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Goodnight Moon

Goodnight Moon is an American children's book written by Margaret Wise Brown and illustrated by Clement Hurd. It was published on September 3, 1947, and is a highly acclaimed bedtime story.

Goodnight Moon
Book cover
AuthorMargaret Wise Brown
IllustratorClement Hurd
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreChildren's literature
PublisherHarper & Brothers
Publication date
September 3, 1947
Pages32pp
ISBN0-06-443017-0
OCLC299277
[E] 21
LC ClassPZ7.B8163 Go 1997
Preceded byThe Runaway Bunny 
Followed byMy World 

This book is the second in Brown and Hurd's "classic series," which also includes The Runaway Bunny and My World. The three books have been published together as a collection titled Over the Moon.[1]

Background edit

In 1935,[2] author Margaret Wise Brown enrolled at the Bank Street Experimental School[3] in New York, NY.[2] At Bank Street, Brown studied childhood development alongside the school’s founder, Lucy Sprague Mitchell,[2] who believed that children preferred stories about everyday topics rather than fantasies.[2] Mitchell’s ideas[2] combined with Brown’s observance of what children enjoyed[3] formed the foundation for Brown’s writing going forward, including the familiar world depicted in Goodnight Moon.[4]

In 1945, the idea for Goodnight Moon appeared to Margaret Wise Brown in a dream.[5] She wrote down the story in the morning, with the original title of the book being Goodnight Room.[5] Brown gave illustrator Clement Hurd very little direction on the illustrations,[2] and the characters in Goodnight Moon are depicted as rabbits because Hurd was better at drawing rabbits than humans.[2] This was among several decisions made regarding the illustrations over the course of the book’s creation.[2] Other revisions include replacing a framed map on the wall with a scene from The Runaway Bunny and blurring the udder of the “cow that jumped over the moon.”[2]

Publication history edit

Illustrator Clement Hurd said in 1983 that initially the book was to be published using the pseudonym "Memory Ambrose" for Brown, with his illustrations credited to "Hurricane Jones."[6]

Goodnight Moon had poor initial sales: only 6,000 copies were sold upon initial release in the fall of 1947.[citation needed] Anne Carroll Moore, the influential children's librarian at the New York Public Library (NYPL), regarded it as "overly sentimental."[citation needed] The NYPL and other libraries did not acquire it at first.[7] During the post-World War II Baby Boom years, it slowly became a bestseller. Annual sales grew from about 1,500 copies in 1953 to almost 20,000 in 1970;[7] by 1990, the total number of copies sold exceeded four million.[8] As of 2007, the book sells about 800,000 copies annually,[9] and by 2017 had cumulatively sold an estimated 48 million copies.[10] Goodnight Moon has been translated into Spanish, French, Dutch, Chinese, Japanese, Catalan, Hebrew, Brazilian Portuguese, Russian, Swedish, Korean, Hmong and German.[11][12]

In 1952, at the age of 42, Margaret Wise Brown died following a routine operation, and did not live to see the success of her book.[2] Brown bequeathed the royalties to the book (among many others) to Albert Clarke, who was the nine-year-old son of a neighbor when Brown died. Clarke, who squandered the millions of dollars the book earned him, said that Brown was his mother, a claim others dismiss.[13]

In 2005, publisher HarperCollins digitally altered the photograph of illustrator Hurd, which had been on the book for at least twenty years, to remove a cigarette. HarperCollins' editor-in-chief for children's books, Kate Jackson, said, "It is potentially a harmful message to very young [children]." HarperCollins had the reluctant permission of Hurd's son, Thacher Hurd, but the younger Hurd said the photo of Hurd with his arm and fingers extended, holding nothing, "looks slightly absurd to me."[14] HarperCollins has said it will likely replace the picture with a different, unaltered photo of Hurd in future editions.[needs update][citation needed]

Other editions edit

In addition to several octavo and duodecimo paperback editions, Goodnight Moon is available as a board book and in "jumbo" edition designed for use with large groups.[citation needed]

In 2008, Thacher Hurd used his father's artwork from Goodnight Moon to produce Goodnight Moon 123: A Counting Book. In 2010, HarperCollins used artwork from the book to produce Goodnight Moon's ABC: An Alphabet Book.[citation needed]

In 2015, Loud Crow Interactive Inc. released a Goodnight Moon interactive app.[citation needed]

Synopsis edit

The text is a rhyming poem, describing an anthropomorphic bunny's bedtime ritual of saying "good night" to various inanimate and living objects in the bunny's bedroom: a red balloon, a pair of socks, the bunny's dollhouse, a bowl of mush, and two kittens, among others; despite the kittens, a mouse is present in each spread.[15] The book begins at 7:00 PM, and ends at 8:10 PM, with each spread being spaced 10 minutes apart, as measured by the two clocks in the room, and reflected (improbably)[16] in the rising moon.[17] The illustrations alternate between 2-page black-and-white spreads of objects and 2-page color spreads of the room, like the other books in the series (a common cost-saving technique at the time).[15]

