The Ugly Volvo

All of my Issues With the “Goodnight Moon” Bedroom

I’ve read Goodnight Moon almost every night for the past two years.  It’s a wonderful book which my son enjoys.  Here are some of my issues with the bedroom depicted in it.

1.  The Size of the Bedroom

aa goodnight moon 1
Nice bedroom and/or place to possibly hold the 2024 Olympics

This bedroom is enormous.  There is no one, I think, who has not noticed this.  As someone who has lived in apartments only slightly larger than “a little toy house,” it’s mildly vexing that this bedroom is the size of a banquet hall in Downton Abbey.

 

2. The Little Toy house.

This little toy house would rent out for $2500 a month in Manhattan (not including utilities)
This little toy house would rent out for $2500 a month in Manhattan (not including utilities)

This is not that little of a toy house.  Not only could the rabbit easily fit inside the “little toy house,” the little toy house also has working electricity.  Why are these rabbits so civilized?  Is this some f**ked up Watership Down sequel???

 

3. This Just-Discovered Transcript of a Conversation Had by the Interior Decorators

The color scheme we're going for is "exploded paint factory."
The color scheme we’re going for is “exploded paint factory.”

“So what color have we decided on for the upstairs child’s bedroom?”

Which child’s bedroom?”

“The enormous one.  The one with the expansive tomato-colored floor.”

“I was thinking for that room maybe a dark green?”

“Really?  Dark green?  You don’t think maybe dark green walls with a tomato-colored floor is a bit much?”

No, it’ll look amazing.  We can break up the monotony of the color with some dark green and yellow striped curtains.”

“That’s an amazing idea.  On non-matching red and yellow spearhead curtain rods?  Do you think a tiger skin rug would be overkill?”

For a young child’s room?  No.  Not at all.  ”  

4. This Bookshelf

"For tonight would you rather read 'Hop on Pop' or the entire Encyclopedia Britanica?"
“For tonight would you rather read ‘Hop on Pop’ or the entire Encyclopedia Britanica?”

Why are these books so thick?  This is a child’s bedroom, not a law library.  Unless this rabbit is defending a doctoral thesis, there’s no need for him to own every non-fiction hardcover from Farrar Straus and Giroux.

 

5. The Idea That Anyone Would Keep a Comb and a Brush and a Bowl Full of Mush on the Same Table

Almost as appealing as a nailclipper next to a plate of sunny-side up eggs.
Almost as appealing as a nailclipper next to a plate of sunny-side up eggs.

I’m right now trying to picture a situation in which I would place my unwashed hairbrush next to a bowl of cream of wheat and even the idea of it is turning my stomach.

Oh, you’re eating a bowl of warm cereal?  How do you take it?  With milk, cinnamon and dozens of soggy, long white hairs?

*Vomits onto neatly stacked fireplace logs*

 

6. The World’s Smallest Most Useless Clothesline

Somewhere a personal organizer is having an aneurysm from this thing
Somewhere a personal organizer is having an aneurysm from this thing

After living in New York City for almost a decade I’m very big into “intelligent use of space,” and the fact that this much floor space is taken up by a free standing clothesline that’s being used to dry ONE pair of socks and ONE pair of mittens makes me grind my teeth.  Mount it on the wall, idiots!  The people at IKEA would have a seizure if they looked at this room.  Also, isn’t there a laundry room or something?  Just put it in there.

 

7.   Continued…

Meanwhile, back at the ranch...
Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

“So what color do you think for the child’s bed?”

I was thinking like a tomato-ish red color?”

“You remember the floor’s a tomato-ish red color.”

Yeah.”

“You don’t think that’s a lot of red for a child’s bedroom?  We don’t want it to look like the Amityville Horror kill room or anything.”

You don’t trust me?  I’ve been decorating children’s bedrooms for almost twenty years.”

“No, I trust you, I trust you.  So you want to do all the furniture in red?”

Are you out of your f**king mind?  Of course not.  For the rest of the furniture I was thinking something sophisticated, like a mustard yellow.”

“For everything??  All the furniture?”

All the furniture.”

“Even the little toy house?”

Are you seriously asking me this?  No.  Of course not.  The little toy house should be red.”

 

8. The Dangerously Non-childproofed Fireplace

Also, nothing says "child's bedroom" like an expensive mantelpiece clock bordered by Cookie Monster-blue funeral urns.
Also, nothing says “child’s bedroom” like an expensive mantelpiece clock bordered by Cookie Monster-blue funeral urns.

Look, I’m not a crazy stickler for safety or anything but shouldn’t there at least be a screen between the roaring open flame and the rest of the nursery?  Also, can we talk about how the heating situation is going to play out?  You’re going to use an old fashioned fireplace to heat a room the size of an elementary school gymnasium when the room has zero radiators and two enormous single-paned windows?  Have fun!  You’ll be totally fine with that thin green blanket you’ve thrown over the kid’s legs!

 

9. The Totally Ignored Existential Mouse

As casual about their infestations as they are exacting about their interior design.
As casual about their infestations as they are exacting about their interior design.

Anyone notice this guy?   What sort of mouse just hangs out in the middle of the carpet in an enormous open room within spitting distance of two cats?  Clearly this illustrator has never had an apartment with mice because real mice creep along the edges of rooms, usually in the dark, along baseboards and under furniture, occasionally chewing through the walls.  Given his devil-may-care attitude, this mouse is obviously lucid in a way we cannot understand, or rabid.

 

10. The idea that a child this young (rabbit or human) would need a black office telephone by his bedside.

"Goodnight, Technologically-out-of-date telephone"
“Goodnight, Technologically-out-of-date telephone”

Who’s calling, his financial adviser?  Why would someone this age need a telephone unless it’s to call the woman across the vast expanse of his bedroom to ask her to stop whispering, “Hush.”

 

11.  This Picture of Bears in a Couples Therapy Session

"So you say your mother was protective. Tell me more..."
“So you say your mother was…protective?”

Husband Bear:  We’ve started fighting more since our son was born.  I feel like she resents me.  I feel like every little thing turns into an argument.”

Wife Bear:  “How could I not resent you?  We have a newborn and you’re off eating salmon in a PBS documentary while I’m stuck at home 24/7.

Husband Bear: “Don’t start, Janet!  That documentary was a once in a lifetime opportunity!”

Therapist Bear:  You sound angry.

Husband Bear:  Brilliant observation!  It took you eight years of graduate school to figure that out?

Therapist Bear:  Let’s all take a deep breath.  In, two three, out, two three…

(They are all silent for several seconds)

Wife Bear:  Also, a tomato red floor seems like a really bold choice for a psychologist’s office, doesn’t it?

Husband Bear:  God, you are so CRITICAL OF EVERYTHING.

Wife Bear:  Ugh.  My mother told me not to marry a grizzly.

*Husband Storms out.  Wife sobs quietly.  Psychologist quietly questions whether he was wise in going with the blue walls and mustard yellow office furniture.*

 12.  And in closing…

"Are we about done decorating this apocalypse of a bedroom?"
“Are we about done decorating this apocalypse of a bedroom?”

“Ok, so the mustard-colored bookcase came in. I had them install it in the corner and fill it with large, antique books. ”

Great, so now all we’re waiting on is the round side table, the rocking chair and the freakishly enormous nightstand.”

“So wait, that’s it on the furniture?  It’s a big room, isn’t there going to be a lot of unused space?  Or are we filling that with toys?”

Actually I was thinking for toys let’s keep it real minimal.  I’m thinking maybe one elephant, one giraffe and then the uncomfortably pink naked dolls on the bookshelf.

“You don’t think maybe he could use a few more toys?  It’s such a huge room and it feels so empty and formal.  You’re sure his parents are going to be ok with it?”

Will his parents be ok with it?  Did I not graduate in the top of my class with a degree in interior design?

“I know, I just—”

Have I not been designing rooms for the past twenty years?

“No, I know!  I just thought—”

How about when I want your opinion I ask for it.”

“Arrggghhh.  I’m…I’m sorry I spoke up.”  (struggles between wanting to storm out in anger and being grateful for this apprenticeship, which he knows is a big deal. )

The End

*          *          *

Welcome to the Club: 100 Parenting Milestones You Never Saw Coming
Welcome to the Club by Raquel D’Apice

 

 If you are going to a baby shower in the near future, I have a book out designed as a gift for new parents called Welcome to the Club: 100 Parenting Milestones You Never Saw Coming that you can purchase through AmazonBarnes and Noble or Indiebound.  Please buy them a copy in addition to the other cute thing you already bought them!

If you enjoyed this piece, please share it and/or follow The Ugly Volvo on Facebook or Twitter.

Also, if you’d like to buy the book Goodnight Moon, do that too!  Despite my making fun of it, it’s a lovely book that I have read about 4,000 times.  It’s around 12 bucks.  My book is also around 12 bucks.  Go nuts.

And if you read Goodnight Moon to your child all the time, please know that somewhere across the world I’m reading it to my child as well and we’re totally like that scene in An American Tail where they’re simultaneously singing “Somewhere Out There” with Fievel and whatever the girl mouse’s name was.*

*Just looked it up.  It was Tanya.


Comments

839 responses to “All of my Issues With the “Goodnight Moon” Bedroom”

  1. My 20 month-old son woke up from his nap 20 minutes ago, but I just let him continue trying to pull random stuffed animals through the lats of his crib (success with two of them), while I sat in the living room, alone, and laughed my head off. Thank you!! What a glorious way to kick off the afternoon block.

  2. I along with a couple of my kids subscribed to Ugly Volvo a few months ago.
    I don’t know about them but this may be my fave thus far!
    Thanks and godspeed,
    Randy

  3. How is there not a Tumblr dedicated solely to the existential mouse in Goodnight Moon? I actually just searched to see if there is, and I at least found “Goodnight Moon as a Poem by Sylvia Plath”: http://seanmccarthycomedy.tumblr.com/post/68055542329/goodnight-moon-as-a-poem-by-sylvia-plath
    Anyway, delightful post as always!

  4. Love the “Bears Couples Therapy Session.”

  5. One time I went to the Connecticut Children’s Museum in New Haven, where they had an exhibit in which they recreated the Great Green Room, life sized. It was just as…trippy as it sounds. Maybe everyone already knows about this; it seems as if everyone should. But I just spent the past 10 minutes searching their website, and I’m panicked now that maybe they’ve done away with this exhibit. I have a toddler again now, and I would be willing to drive 800 miles to New Haven so he could see the Great Green Room in person. I have to go look at Trip Advisor now. Anyway, well done. Usually people save their deconstructive work for Runaway Bunny, and that’s so overdone now.

  6. One time I went to the Connecticut Children’s Museum in New Haven, where they had an exhibit in which they recreated the Great Green Room, life sized. It was just as…trippy as it sounds. Maybe everyone already knows about this; it seems as if everyone should. But I just spent the past 10 minutes searching their website, and I’m panicked now that maybe they’ve done away with this exhibit. I have a toddler again now, and I would be willing to drive 800 miles to New Haven so he could see the Great Green Room in person. I have to go look at Trip Advisor. Anyway, well done. Usually people save their deconstructive work for Runaway Bunny, and that’s so overdone.

  7. This is the funniest thing I have read in a long time. The bears, the neatly placed logs, the mouse. I feel like I have wondered this every time and just powered through because there were no other adults to discuss it with. Brilliant.

  8. I modeled my son’s nursery after the Goodnight Moon room! We had to knock down a few walls to make sure he had the expansive floor plan we were after. And don’t get me started on how many layers of paint it takes to nail that deep green.

    Ok no we didn’t. But I do think we have a mouse on standby somewhere. Great post!

  9. Heather Fuller Avatar
    Heather Fuller

    Your existence warms my heart.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      as this comment warms mine 🙂

  10. I literally Googled “Clement Hurd” (the illustrator of this book) last night. I had to know whether or not he was on LSD. Sadly, he was just a terrible artist, who apparently hates the parents of small children (the last part wasn’t on Wikipedia, but is obvious to anyone who’s read this book 3 or 4 million times). And can we talk about “Good night nobody”? I’m trying to imagine tucking in my kid and telling him to say night-night the great gaping void on the other side of consciousness. Sweet dreams!

  11. OK – just laughed until tears came.. this has been my daughers choice for the past month.. this is awesome thank you:)

  12. My favourite part is when the mother just disappears for about 10 minutes for no reason.

  13. caroline seguin Avatar
    caroline seguin

    I really love this one! I laughed a lot and really liked it! Thanks again, I love reading your stuff!

  14. Looking forwards to your next post on the Dune version of this book… http://goodnightdune.com/ 🙂

    As usual fan-tastic, almost bursting in tears of laughter 😀

  15. Tab Yang Avatar
    Tab Yang

    I just laughed so hard that I cried. This is second only to your post about what toddlers really want for x-mas. Thank you!

  16. How many times have I read this book, and it never occurred to me to nominate it as an Olympic venue? So, so funny. Have you ever had the distinct pleasure of reading Goodnight Moon’s companion piece, My World? I don’t want to spoil anything, but if you do get your hands on a copy just be sure to have your therapist on speed dial.

  17. Oh, I cannot wait until you graduate to Sheep in a Jeep. Also, the Boxcar Children. Seriously. Between the farm animals drunkenly crashing a jeep and the four orphaned kids surviving off stream water in the woods without Child Services anywhere in sight… Oh, just wait. You’ll see.
    Absolutely brilliant.
    P.S. I had a friend whose husband painted a wall of the nursery to look like… Wait for it… The Goodnight Moon Room. No amount of bear therapy can ever repair that child’s psyche, am I right?

  18. David from England Avatar
    David from England

    And if the old rabbit wants the little ‘un to sleep, stop saying “Hush”, stop clacking those needles, pull the curtains, turn off the lamps, remove all animals and rodents (except the little ‘un, of course), douse the raging inferno and pull the plug on the ‘phone!
    My daughter put me onto your brilliant blog and now I’m reading the British equivalent of “Goodnight Moon” to HER daughter at night

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      Now it’s going to be my life’s mission to read the British Equivalent of this book.

  19. I haven’t laughed this hard in who knows how long!!!!! This is my favorite book and now I will enjoy it even more. Thanks for this! 🙂

  20. It explains alot if you think of the rabbit in bed as not a baby but the equivalent if a 43 year old man.

  21. And on the nightstand next to the telephone is … a copy of “Goodnight Moon”!

  22. we have just been killing ourselves reading this. so hilarious! the bit about the bear skin rug!!!

  23. Love Mother Bear complaining about Father Bear being away eating salmon for PBS while she is home 24/7 with cubs!

  24. This was pretty funny, but a lot of the issues here are just anacrhonisms. The book was published in the early 40s IIRC. So, stuff like the mittens… well, you hung them by the fire to dry them off. And the color scheme is probably mostly due to the high cost (or impossibility?) of real color printing at the time…

    That -is- a pretty cavernous space, though.

  25. I am surprised that you didn’t mention the painting on the left side of the room, above the toy house). It’s not clear on some of the pages, but on one (the “goodnight room” page) you can definitely see that it is a rabbit fly-fishing, and it’s caught something- it’s a… tiny rabbit! What?

  26. Kimberly Marley Avatar
    Kimberly Marley

    The room is huge. That circle rug is huge, but nothing comes close to it.

  27. I would also add that the doll house is creepy when it’s glowing at night like in the book The Dollhouse Murders (a kids book by the way).

  28. I had always thought of it as a small apartment (a large-ish studio) instead of just the child’s bedroom. Makes the fireplace, phone, and bookshelves make more sense. Colors are still weird tho.

  29. Michael Beauchot Avatar
    Michael Beauchot

    The only thing that surprised me was that Kim and Bart getting married didn’t really surprise me. It was perfect – sort of like Ron and Hermione.

    One thing, though. These are talking rabbits – and you’re worried about the room?

  30. ….and inside that nightstand copy is a picture of a nightstand with a copy of Goodnight Moon next to the telephone….and so on, and, on, and on….

  31. Perisoft, thanks so much for bringing me in to this satirical essay.

  32. I think you’re missing the forest for the trees. Clearly this isn’t a child’s bedroom; it’s a studio apartment hosting at least a family of four: mother and father rabbit (probably at their second jobs), granny rabbit (childcare isn’t cheap), and child rabbit. Perhaps that little toy house doubles as a cradle and there is a baby rabbit in there. Only the author and illustrator know for sure.

  33. Martie Hamilton Avatar
    Martie Hamilton

    The story is about a rabbit family. Rabbits may have different ideas about color schemes, and what items are appropriate for a young rabbit’s room. Also rabbits love to dig, and this room is probably not large by rabbit standards. However, I’ve never gotten the “mush” thing. Rabbits don’t eat mush.

  34. what about the absurd size of the bed?

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      I am very mad at myself for not noticing this earlier. (also, my computer is wonky so apologies if this posts twice.)

  35. Katherine Putziger Avatar
    Katherine Putziger

    Now I know why my daughter wanted to install a fireplace in her room. She has this rabbit’s room, these toys and more, many antiques, and the green walls. The rug is brown on wood, though. and her bookcase was not yellow, but full of large books. The antique phone happens to be in her brother’s equally large room, which has a balcony. Her pictures are not bears, though, they are large framed prints by Cassatt, Van Gogh, and Dali, and . It’s a 1920’s house built by a factory owner, so the rooms are not many, but they are large. Antiques are bought as they appear on the market, and you get what you get, so if it is large, so be it. It is true that the hair implements need to stay in the bathroom, and the food in the kitchen. Thanks to this article, I now see the parallel.

  36. Emilayday Avatar
    Emilayday

    Don’t worry, in case the clock on the mantel breaks down, there IS another clock right there on the nightstand. And it’s OK because they will chime loudly every half hour. Perfect for a kid’s room.

  37. Beth-Ann Buitekant Avatar
    Beth-Ann Buitekant

    I think it’s even funnier that you suggest a laundry room…Do you have one in NYC?

  38. While this is a hilarious analysis of interior design, I didn’t even think twice about it. Child development in the 80s was emphasizing red with yellow and green as a great stimulating color scheme for children. And all the parents I’ve talked to love this book. Kids look intently at the different things in this room. We would refer to the bowl as oatmeal. And knowing it is imaginary images makes it even better. No animal knits sweaters but we accept a caring animal as a concerned and loving grandmother.

  39. Bradford Avatar
    Bradford

    No mention of the enormous painting of a rabbit fly-fishing another rabbit out of a stream?

    1. Eva Carlstrom Avatar
      Eva Carlstrom

      That’s one of the illustrations from another of the author’s books, The Runaway Bunny. The baby bunny claims he’s going to turn into various things to run away, and the mommy bunny says she’s going to turn into other things and bring him back. It’s very similar to a folk song called Two Magicians that Steeleye Span recorded a version of. It’s creepy and weird, yes. But in the context of this other creepy weird book, not inexplicably.

  40. The floor is orange.

  41. The great green room is home to nightmares. I loved spotting it in Emily Carroll’s scary graphic novel Through the Woods. http://thebooksmugglers.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/wofl2.jpg

  42. Michelle Lee-Reid Avatar
    Michelle Lee-Reid

    You obviously had fun tearing this book apart (I admit, I’ve done it myself), but many of the things you bring up are easily explained. The bedroom is based on an old nursery found in an English manor house. The nursery was bedroom, playroom, dining room, and living room for the children of the family. Of course, it’s large! (although, yes, the colors are very unusual!). Most nurseries would have a clothes rack to dry socks and mittens, scarves maybe, after the children had been outside. They were dried, then the clothes rack was folded and put away. My mom kept one like this in the laundry room to dry our things when I was little (the laundry room was the warmest room being right next to the furnace). The quiet old lady was most likely the nursery nurse, paid to take care of the small children of the family. And the mouse. Our school has mice (as many schools do) and I’ve seen mice sitting in the middle of my classroom (not when the children are there, of course!). Although in the presence of the cats, it would be unusual.

  43. shall we mention that there’s an old lady in the room, ALL THE TIME, who apparently is not a relative nor a nanny? I mean, what, is she a squatter? “Hush… (don’t tell your parents). I’ll just stare st you while you sleep” – how comforting.

    Finally, how is the moon in the very lowest corner of the window? The only possible explanation is that the room is on a space station in orbit around earth. That also starts to make some sense of the “cow jumping over the moon” part…

    1. Are you friggin kidding me!?!?!? The moon is the most brilliant part of the book! The moon rises and sets each day (just like the sun and stars). The moon in the book rises at the proper rate as shown by the progress on the clock on the mantle.

  44. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    Excellent! Note that the existential mouse is on every page. You can follow his path.

  45. This is really funny stuff. I studied these images closely a few years back when I wrote and drew my “Goodnight Goon” parody. What always makes me laugh, and I point this out to students when I visit schools, is that while I had to change many things in the room to make a “monster” version of the book, I didn’t change the tiger skin rug.

    1. where can i find good goon?

    2. Just found Goodnight Goon on Amazon.com. Will have to order a copy! My 4 yr old daughter is obsessed with monsters and all things spooky.

  46. Kimberly McDonald Avatar
    Kimberly McDonald

    Greatly enjoyed your observations. I read this book often that’s why the Facebook post caught my attention. I will now have more commentary to add to the story.

  47. Older books were limited to four colors in illustrations, as each one had to be applied individually.

  48. Thanks for the laffs!

  49. we’re totally “somewhere out there, beneath the pale moon light” rodent sisters! and i’m seriously on the other side of the globe. thanks for the entertainment break from work.

  50. I think the most disturbing item in this entire room is none of the above. It is the tiger skin on the floor. Why would a bunch of bunnies have a tiger skin? How do they get it? Is it a trophy of some kind? Why a tiger? I would think that is scary for any child, not to mention, in conflict with the endangered species act…

    1. Also notice that the tiger skin is only slightly bigger than the quiet old lady whispering hush, which means that theyre either a rare horrifyingly giant breed of rabbit, or a rare pygmy breed of tiger. but considering that the tiger stripes are clearly defined, and they massively dwarf the two cats, it which would indicate the former.

