FICTION

Goodnight Everyone

illus. by Chris Haughton. 32p. Candlewick. Dec. 2016. Tr $15.99. ISBN 9780763690793.
COPY ISBN
PreS-Gr 1—The sun is setting, and while the forest creatures feel the inevitable draw of slumber, Little Bear is wide awake. A fantastical purple and fuchsia woodland surrounds four mice, three hares, two deer, and Great Big Bear and her cub, Little Bear. In a series of introductory flaps, Haughton reveals how each animal group gets ready for bed, by establishing a simple pattern ideal for storytelling. Children will itch to join in as the mice yawn, the hares sigh, the deer take a deep breath, and Great Big Bear stretches. However, Little Bear does not feel sleepy and is determined to invite his friends to play. When sleep finally finds him, he follows the same path as the others: sighing, taking a deep breath, stretching, and yawning. Great Big Bear then gently carries him off to bed. Readers then say good night to each animal family in its home, starting with the mice. A dandelion appears, and a mouse's gentle snores blow seeds into the air. Dandelion seeds rise slowly into the sky on each subsequent page until the final page, where the moon is high and all are asleep. Small dots trail across the endpapers, too, like a continuation of the seeds and the animals' dreams. They soar around the southern and northern constellation maps to the forest shown on the earth in the solar system map. This is a charming addition about a dreamer's place within the wider world.
VERDICT A stunning picture book for sharing during storytimes or quiet times before bed, this is a must for all collections.—Rachel Zuffa, Racine Public Library, WI
Clever book design adds a little something extra to this bedtime book, illustrated with Haughton's signature blocky, digital illustrations, and rendered in a jewel-toned palette. Front and back inky-blue flyleaves depict the solar system, with tiny silhouetted pictures of the animals from the book sitting on top of the Earth. In the front they are illuminated by the sun, while in the back their hemisphere is in darkness, echoing how night falls in the story. Southern and Northern constellations adorn the endpapers. On the half-title page, a wide-awake cub looks at a yawning big bear. Then the book begins with several woodland animals, eyes at half-mast, while the same little wide-awake bear looks on: "The sun is going down and everyone is sleepy." Subsequent pages are trimmed at the right side to offer a tiered progression (narrow to less narrow) of three page-turns telling readers how very sleepy the mice, hares, and deer are, all leading up to the big bear's "GREAT, BIG STRETCH." But the little bear, with those great big eyes, is not sleepy. Alas, the cub can find no playmates among the drowsy animals and eventually exhausts itself searching for some. A return home to the big bear provides cozy closure for the little bear, and for the rest of the animals, too, as closing illustrations zoom out for the "goodnight everyone" ending: "The moon is high and everyone is fast asleep." megan dowd lambert

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