Allusions and references edit

Goodnight Moon contains a number of references to Brown and Hurd's The Runaway Bunny, and to traditional children's literature. For example, the room of Goodnight Moon generally resembles the next-to-last spread of The Runaway Bunny, where the little bunny becomes a little boy and runs into a house, and the mother bunny becomes the little boy's mother; shared details include the fireplace and the painting by the fireplace of "The Cow Jumping Over the Moon," though other details differ (the colors of the walls and floor are switched, for instance). The painting is itself a reference to the nursery rhyme "Hey Diddle Diddle," where a cow jumps over the moon.[18] However, when reprinted in Goodnight Moon, the udder was reduced to an anatomical blur to avoid the controversy that E.B. White's Stuart Little had undergone when published in 1945.[19] The painting of three bears, sitting in chairs, alludes to "Goldilocks and the Three Bears" (originally "The Story of the Three Bears"),[18] which also contains a copy of the cow jumping over the moon painting. The other painting in the room, which is never explicitly mentioned in the text, portrays a bunny fly-fishing for another bunny, using a carrot as bait. This picture is also a reference to The Runaway Bunny, where it is the first colored spread, when the mother says that if the little bunny becomes a fish, she will become a fisherman and fish for him. The top shelf of the bookshelf, below the Runaway Bunny painting, holds an open copy of The Runaway Bunny, and there is a copy of Goodnight Moon on the nightstand.

A telephone is mentioned early in the book. The primacy of the reference to the telephone indicates that the bunny is in his mother's room and his mother's bed.[20]

Literary significance and reception edit

In a 2007 online poll, the National Education Association listed the book as one of its "Teachers' Top 100 Books for Children."[21] In 2012 it was ranked number four among the "Top 100 Picture Books" in a survey published by School Library Journal.[22]

From the time of its publication in 1947 until 1972, the book was "banned" by the New York Public Library due to the then-head children's librarian Anne Carroll Moore's hatred of the book.[23] Moore was considered a top taste-maker and arbiter of children's books not only in the New York Public Library, but for libraries nationwide in the United States, even well past her official retirement.[24][23] The book was stocked on the library's shelves only in 1972, at the time of the 25th anniversary of its publication.[23] It did not appear on the NYPL's 2020 list of the 10 most-checked-out books in the library's history.[24]

Author Susan Cooper writes that the book is possibly the only "realistic story" to gain the universal affection of a fairy-tale, although she also noted that it is actually a "deceptively simple ritual" rather than a story.[25]

Writer Ellen Handler Spitz suggests that Goodnight Moon teaches "young children that life can be trusted, that life has stability, reliability, and durability."[26]

Writer Robin Bernstein suggests that Goodnight Moon is popular largely because it helps parents put children to sleep.[27] Bernstein distinguishes between "going-to-bed" books that help children sleep and "bedtime books" that use nighttime as a theme. Goodnight Moon, Bernstein argues, is both a bedtime book and a going-to-bed book.[28]

According to The Daily News (Halifax) writer Cathy MacDonald, when Goodnight Moon was first published, it was considered controversial.[5] This was because Goodnight Moon did not teach children anything,[5] and Goodnight Moon did not “take” children anywhere, as the entire story takes place in only one room.[5]

New Yorker writer Rosemary C. Benet called Goodnight Moon a "hypnotic bedtime litany."[2]

Regarding Goodnight Moon, The Christian Science Monitor wrote that “a book for little children which creates an atmosphere of peace and calm is something for which to be thankful.”[2]

Analysis edit

In his article Bedtime Books, the Bedtime Story Ritual, and Goodnight Moon, Daniel Pereira analyzes the function of Goodnight Moon as a “bedtime book” that is not only beneficial to children at bedtime, but is beneficial to parents as well.[29] Pereira first defines a “bedtime book” as a book that both “represents” bedtime and is about bedtime, and is meant to be read by a parent and child together.[29] Pereira further argues that bedtime books such as Goodnight Moon serve parental interests since they help parents carry out their duty of being an “entertainer, educator, enchanter”[29] at bedtime while also maintaining a sense of independence between the child and the parent.[29] Pereira analyzes the effectiveness of Goodnight Moon’s illustrations in assisting parents at bedtime through discussing Joseph Stanton’s evaluation of the role of the “old lady,” who is treated as another “feature of the landscape”[29] rather than as a character herself.[29] Stanton notes that the objectification of the old lady contributes to a sense of independence in the child, who lacks a true parental figure in the “great green room."[29] Pereira asserts that despite this objectification, the old lady still conveys a message when she whispers “hush."[29] He notes that in doing so, the old lady “delivers the parent’s bedtime message for them,”[29] which reminds the child reader to be quiet.[29]

In the article 'Goodnight Nobody': Comfort and the Vast Dark in the Picture-Poems of Margaret Wise Brown and Her Collaborators, author Joseph Stanton discusses a motif present in Goodnight Moon that he refers to as “child-alone-in-the-wide-world.”[30] According to Stanton, this motif is present in much of Brown’s work and is characterized by a child character finding resolution in being left alone.[30] Further contributing to this motif, Stanton argues that the child is at the center of both the words and the illustrations in Goodnight Moon due to a lack of any parental figure.[30] He states that the voice in Goodnight Moon is not the child’s voice, but rather an omniscient voice that knows and understands what the child sees.[30] Additionally, Stanton comments that each illustration focuses on what the child is looking at, which corresponds to what is being named in each scene.[30]

In his article 'Goodnight Moon' was once banned: Classic children's book marks 75th anniversary, Jim Beckerman presents analysis about why children enjoy Goodnight Moon.[3] Beckerman references professor Julie Rosenthal’s point that Goodnight Moon acts as a “scavenger hunt”[3] for children, as they are able to search the illustrations for each object mentioned in the book.[3] Beckerman also mentions some of professor April Patrick’s ideas, such as how the rhyming scheme fascinates children,[3] as well as how children feel comfort in reading a book about real things.[3]

Animated adaptation edit

In 1985, Weston Woods released a filmstrip adaptation of the book.[31]