  51. Thank you for the laughs. I read (or in later years recited, as I knew it by heart) nightly for almost 8 years. BTW my sister and her kids recently painted several rooms of their house red, green and yellow. They say it’s McDonals colors, but all I can think is “In the great green room…”

  52. Nicole Matero Avatar
    Nicole Matero

    …and why would rabbits have pictures on their walls of one of their predators (bears)?

    1. Bears…? These bunnies have a TIGER SKIN on their floor. These are no ordinary rabbits — they’re bad-ass bunnies living it up in a mansion. The bears are terrified of THEM. (That’s always been one of my issues with Goodnight Moon, fabulous book though it is.)

  53. Ian Girdley Avatar
    Ian Girdley

    And every baby bunny needs a tiger skin rug.

  54. Anne Brock Avatar
    Anne Brock

    Not only did we read this book to our son, but we also had a poster of this exact page framed for his room – -thinking he would love it. Just before putting him to bed, I would hold him and walk around his room saying goodnight to everything on his walls. When he came to the Goodnight Moon poster, he would tighten up and look away. When he was older we asked him why he did that. His response was “There wasn’t a way out of the room. And that lady in the rocker was scary.” What a discerning observation at such a young age! So – you see – not everybody loved Goodnight Moon. But I am saving the framed poster just in case he has children and wants it in their room. He’s now 32.

  55. Patpen Poly Avatar
    Patpen Poly

    FYI, the little mouse is on every page – we used to LOVE trying to find the mouse on each page. And the picture on the wall is of the Three Little Bears. Loved this article, though!

  56. I LOVED this! Thank you! And for the record, one of our children’s rooms really did have a Britannica on a shelf!

  57. How about the “Goodnight nobody,” blank page? I don’t get it! Drives me nuts.

    1. bluesabriel Avatar
      bluesabriel

      Ha! The whole book annoys my husband on some level, but he REALLY doesn’t like the blank page. It racks me up every time.

    2. My husband – knowing what a scaredy cat I am – very kindly pointed out that the page is for all the ghosts.

  58. Sarah Glaze Avatar
    Sarah Glaze

    This was the funniest thing I have read in a long time. This damn book has been recited most nights at my house to three children. I love the interior designer dialogue and have now wasted (not really wasted) my work day reading your blog. Awesome!

  59. very amusing. We do have to remember that the book was published in 1947. In my bedroom in 1949 there was a set of Childcraft, a set of wonderful hardbound books of stories called My Bookhouse and so on. And I must point out that that is exactly what a telephone looked like in 1947 It does make me think of Downton Abbey and the nannies in the nursery there

  60. Most of these complaints disappear when you consider that grandma bunny inherited a house from a legally-blind distant relative, and the baby bunny is spending the night in a strange (to him, and to innocent passers-by) bedroom. Also, the mouse is a wind-up toy.

    1. Annie Mac Avatar
      Annie Mac

      Best. Comment. Ever.

  61. Jeff Sternstein Avatar
    Jeff Sternstein

    Hilarious and true. To the comment that there was no way out of the room, there was. The window. Thus the title of the book. Should he wish to escape these would be the little bunny’s final words.

  62. suresh sampath Avatar
    suresh sampath

    I always took issue with the “quiet old lady who was whispering hush.” If she wants to remain quiet so be it, but why impose her worldview on others. If the kid wants to make a little bit of sound, let him for god’s sake.

  63. Sue Tunney Avatar
    Sue Tunney

    Two reflections on your comments:

    #2. Dollhouse – my father built us a dollhouse in the 1950s and electrified it. Not uncommon.

    #4. Clothesline – that is not a clothesline, it is a wooden collapsible drying rack. I have two of them and dry things on it that I don’t want to put in a hot dryer (like hand-knit socks). It folds flat and goes into the closet. Besides, this is not a child’s room but what was called the nursery. Not uncommon to have something like a drying rack for wet mittens as you would hardly find that in the parlor.

    1. WAY too serious dude

    2. No fun allowed ever

    3. Fear not, Sue! Mulder and Scully are actively searching for the aliens who abducted your sense of humor!

  64. Cynthia west Avatar
    Cynthia west

    Too funny!!

  65. I literally laughed until I cried. Genius. I also think the Goodnight Nobody page is total BS. I can’t explain that to my kids – I just speed by that part, but eventually they’re going to ask!

  66. I can’t believe people don’t like the blank page. Have you actually read the book to a child? It makes them laugh.

  67. Crispybeard Avatar
    Crispybeard

    Thanks for the explanation Eva.on Bradfords.comment. The whole book is off, but especially the fishing cannibal bunny. My partner and I read this book many times to all our children and that painting jn the room got me wvtery time.

  68. Check out the string on the balloon – it changes length throughout the book. Made me nuts.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      now I’ll have to keep an eye out for this too…

  69. Are we not talking about the painting of the Rabbit standing in the middle of the stream “fishing” for the little bunny using a carrot to bait him? Why is he trying to catch the little Bunny? Why is the bunny in the stream in the first place? Why is this a picture hanging on the wall of a little bunny’s room? So many questions!!

  70. Michael S Avatar
    Michael S

    There’s also a picture on the wall of a bunny fishing, and the fish also has bunny ears. On the left-most wall.

  71. Made me laugh so much. Love your style.

  72. Kelly Mama28kiddos Avatar
    Kelly Mama28kiddos

    Thanks for the laugh!! We have 8 children, and are at our halfway point, 4 in and 4 out, with our youngest at 10yrs. We now have #2 grandbaby on the way. I have read and memorized this book more times than I can think I remember. I have pondered the many points you too have pondered. Heading into a shoulder surgery and really needed to take my mind off the important and remember the super important~~spending time with my children when they are young , for they grow so fast. If time would just stand still for a moment while I snuggle once more with that wiggly two yr old, watch the beaming eyes of a three yr. old, and the wise look of the four yr old as he “reads” the story out loud. Appreciate your humor! Thanks you for sharing 🙂

  73. I’m mid-60s. I had Encyclopedia Brittanica on the bottom shelf in the bookcase in my room as a child. But wasn’t copying “Goodnight Moon, ” as I never heard of the book until my grandkids came along. (Thanks for this post. I’ll now be looking at all books with a more discerning eye.)

  74. The cool thing is the framed picture with a scene from her other book, The Runaway Bunny – who was clearly running away from that tigerskin rug.

  75. In get that housing is small in the “city”, but for those of us out in the rest of the world, that room’s not so big… My bedroom.right now is 25′ x 15’…. And my teen son’s room is 15’x15′ and it’s likely the smallest bedroom.he’s ever had.

    Housing is bigger in the ‘burbs. 😉

  76. before I had children I worked in early childhood research and had to read this book to every child I evaluated (hundreds) as part of the study protocol–but the Spanish version.

    “En la gran habitación verde hay un teléfono, un globo rojo y una cuadro de una vaquita que salta sobre la luna, y otro más, con tres ositos sentaditos en sus sillitas. Dos gatitos juguetones, dos calcetines y dos mitones. Y una casa de muñecas y un ratón que corretea….”
    I’ll bet I could remember the rest if I tried!

  77. Plus, no knitter would ever allow not just one but TWO cats to play with her yarn.

  78. why do people have to pick on a children’s book that is intended for children? if the book were bad would you have read to your child every night for 2 years? come on it’s the art of imagination that brings a book to life. So what if the room looks big it’s a book and who cares if the brush and bowl of mush are on the same table. And I have seen some very elaborate doll houses some that have running water and electricity. As for the fireplace gee ever thought that was the only source of heat in the room…..even the Downtown Abby has fireplaces in the rooms…..until the late 30’s lots of people had fireplaces in every room for heat….

  79. Hilarious!!!! We recite this book every night and have as our bedtime routine for about 4 years. I find the book and illustrations bizarre but EVERYONE seemed to read it and I was a sleep deprived mother of twins, so nothing was clear back then. Now, my husband & I sometimes change the words or sing it to familiar tunes to break up the boredom. I’m so glad I’m not the only one who finds it odd but reads it anyway!!!!

  80. lol! Funny! The good night nobody page kinda irks me too! The interior design comments are hysterical! I never really paid attention to it. It’s also one of my daughters favorite books for bedtime. But as far as the fireplace goes…this book was written in the 40’s…where people still were using fireplaces as a source of heat.
    And we had one of those drying racks for our mittens at my grandmothers house when I was a child. Other than that..,funny.

  81. Gretchen Savage Avatar
    Gretchen Savage

    i live in an old house where the bedrooms are huge like this. The only thing I see as a problem is the bed is so small, it’s for a rabbit, so it makes the room look bigger. Fires in the fireplace was not unusual, doll houses were often even bigger, and he had just finished his bowl of pudding and the maid hadn’t removed it yet.
    I love the green and orange. Looks like a fruit bowl.

  82. Edgar Mice Burroughs Avatar
    Edgar Mice Burroughs

    Not as weird as “In the Night Kitchen” or most Dr. Suess. Cut some slack, “…Technologically-out-of-date telephone.” The author was born in 1910. That was a modern phone when she was a child.

  83. And you didn’t even get to the picture of the fisherman rabbit who using a carrot for bait to fish a smaller rabbit out of the stream.

  84. You forgot about the copy of Goodnight Moon on the bedside table next to the phone, meaning there’s an endless loop of book inside of book inside of book inside of book that goes on for eternity.

  85. Lara Sweeney Avatar
    Lara Sweeney

    The bears in therapy absolutely killed me. I’ll never look at the book the same again.

  86. Hilarious. I’m trying not to laugh very loudly at my desk at work. 🙂

  87. My most favorite part of this all are the comments attempting to explain and defend the different elements of the picture/story to you. #10 is my favorite. Although you should know that this book was written many years ago and this particular telephone was historically accurate, so your questioning of it is wrong. 😉

  88. How can you ignore the adorable picture hanging over the bookshelf of a bunny fly-fishing for a baby bunny with a carrot? Clearly a portrait of Bunny Cannibalism! Also, as my (now 19 year old) daughter pointed out after umpteen readings of this book, both the fly-fishing and cow jumping over the moon pictures are from Runaway Bunny! As for the fireplace, telephone, giant law books, etc — I always figured maybe this was the parent’s room. Great stuff — thanks for the laugh!

  89. My son (1.5) loves this book…I wonder if its because of the crazy color scheme!???

  90. I see it as a one room house fit for bunnies, not a child’s room but this aas a funny read

  91. Do NOT get the app! My little guy loves them both.

  92. Jenny W. Avatar
    Jenny W.

    What about the RED BALLOON!! There’s a red balloon just bouncing around the ceiling? The cats would freak-out about it….maybe the mouse let it loose? That changes everything!

    1. Michelle Lee-Reid Avatar
      Michelle Lee-Reid

      Jenny–hilarious! 🙂

  93. THANK YOU FOR MAKING MY DAY BETTER!!
    I hate that stupid book!

  94. Such a classically loved book, and this was hilarious.

  95. Thanks for posting this, it’s great! I always think the woman sitting in the corner knitting and saying “hush” was a little spooky. Especially because she’s not there on the first page! But that’s my daughter’s favorite character, because she likes to say “hush”.

    And also,,, what’s up with the “Goodnight nobody” page? Could they not think of something else to say goodnight to?

  96. Patience Mason Avatar
    Patience Mason

    Absolutely funny and fun. Thanks a lot. I need to do this with Millions of Cats…

  97. Did you do the parody book to this one “Go the F**k To Sleep” after you were done ripping apart the rabbits bedroom here? Despite obviously being an adult book, it too has similar illustrations.

  98. Another thing about the phone that I noticed the other night: This book was written in the ’40s, when most people only had one phone in the house. WHY IS YOUR ONLY PHONE NEXT TO THE KID’S BED?

  99. How about the tiger skin rug. Inches away from the bed of a baby bunny rabbit. How did we overlook that scary little design faux pas?

  100. Did anyone also noticed that the book on the freakishly large nightstand is actually “Goodnight Moon”?!? And, the picture on the wall in the bear therapist’s office is the cow jumping over the moon?!?

  101. Gwendolyn Lukas Avatar
    Gwendolyn Lukas

    You forgot: the women who stares at the child whilst he sleeps, the page where it looks like he is trying to scale the wall, and the gay pride pink blanket on the bed.

  102. Oh my GOODNESS!!!!!!!!! Let me start by saying this was one of my favorite books as a child, and one of my favorite books to read to my child… But this CANNOT be any more true!!!! And quite funny!!!!! So many good observations I had never paid attention to!!

  103. Anne Richardson Avatar
    Anne Richardson

    I’ve always thought of the color scheme as early Matisse.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      I’d much rather read a book about that Cezanne bedroom painting. At least the walls aren’t green.

  104. Loved this!!! I have similar issues with Max and Ruby!! How do u feel about them?

  105. OK; I think I can stop laughing long enough to type! As far as the phone goes, this book was written back in the Forties/Fifties (if not earlier, but the design of the phone says Forties to me). Phones only came in a couple of styles and only black, unless you wanted to spring the big bucks for a custom phone. Plus you had to pay a monthly fee for every phone in the house because the phone belonged to the phone company. Having the phone in the baby’s room was done in case there was an emergency with the baby if you didn’t have the phone in the hallway between the kid’s room and the master bedroom, in addition to a phone in the kitchen. However I know this is satire (and wicked good satire, I might add!).

  106. So Runaway Bunny must have come before Goodnight Moon. Because the picture on the wall (black and white fly fishing) is from RB. Then Goodnight Moon must be a sequel.

  107. Ann Tweedell Avatar
    Ann Tweedell

    I have never liked this book as a child or as a parent reading to my children, but I never knew why; apparently I could not get past the decor. I think that the words and sentiment are nice if you don’t look at the pictures. Thanks for clearing this up.

  108. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    This was hilarious. But as a counterpoint, maybe this is the entire bunny house, not just the child’s room. This would explain the huge size, the fireplace, the grown up books, and the phone.

  109. Love this book and loved reading it to my son when he was little (totally miss those days). Agree w Ann Richardson – early Matisse – perfect. And of course you can’t have all those colors when those things cost a lot of money back in the day — you choose your spot colors and you make do! : )

    Now hush! Just kidding – this was hilarious.

  110. My biggest issue was always the blank page which says “goodnight nobody” creepiest page ever!

  111. nycsongs Avatar
    nycsongs

    I used to enjoy every nightly reading of this book because my children also enjoyed it so much, but now that I’ve been enlightened as to how irritating the artwork is, I too will be irritated, and will never enjoy this book again.

  112. Well played. I love the feeling (which you just gave me) of laughing until in tears while reading alone. My biggest challenge has always been the back & forth from black/white illustrations next to full-colored pages. But the kiddos love it!

  113. Chris Smith Avatar
    Chris Smith

    Should have a go at “The Giving Tree”. Depressing book with a freakishly scary picture of the Author on the back facing the kids the whole time. It’s probably put a whole generation of Therapists into Summer homes…

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      Thank you– I have always thought that author photo was terrifying.

  114. Jannette Avatar
    Jannette

    I’m rather digging the brown rug. Really pulls it all together, don’t you think?

  115. I realize the author is trying to be funny, but if you want a more modern book, then choose something not written in 1947!! For it’s time, this was an awesome book. Even Dr. Seuss is limited compared to the wondrous selected of picture books available today. Despite it being so dated, Goodnight Moon does show a pioneer mind in the field of picture books. Margaret Wise Brown understood the language that would soothe a child to sleep and the cadence of words that would stand the test of time. It’s an endearing book.

  116. RonTamra Avatar
    RonTamra

    The mouse isn’t ignored! He’s even mentioned in the story! And, if you’ve truly got kids and live in a small place, then it’s not really such a stretch to picture a bowl full of mush, a comb, and a brush all on the same table! Jeez, by comparison to tables around my house, the one in the book is looking pretty orderly and clean!

  117. I will never look at this book the same way again.

  118. What really bugged me about this book was the massive, glaring continuity error where the socks kept popping in and out. Shouldn’t someone have caught that in post?

  119. I thought I was the only one that noticed this! I love the book but after reading so many times, it becomes more clear that it is out of touch with reality…and our 5 year old noticed also! Thanks for the laugh!

  120. Rosemary Booth Avatar
    Rosemary Booth

    I enjoyed reading this book to all 5 of my children and one of my Grandkids every night for years.
    At 84, I could read it again and enjoy every word, every color, every nuance, every animal.
    Hurray for Margaret Wise Brown, one of the Good People who made Life Better.

  121. James Moreland Avatar
    James Moreland

    I really don’t care about the ‘imperfections’ of the room. My children are now grown, but I read this book to all of them and thoroughly enjoyed every moment. Is it really necessary to deconstruct everything?

    1. Have you heard of something called “humor”? Check it out sometime, rent it, whatever – it’s awesome.

    2. James — it’s humor. If you’ve read the book incessantly, these are glaring things you CANNOT miss. i adore the book as well, but this “article” is pure humor. And it’s hysterical. Every word.

  122. Terri Herman Avatar
    Terri Herman

    Well don’t read it for goodness sakes if it gets on your nerves that bad! Personally, I. Love. It.
    It is, by far, one if the most comforting bedtime books EVER. The colors, dimensions, safety issues, etc. really don’t mean a thing to the child who is snuggled up with a loved one, knowing that they are loved.

  123. Jeremy Morse Avatar
    Jeremy Morse

    I’ve always been bothered by that rocking chair that offers no back support whatsoever, and looks like a trap to get you to tip over backwards.

  124. Danae McBurney Avatar
    Danae McBurney

    This is completely hilarious. I was laughing so hard tears ran down my face! Thing is, I haven’t even read Goodnight Moon, maybe ever, but your commentary on the pictures was still wonderful. I agree, what was the illustrator thinking???

  125. jbtechie Avatar
    jbtechie

    he thing that bothers me the most is the painting above the bookcase. It appears to be an adult rabbit fly fishing in a river, using a carrot as bait, and about to catch a baby rabbit/frog-rabbit. Is this some kind of sick, cannibal rabbit or a bizarre retelling of the stork story and where babies come from? So creepy.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      It’s from The Runaway Bunny, another book they did together. I read that one to my son too but some of the pictures are a liiiiiittle weird.

  126. Almost as funny as your hilarious send up, are the comments in which people are seriously deconstructing the commentary! And as a couple’s therapist, I’ve worked with Bears, and you nailed it. Grizzly’s are very treatment resistant.

  127. Has anyone mentioned the fact that the room has no door?! I used to love reading this book before bed as a child, but when I noticed this important fact it gave me so much anxiety!

  128. Stephanie Danz Avatar
    Stephanie Danz

    I’ve always loved this book. Read it to my children and most recently to grandchildren. I have always wanted to live in that room, although I would like more socks and mittens. Perhaps a hat to go with them. The mouse just likes a good story. Reading your comments just made me like the room all the more!

  129. So freakin’ hysterical! Laughed so hard I cried.

  130. I seriously cried laughing read this. Thank you! I really needed that laugh today!!

  131. Someday I hope to write a children’s book that will become as popular and time-tested as this book. and when I do please do me a favor…just read it…don’t write about it. 😉

  132. Johninpa Avatar
    Johninpa

    Wow. Seems like someone has too much time on their hands. It’s a children’s book, published in 1947. It’s fanciful, not real and meant to entertain young children which it has done quite successfully for three generations, give or take. Take a breath, let it go and remember it’s just a kids book and not the most recent issue of “House Beautiful”.

  133. I have many issues with that kind of creepy book but strangely never focused on the physical – I just chalked it all up to a ’70’s LSD trip the author never returned from (I don’t know when it was written by I had it as a child so feasibly the 70s).

  134. I have many issues with that creepy book but strangely never focused on the physical – I just chalked it all up to a ’70’s LSD trip the author never returned from (I don’t know when it was written by I had it as a child so feasibly the 70s).

  135. I realize this is just for laughs, but I really love Goodnight Moon, so I want to make a case for the artwork. Clement Hurd, the illustrator, was a trained artist who studied architecture at Yale and painting in Paris, so I don’t believe he illustrated GM as some amateur idiot. I don’t believe we are meant to take the illustrations in a literal way (maybe using bunnies instead of people is meant to communicate that) but as a representation of the dreamy state of early childhood (as an example, have you ever been somewhere as an adult that you remembered seeing as a kid and you realize it was so much smaller than you’d thought at the time?). Margaret Wise Brown, Clement Hurd, and others of their generation of children’s authors and illustrators really understood this dreamy state, and they wrote primarily for kids, not for the adults (unlike so many children’s books of the last ten years which are often very self-conscious of the adult reading the book). As for the colors, it’s likely that for financial reasons they could only print a few colors – a lot of the books at the time were that way. So they made it bright, and eye catching by using complementary colors red and green, blue and orange/yellow, and memorable. And it makes an impression – everyone knows even from a distance that the green and orange-red book is GM, and isnt that especially great for pre-reading kids?

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      He is in no way an amateur idiot 🙂 All your points are excellent (and probably correct). I don’t dislike the book– this post is more indicative of “the things grownnups start to think about when they have read the same book 4,000 times. Children are riveted by reading the same book over and over again but our minds start to wander so this is where mine goes. But thank you for a well-thought out comment. Those are always appreciated. 🙂

      1. I just reread my comment and it sounds like a straight laced essay – sorry! I do think that wandering adults’ minds can come up with some very funny stuff re children’s books, I just have a soft spot for Brown and her books and I hated to see them joked about. But the Bears’ therapy session…I loved that. I’m going to laugh every time I see it now 🙂

  136. Chadwick Crawford Avatar
    Chadwick Crawford

    Clement Hurd’s style is so weird and unsettling. It seems strange that Brown handpicked him for this book.

