|
Lullaby and goodnight
Ralph Waldo Emerson had the right idea when he wrote, "There was never a child so lovely but his mother was glad to get him to sleep." Here are the latest sleepytime books to help get your little lovelies to bed.
|
REVIEWS BY ALICE CARY
Start with two choices that make a super combination. First, Hush Little Baby: A Folk Song with Pictures. Marla Frazee's lively illustrations are based on living history studies at Fort New Salem, West Virginia. Her splendid details of life in a mountain cabin bring plenty of fun to the classic lullaby.
Hush Little Baby:
A Folk Song with Pictures
By Marla Frazee
Browndeer/ Harcourt, $15
All ages
ISBN 0152014292
Next is Hush, Little Alien, a sci-fi parody of the same lullaby. Daniel Kirk's little green aliens will win your heart as the father romps through extraterrestrial orbits, singing lines like, "If that shooting star's too hot, Papa's gonna find you an astronaut!" Both books are standouts, and even more fun together.
Hush, Little Alien
By Daniel Kirk
Hyperion, $12.99
ISBN 0786805382
More traditional poems await in Twilight Verses Moonlight Rhymes. Mary Joslin has compiled a variety of verse, including many familiar ("Wee Willie Winkie" and "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star"), many new, and some speaking of God. Liz Pichon's illustrations make the text sing even louder.
Twilight Verses Moonlight Rhymes
By Mary Joslin
Augsburg, $16.99
ISBN 0806638850
My own childhood bedtime ritual often included Remy Charlip's classic book Fortunately. Charlip has a new bedtime tale, Sleepytime Rhyme, a mother's simple yet elegant ode to her child. No doubt parents and children will soon memorize the rhyme, which begins: "I love you./I think/You're grand./There's none/Like you/In all the land." The illustrations are sparse and ethereal, but fun; the rhyme is full of emotion without gushing.
Sleepytime Rhyme
By Remy Charlip
Greenwillow, $16
All ages
ISBN 0688162711
Young children will enjoy the simple adventures of a girl named Poppy in Melanie Walsh's Hide and Sleep. Poppy wants to hide at bedtime, but the hamper is too smelly, the dog bed occupied, and so forth, until finally her bed is just right.
Hide and Sleep
By Melanie Walsh
DK Toddler Story Books, $9.95
Ages 1-4
ISBN 0789448203
My five-year-old loves Mem Fox's Sleepy Bears, in which a mother bear prepares her six youngsters for hibernation by giving each his or her own special rhyme. One bear gets a pirate poem, for instance; another becomes a queen with a castle. Be sure to study Kerry Argent's lively watercolors -- as a stuffed elephant gets passed from bear to bear, the candles get shorter as the evening passes, and one bear munches on cereal then brushes his teeth in bed.
Sleepy Bears
By Mem Fox
Harcourt, $16
Ages 3-6
ISBN 0152020160
Another book worthy of close scrutiny is Morning, Noon, and Night. Newbery Medalist Jean Craighead George delivers another of her superb meditations on nature, as animals from the East to West Coasts awake, work, rest, and play during the course of a day. Wendell Minor's illustrations are, as usual, breathtaking. Don't miss the endnotes that identify the animals on each spread and the location of their varied habitats.
Morning, Noon, and Night
By Jean Craighead George
HarperCollins, $15.95
Ages 3-8
ISBN 0060236280
One final bedtime rhyme is Lynn Plourde's unusual poem, Wild Child. As Mother Earth puts her Wild Child to bed, her offspring pleads for a song, a snack, and other bedtime treats. The rewards are all the fruits of fall, such as apples and red and golden leaves -- and the Wild Child turns out to be Autumn. No sooner is Autumn asleep than another child stirs, and this one is Winter. Greg Couch's acrylic and colored pencil illustrations set just the right earthy, autumnal mood. Sweet dreams!
Wild Child
By Lynn Plourde
Simon & Schuster, $16
All ages
ISBN 0689815522
|