On July 15, 1999, Goodnight Moon was announced as a 26-minute animated family video special/documentary, which debuted on HBO Family in December of that year,[32] and was released on VHS on April 15, 2000, and DVD in 2005, in the United States. The special features an animated short of Goodnight Moon, narrated by Susan Sarandon, along with six other animated segments of children's bedtime stories and lullabies with live-action clips of children reflecting on a series of bedtime topics in between, a reprise of Goodnight Moon at the end, and the Everly Brothers' "All I Have To Do Is Dream" playing over the closing credits. The special is notable for its post-credits clip, which features a boy being interviewed about dreams but stumbling over his sentence, which soon became a meme in 2011 when it was uploaded on YouTube. He was referencing a line from the 1997 Disney animated film Hercules.[33] The boy's identity was unknown until July 2021, when he came forward as Joseph Cirkiel in a video interview with Youtuber wavywebsurf.[34]

Here are the other tales and lullabies featured in the video:

Musical adaptation edit

In 2012, American composer Eric Whitacre obtained the copyright holder's permission to set the words to music. He did so initially for a soprano, specifically his then wife Hila Plitmann, with harp and string orchestra. He subsequently arranged it for soprano and piano, SSA (two soprano lines plus alto; commissioned by the National Children's Chorus), and SATB (commissioned by a consortium of choirs).[35][36][37]

Exhibit adaptation edit

In 2006, an exhibit titled “From Goodnight Moon to Art Dog: The World of Clement, Edith and Thacher Hurd'' was on display at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island.[38] This exhibit featured 3-D displays of Clement Hurd’s artwork, as well as artwork from his wife, Edith Hurd, and his son, Thacher Hurd.[38] Included in the displays was the “great green room” scene from Goodnight Moon.[38] Providence was the exhibit’s final stop in the United States.[38] The exhibit had also featured shows in Vermont, Michigan, Florida and South Carolina.[38]

In popular culture edit

The first episode of the Warner Bros. animated television series Animaniacs included a spoof of Goodnight Moon named "Nighty-Night Toon."[39]

The Goodnight Moon Game, by Briar Patch, is a memory game for very young children. It won a 1998 Parents' Choice Gold Award[40] and a 1999 Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Platinum Award.[41]

The January 13, 2002 edition of the comic strip Zits featured Jeremy Duncan, the main character, reciting a parody of Goodnight Moon; his room and curtains resembled those in the book.[42]

In 2010, CollegeHumor posted five science fiction spoofs of well-known children's stories, including a mashup of Goodnight Moon and Frank Herbert's novel Dune, entitled Goodnight Dune.[43]

In 2011, American rock band Go Radio released a single entitled "Goodnight Moon" on their album "Do Overs and Second Chances", which features lyrics that allude to the story.

A parody written by David Milgrim and published under the pseudonym “Ann Droyd” in October 2011, Goodnight iPad: a Parody for the next generation “shows a very different homelife 50 years later, with mobile devices, social networks, and non-stop streaming media.”[44]

The University of Minnesota Press published the 2015 book Goodnight Loon, full of Minnesota Northwoods language. The original text's bunny is replaced by the university's mascot, Goldy Gopher.[45][46]

Mad magazine published a parody of the book starring Batman, titled "Goodnight, Batcave."[citation needed]

Catherynne M. Valente's 2021 novella The Past Is Red includes a character named Goodnight Moon.[citation needed]

Survivors of an extraterrestrial organism's killings in 2017 science-fiction film Life read excerpts from Goodnight Moon.[47][48][49][50][51]

In the TV series Mad Men (Season 5, Episode 11), Pete Campbell reads Goodnight Moon to his daughter.[citation needed]

The January 29, 2023 edition of the comic strip FoxTrot features Jason Fox reciting his own version of Goodnight Moon while shutting down the family desktop computer.[52]