  137. Valerie S Avatar
    Valerie S

    Absolutely LOVED this blog!!! You captured what so many (whether they will admit it or not) think about while reading over and over the same book.

  138. I opted for Beverly Cleary books, so not having read this book probably qualifies me for the “Bad Parent Club.” For a story about animals, the choice of a tiger-skin rug does seem ill-advised. As a child, I always coveted those tiny books that fit into a tiny box, thinking that any child who possessed a set to be very lucky indeed. Does the table lamp work with a clapper to turn on/off, so as to avoid getting out of bed? Why does Mother Bunny read from across the room and not sitting on the bed as most TV/Movie parents depicted?

  139. Very funny! This was a favorite of my daughters and mine…we used to play a game which involved pointing out where the mouse is hiding on each page, then we would read that page…I miss those days!

  140. I laughed a real lot at this blog, but seriously why do expletives of the’f’kind spoil these things every time ? I might be old fashioned but that is how I feel.
    Anyhow, I guess the illustrator did something right for the way so many kids are overly hooked on this book. You would think ii was the only one on their shelves.

    1. Agreed. It wqould have been great without the F*** words interlaced throughout.

  141. Having a vast appreciation for Irony, I enjoyed the humor behind this article. Sadly, some people seem to have taken it quite literally, their children have my sympathy. Unfortunately, due to some (implied) language, I will not be sharing this with my family members that have small children. Yes we are all adults, but we are also aware that there are many ways of expressing ourselves and making a point without using words that must be ast***sked out. Carry on!

  142. I’m so shocked by all the critical comments. People – it’s prose. It’s thoughts and giggles and tongue-in-cheek. Where did your sense of humor go?!

    1. i think you can still have a sense of humor AND an opinion about something, as in, that was funny, but I think the critiques behind the humor miss the point, and since literature matters, it’s worth discussing that (what is humorous prose if not also commentary?)

  143. Love this. I’m wondering what your thoughts are on the disappearing, reappearing red balloon? My son has an intense love/hate relationship with balloons and he freaks out every time we turn to a page without it. “Where’s the balloon mama? Where’d the balloon go?” He asks almost as if he’s waiting for it to suddenly appear in our room just to terrify him. I think he likes to see it safely on the pages of the book – at least then he knows where it is.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      Does he hate when balloons lose half their helium and hover next to the bed shoulder-height like the dismembered heads of serial killers because oh my god, that used to scare the pants off me when I was little.

      1. ROFLOL

  144. Brilliant! Love the therapy scene. But it’s cracking me up that some people are seeing this as a serious critique of the illustrator or the book. Can you do Room on the Broom? that was my kid’s favorite..

    1. a critique is a critique, even when it’s humorous. No one’s taking cheap shots at the post, but the people who care about the literary work are expressing their disagreement with the actual critique underlying the well written humor, and that’s okay. What’s not cool is writing off others’ thoughtful responses as “not having a sense of humor” or being sorry for their children as another commenter said. That’s a cheap shot.

    2. Ugh, spoke too soon. Some people did take cheap shots. Sigh. For what it’s worth, even though I was bummed by some of the opinions, i died at the bear couple’s therapy session bit. That’s exactly what it looked like! I will never see that part without giggling now.

  145. Quite amusing read, but I can definitely tell that the author is a big-city dweller by their reaction to the room. Sure, that would cost a medium-sized fortune in New York City, but growing up (dirt poor I might add) waaay out in the country, my room as a child was nearly that big. We lived in an old ramshackle farmhouse, and as an only child, I had one of the two huge rooms upstairs to myself.
    And yes, I still feel *extremely* hemmed in when I spend a long time in a dense urban environment. Nice places to visit, horrible places to live…unless you’re filthy rich.

  146. This room is a little smaller than the bedroom in Peter Pan. Every time you see that bedroom people are flying in it!

  147. Absolutely hilarious. I thought I was the only one who hated the color scheme with a passion. And the part about the bears had me giggling helplessly. At work.

  148. THANK YOU as a teacher this is BRILLIANT well done

  149. I LOVED this post. Hilarious. I felt I had to post to offset some of the comments that took it way too seriously. And the whole post is obviously written for adults, so I don’t really see why the asterisked word is a problem. Presumably parents would read this before reading it to their kids.

    1. nycsongs Avatar
      nycsongs

      Just because we’re adults doesn’t mean we’re casual and OK with f-bombs. 🙂

  150. This is so clever and hilarious….I design kids’ rooms and I read this book countless times to my children.

  151. I think this is quite possibly the best thing I’ve ever read. My girls both wanted to read this book every. single. night. when they were babies and this puts it all into a new light. A sick, twisted and hilarious light.
    Amityville Kill Room.

    Literally, laughing my buns off.

  152. I loved this entry and took it exactly as intended. I, too, have read this many many many times and you put some of my thoughts right here in the blog. The stuff I hadn’t thought of, hilarious! Thanks for the laugh today.

  153. This is the best illustration critique I have ever read and I read it out loud to my adult sons and we all had a hearty chuckle over it. I have not read this particular picture book but now that I have read your review I am going to go find it. Thank you. 🙂

  154. jennifer Avatar
    jennifer

    Love this post. I was always bothered by the rabbit fishing with a carrot as bait for another rabbit in the picture. Creepy

  155. Catherine Warren Avatar
    Catherine Warren

    OMG! I nearly died laughing reading this! As a mother, teacher and writer of (yet to be published) picture books, the points you made were things I was thinking too and many things I had not noticed as well! Good call on these! Illustrations that are appealing to kids can be downright strange to the adult eye. And funny as you know what!

  156. This is too funny! My daughter passed this link along saying it made her smile (she’s 35…) As a mother of 4 children and 1 grand child, we’ve gone thru several copies of Goodnight moon. It’s kind of scary, but now 35 years later since my first was born, I can still recite the book verbatim. It’s a classic bedtime companion although I agree the illustrator could have used some guidance. No matter all of my kids loved it as is, and that’s what counts in the end isn’t it?

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      It is. And it’s crazy to think that possibly I’ll be able to quote the book years from now. At this point I sometimes find myself just reciting it to myself the way you get a song stuck in your head 🙂

  157. Louise Canter Avatar
    Louise Canter

    Loved the book! But then, anything made in 1947 was exceptionally good! Did I mention that I was born in 1947?? it can still put me to sleep!

  158. Wholly crap… you have too much time on your hands. I clicked on this on Facebook to see how ridiculous this was, and after the day I had as an inpatient nurse dealing with peoples lives, I feel sorry that this is what you do… sorry for the run on and improper punctuation, but in the scheme of things someone died today and you are nitpicking a book/illustrator .. I guess we all have a place

    1. libraryann Avatar
      libraryann

      I’m sorry you had a bad day and that the humor in this post couldn’t lighten your load a little.

    2. Um, “holy” crap, I guess we could sit around and be weighed down by the knowledge that people die all day, every day, everywhere, OR we could lighten life up by laughing at the silly little things in it. Guess we know which one you chose. Good luck with that, I hope you’re not this morose around your poor patients.

  159. THANK YOU! I had to read it twice because the first time I was LAUGHING SO HARD, I was CRYING! I needed that laugh! Oh, and though I have 4 kids, I have probably only read Goodnight Moon a few times in my life. I couldn’t stand the color scheme 😉

  160. What about Runaway Bunny? Makes Goodnight Moon seem like a PBS documentary.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      I’m still recovering from reading Runaway Bunny.

  161. what about the picture of the bunny fly fishing for bunnies?? — cannibilism much?

  162. Oh. My. Goodness!!! Hahaha!!!! I often find myself wondering some of these very things while reading this book, though now I have many more inconsistencies to grab my attention. Lol! This is hilarious!!! I’m glad I’m not the only one who has these kinds of thoughts. You just have to wonder what the illustrator was thinking, and THEN what all the other people were thinking who agreed that it looked like your typical childs’ room. Holy moly. I love it!!!! Thanks for the laugh!!

  163. Kathleen M. Morris Avatar
    Kathleen M. Morris

    Hilarious! Thanks for brightening up a dull day. Remember that my daughter loved this book, but your points very well taken. You should perhaps turn your attention to classics such as Babar the Elephant and the Madeline series next.

    1. yikes! Babar – he marries his “little cousin” on a road trip. Creeper. 🙂

  164. Your life is so dull you’ve had time to put this much effort into picking apart the poorly drawn bedroom of some dumb kids book and typed it out for the rest of the world? Also what was with the crap about the brush being on the same table as food? It’s near it, not in it and last I checked hairs didn’t walk across the table to jump into food. Maybe the kid with the massive, ugly, room was finished with it.

  165. Love, love, love, love, love. This was so hilarious – it completely made my day. I read this book about a million times when my daughter was little – and it NEVER occurred to me how odd it was. I want to read everything you write – adore your sense of humor.

  166. WOW…Bitter Much???!!

  167. You’re ok with a rabbit dressed in a nightgown, sitting in a rocker knitting, but this stuff bothers you?

  168. Somehow, I didn’t ever notice (3 children, now in their 20s) the tiger skin rug! Gack.

    As for the drying rack, this professional organizer wasn’t gnashing her teeth because it’s not clutter, it’s not impinging on the available (massive amount of) space, and the “clients” aren’t bothered by it!

    Love your screed, I mean blog, on this resilient old book. Poor little bunny, living in such a scary room!

  169. Well, the bunny did have a red balloon. I know from experience that when a child has a balloon, they need no other toys.

    BTW, posting a link back to you from my blog!

  170. Casandra Avatar
    Casandra

    Hilarious and spot on! Though I’m surprised you did not point out the grey rug, that, relative to the bed and cats, and other furniture, is at least 20 feet in diameter. Where do you get a 20 foot rug?!

  171. Diane Striley Avatar
    Diane Striley

    Re: Heat

    All the creatures are wearing fur coats.

    See; The willing suspension of disbelief!

    I really enjoyed this rant–very clever.

  172. Love this – hilarious. After reading some of these books ten hundred times, you start to notice things like this. I’ll find myself reading along, while in my head I’m critiquing plot, character development, narrative arc…

  173. This is so great and so true – after you read some of these children’s books for the ten hundredth time these things start to get to you. I find myself reading to my kids while in the back of my mind I’m critiquing plot, character development, narrative arc…

  174. Hilarious. Loved your observations and humor!

  175. Ann Marie Tourtellotte Avatar
    Ann Marie Tourtellotte

    I found myself defending many comments. Like the room always seems huge to a small child. The colors have a feeling of warmth and comfort so to critique them is annoying. It was written for children not adults comfort. I honestly thought it was too critical of the book’s images. Sorry!

    1. Aaron Smallets Avatar
      Aaron Smallets

      I was going to write something slightly mean, and then I read your name and realized it’s not your fault.

  176. Awesome! I think we’ve all thought this.
    Shared on my public profile.

  177. Oh my gosh this is hilarious! I was reading this in class and had to stop because otherwise I was going to burst out laughing. Then I read the rest at home and was laughing so much that my sister actually told me to shut up. Then I read it to my mom and we were laughing so hard we started to cry. Thanks for this! I especially love the interior designers. And couples therapy.
    Emma

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      This comment totally made my night.

      1. I have to agree with Emma! This was hysterical. I was near tears!

  178. Actually, what’s always bugged me about the book is not the decor but the fact that they use the word Moon on two consecutive pages and the way its written doesn’t trip easily off my tongue. “Goodnight Moon . . . Goodnight Cow Jumping OVER the Moon.” But then again only someone whose read it thousands of times like me probably gets bugged by things like that.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      That absolutely drives me up the wall but I wasn’t sure everyone would relate to it or if it was just me.

  179. Love your way of writing and expression. Perfect rant and fun and one I can so relate to. Thanks for this…:-)

  180. Soooo… you’re OK with the fact that rabbits are keeping cats as pets. Considering where they respectively fall on the food chain, I’ve always found that odd. But, whatever, as you’ve so aptly pointed out, the whole setting is pretty whackadoo.

  181. 1. Is it just me? I actually well up, choked up, each time I read this story. Bear in mind, I read it to both my daughters when they were little, then to my 2 (out of three, the baby is just 7 months old) grandkids…and I just can’t help it. Few things do this to me so unprompted. Do you think the colors of the bedroom are toying with my brain’s emotional responses? LOL…

    2. Have you noticed the Bowl of Mush is bigger than the little bunny’s head?

    Funny stuff, thanks. 🙂

  182. I was laughing so hard at the phone call to tell the woman to stop saying hush, I actually spit food out of my mouth. Hilarious!

  183. Have to add that the automatic cat profile pic that represents me on my first comment, kinda looks like I think I would look as a cat. Just sayin’.

  184. Lori Spatola Avatar
    Lori Spatola

    This is funny! I’m surprised you didn’t mention the alternating black & white pages

  185. Has anyone read one of Margret Wise Brown’s lesser known books, The Little Fur Family? It half rhymes, which aggrevates me and says thinks like “the dark and sunny woods”. WTH. How are the woods dark AND sunny? Why is this happening and why does my daughter want to read it 3, 000 times in a row.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      I own the touch-and-feel version where the cover has fur on it. The little fur creatures are the weirdest things ever.

  186. Not to be mean but this is pointless to complain about a child’s book that you admit to enjoying reading to your children. Like many other children’s books, illustrations and other creative finds are part of that genre. What’s the big hang up? Criticize things that impart negativity and inhumane things..a child’s book is far from that..

  187. Very funny! We loved Goodnight Moon mostly because the mouse appears on every page and it was fun for the kids to try to pounce on it before the parent was done with the text on that page! (Now that we have teenagers, we still have a soft spot for mice, but neither of our girls has ever opted for a tomato-and-green bedroom, thankfully. . .)

  188. Meredith Avatar
    Meredith

    I laughed so hard I almost woke the baby up. That would have been horribly ironic.

  189. Terri Delebo Avatar
    Terri Delebo

    Oh my gosh, I rarely laugh out loud at stuff I think is funny…just a muffled chortle , usually…but this made me LAUGH OUT LOUD. Beautifully, snarkily done! Of course I read this book to my boys yeas ago, a bazillion times., but your piece highlighted a cartload of details I never noticed…and many I recall puzzling over, too, like WTF, creepy Lepidoptera in a rocking chair.

    I’m also reminded of our Goodnight Moon “fave tradish” (<–as the now-grown boys would say): When I read it to them, I always changed that one line to "A comb and a brush and a bowl full of mush, and a quiet old lady whispering….SHUUUUTTTTTTTTT UPPPPPPPPPPPP!" Screamed, of course. SCREAMED, I tell you. Two mangy little boys thought that was the funniest thing on Earth.

    Thanks for the memory-jogging, and the pitch perfect satire!

  190. Denise B Avatar
    Denise B

    Absolutely HYSTERICAL!! I have a 9 year old and haven’t read this in quite some time, but a mad rush of “oh my goodness” came rushing back to me as I read this! Thanks for the laughs!

  191. Jann Bell Avatar
    Jann Bell

    Yes, the whole thing, art and all is outlandish and awkward and that is what makes it a classic. Out of step, tentative, blaring. I loved this piece and will seek more of you out. Jann

  192. I love most of the color comments, but have to disagree on the mouse. I have two kids and our favorite part was finding the mouse on each page. He moves around as you would expect a mouse to and it is so much fun when they realize he is there all the time. The last one is very sweet.

  193. There is a copy of Goodnight Moon on the nightstand. WHAT.

    1. i know, that’s totally inception-ish. freaky.

  194. This post should have been called “Why Goodnight Moon is brilliant and hilarious.” Did you address the blank page that says, “Goodnight nobody”? It’s meant to be fun, it being a children’s book.

  195. Christine Johnson Avatar
    Christine Johnson

    Sounds like you’re trying to hard to be funny. Bit of overkill, eh?

  196. April Van Scherpe Avatar
    April Van Scherpe

    I found your blog when a friend shared this post on Facebook. Laughed so hard while reading it that I was literally crying. Thank you.

  197. Okay, I always thought the baby bunny was sleeping in the mom’s room for the night… which would explain almost all the decor… and also why the mom is comforting the child by describing the objects in the room that seem scary at night.

  198. Mary Mehrens Avatar
    Mary Mehrens

    Love this.
    Something my toddler points out every time: one of the kitten looks more like a squirrel. “There were 2 little kittens, and a pair of mittens – AND A SQUIRREL!!!”

  199. My kid pointed out to me some interesting continuity errors in the book, regarding the balloon. You are introduced to the balloon, and it’s all fine. Then, there comes a page where, based on the “camera angle,” you should see the balloon — but it’s not there! Then it’s there again after that. Spooky! We always said, maybe it floated up on a hot current from the fire, then down again … :]

  200. The mouse is hidden in different places in every page with the wholebig bedroom. It’s the fun game we played when each of our children had it read to them…where is he?

  201. This is “the worlds smallest most useless” article. More pointless than a sphere.

  202. The Runaway Bunny is on the bookshelf, too.

  203. I’ve always wondered why the picture of the bunny going fly fishing on the left side never gets mentioned in the book. Couldn’t that have filled in for the “Goodnight Nobody” page, which is clearly a total cop out?

    1. Christine Avatar
      Christine

      The bunny fishing is a prequel to the other famous board book, The Runaway Bunny, by the same author. I would love to see The Ugly Volvo’s take on THAT one where overbearing parent masquerades as a loving, devoted parent.

  204. u r funny… I especially loved the bear scene

  205. Jean Wills Avatar
    Jean Wills

    This IS funny.

  206. Read my mind about the gigantic room and the colors… This piece is hilarious and those who comment negatively need to look up the word ‘satire’ on Google or that Encyclopedia Britannica on the bookshelf. Keep it up – I appreciate you and your work!

  207. It’s a children’s book. WHO CARES. You are looking way too far into it, for real. I’m sure your kid hasn’t noticed any of the things mentioned here.

  208. Wesley Gallagher Avatar
    Wesley Gallagher

    How could you not mention the kittens?? In a rabbit’s bedroom? Those rabbits should be dead.

  209. you failed to point out the strange picture over the bookcase with one rabbit fishing for a baby rabbit with a carrot. The big rabbit is dressed for fly fishing, in a steam. So weird. Love the post.

    1. This is actually an illustration from The Runaway Bunny, which is a “companion” book to Goodnight Moon. Same author, same illustrator. Sweet story, and cool that the picture is in this book. 🙂

    2. That picture is actually a reference to another book by Margaret Wise Brown, *The Runaway Bunny.* Seems strange, but it’s actually a clever nod, as is the copy of *Goodnight Moon* on the bedside table.

    3. Nathalie Avatar
      Nathalie

      The fishing bunny picture is from another book by the same author, ‘The Runaway Bunny.’ 🙂

    4. Nathalie Avatar
      Nathalie

      Ha, jinx!

  210. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    How about there is a copy of Goodnight Moon on the nightstand. And the mom bunny is also reading it?

  211. Wow…you must be a real buzz kill with movies…i mean, come on, its a childrens book with rabbits living in a house. Seriousky spent that much time looking for and pointing out all the negatives? Theres a reason its a best seller. KIDS (you know, the ones the book was intended for!) love it and arent cynical of every detail. I think you wanted that to be a lot funnier than it was. Tried way too hard on that one.

  212. This is the funniest thing I have read in a while! Amazing!

  213. This is clearly Bunny Wayne . Think about it, the two urns on the matel, the enormous bedroom, the non-familia care giver.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      *mind blown*

  214. Come to think of it, aren’t the bears in therapy because of the Goldilocks burglary? I mean, some human goes into your house, eats your food, sleeps on your bed, etc, etc… QUITE a shock to one’s system. Heh.

  215. The details may seem odd to an adult, but the book was written for young children, who don’t care about a fisherman’s outfit. To them, rooms, books and even “little toy houses,” seem enormous. As for the interior decorating, have you ever seen a young child who has dressed himself? Matching colors and patterns is completely optional. The important thing here is not the room or its contents, but the moon.

  216. The painting of the rabbit fishing is a reference to another one of the author’s very popular books (written before this one), called The Runaway Bunny.

  217. Anjalika Nigam Avatar
    Anjalika Nigam

    I’ve always assumed the room was actually the whole house. Like a studio apartment except kitchen and bathroom. But your interpretation is hilarious!

    1. Nathalie Avatar
      Nathalie

      That’s what I always thought too! But yeah, this is hilarious. And seriously awful colors!

  218. mary douglass Avatar
    mary douglass

    My daughter was always disturbed by the red balloon. It is in the pages in the beginning of the book, disappears in the middle, and then reappears at the end. At eighteen months old, it made her nuts. She would ask about it each time we read the book.

  219. Cyndi Barron-Harris Avatar
    Cyndi Barron-Harris

    Hilarious! I’ve thought many of those things myself over the years.

  220. “Goodnight Moon” is a child’s introduction to existentialism.

    Existentialism (/ɛɡzɪˈstɛnʃəlɪzəm/)[1] is a term applied to the work of certain late 19th- and 20th-century philosophers who, despite profound doctrinal differences,[2][3][4] shared the belief that philosophical thinking begins with the human subject—not merely the thinking subject, but the acting, feeling, living human individual.[5] In existentialism, the individual’s starting point is characterized by what has been called “the existential attitude”, or a sense of disorientation and confusion in the face of an apparently meaningless or absurd world.[6] Many existentialists have also regarded traditional systematic or academic philosophies, in both style and content, as too abstract and remote from concrete human experience.[7][8]

  221. I did not enjoy this piece. I will not like The Ugly Volvo on Facebook or follow you on Twitter. Or follow the blog by signing up for email updates. I did not enjoy your writing, I will not read your essay which you would describe as “not too terrible” in the book I Just Want to Be Alone. I do not want to spend 11 bucks and get it, even if the link also supports your lovely local bookstore. I will not like your Facebook page. I will have wonderful and productive day. You’re welcome.

  222. Did you know the mouse is on every big colored pictured in the book. Always in a different place. My son would find him every time we read the book.

