Go to Sleep, Monster! By
Kevin Cornell. Balzer+Bray/HarperCollins. $17.99.
Very Little Sleeping Beauty.
By Teresa Heapy. Illustrations by Sue Heap. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $16.99.
With all the bedtime books
out there, it seems reasonable to imagine that there would be a glut. After
all, how many ways can authors and illustrators show reluctant sleepers a set
of bedtime-related problems requiring clever solutions of some sort? But the
books keep coming, and the offbeat answers to everyday nighttime concerns never
seem to stop. Of course, some books are a bit beyond the everyday, such as Go to Sleep, Monster! Kevin Cornell
starts with the ordinary-enough notion of beneath-bed baddies stopping kids
from getting some rest, but he takes it up to new levels. Or, not to be
directionally inaccurate, down to new
levels. It seems that a boy name George, first seen clutching the covers to his
face in a very well-drawn darkened room, cannot get to sleep one night because
of the monster under his bed. So his sister, Anna, comes in to help. And sure
enough, there is a monster under the
bed, complete with wide smile and purple, egg-shaped head. Anna will brook no
disobedience from such a creature: she orders it to stop scaring her brother,
because it is time to go to sleep. But the monster cannot sleep – because there
is a monster under the floor. Now it
is time for a priceless, silent exchange of looks among the three characters,
Anna, George and the monster. Well, something
has to be done, so Anna climbs below the floor, followed by George and the
purple monster, and finds a green, horned, one-eyed creature that she orders to
go to sleep. But no, the monster cannot sleep, because there is a monster under the room. So down go Anna and
George into a marvelously dark room-beneath-the-room in which the only light
seeps in from the green monster’s level – but there is nothing there. Or – yes,
there is, clinging to a chandelier out of fear of the monster under the table. Which is scared of the
monster under the house, which fears the monster under the gravel, which is
terrified of the monster under the dirt, which is petrified of the one “in the
center-most center of the center of the earth!” How low can this go? Well, the
troop of two kids and a whole passel of monsters makes it down to the
dragonlike center-of-earth monster, only to find that it too is afraid – and of
what, since “you’re the underest under something someone can be”? Aha! This monster is afraid of being alone!
And so we have another marvelous silent page, illuminated this time by the
light in the eyes of the whole cadre of characters; and the solution is obvious
and delightful, as kids and monsters alike return to Anna’s and George’s house
and happily fall asleep in a huge pile – which, however, does something mighty
strange to the house itself…and that carries
through all the way to the book’s back cover, which provides a suitably
monstrous epilogue.
Cornell invents his own
bedtime fairy tale, but Teresa Heapy prefers to reinvent existing ones. Hence
she and illustrator Sue Heap have produced Very
Little Red Riding Hood, Very Little Cinderella, and now Very Little Sleeping Beauty. More
accurately, this is about Very Little NON-Sleeping Beauty, who is so excited
about her birthday party the next day – “with cake and Aunty Fairy” – that she
cannot go to bed at all, much less as early as Daddy wants her to. So Very
Little Sleeping Beauty launches into all the delaying tactics she can. First,
Daddy must sing to her, and not a
lullaby, and not just a single song.
Daddy obliges, and then goes along with Very Little Sleeping Beauty’s follow-up
insistence on “stories, and tickles, and dancing, and a jump on the bed!” And Daddy
does it all with 100% good humor, too (showing parents just how much of a fairy
tale this is). Indeed, Daddy’s upbeat attitude persists as Very Little Sleeping
Beauty insists that he run upstairs and downstairs repeatedly to find her bear
and blanket and get her a drink in her “special-est cup.” But – uh-oh – the cup
is nowhere to be found, and Very Little Sleeping Beauty gets tired of waiting,
so she wanders from room to room until she encounters Aunty Fairy in the
“tallest tower room” and ends up having a problem with her birthday gift, a
spinning wheel (that is, in this case, a wheel that spins). Troubles ensue,
soon resolved by Daddy, who is still (extremely improbably) smiling; and
finally, Very Little Sleeping Beauty goes to sleep “just as the sun was about
to rise.” And she manages to sleep right through her birthday party! “No one
could wake her, however hard they tried.” But of course there is a happy
ending, as she wakes on her own – at what should be bedtime – and everyone has
a “pyjama party” (British spelling: Heapy and Heap live in England). The
layering of a straightforward story of a little girl who will not go to sleep
on the classic tale of a princess whose sleep is magical and extended makes Very Little Sleeping Beauty, like the
previous Heapy/Heap collaborations, an amusingly enjoyable story, although
parents with less tolerance than the book’s Daddy (and less obliviousness than
its Mommy) may want to think twice before using it as a bedtime book and
possibly encouraging real-life all-nighters.
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