References edit

  1. ^ Brown, Margaret Wise and Clement Hurd. Over the Moon: A Collection of First Books (HarperCollins, 2006).
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Marcus, Leonard. "Awakened by the Moon: a new biography of Margaret Wise Brown presents a revealing portrait of the author of Goodnight Moon and more than 100 other books for children.", vol. 238, no. 33, 1991, pp. 16+. Gale Literature Resource Center; Gale.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Beckerman, Jim. "'Goodnight Moon' was once banned: Classic children's book marks 75th anniversary." The News Journal, 2022. ProQuest Central.
  4. ^ Mills, Nicolaus. "We’ve Been Saying Goodnight to That Moon for 70 Years: It doesn’t have a plot or much of a main character, and it all takes place inside one room. But ‘Goodnight Moon’ has been enchanting us for generations, and it never gets old." The Daily Beast, ProQuest Central, Research Library, 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e MacDonald, Cathy. "That great green room: Margaret Wise Brown's children's classic turns 50." The Daily News (Halifax), 1997, pp. 64.
  6. ^ Hurd, Clement. "Remembering Margaret Wise Brown." Horn Book Magazine Vol. 59 (5). October 1983. 553-560. 552.
  7. ^ a b Meagan Flynn. "Who could hate 'Goodnight Moon'? This powerful New York librarian." The Washington Post. via San Francisco Chronicle. January 14, 2020.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on August 9, 2011. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
  9. ^ Adcock, Joe. "Turning a tiny book into a musical? No problem," Seattle Post-Intelligencer (January 11, 2007).
  10. ^ Crawford, Amy (January 17, 2017). "The Surprising Ingenuity Behind "Goodnight Moon"". Smithsonian. Retrieved January 27, 2017.
  11. ^ Robin Bernstein, "'You Do it!': Going-to-Bed Books and the Scripts of Children's Literature," PMLA, Volume 135 , Issue 5 , October 2020 , pp. 877 - 894
  12. ^ "Buenas noches, luna". shop.scholastic.com.
  13. ^ Prager, Joshua (September 8, 2000). . Wall Street Journal. p. A1. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved March 26, 2007.
  14. ^ Wyatt, Edward (November 17, 2005). "'Goodnight Moon,' Smokeless Version". New York Times. Retrieved November 23, 2005.
  15. ^ a b Andrea (November 14, 2009). . Archived from the original on January 5, 2021.
  16. ^ Dr Chad Orzel (October 12, 2010). "The Astrophysics of Bedtime Stories".
  17. ^ Chuck Bueter (1997). . GLPA Proceedings. Archived from the original on August 28, 2019.
  18. ^ a b Leanne Barrett (January 25, 2019). . Kids' Book Review. Archived from the original on February 2, 2019.
  19. ^ Marcus, Leonard S. Making of Goodnight Moon (New York: HarperTrophy, 1997), p. 21.
  20. ^ Pearson, Claudia. Have a Carrot: Oedipal Theory and Symbolism in Margaret Wise Brown's Runaway Bunny Trilogy. Look Again Press (2010). ISBN 978-1-4524-5500-6.
  21. ^ National Education Association (2007). "Teachers' Top 100 Books for Children". Retrieved August 19, 2012.
  22. ^ Bird, Elizabeth (July 6, 2012). . "A Fuse #8 Production". Blog. School Library Journal (blog.schoollibraryjournal.com). Archived from the original on December 4, 2012. Retrieved August 19, 2012.
  23. ^ a b c Kois, Dan (January 13, 2020). "How One Librarian Tried to Squash Goodnight Moon". Slate Magazine. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  24. ^ a b Flynn, Meagan. "Who could hate 'Goodnight Moon'? This powerful New York librarian". Washington Post. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  25. ^ Cooper, Susan (1981). Betsy Hearne; Marilyn Kay (eds.). Celebrating Children's Books: Essays on Children's Literature in Honor of Zena Sutherland. New York: Lathrop, Lee, and Shepard Books. pp. 15. ISBN 0-688-00752-X.
  26. ^ Spitz, Ellen Handler. Inside Picture Books (Yale University Press, 2000), p. 34.
  27. ^ Bernstein, Robin (2020). ""'You Do It!': Going-to-Bed Books and the Scripts of Children's Literature"". PMLA. 135 (5): 877–894. Retrieved December 28, 2021.
  28. ^ Bernstein, Robin (October 2020). ""'You Do It!': Going-to-Bed Books and the Scripts of Children's Literature"". PMLA. 145 (5): 878.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Pereira, Daniel. "Bedtime Books, the Bedtime Story Ritual, and Goodnight Moon." Children's Literature Association Quarterly, vol. 44, no. 2, 2019, pp. 156-172. ProQuest Central, Research Library.
  30. ^ a b c d e Stanton, Joseph. "'Goodnight Nobody': Comfort and the Vast Dark in the Picture-Poems of Margaret Wise Brown and Her Collaborators." Lion and the Unicorn, vol. 14, 1990, pp. 66-76. Gale Literature Resource Center; Gale.
  31. ^ Ephemera, Uncommon (1984). "Sound Filmstrip: "Goodnight Moon" (Weston Woods Studios #298, 1984)". Internet Archive. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
  32. ^ Time Warner (July 15, 1999). "Fairy Tales, Bedtime Classics and Other Magical Stories Lead HBO's Fall Family Programming Lineup". Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  33. ^ Know Your Meme. "Have You Ever Had A Dream Like This?". Retrieved March 27, 2021.
  34. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : I FOUND THE DREAM KID! - Have You Ever Had A Dream Kid Interview, retrieved July 28, 2021
  35. ^ "Goodnight Moon – Music Catalog". Eric Whitacre. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  36. ^ "Eric Whitacre: Water Night". Presto Music. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  37. ^ "Eric Whitacre". New York Concert Review, Inc. April 20, 2018. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  38. ^ a b c d e "Exhibit based on beloved children's book opens at Rhode Island museum: [Final Edition]." North Bay Nugget, 2006. ProQuest Central.
  39. ^ "Nighty-Night Toon". Animaniacs References Guide. 2013. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
  40. ^ "Goodnight Moon Game". Parents' Choice Foundation. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  41. ^ Clifford, Jane (December 5, 1998). "Pros and kid testers pick the best". San Diego Union-Tribune, The (CA) – via America's News (Newsbank, Inc.).
  42. ^ "2001-2002 Comics Archive".
  43. ^ "Five Sci-Fi Children's Books". College Humor.
  44. ^ mikl-em (November 7, 2011). "Goodnight iPad, A Parody of the Children's Book Goodnight Moon". Laughing Squid. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
  45. ^ "Goodnight Loon". University of Minnesota Press. 2015. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  46. ^ Grossman, Mary Ann (November 30, 2014). "Children's books for the holidays and year-round". St. Paul Pioneer Press. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  47. ^ "Life review – Jake Gyllenhaal hits the retro rockets for sub-Alien space horror". the Guardian. March 22, 2017. Retrieved January 9, 2023.
  48. ^ "MOVIE REVIEW: Life". Every Movie Has a Lesson. March 24, 2017.
  49. ^ Harris, Hunter (March 24, 2017). "Life Has a Lot of Gross Deaths, But Which Is the Grossest?". Vulture.
  50. ^ "Life review – exuberantly grisly Alien rip-off". the Guardian. March 26, 2017.
  51. ^ "Life Movie Review (2017) | A Spine-Tingling Sci-Fi Thriller". March 29, 2017.
  52. ^ Amend, Bill (January 29, 2023). "FoxTrot by Bill Amend for January 29, 2023 | GoComics.com". GoComics.