  223. Anyone who thinks this is useless or ‘its a children’s book so who cares?’ is completely missing the point. I thought it was hilarious!

    1. It reminds me a bit of a comedian who gets laughs at the expense of a random audience member who he decides to heckle. The essay makes fun of the work of an artist who drew for children 70 years ago (pre-TV)) by judging illustrations by today’s adult viewpoint.

  224. Did we discuss the tiger skin rug?

  225. I refuse to read this book to my nieces and nephews, and because I’m not a parent I can get away with that. I remember as a child hating this book because the colors made my eyes hurt. This post is hilarious, especially the the three bears.

  226. This just made my day! I am sitting in the parking lot of my children’s school with tears rolling down my face from roaring with laughter…. Thanks!

  227. I haven’t laughed so hard in at least a week. Thank you for the comic relief!

  228. When I was younger, I had a recurring nightmare about an old lady in my room who I think was left to babysit me. She was horrible and this nightmare really disturbed me. I never put it together until I read this book to my own own son. that damn old lady was from this book. This book now terrifies me lol, and we don’t read it. 🙂

  229. KP Cantu Avatar
    KP Cantu

    I’d like to point out that the balloon is missing toward the end of the book and then reappears. My 2 year old noticed this and says. “Uh oh, balloon” every time we read this. Probably signs of future OCD. Why doesn’t the old lady have a name? Why is she in the room? Creepy. I never noticed the bunny picture on the left. My son and I read it in Spanish and it says ‘habitacion’ for room and I would have preferred ‘recamara.’ More thoughts I just needed to get off my chest because we read this every. night.

  230. Absolutelty hilarious and brilliant read.

  231. Kathleen Avatar
    Kathleen

    I’m an inverate reader and critic. Actually learned to read on the toilet as a kid. Only peaceful place in the house. Read everything . Ingredients in Vaseline and shaving cream to stave boredom. This critique of a kid bedroom is great. Seems like something that you started while bored. It then set sail in your head and kept growing. Fun!

  232. Lori Smith Avatar
    Lori Smith

    I seriously hope this is a joke. It’s Goodnight Moon for God’s sake….a children’s book…get a grip.

    1. bygrinstow Avatar
      bygrinstow

      I hope *this* is a joke. Seriously, reading children’s books over and over is a good thing — for the children. Sometimes as the parent you can feel like reading *that book* One. More. Time. is perhaps the camel that broke the straw’s back, and you’ll go mad.

      Mad, I say.

      Levity is the soul of it. Now if someone could explain to me what “it” is…

    2. I must admit to being alarmed that you couldn’t see the humor in this.

    3. It is indeed a joke! This is, in fact, a website full of jokes. 😉

  233. Good stuff. Classic it may be, but it’s still a seriously creepy book. We’ve read it more times than I can count, and my son would always point out the weird painting on wall with the fly-fishing rabbit. Is he catching a rabbit-fish? Who knows, but it gives me the willies.

    1. That picture on the wall is a scene from “The Runaway Bunny” by the same author! I love the fact that they got cheeky with the art that way.

      1. The rabbit fishing is a reference to the author’s other book “Run Away Bunny”.

  234. This was pretty funny. I read this book as a child growing up and never thought twice. But for the mouse part, while not trying to be ‘that person’ in every picture through out the book there is a mouse hiding somewhere. That was always my favorite part reading it, trying to find the mouse in the scene it’s like I spy.

  235. This made my morning but I must say you missed the “Goodnight Nobody” page. It creeps me out. Why would you say good night to nobody! I will never get it!

    1. I think that too! How did the author get away with just writing “goodnight nobody” with a blank page. It’s like they were 90% done with the book, couldn’t think of anything else but wanted to finish it, so they just wrote “goodnight nobody”. As a children’s book author, you couldn’t have been any more creative? And yes, who says “goodnight nobody”, I agree it’s kind of creepy.

  236. What bothers me the most is how the mouse wanders throughout the room during the story, winding up ON THE TABLE with the mush at one point! No way is anyone eating that oatmeal!

  237. Brittany Avatar
    Brittany

    To me, the creepiest part of this book is the line, “And goodnight to the old lady whispering hush.”

    Does the child/bunny not KNOW who this woman is? She’s not a grandmother or mother because that would read “goodnight to grandmother whispering hush.” Even a nanny would be something other than ‘the old lady.’ Right? Is she like a random knitting stranger? A ghost? Seems rather sinister to me.

  238. You need to get out of NY.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      Dude, you’re telling me…

  239. This is totally hilarious, but I’m struggling to believe the author actually has children if she is “now trying to picture a situation in which I would place my unwashed hairbrush next to a bowl of cream of wheat.” I used to think that way, too, until I’d had kids for about a week. Now I’m lucky if I don’t catch myself spooning up the cream of wheat with the hairbrush and not really caring.

  240. My kids loves this book, but it is a bit odd. BTW, the mouse appears on every page. It moves around the room, even nibbling at that yummy cream of hairy wheat. (Look at the photo with item 12.)

  241. How about that picture of a rabbit fishing and catching a rabbit.

    1. The rabbit fishing for the rabbit fish is actually taken from another Margaret Wise Brown/Clement Hurd book, The Runaway Bunny.

  242. I’m surprised there wasn’t something written about how the socks are hung on one page, but not on another. My son loves saying goodnight to the fire. It bugs him that they don’t say goodnight to it in the book.

  243. This was hilarious! I read GM to my daughter every night…and I’ll never look at it the same again! The animal skin rug always got me! And – how did I never think twice about that fireplace?!

  244. Well, it’s the bunnies’ whole house I think, not one room or a nursery.

  245. I personally think that the little vermin was brought into the room by the child to eat it’s bowl of hair encrusted mush! Thanks for the chuckle!! Could it be that the bears in therapy are the interior decorators?!

  246. It’s a fantasy children’s story not to-scale architectural drawings, or a safety video. Do you have a problem with the bunny knitting too? Or the small bunny sleeping in a person bed? This is not realistic! For shame!
    I also must admit that I have left my hairbrush it the kitchen on more than one occasion and I have stirred my cup-o-soup with the non-bristled end of my tooth brush on camping trips. Gag on that.

  247. Kathryn Soper Avatar
    Kathryn Soper

    p.s. The existential mouse is in a different spot on every page.

  248. Stefanie Avatar
    Stefanie

    As a former daycare teacher I’ve read this a lot. For some reason I always had the impression it was not his room. Maybe he was visiting an elderly relative who dragged a few things from the attic. Too much time to think I guess.

  249. i’ve always assumed this was one of those one-room houses. you know, like back in the olden days.
    my only complaint is the big red balloon, which disappears and re-appears with no reason. my kid is obsessed with balloons and this thing causes a crisis EVERY NIGHT.

  250. I’m missing something. The room isn’t THAT big.

  251. Joan Brown Avatar
    Joan Brown

    Your writing reminds me of Erma Bombeck. I’ve read every book she’s ever written. Your posts are hilarious, keep it up!

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      Thanks, I’ve always thought she was hilarious. Although I used to read her when I was a teenager which is, looking back on it, sort of weird I guess?

  252. I’m surprised you didn’t say anything about the fact that he has a copy of Goodnight Moon next to his out-dated office phone, despite existing in Goodnight Moon. Clearly they reside in a land of madness and discord.

  253. Loved this. Yes, I read this many times to my three girls. You are totally right in every observation. Let me add, though, that I would give ANYTHING to be reading this again to the girls when they were little. The youngest is in her senior year of high school. Oh, how I wish I could do this again. Enjoy this time thoroughly with your little one now.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      As much as I sometimes wish I didn’t have to read the same things over and over (AND OVER) again, I know how fast this time goes (and can already not believe how fast it’s gone) and am enjoying every minute. Getting to watch a kid this age grow up has been a wonderful and totally mindblowing experience. 🙂

  254. I found your story via the Fug Girls. What a delightful post. I giggled out loud several times. Thanks for this. 🙂

  255. Really???? Think more about your son and his love of reading! I think you’re a little OCD—no, a lot! Read more yourself and you won’t be consumed by stupid thoughts! I’m actually embarrassed for you!

  256. Wilma Veldman Avatar
    Wilma Veldman

    All of my five children loved the book. Some of your complaints are really irrelevant to a child. Some I laughed with. As far as the size of the room and use of space, well, my childhood bedroom in our large farmhouse could easily fit all of the items in the child’s bedroom and we did not worry about lack of space for our few belongings. We had four of us girls in it. We had very few toys, and we certainly did not keep them in our bedroom cause that was not convenient for play! As far as the bowl full of mush and the comb and brush; I can see that easily happening in a child’s room. Uneaten and unwanted food will stay there until a parent removes it, and according to the child, who cares about hair in it. They don’t want to eat it anyways!

  257. nathan helgren Avatar
    nathan helgren

    it’s also weird the bunny has a copy of the book on his nightstand, which if he was reading it, would have him, in bed, with a copy of the book on his nightstand.

  258. Wasn’t this book banned by the Daughters of The American Revolution?

  259. polarbear4 Avatar
    polarbear4

    seriously funny.

  260. It drives me nuts that they say good night to the clocks. Saying good night is the first mention of it. I had to look in two books to make sure the first one didn’t skip a page. They introduce the other stuff and THEN say good night. My kids still love it. Funny article.

    Alison
    Theguiltymommy.com

  261. I always thought of it as a one room house, kinda log cabin-ish, rather than one giant kid’s bedroom. It’s less disturbing that way.

    1. Sharon Lynn Avatar
      Sharon Lynn

      I agree with Annalisa. Having lived in a 500 sq. ft. studio apartment in NYC for 6 years, I’ve always thought of it as their on!y room besides the (tiny) kitchen and bathroom. I imagined that the grandmother would eventually have to crawl into bed with her sleeping grandbunny, because it’s their only bed (she gets the side with the telephone, which will shrilly ring late at night with a “wrong number” and wake up the kid).

      That being said, this is a wonderful and hilarious analysis! All 3 of my kids loved this book as toddlers and had my husband or me reading it repeatedly. I still know all the words by heart (and my kids are 10, 14, and 17, so it’s been awhile!).

  262. I actually read this (to adults) at the end of a bedtime-themed baby sign language class. I always read “and goodnight to the creepy old lady whispering “Hush.” before delving into a rant about who that lady is anyway–a wet nurse? Certainly not grandma, or they would’ve called her Grandma.
    …and is she just going to leave that bowl of mush sitting out all night? Does she have any idea how many bacteria will have multiplied in that bowl, come morning? Perhaps she should put her crochet down for just a minute to walk that Petri dish to the sink!
    And why are we saying goodnight to things not introduced in the first half of the book? Where is the continuity?!?

    (Clearly I was not raised on this book, so I guess I was a little more over analytical than I would’ve been if it was a childhood favorite.)

  263. Love your post! I too read Goodnight Moon (and My World – don’t even get me started on that one…) every night for about a year. Classic and disturbing stuff! 🙂

  264. The tiger skin rug on the floor? Why would a child’s room have an animal skin rug. – especially a rabbit child. But it does go with the mustard chair.

  265. What about the picture of the cow jumping over the moon that is in the picture of the three bears on chairs?

  266. It’s the rhythm of the story. It is a sweet book. Too much time on your hands.

  267. Who the hell spends this much time analyzing a children’s book? A children’s book for God’s sake. If you spent half the effort critiquing something worthwhile, or maybe sat your arrogant butt down and tried to write and illustrate an entire children’s book, maybe you would realize that you don’t, in fact, know everything about everything. Why don’t you stick to using your obviously very incompetent brain for something much smaller and more to your scale instead of attacking works of art that were created by someone with more talent, artistry, and skill in their pinky finger than you could ever fathom in your life.

    1. You obviously woke up on the wrong side of the bed this morning. Maybe someone should have read this book to you last night so you could have gotten a better night’s rest and not be so foul, nasty, and disrespectful.

    2. Did YOU write this book yourself? IT IS an obnoxious book and I have always disliked it from the first time I read it.

    3. Katie Bolinger Avatar
      Katie Bolinger

      I love your commentary. So funny. I’m betting in 1947, when this book was published, they didn’t sink a lot of money/technology into a kids book so the colors are flat and odd to say the least. What I never noticed until you blew the picture up is that next to the phone is a copy of Goodnight Moon. Thanks for the laugh.

    4. jaomomof3 Avatar
      jaomomof3

      Lighten up, Allison! It’s HUMOR, for heaven’s sake!

  268. This is too funny! I’m glad I’m not the only one who wondered about all this. Sharing!

  269. For gosh sake! It isn’t meant to be taken literally, it’s a fantasy, it’s a children’s book. I hope this is satire if it isn’t you are too bound up in the modern culture of thought.

    1. jaomomof3 Avatar
      jaomomof3

      OMG, are there really people who can’t see that this is meant to be FUNNY! I couldn’t stop laughing!

  270. I’m enraptured! This is beautifully conceived & realized & so much fun!!

  271. ^^^ Some harsh comments. People can be so cruel. I thought your observations were funny. I know how it goes, my one year old LOVES to be read to. “Book” was one of her first words. There are a few books I know word for word without even having to look at the words.

  272. Very funny. I’m sorry you have to read all of the comments from humorless people who don’t understand that you can truly love reading classic books like this to your child and still observe silly details through your own adult eyes. I hope you ignore all of the ‘naysayers.’

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      It’s totally ok, lovely comments like this totally make up for it.

  273. John Smutko Avatar
    John Smutko

    Brilliant analysis, but you glossed right over the disturbing picture of a rabbit in hip waders fishing for a baby rabbit with a carrot.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      That picture is crazy, I know. It’s from The Runaway Bunny by the same author illustrator combo (Which, if you look for it, is also on the bookshelf!)

  274. Ryan McCumber Avatar
    Ryan McCumber

    What’s with the creepy picture of the bunny fishing for bunnies? That bunny is either a cannibal or a pedo-bunny!

  275. this is brilliant. My only issue with it is that i didn’t come up with it myself. You should hear my issues on Mary Poppins and any other disney film.

  276. Ryan McCumber Avatar
    Ryan McCumber

    Oh and nothing screams “kid’s room” like an endangered tiger skin rug!

  277. I have wondered these things ever since I started reading this book. Also…who is the old lady and why does she only say hush? She is so far away from the kid, how does he even hear her?

  278. Speaking of that incredibly small drying rack…on one page it has two pairs of mittens, but on another page there is only one pair of gloves.

    Where did they go? Based on your observations, I’m guessing that mouse used them to stay warm in that giant room.

  279. I am glad that someone other than me dislikes this book! You would appreciate Boom Baby Moon – a satire of Good Night Moon

  280. Geez! I can not believe the rude comments! We all know this book is a classic….this post is supposed to be FUNNY! (Which it is!) The things some people will find offensive…..smh

  281. Cheryl Ramirez Avatar
    Cheryl Ramirez

    That was hilarious! I too read this book to my children many times and we always enjoyed it and hunting for the mouse. It was a great way to “settle” them for sleep. I never noticed the things you described. Thank you so much, I can’t stop laughing!

  282. Wow. That is a lot of hate for a children’s book . Yikes.
    Who cares? Why does it bother you so much about a 2 dimensional drawing with bright colors, and happiness?
    Have you ever read about the kid with the purple crayon? you would have a field day. This is what is wrong with this country. everyone has a complaint about nothing and has to spew the hate.
    Get over yourself.

  283. Are you kidding me you two people….this was funny stuff. This is lighthearted joking about a book that many of us have read to our children. This isn’t to be taken seriously, just to enjoy observations made by someone who has a sense of humor. Thank you as I enjoyed your sense of humor. I myself read this book to all of my children when they were much younger and now make it a point to buy this book with every new baby of family and friends.

  284. Yeah the drawings for this book suck. Mind boggling. Great story totally insane illustrations. Maybe I’ll do a re-make.

  285. Wow! The Goodnight Moon Fan Cult out in full force. It’s called “humor” people … “the quality of being amusing or comic, especially as expressed in literature or speech.” And, from the angry tone, the author’s of the last few comments could use more of it in their lives. Brilliantly funny stuff!

  286. Eva Wagner Avatar
    Eva Wagner

    This is brilliant. And having read that book over and over I thought the very same things! I also thought the words were kind of silly too and was not sure why it was such a popular book – I work in an art museum and hear people saying all the time, “I could paint a picture better than that.” And I think yeah, well do it…but in this case I really think most 5th graders could write a better children’s book. I often wondered why it was so popular – perhaps the absurdity/simplicity – there is something foolishly magical about it. In Bangor Maine where I live and work we have a children’s museum – Maine Discovery Museum that has an almost exact replica of this room for children to play in, except it is not as enormous. Children love it – go figure!

  287. I loved these comments…thanks❗️

  288. Hey, y’all, criticizing with comments like “too much time on your hands”, etc. You don’t get it. This is just for fun. Have some fun. Lighten up. This is hilarious!

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      Thanks 🙂 It was meant all in good fun. And oh my god, I have a toddler and I wrote this in a mad rush during his naps. I never have ENOUGH time on my hands.

  289. Brilliant! Thanks for the laugh!

  290. My teenage girls and I enjoyed this very much! And the value of it was this: as each of the illustration’s obvious absurdities were exposed, my girls’ eyes widened with recognition. Of course! They had always suspected the same things, but as children felt they could not express reproach of a classic. But now they realize that yes, indeed, their own observations and opinions are as valid as anyone’s. So, Goodnight Moon, your value to my toddlers was negligible, but thanks for this late lesson in self-confidence.

  291. I loved this. I didn’t grow up with this ‘classic’ so I never got the big deal about this book. It’s just old. I remember the first time reading it, in my late 20s and thinking, “Goodnight nobody?” Am I the only one that thought that was just being lazy?

  292. Great comments & insight. No mention of the multiple clocks? No need for all of that, especially with how loud those clocks can be while trying to sleep.
    In regards to the bowl of mush, obviously the dumb spoiled rabbit didn’t eat his dinner so before any breakfast is served the bowl of mush must be eaten. The brush is strategically located next to the mush because for rabbits brushing there fur is important like getting dressed is to humans.
    Hopefully my insights have been helpful as yours have been invaluable to me.
    Thanks.

    1. right on with the clocks! damn and im sure you know that its impossible to keep clocks in sync with one another. one second hand can be “kind of” soothing as it rhythmically ticks, but youd be hard pressed to get another to tick in time with it. that split second off-beat would drive me crazy.

  293. mary baughman Avatar
    mary baughman

    Thank you. I enjoyed this very much. I haven’t read Goodnight Moon for many years (my daughter is nearly 20), but I remembered having some of the same thoughts. So funny. Ironic too, because I just saw a book by Gertrude Stein that was illustrated by Clement Hurd. Here’s more about that: http://www.npr.org/2013/11/09/243979808/a-rose-is-a-rose-is-a-75-year-old-kids-book-by-gertrude-stein

  294. I, like many people, grew up on this book. Do you know what I noticed now that I read it to my daughter? They’re rabbits! In my head, the little old lady whispering hush was.. an old lady. Now I’m looking at it, and I’m like, why the hell is there a rabbit in the rocking chair??

  295. Allegra Smith Avatar
    Allegra Smith

    I have read this book moe time than I can count, as a child and again as an adult to my 3 kids. The only wonder I really had was about the bowl of mush: shouldn’t the rabbit have brushed his teeth after his supper, and shouldn’t the old lady have cleared it away after lights out? If he tries to eat it in the morning it’ll be germ infested gluey stodge.
    Also, our family tent back in the 70’s had the same pattern as the curtains. Very circusy.

  296. Something to keep in mind about the colors. Back when it was published printing was much more ‘primitive’ three color process was done by hand with overlays. And the artists prepared their own artwork for the printing process. That’s why so many “classics” have such hideous…I mean timeless illustrations–colorwise at least. Think millions of cats, May I bring a friend, even caps for sale has the limited color palette. Oh and I hate good night moon. Never read it to my oldest son and he’s turned out a fine human being. And I a children’s librarian. 🙂

  297. Seriously? Do NONE of you have poetry in your soul? Are you so lost in current pop culture that you can’t recognize a bedroom of “Old Time” comforts? This is a nursery. That is the Nanny. It’s an old house from a time similar to Downton Abbey, and the rest is just ridiculous whining. Complaining about a drying rack. Really? I have one of these, and setting it up next to the fireplace to dry out wet mittens and socks is perfect, then you fold it back up and put it in a closet rather than having an ugly rack permanently installed on your wall (and then you have the nerve to complain about the 3 Little Bears painting!?!)

    And none of you could possibly be parents and still be whining about a bowl of food on a table next to a brush. Neurotic germophobes. Sheesh.

    1. Mary G – I do appreciate poetry and have four children but just really despise this particular book… I think it just reminds me of people who have such long drawn out bedtime routines that their kids can’t go to sleep without. I spent more time with my kids during the day and at bathtime and taught them how to put themselves to sleep, which they all did very well (one took a longer time to get there than the other three) and can, to this day, sleep anywhere without a problem and they are now aged 19-25.

  298. I used to readthis delightful book to my little boys almost every night. At no time did we ever wonder about the objects or the size of the room. We built language skills and shared valuable, precious time with my babies who are now grown.

    1. It really is a shame that you read the same book almost every night to your children… there are SO MANY books out there that you could have shared with them too…

      1. She’d didn’t say that was the ONLY book she read to them. My mom sometimes read me two books if they were short. Lighten up.

  299. This was written a while ago. So I would guess you didn’t know what houses looked like then but that is not really the point at all. The point is children LOVE this book and parents , teachers, etc love reading it to kids. If you don’t like it don’t reading it don’t but please don’t wreck it for the many who do. I as a teacher read it many, MANY times and love it still. It is a pure, simple story that kids of all ages can take something from. Find something you enjoy reading and your child will pick up that enjoyment and leave Good Night Moon to those who treasure it’s beauty.

