and a gray wash hangs over everything. Some exceptionally keen descriptors leap out of the narrative, such as the thrift shop's "rose-petal old-shoe smell." Though the journey in and out of the different glasses is rather formulaic, and the relationship between Mr. Posey and Andy is regrettably underdeveloped, this is still a nice representation of intergenerational friendship.Surreal, wacky, and peppered with just a hint of danger. (Picture book. 6-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.