goodnight, moon, this, article, about, children, book, other, uses, disambiguation, american, children, book, written, margaret, wise, brown, illustrated, clement, hurd, published, september, 1947, highly, acclaimed, bedtime, story, book, coverauthormargaret, . This article is about the children s book For other uses of Goodnight Moon see Goodnight Moon disambiguation Goodnight Moon is an American children s book written by Margaret Wise Brown and illustrated by Clement Hurd It was published on September 3 1947 and is a highly acclaimed bedtime story Goodnight MoonBook coverAuthorMargaret Wise BrownIllustratorClement HurdCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreChildren s literaturePublisherHarper amp BrothersPublication dateSeptember 3 1947Pages32ppISBN0 06 443017 0OCLC299277Dewey Decimal E 21LC ClassPZ7 B8163 Go 1997Preceded byThe Runaway Bunny Followed byMy World This book is the second in Brown and Hurd s classic series which also includes The Runaway Bunny and My World The three books have been published together as a collection titled Over the Moon 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Publication history 2 1 Other editions 3 Synopsis 4 Allusions and references 5 Literary significance and reception 6 Analysis 7 Animated adaptation 8 Musical adaptation 9 Exhibit adaptation 10 In popular culture 11 ReferencesBackground editIn 1935 2 author Margaret Wise Brown enrolled at the Bank Street Experimental School 3 in New York NY 2 At Bank Street Brown studied childhood development alongside the school s founder Lucy Sprague Mitchell 2 who believed that children preferred stories about everyday topics rather than fantasies 2 Mitchell s ideas 2 combined with Brown s observance of what children enjoyed 3 formed the foundation for Brown s writing going forward including the familiar world depicted in Goodnight Moon 4 In 1945 the idea for Goodnight Moon appeared to Margaret Wise Brown in a dream 5 She wrote down the story in the morning with the original title of the book being Goodnight Room 5 Brown gave illustrator Clement Hurd very little direction on the illustrations 2 and the characters in Goodnight Moon are depicted as rabbits because Hurd was better at drawing rabbits than humans 2 This was among several decisions made regarding the illustrations over the course of the book s creation 2 Other revisions include replacing a framed map on the wall with a scene from The Runaway Bunny and blurring the udder of the cow that jumped over the moon 2 Publication history editIllustrator Clement Hurd said in 1983 that initially the book was to be published using the pseudonym Memory Ambrose for Brown with his illustrations credited to Hurricane Jones 6 Goodnight Moon had poor initial sales only 6 000 copies were sold upon initial release in the fall of 1947 citation needed Anne Carroll Moore the influential children s librarian at the New York Public Library NYPL regarded it as overly sentimental citation needed The NYPL and other libraries did not acquire it at first 7 During the post World War II Baby Boom years it slowly became a bestseller Annual sales grew from about 1 500 copies in 1953 to almost 20 000 in 1970 7 by 1990 the total number of copies sold exceeded four million 8 As of 2007 update the book sells about 800 000 copies annually 9 and by 2017 had cumulatively sold an estimated 48 million copies 10 Goodnight Moon has been translated into Spanish French Dutch Chinese Japanese Catalan Hebrew Brazilian Portuguese Russian Swedish Korean Hmong and German 11 12 In 1952 at the age of 42 Margaret Wise Brown died following a routine operation and did not live to see the success of her book 2 Brown bequeathed the royalties to the book among many others to Albert Clarke who was the nine year old son of a neighbor when Brown died Clarke who squandered the millions of dollars the book earned him said that Brown was his mother a claim others dismiss 13 In 2005 publisher HarperCollins digitally altered the photograph of illustrator Hurd which had been on the book for at least twenty years to remove a cigarette HarperCollins editor in chief for children s books Kate Jackson said It is potentially a harmful message to very young children HarperCollins had the reluctant permission of Hurd s son Thacher Hurd but the younger Hurd said the photo of Hurd with his arm and fingers extended holding nothing looks slightly absurd to me 14 HarperCollins has said it will likely replace the picture with a different unaltered photo of Hurd in future editions needs update citation needed Other editions edit In addition to several octavo and duodecimo paperback editions Goodnight Moon is available as a board book and in jumbo edition designed for use with large groups citation needed 1991 US HarperFestival ISBN 0 694 00361 1 publication date September 30 1991 board book citation needed 1997 US HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 027504 9 publication date February 28 1997 Hardback 50th anniversary edition citation needed 2007 US HarperCollins ISBN 0 694 00361 1 publication date January 23 2007 Board book 60th anniversary edition citation needed In 2008 Thacher Hurd used his father s artwork from Goodnight Moon to produce Goodnight Moon 123 A Counting Book In 2010 HarperCollins used artwork from the book to produce Goodnight Moon s ABC An Alphabet Book citation needed In 2015 Loud Crow Interactive Inc released a Goodnight Moon interactive app citation needed Synopsis editThe text is a rhyming poem describing an anthropomorphic bunny s bedtime ritual of saying good night to various inanimate and living objects in the bunny s bedroom a red balloon a pair of socks the bunny s dollhouse a bowl of mush and two kittens among others despite the kittens a mouse is present in each spread 15 The book begins at 7 00 PM and ends at 8 10 PM with each spread being spaced 10 minutes apart as measured by the two clocks in the room