  300. Thank you for the couples counseling transcripts. Hilarious. As for the lack of furniture and toys, it’s all in the half of the room you can’t see, behind the viewer. They moved it all to one end of the room so the other half would be neat and presentable for the illustrator, of course. Now, the fireplace is clearly NOT a fireplace, but a cosy-looking picture of a fireplace. You can tell because there’s no chimney. There. Feel a little better?

  301. Rhoda Rose Avatar
    Rhoda Rose

    See this room and everything else through a child’s eyes! To small children everything and everyone look BIG, sometimes HUGE. The realism to children is why generations of little ones love this story, book, and pictures.

    1. I’m sorry Rhonda Rose but you just ruin it for me. I came to this page accidentally & was going to leave but the tomato colored floor struck me. I started reading this blog. I almost died from laughing until you came along with your seriousness! I never was read nor did I ever read this story….your just like my mom. Knit picky….
      I’m sorry, I don’t want to lose this page but I forgot who write this or I’d check. Thank you for a great laugh. After reading it though, I was wondering why this hough here isn’t any mouse turds. Thanks for having me laugh & smile, Mary (now I feel really stupid, Rhonda Rose wrote this & I cut her down. )

  302. The commentary from Deb, Shawna and Mary G are almost as funny as your post. How do they NOT get it? I read this to my 17 month old daughter multiple times a day and have often pondered the same things! That mouse!! HA! It really is a great classic, at first I hated it but now it’s one of my faves, WAY better then Little Quack Counts or Too Princessy! I an not ashamed to admit that I hide those on a regular basis.

  303. That’s a drying rack, not a clothesline. I have one. it’s collapsible. I can unfold it in the tub and hang dry anything that shouldn’t be machine dried. It’s also awesome on camping trips for towels and such because it’s lightweight and folds flat…just be careful if it’s super windy. I highly recommend getting one.

  304. …and it’s there because it’s next to the fire where things will dry fastest. I know, I just killed your bitchin.

  305. All of you wondering about the animal skin rug — did any of you ever read The Little Princess? Sara Crewe had a tiger skin rug on her floor and it was a big comfort to her when she missed her Papa. Maybe this was an homage to that story?

  306. My husband noticed one day that it takes 70 minutes for all the action in the story to occur if you watch the clock on the mantle. That Bunny really has trouble falling asleep. We both laughed out loud at this piece. Well done.

  307. My wife and I have been reading this book EVERY NIGHT for the last 18 months to our son and we can’t stop laughing about this article. My personal gripe about the book is that the things listed in the room are only 50% of the things you actually say goodnight to…

  308. It’s always been my interpretation that the child is not feeling well and is sleeping in its parents’ room; do you think this explains come of the inconstancies you mention?

  309. My lord, how fatuous this is. First off, the book was not made to be taken literally. It was designed to soothe, not to be read word for word. The smooth flowing beat and rhythm of the words help lull a child to sleep, as well as the rhyming leaving resonance with the child. If you don’t believe me, why don’t you go and obtain a four year degree in Music Therapy?
    Secondly, the book is part of a series that was all written by Margaret Wise Brown- WHO WAS A CHILD PSYCHOLOGIST. They are meant to alleviate a child’s angst and worries.
    So next time you feel like criticizing a work, you should be less asinine by actually picking up some erudition about the work. Really. Your opinions show that you are truly vapid in your critique.

    1. Ames – I suppose by your pretentious, elevated, thesaurus-type vocabulary that we should agree with what you put out in your comment. Margaret Wise Brown may have been a child pyschologist 80 years ago but she did not like children nor did she have any of her own!! We are entitled to dislike this book for whatever reason we put out there. I don’t like it and my four children did not like it either. Music therapy is completely different from children’s literature – you are the only who is truly vapid. I am Ivy League educated with two masters degrees in education and have siblings who are music educators as well as performers and resent your assumptions, though your opinions are irrelevant to me.

      1. Jan, please lighten up. We get that you hated the book, OK?

  310. As a British reader of your blog I have never seen or read Goodnight Moon, although I now really want to! I thought your musings were hilarious nonetheless! I often have similar thoughts about the illustrations in older books – take a look at Mog, The Forgetful Cat (Judith Kerr) which features a burglar who is given a cup of tea by the family whose house he just broke into while the police ask him questions in the cosy kitchen!
    Keep up the great writing I love reading your posts!
    PS According to Wikipedia the rabbit in Goodnight Moon is thought to be in its mothers bed in her room! Not sure that’s a good habit to get into!

  311. These comments are hysterical. I LOVE THIS BOOK. My daughter LOVED THIS BOOK. People, please lighten up. You are missing the point – it’s called HUMOR. The first thing the writer said is that Goodnight Moon is a wonderful book.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      Because it is a wonderful book. With the books I actually don’t like (and there are some) I hide them under the sofa so my son can’t get attached to them. 🙂

  312. Let’s stop and think for a minute. Margaret Wise Brown wrote this in 1947. She was born in 1910. So when she was a small child her room quite possibly was like this. Maybe not the colors (read some of her other books…lots of color) but she probably had a large room in a large old home. The fireplace wouldn’t have had a screen in 1920. Nor would she have had many toys. Plastic toys were not the norm, and there weren’t many mass produced toys, so a child wouldn’t have had the hundreds of toys they have now. As for the mouse, could it be a pet? We are talking about a bunny here, could the mouse be a pet? Here’s a thought. Read the book, enjoy it for what it is.

  313. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    This book was written more than half a century ago which easily explains most of your criticisms. The artists work was inspired by colors of the French modernist movement which may also explain the bold coloring. See. A simple google search is all you need to do, instead of spending all this time nitpicking fairytales and children’s books.

  314. Sharon Rue Avatar
    Sharon Rue

    Hahahaha! Very funny. But seriously, this is what happens when an adult looks with grown-up eyes at a child’s book. Fantasy flies out the window and everything becomes “practical” and “rational.” Have to enjoy the humor in this piece. Kind of a reminder to all of us that it’s more fun to be a kid as often as possible.

  315. maybe it’s not the bedroom. Maybe it’s the living room, and either the family is too poor to afford a house with multiple rooms (the mother rabbit will ultimately retire to the same bed shortly after this photo was taken) or else the kid has a terminal disease and they’ve moved his bed to the common area to make his caregiving easier.

  316. You didn’t even touch on the fact that when the old rabbit lady is done knitting that row, she is going to have to put down her knitting, lock the cats in the closet, and spend twenty minutes untangling her yarn before she can keep going. Just saying.

  317. The mouse severs a very important purpose. On every page you ask your child to find the mouse. He is there for a reason and my kids loved that part of this book. Believe me with 5 kids, I have read this book thousands of times. It will always be a classic even with it’s non childproofed fireplace. Goodnight Noises Everywhere.

  318. Loved this! I really never got that book. Read it once to my daughter at bedtime and it bored her as much as it did me! None of my kids would let me read that one more than once. Where’s the action?! The suspense? The intrigue?! When will something come bursting in the window and have nanny rabbit rescue the sleeping bunny? We did read The Napping House over and over and over but at the end of that one they all wake up, go outside and play if I remember right. P.S. I am an elementary school teacher- I love children’s literature- this one never spoke to me.

    1. Oh And I am also the grump that threw out Love you Forever when my mother in law gave it to me to read to my baby boys. I was like, no way- just because you didn’t cut the cord with your baby boy doesn’t mean I will go full on helicopter mom stalk mode with my grown sons as well.

    2. Glad I am not the only one you really disliked Love You Forever!!! I do love my kids forever but not like that psycho!

  319. Hilarious. I’m not a parent, not yet, but have reread Goodnight Moon with little ones as I’ve aged. I laughed at every one of these observations!!!

    But still, it takes me back to think if how i perceived all of these things as a wee one – i believe GM posesses some magical lullaby spell to cast over the youngest minds. The palette is, yeah, horrible for real life, but soooooo stimulating for kids, esp as it gets darker… It just captivates the kids and brings them along to sleepland. The words are like a mantra lullaby!

    And as for all of the objects- equally captivating, strange to me as a kid in the 80s, but so fascinating. I can only imagine how fascinated kids nowdays will perceive things like the telephone– 25 yrs ago we at least still had landlines and only landlines. Just interesting to gauge through this book how culture changes, and that this book is still such a standard even as it becomes more and more outdated with every generation.

    Still….thanks for the good laughs. Gotta share with my folks, and the dear friends with a current 2 yr old.
    Signed,
    One who rode in the same ugly volvo from age <2 to 20

  320. Oh yeah… This also reminds me of what my dad would say (out of our earshot) after reading us Owl At Home by arn Lobel.

  321. Oh yeah… This also reminds me of what my dad would say (out of our earshot) after reading us Owl At Home by Arnold Lobel, another simpleton kinda story that we adored, shaking his head: “Dumb f$@king owl…”

  322. This made my day!

  323. I turned my son’s room INTO the Goodnight Moon room for Christmas. Down to the tiger rug and all (minus the colors of the room, I wasn’t going that far, but all the items are down to the T)

  324. Absolutely love the existential nature of “good Night Moon” it’s like an intersection of Kafka and Teletubbies:) and totally intrigued by the very patient and creative mother who made her child’s room look like Good night moon’s bedroom for Christmas. I’m in awe of that because it is a very thoughtful act of love for the child. Perhaps, why I say that might make more sense when you get to my final comment, I hope. – I think this book is totally different from “I’ll Love You Forever” storybook which I find manipulative and potentially harmful to a sensitive child. It engenders fear of loss and deterioration unnecessarily. In short, it is about the adult view of self/fear/longing and purports to be about love., however, I am certain the author meant well and probably performs a useful concept for some children. Who may be watching their parents deal with grandparents or for the adult mentally challenged needing to deal with aging parents..It is probably just jarring to some of us. But back to “Goodnight Moon” -I think it is somewhat masterful in this-somehow the illustrator/author envisions how a very young child might put together all the varying ordinary things of the world that the adults around them “name , use, and provide for the child. Imagine how it might be for a very young child to put together size, dimension, color, form, books with animal parents and kids and you have the image log of “Goodnight Moon” . It is totally incongruous to the adult or possibly the early aware child or 3 or 4 year old who has surpassed this stage and is ready for story telling. But, for the wee one, it is restful., I think because it doesn’t require the young child to do the object sorting that they may do during the day, it is restful and calming., I am very grateful that I saw a friend share your site and followed it because this little revelation is a direct result of your fun piece on this classic storybook for the very young. Thanks!

  325. When you close the book the room gets smaller ? Mother Rabbit is then next to the bed and able to reach the phone when the Doctor calls ! It’s a humans’ bedroom with some rabbit furniture in it so of course the proportions will be off. The view of the roof seems to be from the ceiling looking down……….I’m guessing we are looking , at this scene, thru the eyes of a spider. Spiders have multiple eyes which would distort everything……including color. Enjoy

  326. Graham Milne Avatar
    Graham Milne

    so, talking about the pictures on the wall, there is a nice pleasant one depicting a quiet day fishing in a stream. Nothing concerning there… Until you notice the fisherman in the picture is using a carrot for bait. Odd. Then as you look closer the truth dawns on you. The fisherman is a rabbit, and he is pulling another rabbit out of the stream… Can you say Cannibalism anyone?

  327. Roxane Hughes Avatar
    Roxane Hughes

    Geez, what a grouch! To a kid, most spaces are huge, colors are primary, and so are concepts. Goodnight, Moon rules!

  328. Maybe he can’t sleep so he’s staying in the parents master bedroom? And this book is about civilized rabbits, is it not possible the mouse is also? I agree the colors are awful, but apparently rabbits have different taste than humans 😉

  329. Congrats, you made me laugh so hard I cried and everyone at work is staring at me.

  330. As a Marriage and Family therapist, who has been reading this book for the past 2 years too ( at home ) I found the couples counseling session very insightful:) I am not sure how I missed the obvious, and am now considering hanging the portrait in my office! That was hilarious!

  331. Christina Iwanowicz Avatar
    Christina Iwanowicz

    What? No mention of the metafictional use of the book itself placed on the bureau? The narrative indicating itself in this manner clearly excuses all of the questionable interior design choices by suggesting an expansive, surreal setting. Symbolic of the bunny-child’s boundless imagination. Duh. Pretty sure this is just inherently obvious to most of the book’s three-year-old audience.

    And those books on the shelf over there? Thornton W. Burgess’ Green Forest Series in hardback, first editions. Or possibly Old Mother West Winds. From that pre-post-modern era when children’s fiction contained more than eight pages.

  332. This was the first version of Inception….you are reading Goodnight Moon and there is a copy of Goodnight moon on the kid’s nightstand….

  333. Julia Balucz Avatar
    Julia Balucz

    You forgot to comment on the creepy animal skin rug… definitely gives me the shivers.

    “Mother, why do we have the skin of a wild beast on the floor of my room?”

    “Well, son… many years ago, your grandfather was one of the candidates vying for the position of Chief Rabbit in a village across the ocean. Whoever killed the scariest animal would rule the tribe.”

    “So Grandpa became chief because of killing the wild beast?”

    “No, son. He lost. In his rage, he stole the new chief’s trophy catch, turned it into a rug, and fled to America, home of the brave. ”

    “Wow! What a legacy! I can’t wait to tell my friends!”

  334. Kim Brindley Avatar
    Kim Brindley

    Oh stop people! Adults get sick of reading this book over and over (believe me, at one point I thought I’d shoot myself if I had to read it one more time) but OBVIOUSLY it’s magical to children and must somehow be important to their developmental growth because their love for it is universal and absolute. Being a parent sucks some of the time. So suck it up.

  335. Lashonda Avatar
    Lashonda

    This is pretty funny. I think I know the answer to some of them! They co-sleep and share the room. That’s why it’s so big and there are so many adult features. The useless clothesline is a Montessori work for little rabbit to practice life skills. There’s no explanation for the decor choice and mouse infestation. 🙂

  336. Very funny gave me a chuckle and something to read while feeding my son at 4am however I do have a few comments,
    1: I’ve had a bedroom this big before complete with fireplace, not rich just from another country (Australia)
    2: Its fairly common for doll houses to have working lights, (my old barbie house had a working elevator!)
    6: Thats a clothes horse, its portable you put in front of a fireplace or heater when it’s been raining. They fold away and are stored elsewhere when not in use.

    Thoroughly enjoyed the interior decorating comments! Red and green for a bedroom yuk!

  337. The story is supposed to be about a child (rabbit) sleeping in his *parents* bedroom while they’re away. So 90% of these objections are irrelevant.

    You totally missed the real issues, like the socks disappearing from the drying rack when he says goodnight to them!

  338. Anita Jo Hollis Avatar
    Anita Jo Hollis

    Despite having just squeezed the prescribed 2 drops of solution into my eyes to prevent “weeping,” I’ve had to wipe teardrops from my chinny, chin chin after reading your hilarious commentary on a book I have read to three generations. Thank you, Thank you.

  339. Rachel L Avatar
    Rachel L

    I knew that book annoyed the bejesus out of me. Now I not only understand why, but I feel vindicated. Thankyou.

  340. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    Cute list, but one comment about the little mouse… He’s actually on every bedroom page of the book, moving from one corner, to a windowsill, to the fireplace…all over like your real life comment. Took me about 50 times reading it to my son to notice. 🙂

  341. You have entirely to much time on your hands. Not only to notice all the above listed, but to dissect and also blog about it. Amazing.

  342. Johanna Bowen Avatar
    Johanna Bowen

    Whoa there, the “clothesline” is a wooden collapsable rack that is very functional in small apartments. Still sold, still in use, have one myself.

  343. It’s a book for children for crying out loud. I’m sure the color Scheme is attractive to young children. I read this book to my son so many times I had it memorized. Find something else to really complain about.

  344. Your article was a joy to read. After some thought, here is alternative analysis about the room. This room belongs to the bunny’s parents. Daddy is away on a business trip, so bunny gets to sleep wth mom in her bed while he’s away. The telephone is on dad’s bedside, the brush and comb on Mom’s side. The mush just happens to be there because bunny is trying every trick he can to avoid sleep. Mom and Dad have a few toys in their room so they can doze once in awhile but still monitor their kids. The room decor is awful because Dad decorated the room when he was still a bachelor and he also happens to be red-green color blind. Those are law books on the shelf because Dad is a lawyer. In fact, the painting on the wall was given to him by the three bears after he successfully won their case when they were accused of eating Goldilocks. The mouse is a friend (they’re all rodents, after all), and the mittens and socks are drying by th fire after a long day of playing in the snow. The parents don’t have a screen in front of the fireplace because it’s their room. But I’m sure they will remedy that when some bunny’s paw gets singed. Also, I don’t want anyone thinking I’m stereotyping professions when I note father is a lawyer. Mom is a successful big game hunter and also a children’s author and illustrator. She wrote “Runaway Bunny.”

  345. Ummm… Firstly, they are RABBITS. Rabbits are SMALL. Therefore any normal size room they might inhabit would seem extremely large in comparison. Secondly, not EVERYONE lives in New York City. As a matter of fact most people DO NOT live in NYC. Normal people who live in the rest of the country also live in normal sized houses with normal sized rooms, not the obscenely tiny excuses for apartments the New Yorkers seem to think is the norm so it is not out of the question that a child, and probably many children around the world, actually have a bedroom this size. If you want to pick on someone who exaggerates the size of rooms, take a look at Hollywood where they depict a low level office worker in Manhattan living in a huge 1500+ square foot apartment that would be SO far beyond their actual budget that is is ludicrous. And lastly, its a KIDS room! What, you want it decorated in boring neutrals? Kids like color. Lots and lots of bright colors.

    1. This is satire.

  346. Oh my goodness. This is so funny I’m literally bawling. Great job! Thanks so much for sharing this… and ignore everyone who is taking it so seriously – it’s entertainment people!

  347. I just figured that’s the way someone would decorate in the late 1940s . Apparently there is some lady who has written a bunch of books dissecting the symbolism of the whole trilogy

  348. Jobeth LaFuria Avatar
    Jobeth LaFuria

    As a child, I read the Encyclopedia Britanica, from the bookcase that was in my bedroom.

  349. Christy Swanson Avatar
    Christy Swanson

    I SO enjoyed this! I have one addition. I live in the country and have both cats and rabbits on the property. It is not a peaceful coexistence. Perhaps there is a reason for that tomato colored floor in baby rabbit’s bedroom.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      good call.

  350. You’re WAAYYY overthinking this.

  351. I wonder what you would do with Cat in the Hat?

  352. Yes, giving a bunny (average weight 3 lb.) kittens that will grow into adult cats (average weight 10 lb.) that hunt bunnies and mice (Good night, Unmentionable Mouse!) is pretty sick. I graduated my daughter from Goodnight Moon to Goodnight Keith Moon (http://www.amazon.com/Goodnight-Keith-Moon-Bruce-Worden/dp/0956011926/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1422375878&sr=8-1&keywords=Goodnight+Keith+Moon) very quickly; it turned out to be a much better choice and taught her enduring life lessons!

  353. design wise, i dont understand why there is a gigantic round woven carpet with a animal skin right next to it…its a bedroom, not a area rug showroom.
    also that large picture should not be hanging over a child’s bed. CPS101. But more importantly, if that child stood up next to the bed, it must have come up to his shoulders at least. how the hell does it get in every night, and out every morning.

  354. comparing the mother to child size-wise, shouldnt the child be pink and hairless…and blind? a creature like that needs to be kept in bedding that retains heat better than a bed much to long for a single, but not quite wide enough for a full. and in one that, should he roll off, he wont plummet to his death.

  355. I’ve been reading this book to my six kids since the oldest was born in 1995. Youngest is 19 months. Many of these same thoughts have crossed my mind over the years. Thanks for the light-hearted critique.

  356. Obviously some time has passed between the first and last pages. The moon has moved from the edge of the window to the middle. The mouse is gone. What has happened? The cats caught the mouse and deposited it at the old lady’s feet. The old lady screamed “eek”, jumped up, disposed of the mouse somehow. She then gathered up the ball of yarn and the length trailing across the floor and settled herself. The cats are sitting expectantly, hoping to get their yarn ball back. The little bunny is back in bed (you didn’t think he would lie quietly watching all this, do you?) and ready to go to sleep. Maybe.

    1. Look more closely. The mouse is always there.

  357. Hilarious!

  358. Reading this article was hard. It’s a children’s book do you think your son will notice the books being too thick or think that the drying rack is taking up too much room? No but an obsessive compulsive adult might. The way this article was worded really made me feel like I was dealing with an impulsive parent. That’s just me thiugh

  359. I’m sure the publisher at the time had a limited color palette. There are only 5 colors (other than black and white), and the 5th isn’t used often (pink).

    Other than that, spot on.

  360. sara brenner Avatar
    sara brenner

    hysterically funny and clever – thank you for some great belly laughs

  361. The book on the bedside table is titled “Goodnight Moon.”
    Consider my mind… Blown.

  362. Dana Middleton Avatar
    Dana Middleton

    I read the book to both my daughters (now aged 36 with a two-year old) and 29. We always enjoyed the rhythm and the “hush”. I’ve always been bothered by the fireplace in a child’s bedroom,
    the black telephone (?) but most importantly the MOUSE. I think I may have asked “And why do you think that little, tiny mouse is just sitting there?” Maybe they answered “I don’t KNOW” – or “Waiting for a cat to chase him?” I did find a framed copy of the art in a thrift shop a few years ago and bought it for my little grand daughter. I love it all in spite of all the humorous comments you have made. Thank you so much, it made my day too!

