Goodnight Moon

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Goodnight Moon
Goodnightmoon.jpg
A page from the book
Author Margaret Wise Brown
Illustrator Clement Hurd
Country United States
Language English
Genre Children's literature
Publisher Harper & Brothers
Publication date
September 3, 1947
Pages 32pp
ISBN 0-06-443017-0
OCLC 299277
[E] 21
LC Class PZ7.B8163 Go 1997
Followed by My World

Goodnight Moon is an American children's picture book written by Margaret Wise Brown and illustrated by Clement Hurd. It was published on September 3, 1947, and is a highly acclaimed example of a bedtime story. It features a child saying Good Night to everything around: "Goodnight room. Goodnight moon. Goodnight cow jumping over the moon. Goodnight light, and the red balloon ...".

Synopsis

Goodnight Moon is classic children's literature in North America. The text is a rhyming poem, describing an anthropomorphic bunny's bedtime ritual of saying "good night" to various objects in the bunny's bedroom: the red balloon, the bunny's dollhouse, the kittens, etc.

Literary significance and reception

Goodnight Moon slowly became a bestseller. Annual sales grew from about 1,500 copies in 1953 to 20,000 in 1970; by 1990, the total number of copies sold was more than 4 million.[1] Based on a 2007 on-line poll, the National Education Association named the book one of its "Teachers' Top 100 Books for Children".[2] In 2012 it was ranked number four among the "Top 100 Picture Books" in a survey published by School Library Journal.[3]

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.[4]

Brown bequeathed the royalties to the book to (among many others) Albert Clarke, who was the nine-year-old son of a neighbor when Brown died. In 2000, reporter Joshua Prager detailed in the Wall Street Journal the troubled life of Mr. Clarke who has squandered the millions of dollars the book has earned him and who believes that Brown was his mother, a claim others dismiss.[5]

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. Its 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".[6] HarperCollins has said it will likely replace the picture with a different, unaltered photo of Hurd in future editions. In response, a satirical article demanded the removal of other potentially dangerous objects in the book, such as the fireplace and balloon (a choking hazard for young children).[7]

The book has been translated into French, Spanish, Dutch, Chinese, Japanese, Catalan, Hebrew, Brazilian Portuguese, Russian, Swedish, Korean, and Hmong.

Allusions and references

Goodnight Moon contains a number of references to The Runaway Bunny. For example, the painting hanging over the fireplace of "The Cow Jumping Over the Moon" first appeared in The Runaway Bunny. However, when reprinted in Goodnight Moon, the udder "for caution's sake was reduced to an anatomical blur" to avoid the controversy that E.B. White's Stuart Little had undergone when published in 1945 (Making of Goodnight Moon, 21). 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. The top shelf of the bookshelf holds an open copy of The Runaway Bunny, and there is a copy of Goodnight Moon on the nightstand.

The telephone is mentioned early in the book, but is absent from the litany of 'Good night ...' salutations. The primacy of the reference to the telephone indicates that the bunny is in his mother's room and his mother's bed.[8]

Publication history

In addition to multiple octavo and duodecimo paperback editions, Goodnight Moon is available in board book edition, a book whose pages are actually stiff cardboard to make it suitable to give to a very young child, as well as a "jumbo" edition, suitable for use with large groups.

  • 1991, USA, HarperFestival ISBN 0-694-00361-1, Pub date 30 September 1991, board book
  • 1997, USA, HarperCollins ISBN 0-06-027504-9, Pub date 28 February 1997, Hardback 50th anniversary edition
  • 2007, USA, HarperCollins ISBN 0-694-00361-1, Pub date 23 January 2007, Board book 60th anniversary edition

Sequels

My World, billed as "a companion to Goodnight Moon", and also written by Brown and illustrated by Hurd, was published in 1949.[9]

Satire

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.[10] In 2011, author Julia Yu adapted the image on CollegeHumor into a full homage of Moon, also titled Goodnight Dune[11]

In 2013, GWAR lead singer Oderus Urungus did a "live audio read" of the book.[12]

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.[13][14]

References

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  8. 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.
  9. Brown, Margaret Wise, and Hurd, Clement. My World (Harper, 1949). ISBN 0-06-024798-3.
  10. "Five Sci-Fi Children's Books". College Humor.
  11. http://goodnightdune.com/index.html.
  12. http://loudwire.com/gwar-oderus-urungus-goodnight-moon.
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Citations

  • Marcus, Leonard S. Making of Goodnight Moon. New York: HarperTrophy, 1997.