and reflected improbably 16 in the rising moon 17 The illustrations alternate between 2 page black and white spreads of objects and 2 page color spreads of the room like the other books in the series a common cost saving technique at the time 15 Allusions and references editGoodnight Moon contains a number of references to Brown and Hurd s The Runaway Bunny and to traditional children s literature For example the room of Goodnight Moon generally resembles the next to last spread of The Runaway Bunny where the little bunny becomes a little boy and runs into a house and the mother bunny becomes the little boy s mother shared details include the fireplace and the painting by the fireplace of The Cow Jumping Over the Moon though other details differ the colors of the walls and floor are switched for instance The painting is itself a reference to the nursery rhyme Hey Diddle Diddle where a cow jumps over the moon 18 However when reprinted in Goodnight Moon the udder was reduced to an anatomical blur to avoid the controversy that E B White s Stuart Little had undergone when published in 1945 19 The painting of three bears sitting in chairs alludes to Goldilocks and the Three Bears originally The Story of the Three Bears 18 which also contains a copy of the cow jumping over the moon painting The other painting in the room which is never explicitly mentioned in the text portrays a bunny fly fishing for another bunny using a carrot as bait This picture is also a reference to The Runaway Bunny where it is the first colored spread when the mother says that if the little bunny becomes a fish she will become a fisherman and fish for him The top shelf of the bookshelf below the Runaway Bunny painting holds an open copy of The Runaway Bunny and there is a copy of Goodnight Moon on the nightstand A telephone is mentioned early in the book The primacy of the reference to the telephone indicates that the bunny is in his mother s room and his mother s bed 20 Literary significance and reception editIn a 2007 online poll the National Education Association listed the book as one of its Teachers Top 100 Books for Children 21 In 2012 it was ranked number four among the Top 100 Picture Books in a survey published by School Library Journal 22 From the time of its publication in 1947 until 1972 the book was banned by the New York Public Library due to the then head children s librarian Anne Carroll Moore s hatred of the book 23 Moore was considered a top taste maker and arbiter of children s books not only in the New York Public Library but for libraries nationwide in the United States even well past her official retirement 24 23 The book was stocked on the library s shelves only in 1972 at the time of the 25th anniversary of its publication 23 It did not appear on the NYPL s 2020 list of the 10 most checked out books in the library s history 24 Author Susan Cooper writes that the book is possibly the only realistic story to gain the universal affection of a fairy tale although she also noted that it is actually a deceptively simple ritual rather than a story 25 Writer Ellen Handler Spitz suggests that Goodnight Moon teaches young children that life can be trusted that life has stability reliability and durability 26 Writer Robin Bernstein suggests that Goodnight Moon is popular largely because it helps parents put children to sleep 27 Bernstein distinguishes between going to bed books that help children sleep and bedtime books that use nighttime as a theme Goodnight Moon Bernstein argues is both a bedtime book and a going to bed book 28 According to The Daily News Halifax writer Cathy MacDonald when Goodnight Moon was first published it was considered controversial 5 This was because Goodnight Moon did not teach children anything 5 and Goodnight Moon did not take children anywhere as the entire story takes place in only one room 5 New Yorker writer Rosemary C Benet called Goodnight Moon a hypnotic bedtime litany 2 Regarding Goodnight Moon The Christian Science Monitor wrote that a book for little children which creates an atmosphere of peace and calm is something for which to be thankful 2 Analysis editIn his article Bedtime Books the Bedtime Story Ritual and Goodnight Moon Daniel Pereira analyzes the function of Goodnight Moon as a bedtime book that is not only beneficial to children at bedtime but is beneficial to parents as well 29 Pereira first defines a bedtime book as a book that both represents bedtime and is about bedtime and is meant to be read by a parent and child together 29 Pereira further argues that bedtime books such as Goodnight Moon serve parental interests since they help parents carry out their duty of being an entertainer educator enchanter 29 at bedtime while also maintaining a sense of independence between the child and the parent 29 Pereira analyzes the effectiveness of Goodnight Moon s illustrations in assisting parents at bedtime through discussing Joseph Stanton s evaluation of the role of the old lady who is treated as another feature of the landscape 29 rather than as a character herself 29 Stanton notes that the objectification of the old lady contributes to a sense of independence in the child who lacks a true parental figure in the great green room 29 Pereira asserts that despite this objectification the old lady still conveys a message when she whispers hush 29 He notes that in doing so the old lady delivers the parent s bedtime message for them 29 which reminds the child reader to be quiet 29 In the article Goodnight Nobody Comfort and the Vast Dark in the Picture Poems of Margaret Wise Brown and Her Collaborators author Joseph Stanton discusses a motif present in Goodnight Moon that he refers to as child alone in the wide world 30 According to Stanton this motif is present in much of Brown s work and is characterized by a child character finding resolution in being left alone 30 Further contributing to this motif Stanton