  363. This was DELIGHTFUL! Razor sharp wit, and truly funny!

  364. Ok, so this is hilarious. And I would add, under the “old lady whispering hush” page:
    Who is this woman? Surely not a family member, as no one would refer to Grandma or even a nanny as “an old woman”. Is she the secret ghost whom only the little bunny can see? Is the whole story the soliloquy of a terrified child haunted by this old woman ghost who sits in the rocking chair every night, knitting and admonishing the bunny to “hush ” or else…? Are all those “goodnight”s actually “farewell, cruel world”s ?
    Who me? Naw, I’m not procrastinating …

  365. This MADE MY DAY! I am reading this to my 14 month old daughter every night right now and now I’m going to have a hard time not giggling through it tonight. Thanks for that. 😉

  366. John Carter Avatar
    John Carter

    Have you considered hating on adult literature? The real shocker is not the interior decorating but high culture rabbits who inhabit it. All you see is the mouse. Now that is a bizarrely selective literalism. Note that the windows are triple pane, not single. Don’t have children.

  367. Shame on you for tearing apart one of my favorite, most adorable children’s books!

  368. What the heck is wrong with you. If you do not like tighe book and how it is put together then leave it alone . Nothing better to do with your time. Negative mind that you have. I feel sorry for you, that you have to be so negative. Have a super day, If it is possible for you..

    1. Typo the word tighe should be ( the ) I know the negative one here will slam me for that. lol

    2. I would say it’s entirely possible – even probable – that the author of this blog/article will have a good day, because she has a fantastic sense of humor and was simply having fun; most of the commenters on here seem to get that. I hope YOU’RE able to have a good day/week/life, as you seem entirely UNable to loosen up and enjoy something for the pure silliness of it. Good luck.

  369. Mary Kim Avatar
    Mary Kim

    Hilarious and VERY witty!!!!!

  370. Anyone else notice the clock? The little rabbit gets into bed 7:00 and he is still saying goodnight to “noises” at 8:10. If it took my child this long to go to bed, I think I would jump out one of the enormous windows. Or impale myself with a green knitting needle.

  371. HILARIOUS!!!!!!!!!!

  372. Absolutely hilarious!!! I haven’t laughed so hard in I don’t know when. I want to read it again immediately. Kate and John need to lighten up and enjoy a funny moment when it is upon them. The world is hard for a lot of people and if someone is willing to bring a few minutes of joy into your day, let ’em. Have a sense of humor. The book isn’t ruined; it’s better! My mom read this to me all the time growing up and she and I both thought this was amazing. And if you do take John’s advice and start “hating” adult literature, please let me know!!!! Loved it!

    1. YES!!!! 😀

  373. Brad (Uncle/Pop) Avatar
    Brad (Uncle/Pop)

    In our house the book drifts in another direction. On every page that shows the fireplace, I slowly reach out with my pointer finger and touch the fire.. I pretend the fire burns my finger, I yell, “Hot, hot, hot!” and start blowing on my finger. After a while the child I’m reading to, (includes nephews, neices, and now what will be four grandchildren) will try and touch the fire themselves. I very actively warn them not to do it, and try to hold their hand back.. Eventually they too touch the fire and we spend the next few seconds blowing on their finger while yelling, “Hot, hot, hot!” Without fail a true LOL moment follows. And, by the way, I never noticed anything strange about the bedroom until now.

  374. Thank you!! I was laughing so hard, I could hardly answer my I phone when my daughter called! She had a hard time understanding me -lol. Can’t wait until she gets here so I can share!

  375. People…stop being so sensitive. The observations are hilarious…and I read this book endlessly to my now 18 and 20 yo boys. Additionally…did anyone notice that the little bunny is going to bed at 7:20 pm…and it is pitch black out already? Also, if I remember, the other large ‘painting’in the room is a scene from MWB’s Runaway Bunny…another one of our favorites. And as a decorator…the imaginary convo is hysterical!

    1. It must be winter in Indiana in this book; it’s pitch black by 6 pm. 🙁 (Seasonal Affective Disorder – SAD! – , anyone?)

  376. Dana Harrison Avatar
    Dana Harrison

    About that old lady… I really don’t appreciate the hint that other-kids-have-some-nice-woman-sit-quietly-in-their-room-while-the-kid-falls-asleep, ‘cuz that ain’t happening here. This “old lady” has dishes and laundry to do! I’m waiting for when one of my kids to ask why I don’t do this for them.

    Thanks for a good laugh!

  377. you inexplicably failed to mention the painting in the room which depicts a bunny fishing for ANOTHER bunny in the stream and using a carrot as bait to fulfill this bunny canniballism experience.

  378. Hmmmm….. you missed the most disturbing part of the whole book. Look at the painting of the bunny fishing…… .. ..

  379. That was HILARIOUS !! Since I am in the design business I can relate to this !! So enjoyed

  380. . . .and let’s not even start on the actual content of the book. I have hated this book since the birth of my first child, and am just thankful no one read it to me as a kid.

  381. I always thought the mouse was hanging around because of the mush left on the table-

  382. I was in hysterics by #11 and then even more so. But no mention of the not one but 2 antique clocks in the room. Can that kid even tell time? Won’t the chimes wake him all night?

  383. Fantastic! How have I never noticed the law library before?

    And, not to worry… it’s not bunny cannibalism, it’s an Easter Egg – a scene from a very sweet book by the same author/illustrator team, “The Runaway Bunny.”

    Thanks for a great laugh!

  384. You did not mention the creepy bunny picture. Take a look and notice the rabbit fishing with a carrot to catch a baby bunny. Why? What happens to the bunny? Why is a Rabbit fishing to eat or capture his own? It creeps me out!

  385. Does no one realize the little mouse and the little toy house are from another children’s story? I had the book as a kid and loved it, just can’t remember the name off the top of my head. Its another easter egg, the house belongs to the mouse, not the rabbit.

  386. Britteny Avatar
    Britteny

    Hm. Open floor plan cabin, obviously. The colors aren’t for adults enjoyment, only kids’ vivid imaginations to expand upon.

  387. So hilarious! I cannot believe that you didn’t mention the balloon in the corner. It’s string totally disappears by the middle of the book!

  388. i think your just supposed to read the book and let your child enjoy it. I’m quite sure it wasn’t written to be analyzed. Lighten up and try to enjoy things for what they are

    1. It’s supposed to be funny 🙂

  389. Wait, the animal skin rug next to the bed didn’t bother you?

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      No, it did. It’s mentioned in the post 🙂

      1. Caroline Avatar
        Caroline

        She knows…sarcasm

  390. I’m so glad one of my FB friends posted this brilliantly written and creative saga of the bedroom. I was laughing outbloud, yet trying to keep the noise down since everyone else in the apartment is sleeping! I lost the battle, but it would be nice to wake up to the sound of laughter. I will follow you.

  391. Hilarious observations! I for one have never been bothered by the size of the “great green room”. I’ve always assumed it’s a whole apartment and maybe the kitchen and bathroom are adjoining or on the wall we don’t see. 🙂

  392. It’s been at least 7 years since I read this book every night. I still know it by heart. I could never part with it so it sits on my bookshelf. I’m getting ready to look at it with new eyes. Lol! I definitely didn’t remember the details other that the horrid color and the horrendous size of the room. Lol!

  393. You are brilliant!

  394. Caroline Avatar
    Caroline

    This disgusts me….
    1. The “old” telephone wasn’t so office and old when this book was written.
    2. The color scheme is realistic because some parents let their children choose the color of their rooms and don’t have the whole house matching. If you plan everyhing down to the color of the curtain rods maybe you should get a life.
    3. Understand that the “encyclopedias” aren’t neccarsarily encyclopedias, maybe they are a bunch of children’s stories in one.
    4. The brush isn’t dirty and is fine next to the food.
    5. The bears maybe a family talking.
    6. The mouse might be a pet.
    7. The fireplace may be electric…you don’t know.
    8. Room is not that big, or maybe you are too poor to afford anything more than a shoebox.
    9. The little house is little. Take a proportion class.
    10. Stop nitpicking a children’s book that everyone loves and instead of writing a blog attempt to publish a children’s book and I will review it.
    Find something else to do than nitpicking!
    Peace out!
    ~Caroline
    P.S. Proofread

  395. It’s cute, sorta. But you could do this with ANY children’s book.

  396. Here’s my take-away from your hilarious post. From a two-page spread you’ve identified no less than twelve “issues,” some of which break the rules for decorating while others make the story seem pretty implausible. And yet this book has had the staying power of styrofoam. Kind of makes us question all those “rules” we’re given as writers, huh? 🙂

  397. Hilarious! I love the therapy session I couldn’t stop cracking up! Hey what do you guys think of our kids room illustration?? Would love honest feedback
    http://blog.putmeinabook.com/birthday-drawing-competition-kids-illustrations/

  398. After 6 years of reading it to my children and working in a daycare reading it almost every day… Have you ever noticed that on each colored page the mouse is in a different spot?

    1. Yes! I read a separate story I like to call “The Mouse and the Mush”, because the mouse appears, smells the mush, gets to various vantage points to try and find the mush, eventually ends up on the table right next to the bowl of mush, and then, on the final page, the mouse is looking contentedly out the window, and the amount of mush in the bowl is way less! Success!

  399. Ha ha, enjoyed this, but am wondering whether it is a human sized room with rabbits living in it?

  400. i have always loved this book as a child and as an adult reading it to my own kids. You make some valid points about Coloring and stuff but I have to say you are saverly wrong in a lot of others!

    This books is written in a old style with a modern feel. The size of the bedroom while being big for today’s standards was not for a nersery of old. House were run by wood fireplaces in those days as are a lot of country homes these days and believe me I grew up in such a home the kid would have been plenty warm!

    Another thing you talked about was the book case. Children of high class would be expected to learn a great many things and all the books back then were hard cover thick books. As for the “urns” as you called them on the mantle? Those are oil lamps. The phone one the bed side isn’t a real phone at all it is prob a phone to connect to other parts of the astaste as were popular when phones first came out.

    The clothes line in front of the fireplace. I don’t remember how many times I came in from playing in the snow or bringing in the wood as a kid to hang my mittens and socks by the fire. This clothes line is the one thing in this book I would never argue about! And you said to put it on a wall! How the hell are they going to get dry like that? It would take forever! Were as before the fire they will be dry and warm in no time at all! You can tell you are a city person as someone who grew up in the country wouldn’t question these things. As for the child proofing of the fireplace do you know one person who did that back in the old days? And they all survived! Plus his nanny is right across the room!

    As for the painting I am not going to say anything as I feel your just now looking for things to nitpick about as it is just a pic of bears sitting there to fill space your Not even suppose to really see it.

    I still love this book and hope to read it to my grandkids one day.

  401. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    How could you not notice that the book on the nightstand is a copy of… Goodnight Moon! It’s a book within a book (within a book…)

    1. Recursion. Cool. Kind of like Land O’ Lakes Butter

  402. I loved this book growing up and now with my first child almost one year old, I’ve gotten to rediscover it. What really bothered me was the painting on the left side of the room above to old lady bunny. The fisherman, who is a rabbit, is fishing for a rabbit. So in this world where rabbits represent humans, its like a human fishing for a tiny human. I still love this book and so does my son. I think the high contrast colors makes it interesting for children

    1. Jennifer Avatar
      Jennifer

      The fishing rabbit is a nod to another of her books, “The Runaway Bunny” about a mother rabbit who will always be able to locate her young bunny no matter how he tries to hide.

  403. read The Sleepy Star you will like that!

  404. i only hope the critique was a satirical take on a book that was written before the author was born. The book is an expression of love and two generations being together. No way I want to read anything else by the obviously over protective, anal retentive, nit picking person.

  405. Chris Marco Avatar
    Chris Marco

    My niece forwarded this to me because after reading this book a billion times to my own kids, it became my customary gift for baby showers. (The much missed Borders carried a gift set with the book and stuffed bunny). You have certainly made me see this book in a whole new light. I can’t remember when I have laughed this hard – I literally have tears streaming down my face. You are a brilliant writer. Not sure if I liked the law library or office phone observation best. Thanks!

  406. Don McGregor Avatar
    Don McGregor

    The size of the room reflects the child’s pov. Just like that hill that looms so large in your childhood memory and then, twenty years later, you go back and it’s so small you wonder why you were scared to ride down it on your little red wagon.

  407. This is one of the funniest things I’ve ever read. Crying laughing. Thank you!!

  408. I know!!!! RIGHT! I have been reading this to my son for over a year and had almost the entire thoughts.
    However – the thing that vexes me the most – the rocking chair! DId you see the angle of the backrest when the quiet old lady leaves the room???? NO one can sit and knit on that kind of rocking chair!

    ANd don’t get me started on My World!!!!!! I HAVE NOD IDEA WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON THERE. I mean it seems like this random collection of thought that don’t connect at all. Yet my son adores the book. Am I missing something?!?

  409. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    The colors are historic. Back when the book was first printed it was extremely expensive to print in color, which is why every other two page spread is black and white. If you compare it to other books published at the same time you will see similar colors used. The red walls have nothing to do with poor interior design but with the options open to illustrators at that time.

  410. I like to think that they live in a studio apartment and that the huge room is their entire apartment and the old lady is like a grandma or something who babysits the kid while the parents are out working, and then one day they save up enough money to buy a nice, regularly-proportioned house. The fireplace is there because they have no other heat source, the bowl of mush is on the same table as the comb and brush because they have limited table space (maybe against the 4th wall there’s a little kitchenette or a stovinkerator or something) and the tiny laundry line is there because of the lack of space, so they just dry a few things at a time.
    …I like my children books to have rich backstories. Plus, thats the kind of place I lived in when I was little, so thats probably why I am quicker to assume that that is their situation.

  411. It’s a childrens book where’s your imagination……………..total example of anger…..can someone help you?

  412. “My mother told me not to marry a grizzly.” LOL!!!

  413. I’m absolutely astonished at the number of commenters who don’t understand satire and humor!

  414. You can tell that this is written by someone who thinks there is nothing on the planet outside of New York City. As for humor, one must be accustomed to the lemmings of New York syndrome. Humor is cultural. NYC is a microcosm not a macrocosm. The colors, lighten up. My grand sons bedroom is easily three times as large as this. He feels sorry for the poor folks who live here. You missed the fact that the fireplace is electric with a ceramic heater as seen on TV. My grandson is only allowed to have pictures of animals in his room as he is allergic to the fur on his hunting trophies. To make up some psycho babble about the animals is ridiculous. Every one of the animals he has killed needed to be killed to improve the environment. That is not porridge on the table. It is a bowl of seeds to feed his bet mouse. The drying rack is for drying his glove and boot inserts after he has been alligator hunting. I certainly tell you are not from Texas.

    1. You’re somehow even less funny than the post, good job.

  415. I loved this.

  416. Yes! Yes! Right on. I’m a big fan of children’s literature, but this really is the “Uncanny Valley” of illustration.

  417. I actually like it that a lot of people don’t understand that this is meant to be humorous (which by the way, was exactly what I needed this morning. It was so funny I had to run to the bathroom because I thought I would pee my pants (TMI)). It makes it funnier when the comments sections are just people pyschoanalyzing their own take on why the room looks the way it does. Reminds me of the therapist bear. Okay guys, just breathe in two three out two three. 🙂

  418. I wish I could talk like that book! I’d be a hit a parties. Also, I have a niece who could have drawn the pictures. V ERY imaginative. And she lives in
    Atlanta.

  419. the other thing that always has bothered me is that the moon which the child is saying goodnight to, and the cow jumping over the moon are two completely different moons. The continuity director clearly wasn’t doing his or her job.

    1. One is the actual moon, the other is a painting.

  420. I think the room is perfect just the way it is. Any less of a room, and the kids would have nothing amazing to look at while Mom reads to them. Then again, I’m glad the two cats didn’t get strangled by the little old lady’s yarn. Did she ever whisper, “Hush” to the wild felines?

    http://joycelansky.blogspot.com/

  421. what about the red dangling balloon over the bed?! this was a great super fun read. brought up some good memories! thankfully we’ve moved on to new books…

  422. Tears in my eyes from laughing!! Read this SO many times to my kids…sharing this RIGHT NOW!!

  423. I heard your interview on CBC recently. I thought you might be interested in the background about “I Love You Forever” which you made reference to in your interview…http://blogs.babycenter.com/mom_stories/09192013-the-sad-story-behind-i-love-you-forever/. Thanks for keeping your readers entertained.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      That was beautiful and very touching. I still, in fairness, get a bit weirded out by some of the illustrations in the book, but the backstory helps to reframe it at least. It helps to understand where the author was coming from and it’s impossible not to feel for someone who’s been through something like that. Thanks for sending.

  424. I think all of you have way too much time on your hands!!!

  425. This is HILARIOUS and now I will die laughing every time I read it!! 😉

  426. How do you ignore the tiger rug? A tiger rug in a child’s room… not to mention a rabbit’s room? Gah!

  427. Did no one else notice that the room is floating in space?

  428. I always despised reading this book to my children. I find it extremely creepy.

  429. Hilarious! We are way past reading it now, as my daughter is 13, but I well remember finding the mouse in every room, and a giant room it is! I figured it must be a rich family to have so much space, but you’d think they’d get a better decorator, wouldn’t you?

  430. We have read “Goodnight Moon” to our children and now to our grandchildren for many years. For us it is a great way to point out the various objects in the room and have the children name them. Now, here is something that has spoken volumes to me as a mom and grandma. If you look at the clock in the room you wlll see that bedtime starts at 7:00 as the book progresses so does the clock and by the time the little one is in bed it is 8;00. To me it says, Take time when you are putting your child to bed, read, sing, pray and know that bedtime is a special time for a child. Shirley Larson

  431. And the rabbit fishing painting in the wall is actually an illustration from the author’s other book, “The Runaway Bunny”.

    1. And in Runaway Bunny, the mother is reading Goodnight Moon!!! Whaaaaaat!?!?

  432. I enjoyed your analysis very much . I was wondering about the footwear under the bed– should those be bunny slippers or maybe human slippers?

  433. Oy.

  434. Leon Rodgers Avatar
    Leon Rodgers

    Obviously, you have never spent time in a one room house.

    Have you ever thought maybe that the family depicted happens to be a poor family?

  435. None of that bothers me. But did you notice they rhyme “moon” w/ “moon?” All that aside, the silly pictures and the half-assed poetry work together- the result is splendid. I dare you to read “good night nothing” in anything but a quiet, soothing voice. It’s magical. By the way, if the room weren’t full of oddities it would be too boring for the kid’s imagination.

  436. Melissa Warner Avatar
    Melissa Warner

    The bold colors are actually great for my toddler. We started reading this book when she was 12 weeks old and frequently read it at bedtime still at 3 years old. She knows all the primary colors now and enjoys pointing out the colors of objects. She even colored a coloring page this week and looked at the book while coloring to get the colors in the same order as they are in the book. When she was younger it was a game to see if she could find the mouse placed in various areas of the room on the different pages. She immediately talks about the Mommy rabbit fishing for her son in the picture hanging on the wall, because she knows the story about the Runaway Bunny also written by Margaret Wise Brown. The vintage telephone was probably the norm back when the illustrator created the pages of this book. This is a classic, favorite, and a great learning tool. We highly recommend this book for young children along with many other classic listed in the Before Five in a Row guide.

  437. William Underhill Avatar
    William Underhill

    Seriously? This is a KIDS BOOK. Kids like bright colours. Next you’ll be on about how it’s obviously not up to code, either. Put down the mouse, step away from the internet and go outside. Now.

  438. My mom read this to me often as a child, and I can hear her voice when I see the cover. She almost cried when I told her that and bought a recordable version to record herself reading so I will always have it. I have a nine month loves it, and after the book is finished we say good night to the things in his room in the same hushed sing song voice my mom always used. It makes him very sleepy. I look forward to helping him discover the oddities of the room as my mom with me when I was small. I sent her a link to this article, because I know she will find it as hysterical as I did.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      that was so sweet. My mom never read this to me as a kid but I have such great memories of the ones we did read together, many of which are just as crazy in places.

  439. Reading this just made me sad and annoyed…
    First off, If you’re going to pick apart this room for its realism, then you’re analyzing the wrong book (the main character is a bunny…). In fact, don’t even analyze another children’s book again because they are always going to be exaggerated and stylized. The great thing about books is that they don’t have to reflect reality, which is why so many people read and play video games is because it makes things that aren’t possible in our world, a norm for a different reality. Not to mention that we are most open and creative as children, so it is important to enhance that by presenting alternate worlds where bunnies knit and dollhouses have lights… Remember, these books are illustrated and written for kids, NOT adults. There is a reason that you’ll see a lot of vibrant colors used in children’s books and kid’s toys that you wouldn’t normally see in conjunction in the real world because kids are much more receptive to saturated colors and it grabs their attention. Saturated colors have also been known to enhance and improve child growth and development.

    So PLEASE, next time you’re thinking of scrutinizing a children’s book illustration just remember, it wasn’t meant for you, it’s meant for the kids who get an incredible experience from it!

    1. Wendy Heckman Avatar
      Wendy Heckman

      Thank-you!

  440. heather Avatar
    heather

    Literally ugly cried, laughing so hard. I woke up my household in an uncontrollable giggle fit. Scared my husband, lol bears in couples therapy! Omg gave myself a laugh induced asthma attack.

  441. I continuously amazed by the comments on this thread. Lighten up, people! Do none of you have a sense of humor? Ever here of satire? Ever watch Comedy Central or Saturday Night Live? Try it. There’s a whole world of laughter out there

    1. My sentiments exactly, Chris. Thank you for voicing them.

  442. *typos: I am continuously…Ever hear

  443. I have never seen this book (I’m Brazilian), but I laughed so freaking hard I can’t believe! This blog is amazing!

  444. Susi Hulbert Avatar
    Susi Hulbert

    It is drawn to the rabbit’s perspective. But funny ranting.

  445. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    Have you read Runaway Bunny (by the same author/illustrator). The other picture on the wall(the one of a bunny fishing for another bunny) in that book they use the same bedroom, so the were probably stuck with outdated design choices and said “screw it, no one will ever notice all this weird shit anyways.”

  446. And what about the red balloon!?! It’s there in one picture, gone in the next, then back again. Maybe a cathedral ceiling to go with the ridiculously large room? And a balloon that is just on the edge of losing it’s helium enough to be hovering up and down out of the frame? Such mysteries.

  447. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    This was completely hilarious. Thank you so much–I loved it! (PS I work in the children’s dept of a public library)

  448. You must be someone whom complains a lot.

    My son’s room is that big.

  449. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    It was amusing fpr a while but then I got bored with the negativity and heard the words in a Gilbert Gottfried voice. My son loved this story and yes the illustrations are weird but it’s a children’s classic.

  450. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    Yes! Finally, I hear from someone who agrees with me – I thought I was alone in the world! But what bothers me more than anything you mention, is the lighting. At the beginning, there’s light coming from the little lamp, but not the raging fire. Then the room gets darker, but there’s still light coming from the lamp, though the fire is still raging, & the full moon casts no light into the room?!?! This whole book creeps me out… but not as much as Love You Forever.

    1. Lindsay: can’t agree with you more – never liked this book, couldn’t see what all the hype was about and neither could any of my 4 children AND Love You Forever is exceptionally disturbing!

  451. This is genius and hilarious. Your captions are amazing. This is my first time on this site, but please keep doing what you’re doing. You made me cry from laughing.

  452. Haha…laughed all through this! This was my favorite story time book when I was little…funny how I never thought to question the absurdities of this room!

  453. I just came across this …it’s hysterical! As an older parent who read this to my children for many years, I thoroughly enjoyed this humorous piece. ( My daughter is now reading it to her son)

  454. Thank you! I laughed until I cried. So happy someone took the time and energy to so hilariously voice our collective trouble with this book. Honestly the first time I saw Goodnight Moon, I thought, “Seriously? This is the book I’ve heard so much about? Why does it look like this?”

  455. Angela Avatar
    Angela

    A few of these are more reflective of the age of the book , it was published in 1947! Fireplaces (and most other things) weren’t childproofed. Kids learned hard way not to touch dangerous things, or had a nanny like this one does. Kids books used to look like that – bound collections of stories, not flashy picture books. Times change – hell, the illustrator was smoking in the dustjacket photo until 2005, when they photoshopped out the cigarette. For me, the biggest annoyance is the gloves and mittens disappearing and reappearing. And you have a point about the hairy bowl of mush!

  456. The book…on the nightstand…next to the out – dated phone is a copy of “Goodnight Moon”…inception? (mind explodes)

  457. “Goodnight nobody”. ARGH! That waste of a line all but spoils the book for me.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      For some reason that line always makes me think of the Elton John lyric, “If I were a sculptor…but then again, no.” THEN WHY DID YOU EVEN BOTHER SAYING IT???

    2. My husband’s response to the blank page ‘illustrating that one was “AAAARRRGGGGHHHH, THERE IS A VOID IN TIME AND SPACE IN THAT BEDROOM”.

      1. Gah. Apparently there’s also a void in time and space in my quotes, since I’ve opened one and left it FOREVER HANGING OPEN without closure. I hate hate hate that.

  458. Reading this for the umpteenth time to brighten a grey day in Detroit. Love it every time! Thank you.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      I’m so glad it’s enjoyed!

  459. I always wondered what kind of cats would give more attention to a ball of yarn than a wondering mouse… And what’s with that balloon with the long strangling string hovering on top of the little rabbit?!

  460. I meant a Wandering mouse!

  461. as a stay at home mum procrastinating away my precious baby asleep time i felt I had to comment. First, thank you for the out loud laughter you just prompted in me, I will never see this book the same way again. Secondly, I finally have a platform to air my grievance about why it is that we don’t encounter the clocks and socks until later in the book? everything else we say goodbye to we have already met. this perplexes me every time i read it. Im so glad to have been able to get that out. (sigh of relief). thanks heaps theuglyvolvo and know that this book (and now your blog) reaches all the way from NYC to NZ, where we are and where I just needed this extra bit of reading joy in my staying- at -home -with- an- 11 -month -old -again day.

  462. There’s also a disappearing doorknob on the little toy house that always annoyed my two-year-old. It’s there in the first picture, gone later on. This book is riddled with inconsistencies.
    Great post. Lots of out-loud laughter that my husband, who is concentrating on work, is resolutely resisting asking me to explain. I think I’ll read it again and test his mettle.

  463. Too hilarious. I love the convo between the interior designers. Maybe you could do another post with just the interior designers working on another room? I feel like I don’t want to say goodbye to them. Kept pestering my husband to stop what he was doing and read this post too so I could talk to him about it. (yes I am annoying to be married to) Thanks for giving us both a good laugh. 🙂

  464. Becca de Leon Avatar
    Becca de Leon

    SO FUNNY! I love this because I’m crazy enough to actually want to recreate the room. In fact, I’m in the process of buying all the pieces to turn my 6 month old’s new room into the GOODNIGHT MOON room. This actually made me realize that there is an elephant and TWO stupid red dolls and not just one that i will need to recreate…

  465. Brilliant points, but I’m surprised you didn’t mention the one that’s my own personal bugbear about this book – why on earth is there a bowlful of mush by this child’s bedside *at all*? I mean, he’s in bed and going to sleep, he’s obviously passed the supper part of the evening. Is this supper that he refused? In which case, isn’t he hungry? That bowl looks untouched to me. And why hasn’t it been cleared away anyway? No wonder they have mice. Or is it breakfast ready for morning? In which case, EEEWWWWWWWW. I just can’t get that worked up about the hairbrush issue when the biggest issue here is that this poor child is going to have to EAT CONGEALED COLD MUSH for breakfast after it has been sitting there all night being sniffed at by a mouse.

  466. Caitlyn Avatar
    Caitlyn

    My biggest problem with this book is the line good night nobody.!!! Really goodnight nobody. Who the heck says goodnight to nobody.

  467. Kirsten Avatar
    Kirsten

    What about the copy of “Goodnight Moon” on the night table beside the telephone? Doesn’t this cause some kind of space/time continuum issue or rift?? Maddening!

  468. Sassy Avatar
    Sassy

    I enjoyed the post — unlike THAT book. Everyone told me how wonderful it was and the first time I read it, I hated it: hated looking at it, hated reading it, hated knowing it even existed. A couple more readings and the book was hidden away so I could not read it. To this day, when I buy books for new babies, it is the first one suggested by book stores and the one I absolutely refuse to push onto some poor unsuspecting parents who no doubt have 20 copies already anyway. Obviously a large number of people are very fond of it — I just cannot understand why.

  469. Chloe Colestock Avatar
    Chloe Colestock

    Love it! I’m sure it explains a lot that it was written in 1947- kind of??

  470. Laura Avatar
    Laura

    It’s the unexpectedness of the book that make it so delightful. Who would bother reading if books perfectly mimicked reality??

    http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/07/19/what-writers-can-learn-from-good-night-moon/

  471. Wait, is the big rabbit in the painting above the bookcase actually fishing for ANOTHER RABBIT, using a carrot as bait?!?! Augghhhh!!!!!!

    1. Susan Pavlik Avatar
      Susan Pavlik

      That is an illustration for a book called Runaway Bunny by the same author. The big rabbit is the mother bunny, baiting a carrot for her little bunny who wants to run away from her.

  472. The rabbit who is fishing in the picture on the wall appears to be using a baby rabbit as bait.

    1. The rabbit picture is from her other book “Run Away Bunny” . Also disturbing is that the cats are the pets of the giant rabbits.

    2. Richard Avatar
      Richard

      The rabbit fishing is an illustration from the book Runaway Bunny by the same author.

  473. Yes, yes, YES!! All excellent points. Everyone seems to have missed the most DISTURBING thing about this book, which is the picture on the wall of the cannibal rabbit trying to catch another rabbit with a fishing rod!!! Creepy.

    1. Seana Avatar
      Seana

      That’s an illustration from one of Margaret Wise Brown’s other books, The Runaway Bunny which is all about a little bunny who says he’s going to run away and all the ways his mother says she will find him.

    2. So that picture is actually from another book by the same author and illustrator called The Runaway Bunny. It’s actually really sweet, but yes, out of context like that the picture is strange.

    3. The fishing rabbit is an illustration from another Margaret Wise Brown book: The Runaway Bunny.
      http://www.corksandcaftans.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Picture-4.png

    4. 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]

    5. The picture is from one of the author’s other books Runaway Bunny.

    6. That’s actually a nod to “The Runaway Bunny” starring these same two bunnies, by the same author/illustrator. One of the pages in that book is the scene from THIS book!

    7. Also should note — in “The Runaway Bunny” the little boy keeps trying to run from his mother and says he will become a fish in a trout stream, and his mother says that she would become a fisherman to catch him. It’s very sweet.

    8. Courtney Avatar
      Courtney

      The picture on the wall is a reference to another book by Margaret Wise Brown, The Runaway Bunny! It’s actually a scene in which the bunny says he’s going to become a fish and swim away from his mother, and the mother says she’ll become a fisherman and find him. It’s a back-and-forth type book with the bunny trying to find clever ways to evade his mother, and his mother saying she’ll always be there regardless. Actually, now that I describe it, I’m kind of creeped out by the premise. But it’s also sweet.

    9. That’s actually an illustration from the Runaway Rabbit by the same author.

    10. Um, that picture is from another one of the author’s books, The Runaway Bunny. That big rabbit isn’t fishing to eat the little rabbit, it is the mother trying to catch her runaway child. In the book that young bunny imagines different things that he will turn into to runaway. Mom always has a way that she will find her little bunny and bring him home.

  474. Explanation: It’s an overnight at Grandma’s non-childproofed studio.

  475. Jane Andresen Avatar
    Jane Andresen

    I’d like to subscribe to your blog via email notifications. Loved your “Goodnight Moon” post! It’s all so crazy and true, yet I love the book, and so did all of my children.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      go right to the bottom of the page and there should be a spot where you can do it?

  476. If I had put these problems & questions to my two when they were hearing this book, they would shake their heads & say, ‘But it’s make-a-lieve.’

  477. It’s been many, many years since I read this to my girls…but i remember thinking that this was a child visiting (grandma? older aunt?) and that the living room had been changed into a bedroom for the occasion.

  478. Cheryl Avatar
    Cheryl

    The room warms my heart…oh not the colors, but having lived in a large old Victorian home the bedrooms were this big with fire places…we didn’t use them..but they were there. You could put 3 full size beds in the rooms easy…and we did..the kids shared rather and be separated. I guess this is just from a time gone by…

  479. Clearly, these rabbits and Caillou’s family have the same interior designer. Is it a Canadian thing?

  480. Thank you for the laugh. Not just any laugh, a body shaking, tears streaming down my face laugh.

  481. Alyssa Avatar
    Alyssa

    I know the post was meant in jest, but you guys do get that the book just contains a lot of imagery from childhood nursery rhymes, right? (Sorry if this is really obvious and I’m missing the joke.)
    The Three Little Bears (in the photo)
    Three Little Kittens (“have lost their mittens” etc) song – kittens, mittens
    Hickory Dickory Dock -mouse, clocks
    Hey Diddle Diddle (“the cat and the fiddle, the cow jumps over the moon”) song
    etc

    The picture of the rabbit fishing is from The Runaway Rabbit , another book the author wrote.

    I can’t explain all of the references but I just assumed there were from some old school song or rhyme that was popular back in the 40’s… can definitely see how it all looks a bit creepy if taken literally though.

    Also, I think they were into some more… intense colour schemes in the 40’s … http://tinyurl.com/oftk9bl

  482. Chris Avatar
    Chris

    I had a different set of issues with Goodnight Moon. I made a video about how it always read to me: https://youtu.be/Q-1Nr1ZhY7s

  483. Rosie Avatar
    Rosie

    Gotta remember, this book was published in the 40s!!

  484. Marie Avatar
    Marie

    I wonder how many other of the children’s books in my kindergarten collection have equally interesting hidden messages within. I will have to investigate this as I reread them to a new batch of kids this year. Thanks for pointing these subtle nuances out.

  485. Alexis Avatar
    Alexis

    This was rely freaking funny and entertaining. Got a good laugh out of this!

  486. Clearly it’s all about the cats.

    The mouse is actually a cat toy. I get toy mice all over the floor at my place – the cats don’t bother putting their toys away when finished.
    The fireplace is open so the cats can sit close to it.
    The gloves and socks are hanging at an easy height for the cats to play with.
    The decorator was colour-blind…but that’s OK as the cats don’t care about the colour scheme!
    The books are all fake, for appearance, as the cats have a tendency to knock real ones off that book shelf. They aren’t disciplined, as you can see by the fact they’re about to play with the ball of yarn and destroy the knitting effort.
    The “dollhouse” is actually a cat house. Note how the door is a convenient size for the cats.

  487. CindyK Avatar
    CindyK

    I could not stop laughing. Just what I needed today.

  488. I laughed so hard I cried. Please– Runaway Bunny next.

  489. And about that the picture on the wall of the cannibal rabbit trying to catch another rabbit with a fishing rod…that’s the mama rabbit from Runaway Bunny relentlessly hounding and chasing down her child bunny who just wants to escape.

  490. Every single time I read this book- 4 times a day right now- I want to see this hideous room recreated as an art installation. Thank you for validating me.

  491. Thank goodness this book was not written for you. I raised 3 daughters reading this book&we all enjoyed the colors,romance every item (looked clean to me). Happy your son loves it too.

  492. A blog as brilliant as thst tomato-red floor! I loved this book and always will, but this was hillarious ant spot on. I was thinking that your designers might discuss adding an indoor pool. There is space! We’ve also determined safety is not an issue, there are two clocks to verify that 20 minutes has passed if the child rabbit ever eats that bowl of mush, and there is that telephone close by for help!

    I do believe you should have at the children’s show called Max and Ruby! I would love to read your thoughts!

  493. Harmony Avatar
    Harmony

    There’s actually a little mouse hidden on each page. Try to find him.

    The rabbit fishing in the portrait is a scene from another Clement Moore book, “The Runaway Bunny.” It’s really very sweet.

  494. While many of the points are humorous, it is obvious that the author does not have much knowledge about upper-class architecture in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The large bedroom is actually the nursery, and the child would spend a great deal of time there. The “old lady whispering ‘hush’” is most likely the child’s nanny. Classic children’s literature would have been bound in hardcover and generally larger that the kids books we seen now (and generally better written). The fireplace is another clue that this is a Victorian-era room. As far as the color scheme, this is actually rather tame by Victorian standards–especially since the carpet does not have a bold pattern.

  495. Karen Thomason Avatar
    Karen Thomason

    This is so very clever. I laughed so hard that my husband came in to see what had me so yi

  496. Amy M. Avatar
    Amy M.

    For all of you with the snarky comments about the bunny picture on the wall, have you ever read “The a Runaway Bunny”? If you have, you would remember this is the part of the book when the little bunny wants to become a fish (as part of running away) and the mommy bunny says she will become a fisherman in order to catch him and bring him home. A couple other things to note, “Goodnight Moon” was written in 1947, so that needs to be kept in perspective. The baby bunny is supposed to be in his mom’s room, as referenced by the huge phone next to the bed. Of course the bedroom looks massive! It was probably an old home and it was the master one at that! Funny article, but it’s helpful to have some perspective of the time/era.

  497. HYSTERICALLY FUNNY.
    THE COLOR SCHEME IS AWFUL. IT BOTHERS ME TERRIBLY!

  498. Amanda Avatar
    Amanda

    A comment about the colors, maybe someone else has said–I did not read all the comments–the book was first published so long ago, 1947, that the only way it could be in color was for the colors to be like this.

  499. Kathryn Avatar
    Kathryn

    The picture on the wall of the bunny fishing for the smaller bunny is actually an illustration from another of Margaret Wise Brown’s books, The Runaway Bunny, where the mama rabbit tells the baby rabbit all the things she would do to catch the baby if it ran away. She is fishing for the baby with a carrot.I always enjoyed the inside reference in this book.

  500. Perhaps it’s already been suggested, but maybe this isn’t a child’s bedroom. Maybe it’s the main room of a studio apartment (the kitchen and bathroom are separate of course.) That would explain the size, library section, fireplace, and lack of a true dining room table (hence the mush by the bed.) There’s room enough for that old lady in the bed. And I’ve certainly seen rooms painted worse than that in NYC. Too big for Manhattan though, I’m sure it’s in Queens.

  501. How about the fact that there is a copy of THIS book on the nightstand IN the book. We’ve been inception’d.

  502. HAHA the mouse is hiding in every page of the book. My kids love finding him. This article had me cracking up!

  503. Wouldn’t the fishing rabbits be from the book “Runaway Bunny” by the same author? Nothing sinister. Funny commentary on a beloved book though!

  504. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    You know that most appears on every page where it shows the room, right?

    1. Christine Avatar
      Christine

      Mouse!! Not most

  505. Excellent analysis! Please explain Caillou’s dads apparent lack of employment- I attribute it to his delusional psychosis.

  506. Country houses have big rooms…
    The clothes rack, where in from, everyone had one.
    The comb is always on the bedside table.
    I’m pretty sure most house-dwellers and country people can relate to the room more than not.
    Fireplaces are nice in the bedroom.
    When I was a kid my bedroom was about 15ft.
    Books used to be a lot thicker and more plain on the outside, often with multiple stories per book. I had a few sets that looked similar.
    Just seems that modern day city people just aren’t familiar with these things.

  507. Briana Reeves Avatar
    Briana Reeves

    Oh, man, I was expecting to be disappointed in this article, as is often the case with online humor, but you really proved me wrong! This was a great read, thank you for writing it!

  508. Sherry Avatar
    Sherry

    Th reason for the rabbit on a fishing line is because it is from another children’s book called The Runaway Bunny. And living in New York has scarred you. It is a beautiful story and you need to get a life.

  509. You forgot about the creepy picture of the rabbit fishing for a rabbits with a carrot on the line. WTF?

  510. I was laughing out loud and with tears streaming down my face. I too, read “Goodnight Moon” every night for maybe a year, and I must confess, I never paid as much attention to the room’s décor until I read your article. Boy, that was funny and on point. Thanks for the laughs!!!

  511. Geesh…overthinking, much? IT’S JUST A PICTURE BOOK, FOR CRYING OUT LOUD!!! I don’t know ANYONE who thinks any of those things when reading this sweet book to their children. It’s just hipster to dis anything child-like.

  512. Nothing on the tiger skin by the bed??????

    🙂

  513. I think you are really reaching with these comments. I have always thought the room charming and comforting. Also, the mittens and socks are drying by the fire: Since I am from Maine and grew up with a wood stove, I know that things dry in just about seconds flat next to a fire. Finally, why should a child not be exposed to the classics of literature at a very young age? Children used to learn Greek and Latin in elementary school . . . I weep for modern society! However, you are onto something with the color scheme. Why couldn’t they have published this book in blue and blue-green tones?

  514. I don’t get the part where they are saying goodnight to nothing, its just plain dumb. I understand they want the book to rhyme, come up with better lines.

  515. So the bizarro rabbit fishing picture is actually a scene from the author’s other book, The Runaway Bunny. Nothing like a little subliminal advertising 😉

  516. Crystal Germann Avatar
    Crystal Germann

    You seem to have forgotten the mouse now eating the hair infested cream of wheat in that last one

  517. wiping tears from laughing so hard

  518. I’m constantly weirded out by the line “Goodnight Nobody”. Is he talking to the monster under his enormous bed or something more sinister?

  519. I like the room . Harold would never find me and I would never have to cook again!
    Xo Emma

  520. #9: More frightening than the brazen attitude of the mouse is the fact that he doesn’t cast a shadow. The table casts a shadow… the bed casts a shadow… but that mouse… it CLEARLY doesn’t have a soul!

  521. We are having a night of no sleep and this really made me chuckle whilst trying to stay awake and feed. We read this book every night and I’ve had similar thoughts. Absolutely hilarious. Thank you for this. 🙂

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      I’ve had those nights and they’re rough at times. Get through it in one piece! Good luck.

  522. Thanks for the giggle, but the “nightstand” is actually a chest of drawers. He has to put his clothes SOMEWHERE.

  523. How about: why is the rabbit in the painting on the wall going fishing for smaller rabbits using a carrot as bait?

  524. Kathleen Bianco Avatar
    Kathleen Bianco

    I was hysterically laughing while I was reading your rendition of this book. My sons loved to have me read this book to them and although everything you have stated is true, they still loved it. I used to question the book sometimes myself and think “what the heck is with some of the stuff on these pages!”. But I absolutely loved reading your explanation of this book! Fantastic!

  525. They say goodnight to ‘nobody’. Who’s that? Creepy.
    Why is the rabbit an ‘old lady’ and not Grandma or Mom?
    This kid has an old lady in the room with him and it’s just supposed to be okay?

    I dislike Goodnight Moon immensely.

    1. to Ruby–you question the “old lady.” The author was born in 1910 and the book was written in the 40s. The world was a different place then. The old lady may very well be a nursery nurse or a nanny. I always pictured the bedroom as a nursery, thus the mittens drying, the fireplace, and the mush. And the old lady as the bunny’s nurse.
      Many people have mentioned the references to The Runaway Bunny (the bunny photo as well as the cow painting)–there is also an open copy of The Runaway Bunny in the bookcase.

  526. Tears are running don’t my face between loud guffaws eminating from my throat! You are hysterical! Thanks to my cousin Lisa Gluskin Stonestreet for turning me on to you on Facebook. Damn straight I’ll follow your blog. Best laughs I’ve had in a while! Do you really read over 500 comments, yeah, I would too!

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      I have to “approve” them since weird spam sometimes gets in so yes, on here I actually do read them all. 🙂

  527. Pen Campbell Avatar
    Pen Campbell

    Thanks. This has totally distracted me and made me get up and hunt down my husband so I could read it aloud to him while simultaneously laughing aloud, rendering the recitation totally unintelligible, even if he could hear. Thank God…I was afraid for a minute I might have to actually continue working on my column until I was done. Off now to share this with my teacher friends as an excellent example of critical reading.