argues that the child is at the center of both the words and the illustrations in Goodnight Moon due to a lack of any parental figure 30 He states that the voice in Goodnight Moon is not the child s voice but rather an omniscient voice that knows and understands what the child sees 30 Additionally Stanton comments that each illustration focuses on what the child is looking at which corresponds to what is being named in each scene 30 In his article Goodnight Moon was once banned Classic children s book marks 75th anniversary Jim Beckerman presents analysis about why children enjoy Goodnight Moon 3 Beckerman references professor Julie Rosenthal s point that Goodnight Moon acts as a scavenger hunt 3 for children as they are able to search the illustrations for each object mentioned in the book 3 Beckerman also mentions some of professor April Patrick s ideas such as how the rhyming scheme fascinates children 3 as well as how children feel comfort in reading a book about real things 3 Animated adaptation editIn 1985 Weston Woods released a filmstrip adaptation of the book 31 On July 15 1999 Goodnight Moon was announced as a 26 minute animated family video special documentary which debuted on HBO Family in December of that year 32 and was released on VHS on April 15 2000 and DVD in 2005 in the United States The special features an animated short of Goodnight Moon narrated by Susan Sarandon along with six other animated segments of children s bedtime stories and lullabies with live action clips of children reflecting on a series of bedtime topics in between a reprise of Goodnight Moon at the end and the Everly Brothers All I Have To Do Is Dream playing over the closing credits The special is notable for its post credits clip which features a boy being interviewed about dreams but stumbling over his sentence which soon became a meme in 2011 when it was uploaded on YouTube He was referencing a line from the 1997 Disney animated film Hercules 33 The boy s identity was unknown until July 2021 when he came forward as Joseph Cirkiel in a video interview with Youtuber wavywebsurf 34 Here are the other tales and lullabies featured in the video Lullaby Hit the Road to Dreamland sung by Tony Bennett This lullaby plays in the opening credits right before Goodnight Moon Lullaby Hush Little Baby sung by Lauryn Hill Story There s a Nightmare in My Closet narrated by Billy Crystal Story Tar Beach narrated by Natalie Cole Lullaby Brahms Lullaby sung by Aaron Neville Lullaby Twinkle Twinkle Little Star sung by Patti LaBelleMusical adaptation editIn 2012 American composer Eric Whitacre obtained the copyright holder s permission to set the words to music He did so initially for a soprano specifically his then wife Hila Plitmann with harp and string orchestra He subsequently arranged it for soprano and piano SSA two soprano lines plus alto commissioned by the National Children s Chorus and SATB commissioned by a consortium of choirs 35 36 37 Exhibit adaptation editIn 2006 an exhibit titled From Goodnight Moon to Art Dog The World of Clement Edith and Thacher Hurd was on display at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence Rhode Island 38 This exhibit featured 3 D displays of Clement Hurd s artwork as well as artwork from his wife Edith Hurd and his son Thacher Hurd 38 Included in the displays was the great green room scene from Goodnight Moon 38 Providence was the exhibit s final stop in the United States 38 The exhibit had also featured shows in Vermont Michigan Florida and South Carolina 38 In popular culture editThe first episode of the Warner Bros animated television series Animaniacs included a spoof of Goodnight Moon named Nighty Night Toon 39 The Goodnight Moon Game by Briar Patch is a memory game for very young children It won a 1998 Parents Choice Gold Award 40 and a 1999 Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Platinum Award 41 The January 13 2002 edition of the comic strip Zits featured Jeremy Duncan the main character reciting a parody of Goodnight Moon his room and curtains resembled those in the book 42 In 2010 CollegeHumor posted five science fiction spoofs of well known children s stories including a mashup of Goodnight Moon and Frank Herbert s novel Dune entitled Goodnight Dune 43 In 2011 American rock band Go Radio released a single entitled Goodnight Moon on their album Do Overs and Second Chances which features lyrics that allude to the story A parody written by David Milgrim and published under the pseudonym Ann Droyd in October 2011 Goodnight iPad a Parody for the next generation shows a very different homelife 50 years later with mobile devices social networks and non stop streaming media 44 The University of Minnesota Press published the 2015 book Goodnight Loon full of Minnesota Northwoods language The original text s bunny is replaced by the university s mascot Goldy Gopher 45 46 Mad magazine published a parody of the book starring Batman titled Goodnight Batcave citation needed Catherynne M Valente s 2021 novella The Past Is Red includes a character named Goodnight Moon citation needed Survivors of an extraterrestrial organism s killings in 2017 science fiction film Life read excerpts from Goodnight Moon 47 48 49 50 51 In the TV series Mad Men Season 5 Episode 11 Pete Campbell reads Goodnight Moon to his daughter citation needed The January 29 2023 edition of the comic strip FoxTrot features Jason Fox reciting his own version of Goodnight Moon while shutting down the family desktop computer 52 References edit Brown Margaret Wise and Clement Hurd Over the Moon A Collection of First Books HarperCollins 2006 a b c d e f g h i j k l Marcus Leonard Awakened by the Moon a new biography of Margaret Wise Brown presents a revealing portrait of the author of Goodnight Moon and more than 100 other books for children vol 238 no 33 1991 pp 16 Gale Literature Resource Center Gale a b c d e f g Beckerman Jim Goodnight Moon was once banned Classic children s book marks 75th anniversary The News Journal 2022 ProQuest Central Mills Nicolaus We ve Been Saying Goodnight to That Moon for 70 Years It doesn t have a plot or much of a main character and it all takes place inside one room But Goodnight Moon has been enchanting us for generations and it never gets old The Daily Beast ProQuest Central Research Library 2017 a b c d e MacDonald Cathy That great green room Margaret Wise Brown s children s classic turns 50 The Daily News Halifax 1997 pp 64 Hurd Clement Remembering Margaret Wise Brown Horn Book Magazine Vol 59 5 October 1983 553 560 552 a b Meagan Flynn Who could hate Goodnight Moon This powerful New York librarian The Washington Post via San Francisco Chronicle January 14 2020 The Writer s Almanac for the week of May 21 2007 Archived from the original on August 9 2011 Retrieved May 12 2011 Adcock Joe Turning a tiny book into a musical No problem Seattle Post Intelligencer January 11 2007 Crawford Amy January 17 2017 The Surprising Ingenuity Behind Goodnight Moon Smithsonian Retrieved January 27 2017 Robin Bernstein You Do it Going to Bed Books and the Scripts of Children s Literature PMLA Volume 135 Issue 5 October 2020 pp 877 894 Buenas noches luna shop scholastic com Prager Joshua September 8 2000 Runaway Money Wall Street Journal p A1 Archived from the original on March 10 2016 Retrieved March 26 2007 Wyatt Edward November 17 2005 Goodnight Moon Smokeless Version New York Times Retrieved November 23 2005 a b Andrea November 14 2009 Things You Might Not Have Known About Goodnight Moon Archived from the original on January 5 2021 Dr Chad Orzel October 12 2010 The Astrophysics of Bedtime Stories Chuck Bueter 1997 Good night Moons Rising GLPA Proceedings Archived from the original on August 28 2019 a b Leanne Barrett January 25 2019 Review Goodnight Moon Kids Book Review Archived from the original on February 2 2019 Marcus Leonard S Making of Goodnight Moon New York HarperTrophy 1997 p 21 Pearson Claudia Have a Carrot Oedipal Theory and Symbolism in Margaret Wise Brown s Runaway Bunny Trilogy Look Again Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 4524 5500 6 National Education Association 2007 Teachers Top 100 Books for Children Retrieved August 19 2012 Bird Elizabeth July 6 2012 Top 100 Picture Books Poll Results A Fuse 8 Production Blog School Library Journal blog schoollibraryjournal com Archived from the original on December 4 2012 Retrieved August 19 2012 a b c Kois Dan January 13 2020 How One Librarian Tried to Squash Goodnight Moon Slate Magazine Retrieved January 14 2020 a b Flynn Meagan Who could hate Goodnight Moon This powerful New York librarian Washington Post Retrieved January 14 2020 Cooper Susan 1981 Betsy Hearne Marilyn Kay eds Celebrating Children s Books Essays on Children s Literature in Honor of Zena Sutherland New York Lathrop Lee and Shepard Books pp 15 ISBN 0 688 00752 X Spitz Ellen Handler Inside Picture Books Yale University Press 2000 p 34 Bernstein Robin 2020 You Do It Going to Bed Books and the Scripts of Children s Literature PMLA 135 5 877 894 Retrieved December 28 2021 Bernstein Robin October 2020 You Do It Going to Bed Books and the Scripts of Children s Literature PMLA 145 5 878 a b c d e f g h i j Pereira Daniel Bedtime Books the Bedtime Story Ritual and Goodnight Moon Children s Literature Association Quarterly vol 44 no 2 2019 pp 156 172 ProQuest Central Research Library a b c d e Stanton Joseph Goodnight Nobody Comfort and the Vast Dark in the Picture Poems of Margaret Wise Brown and Her Collaborators Lion and the Unicorn vol 14 1990 pp 66 76 Gale Literature Resource Center Gale Ephemera Uncommon 1984 Sound Filmstrip Goodnight Moon Weston Woods Studios 298 1984 Internet Archive Retrieved December 25 2022 Time Warner July 15 1999 Fairy Tales Bedtime Classics and Other Magical Stories Lead HBO s Fall Family Programming Lineup Retrieved March 28 2018 Know Your Meme Have You Ever Had A Dream Like This Retrieved March 27 2021 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine I FOUND THE DREAM KID Have You Ever Had A Dream Kid Interview retrieved July 28 2021 Goodnight Moon Music Catalog Eric Whitacre Retrieved June 13 2022 Eric Whitacre Water Night Presto Music Retrieved June 13 2022 Eric Whitacre New York Concert Review Inc April 20 2018 Retrieved June 13 2022 a b c d e Exhibit based on beloved children s book opens at Rhode Island museum Final Edition North Bay Nugget 2006 ProQuest Central Nighty Night Toon Animaniacs References Guide 2013 Retrieved April 17 2016 Goodnight Moon Game Parents Choice Foundation Retrieved January 16 2017 Clifford Jane December 5 1998 Pros and kid testers pick the best San Diego Union Tribune The CA via America s News Newsbank Inc 2001 2002 Comics Archive Five Sci Fi Children s Books College Humor mikl em November 7 2011 Goodnight iPad A Parody of the Children s Book Goodnight Moon Laughing Squid Retrieved August 30 2020 Goodnight Loon University of Minnesota Press 2015 Retrieved July 7 2015 Grossman Mary Ann November 30 2014 Children s books for the holidays and year round St Paul Pioneer Press Retrieved July 7 2015 Life review Jake Gyllenhaal hits the retro rockets for sub Alien space horror the Guardian March 22 2017 Retrieved January 9 2023 MOVIE REVIEW Life Every Movie Has a Lesson March 24 2017 Harris Hunter March 24 2017 Life Has a Lot of Gross Deaths But Which Is the Grossest Vulture Life review exuberantly grisly Alien rip off the Guardian March 26 2017 Life Movie Review 2017 A Spine Tingling Sci Fi Thriller March 29 2017 Amend Bill January 29 2023 FoxTrot by Bill Amend for January 29 2023 GoComics com GoComics Portal nbsp Children s literature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Goodnight Moon amp oldid 1221723255 Animated adaptation, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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