  528. Read it first at three a.m. when I got up and couldn’t go back to sleep. I was laughing so hard tears streamed down my face. Then had my highschool age son read it to me again on the way to school the next morning. Both of us wiping away tears, bent over, having a hard time seeing the road. Seriously funny writing. Thank you. It was just what I needed this week.

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      This comment just totally made my night– thanks 🙂

  529. This was my daughter’s favorite book many moons ago, and she reads it to her little one every night. I laughed until I literally had trouble breathing. I’ll never look at this book in the same way again! Write on!!

  530. I’m at work trying my hardest to keep my laughing to myself. I think I did pretty well. I only had two strange looks.

  531. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    I absolutely love this, especially the conversation about the color scheme. I just wanted to comment and put some people’s mind at ease. The rabbit fishing painting is an illustration from another one of Margaret Wise Brown’s books called “Runaway Bunny.” In fact, most of Margaret Wise Brown’s books include bunnies with human capabilities. I often wonder if Margaret Wise Brown is a bunny.

  532. My son (4) just brought me this book the other day. He wanted to know why the bunny got to eat in his room, when he could not.

    Gotta get me some of those curtains. Apparently you can eat in your room if you hate your interior designer.

  533. To answer your question, “Why are these rabbits so civilized? Is this some f**ked up Watership Down sequel???” Actually yes, these are the SAME rabbits from the Runaway Bunny which was published prior to goodnight moon. In Runaway Bunny, the bunny wants to run away and he goes through a number of ludicrous scenarios including becoming a little boy and running into a home. We then see the same bunnies dressed in the same clothes from the runaway as a little boy scene in Goodnight Moon. One can either assume that the bunnies actually became people as the little boy threatened, OR that this is a little bunny boy’s dream of what it is like to be a little boy. As Runaway bunny is about an incredibly imaginative tiny rabbit, I think the latter is the better option.

    Ergo, this isn’t a real room, it’s what a tiny rabbit thinks a boy’s real room looks like, and yes, there’s a carrot colored floor and dark green leafy walls. And the same cow painting hangs on the wall as it does in his idea of what a little boy’s house looks like in Runaway Bunny.

  534. Jim Gawne Avatar
    Jim Gawne

    I have read and/or recited this book from memory for my 3 children (all grown, now) many foster children and two grandsons, yet I never asked any of these questions. I would love to see what you have to say about “The Giving Tree.”

  535. Christopher Avatar
    Christopher

    How could you miss the cannibalistic bunny picture…? A bunny fishing for bunnies with a carrot?

  536. What about “Goodnight nobody, goodnight mush” ?????

    Goodnight nobody. Blank space. Is “nobody” a ghost?

  537. The cannibal rabbit picture is actually a scene from the author’s other book, “Runaway Bunny.” But the picture makes no sense out of context, and becomes super creepy when seen by itself in another story, lol

  538. Marcia briggs Avatar
    Marcia briggs

    Love the book as did my children, but also enjoyed your very clever “all my issues” piece. Look forward to more of your dry, off the wall stories.

  539. The fishing rabbit is a reference to the other book “Runaway Bunny.”

  540. I read this article awhile back, and now I can’t read the book without laughing at the bears in couples therapy. Hilarious.

  541. Love this! I’ve been reading Goodnight book for the past Almost 3 years to my son And every time at the beginning keep thinking is this like an american decoration or culture because of the fireplace?! (me not been originally from USA) hahaha oh this reminds me those firsts months with my son !! Thank you !!!

  542. Good commentary, but how could you overlook the TIGERSKIN RUG next to the small baby rabbit’s bed? Assuming the Rabbit family owns and furnished this house, did they also kill the tiger?

  543. In Ft. Thomas, KY, just outside Cincinnati there is a great children’s bookstore called the Blue Marble. The upstairs of the shop, which is in an old house, is a perfect replica bedroom of Goodnight Moon, with all the accouterments. They often host author visits in the room and an author has the option of staying overnight in the room. I must confess that when I’ve gone for presentations, I can hardly keep my mind on what’s being said, as I am fascinated by the almost perfectly replicated decor. It’s really well done. I took my grandson as GNM is one of his favorites, and he was enchanted too. I love this book, but I can see the creep factor, as well.

  544. Entertaining and well-written! The author of “Goodnight, Mood,” Margaret Wise Brown, was born into a wealthy family in the early 20th century. The room shown in her book is a typical child’s “nursery” from the era in which she grew up. It was typical for such rooms to have fireplaces, and the doll house pictured would have been considered modest by the standards of the time. Illustrations from “Mary Poppins” show a similar room:

    https://www.google.com/search?q=child%27s+nursery+room+mary+poppins&espv=2&biw=1600&bih=775&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMI0528md6IyQIVB_1jCh3VrwHJ&dpr=1#imgrc=7pGKUNYQ_HxPrM%3A

  545. So funny, I love it. I’ve never read this book, I’ve heard of it but this is the most I’ve seen of it. I just wanted to add another point.
    Why do the rabbits have cats as pets? Pretty sure the cats would have eaten the rabbit’s by now ☺

  546. I always wondered how the moon could be sitting on the window sill. What elevation was this house? Was it on top of Mt. Everest? Who looks down on the moon? I just assumed that the bedroom was grandma’s and grandpa’s. Why else would there be a bookshelf and a fireplace like that in it, and an Old Lady whispering “Hush”? Grandpa’s bed was just out of the frame of the drawing on the other side of the nightstand. The glowing house and stuffed animals were brought down from the attic for little bunny’s visit…

  547. LOL ….Seriously!?? A fictional story. And with fiction you have freedom to do and be anything you want. Interesting how you never even said anything about the fact that rabbits don’t live in houses!!! LOL So who cares what their house looks like. I love Margaret Wise Brown books. They are always full of wild colors. And the three bears on the wall was from story of the three bears. Any idiot should know that.

  548. As to the fireplace notice how mommy rabbit is keeping watch over the little baby rabbit. I doubt she leaves him all alone in that room with the unguarded fireplace. She is the same mommy Rabbit who told her little baby rabbit that if you Run away I will become all kinds of things whenever he decided to become all kinds of things, remember? I read “the runaway bunny” to my children at the Christian school I teach at and tell them that God is the same way. There’s no place you can go that you can get away from God’s love.

  549. LOLOL. Oh my goodness! Some of these comments are hilarious. Cannibalistic bunny? In a children’s book? Come on!

  550. TRIVIA – Very Intetesting
    5. The illustrations feature some last-minute edits.
    Brown’s close friend and frequent collaborator, Clement Hurd—who also illustrated her classic Runaway Bunny—is responsible for the stark, saturated, and slightly absurdist illustrations in Goodnight Moon. When Brown first sent the manuscript to Hurd, she included very few instructions, but did enclose a copy of Goya’s Boy in Red for inspiration. Without much direction, it took Hurd three attempts to get the outlandish size and flatness of the room just as Brown imagined it. And still, there were a number of last-minute alterations: A framed photo on the great green room’s wall was altered to depict a scene from The Runaway Bunny; the Cow Jumping Over the Moon’s udder was made less anatomical to avoid offending librarians; and the child and the old lady are cast as bunnies simply because Hurd proved to be better at drawing bunnies than humans.

    6. The New York Public Library Rejected Goodnight Moon.
    Influential NYPL children’s librarian Anne Carroll Moore was perhaps the highest profile opponent to Bank Street and Brown’s here-and-now style. A champion of the fairytale, Moore often butted heads with Brown, and although she had retired by the time Goodnight Moon was published, her successor, Francis Sayers, stayed true to the party line and refused to put the book on shelves. An internal review at the library accused the book of being “an unbearably sentimental piece of work.” The Library finally reversed its original decision and began stocking the book in 1973—26 years after it was first published.

    7. Other reviews were kinder …
    “Rhythmic, drowsy phrases are set to pictures that complement them perfectly in this new go-to-sleep book for very little children…The sound of the words, the ideas they convey and the pictures combine to lull and reassure when bedtime and darkness come,” read the brief New York Times review. The New Yorker called it a “hypnotic bedtime litany.”

    8. … Especially over time.
    Goodnight Moon sold more than 6000 copies in its first year on the shelves, but in the years that followed, sales averaged just 1500 copies annually. Then, in the early 1950s, the book enjoyed a sudden and dramatic resurgence, selling 4000 in 1955, 8000 in 1960, and 20,000 in 1970. By 2000, total sales topped out at more than 11 million. The book, Writer’s Almanac said, became a “word-of-mouth best-seller.” A glowing mention in “Child Behavior”—a syndicated parental-advice column that appeared in newspapers across the U.S. in 1953—also helped. It praised the book, saying, “It captures the two-year-old so completely that it seems almost unlawful that you can hypnotize a child off to sleep as easily as you can by reading this small classic.”

    9. Despite writing one of the most popular children’s books of all time, Brown herself never had kids.
    And, in fact, never married. In 1946, Brown told Bliven, “Well, I don’t especially like children, either. At least not as a group. I won’t let anybody get away with anything just because he is little.”

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      that #9 quote is amazing.

  551. Fair questions, but who the hell is the quiet old lady whispering hush?? Creepy! I wouldn’t be able to sleep with some old lady rocking in the corner of my room.

  552. I was crying from laughing so hard. Please do more of these, they are absolutely awesome.

  553. This is absolutely glorious! Thank you so much for writing this hilarious and creative piece!

  554. Where did the socks go?! There they both are, drying, I’m assuming, on the preposterous rack. Then, “Goodnight kittens, and goodnight mittens” – but, poof! No f#*$ing socks! What the hell? Was it the zombie mouse? Wait!! Poof!! Magically they reappear! What kind of voodoo is going on in this soulless cavern??

  555. I’m am dying this is amazing

  556. Bryan Anderson Avatar
    Bryan Anderson

    This is great! Thank you for giving voice to the general sense of unease I experience while reading this book. If it ever gets picked up for a movie, David Lynch should direct.

  557. Clearly you don’t remember this book was written for a child. You sound positively miserable. Shame on you to make fun of this perfectly beautiful book.
    The bowl of mush is by the brush for rhyming purposes (you idiot)!
    Rich bunnies have even larger rooms! Wake up you mean New Yorker, some of us have large children’s rooms!

  558. Hilarious and so spot on. I just cried laughing reading this to my husband!

  559. Thanks for a really good laugh…..I always got creeped out reading this book to my son and thought it was just me. Brilliant commentating!!

  560. Maybe the room is for some older rabbit, or, like a grandparent’s room – you know how grandkids are always trying to stay with their grandparents. I haven’t had to read that one is a long time. But even with the whimsical exaggerations in the room (which you have to admit are weird, but kids like weird – read any Roald Dahl?) There is a logic to it. Also, for an interesting insight into your child’s mind, ask him about all of this – it may actually all make perfect sense to him – that was what amazed me when mine were wee. Anyway, you made me laugh. Keep it up.

  561. faerystardust Avatar
    faerystardust

    I disagree on nearly every comment of yours, but what if the bunny is simply staying at his/her grandma’s house (the quiet old lady)? This is beyond ridiculous to me. Find something productive to do, or more important about which to write.

    1. Zippstress Avatar
      Zippstress

      Speaking of something better to do, why bother reading an essay you don’t like? Why bother reading a blog that says it was written (right up there, in the “About” section) by a stand-up comic, whose job is to be funny for a living? Why bother spewing ugliness at the world when no on asked you to? Why bother faking a cutesy username that speaks of whimsy when you so very clearly do not understand whimsy at all? Take a deep breath and realize not everything on the web is meant for you. Take another deep breath and realize leaving mean and stupid comments makes you look … mean and stupid (for the record, I’m not stupid but I sure as hell am mean.) Take another breath and try to answer this question as honestly as you possibly can: what in the world is wrong with you?

      To sum up: Isn’t it AWESOME when people call you out for writing something they deems stupid and unnecessary, especially when your stupid and unnecessary comment makes about as much sense or is as constructive or useful as yours?

  562. Rachael Avatar
    Rachael

    Lol, your blog has brought me to the conclusion that these bunnies are so poor they make their baby sleep in the ugly living room. They had to sell their couch for a bed for him. Also, how do bunnies have only one baby, and why are they not eaten by the cats? Maybe their other babies were eaten by cats. You’ve given me much to think about.

  563. Mary Evans Avatar
    Mary Evans

    Did we forget this is a childrens book????
    Am I missing something here??
    Duhhh!!

    1. theuglyvolvo Avatar
      theuglyvolvo

      We know it’s a children’s book but it’s sometimes enjoyable to poke fun at things we’ve been forced to read every night for the past 8 months to keep us from going crazy. No harm intended but sorry you were offended by the piece. I know my sense of humor isn’t for everyone, but thanks for reading regardless.

  564. TrishyDishy Avatar
    TrishyDishy

    I laughed so hard at this I was crying. Amazing.

  565. Claire Avatar
    Claire

    I just found this post thanks to a link on Elements of Style’s blog- This. Is. Hilarious. I was literally in tears from laughing so hard, clearly I get your sense of humor 🙂 My kids are older now (10 and 9) but we always read this book when they were little. Are you by chance related to the writer that writes the ‘Williams Sonoma haters catalogue review’ at the end of each year? If you haven’t read those, check them out- they will also leave you in stitches IMO. Thank you for making my week!

  566. One word, Hilarious. We must have a similar sense of humor cus I found this very entertaining and I don’t have kids. I do tend to over analyze things. People who are not analytical might not get it.

  567. Squirl Avatar
    Squirl

    The “freestanding clothesline” is a wooden folding drying rack (which you put away). We had one as a kid and I’m only 36…And since the story is in the 1940’s at latest, probably best to dry your wet mittens and socks by the fire…instead of the cold laundry room. The colors are cuckoo, though! But maybe one of the things I like best. 🙂

  568. I have had such similar thought reading the book!

    Thanks to Nashville Moms Blog reposting it, I finally found your book review.

    Any chance you’ll be working up reviews of other childhood classics?

    Like ‘Harold and the Purple Crayon’?

  569. Hallie L Avatar
    Hallie L

    So glad I’m not alone on being a bit amused and creeped out by parts of this book. I used to make it a game for my boys to find the mouse. The number one issue I have had with this book, relates to the picture hanging above the bookshelf you discussed. The picture depicts an angler bunny complete with waiters catching…what? Really? WHAT? A little bunny!!! No way. Yes, way. Eeeeewwwww!!!

  570. Stephen Avatar
    Stephen

    A thoroughly enjoyable reading experience (your blog; Goodnight Moon, not as much). Thank you for some much needed laughs!

  571. Random Astronomer Avatar
    Random Astronomer

    One of the elements of the illustrations is that the moon moves (rises) a bit in each page in the window on the left. The result is one could more or less estimate the amount of time the little old lady has to whisper “hush” through the course of the story.
    Are you sitting down? It works out to about 3 hours! One moon diameter of motion = about one hour elapsed time, and you will notice the moon is barely in the window on the first page, and near the top of the window in the last page.
    The “Go the F* to sleep” book is what the little old lady reads next…

    1. i love that you did this.

  572. 1. I recommend Jan Brett books to sooth your rightful outrage.

    2. The last image (of the whole bedroom) – by far the weirdest thing is the view out the two windows. How freakin’ high up is this house that stars are visible in the bottom of the windows? Is this a three-thousand-story high house? Is it on the moon? You tell me.

  573. Cynthia Avatar
    Cynthia

    Nothing on that little brat taking FOREVER to go to sleep by saying goodnight to EVERY DAMNED THING in an attempt to stay up later and calling that poor, probably overly exhausted, woman ‘Old Lady’?

  574. Samara Avatar
    Samara

    So good! My husband also pointed out after like the 80th reading. “Wait a second — goodnight AIR?!!! Is this a horror story??” 🙂

  575. My biggest grievance with the book has always been that the first half of the book is spent introducing us to EVERYTHING in the room. The second half of the book is then spent saying “Goodnight” to all those things– or is it? What’s the first line? “In a great, green room there was a telephone.” THE VERY FIRST THING WE ARE INTRODUCED TO IS A TELEPHONE. AND YET, AT NO POINT DO WE SAY GOODNIGHT TO THIS TELEPHONE, THIS FIRST THING WE ARE INTRODUCED TO. I hate this book so much. The only thing worse is Margaret Wise Brown’s “My World”, which ends with, “My tree, the bird’s tree. How many stripes on a bumble bee?” ARE YOU SERIOUS, MARGARET WISE BROWN? WHO THE HELL CARES?! WHAT KIND OF QUESTION IS THAT TO END A BOOK WITH? I DIDN’T KNOW THERE WAS GOING TO BE A GOD DAMNED TEST AT THE END

  576. Very funny. Did you notice that the “existential mouse” is in fact in EVERY colored photo in the book? My daughter and I have made a game of finding him on each page. The example you showed is a rare moment he is out and exposed. LOL

  577. Angela Avatar
    Angela

    The room is huge BUT maybe it’s more like a nursery – playroom and bedroom, hence needing a phone? It is a bit curious that they don’t say goodnight to the phone if it’s the first thing they mention. I guess I never really paid attention to some of the other things. The colors really are awful, that I agree on. I think most kids like it b/c it’s simple enough for them to remember and eventually “read” on their own.

    I just looked at the date it was published Sept. 3, 1947 – I’d say that explains a lot. . . .

  578. Hilarious. I have always been bothered by the helicopter mom in the Runaway Bunny.

  579. Laurel Bradshaw Avatar
    Laurel Bradshaw

    Actually, I had a bedroom not too unlike this in high school. I was allowed to decorate it myself. The room was huge – at least 20×20. Part of the room had a sloping roof with an “attic” closet along that entire end. I painted that half of the room a dark green and the other half bright yellow. Sort of like night and day halves of the room. The wooden furniture (table, desk, bookcases) I painted antiqued Chinese red (orange). The bedspread and curtains were in a large floral print in green, yellow and orange. Yes, it was probably God-awful, but I loved it. Oh, and I had a pet white rat named Clyde, though I didn’t allow him to run around the room unless the door was shut, and the cat was not in the room.

    1. That sounds really awful.

  580. CindyVV Avatar
    CindyVV

    WAIT… these are all excellent observations, but how is it that you didn’t object to the fact that the COW’S UDDER HAS NO NIPPLES?

    Seriously, that’s the thing that causes me rage every time. Thank God my kids grew up.

    1. In my copy, the cow has teats in the close-up pictures

  581. Veronica Avatar
    Veronica

    has anyone noticed the “Goodnight Moon” book on the nightstand??

  582. Jean Lamkin Avatar
    Jean Lamkin

    Are you crazy??? With all the serious truly upsetting concerns in this world you put this out for a concern???? A truly beloved childhood book vs. Trump, Isis, North Korea, Global warming, Widfires and Flooding in the US, Putin, the Zika virus affecting many and the Summer Olympics, the vote in Britain to leave the EU, and the continued threat of TERRORISM worldwide are so much more worthy of REAL concern…GOODNIGHT SCARY PEOPLE!!!!

    1. With all the scary stuff in the world don’t we need a little humor? I love the book too and this piece made me laugh out loud.

    2. Adam T Avatar
      Adam T

      You must be a lot of fun at parties.

    3. The more aware you are if the seriousness in the world, and the more you love this book, the funnier this story is. (Or that thing Jean said about Isis and terrorism).

  583. I always wondered why the bowl of mush at bedtime? Isn’t it a breakfast food? Has it been there since morning? Is he supposed to eat an old cold bowl of porridge when he wakes up?

    1. Alexandria Avatar
      Alexandria

      Peas porridge hot,
      Peas porridge cold,
      Peas porridge in the pot nine days old.

      (Fermented foods are good for you – the hushy rabbit knew that)

  584. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    Have you noticed how the table lamp lights up part of the night sky? I don’t think lamps work like that.

  585. Anthony Bennett Avatar
    Anthony Bennett

    Interior design is about planning and construction, not decoration.

  586. Mary Jo Anhalt Avatar
    Mary Jo Anhalt

    My ‘new’ bedroom in a 50 yr old house has a blood red carpet. And before I moved from a gigantic house last year, I donated stacks of books to the library, but they had no use for the hardly-ever-used 30 volume set of The Encyclopedia Britannica, purchased new around 1985, because it was out-of-date!! No references in it to the Internet, I guess. Anyway, Goodnight Moon is a classic. Good night, sleep tight, and don’t let the bedbugs bite!

  587. Anna Freeman Avatar
    Anna Freeman

    The child doesn’t have his own bedroom. He’s sleeping in the living room. It’s a one-bedroom house.

  588. Bless you. My sister & I just finished laughing our way through your this post. We’ll credit you with our improved attitudes & abs and can’t wait to read more.

  589. Wow. What a way to rip apart a perfectly good childrens book. I thought I was a critic but wow. That’s pessimism and negativity at its best. Like another poster said “you must be a lot of fun at parties”.

    1. Do you read satire and humor just so you can straighten people out with your seriousness, Kellie? Seriousness is easy, predictable, and boring.

  590. How about that weird picture of a rabbit catching another tiny rabbit with his fishing pole.

    1. Michelle Lee-Reid Avatar
      Michelle Lee-Reid

      The rabbit fishing is a page from another of the author’s books.

  591. Teri Brown Avatar
    Teri Brown

    The book is meant to be set in the 1940s-50s. Telephone is appropriate. Fireplace is common. Old homes had huge rooms. My granddaughter’s dollhouse is as tall as she is. Old homes FYI have mice. They’really old. I have a drying rack just like that one.
    It wasn’t that funny.

    1. Really, Teri? Was this comment necessary or are you a professional killjoy?

      1. What about the old lady? Its not mom, its not grandma, its not auntie, its apparently not even the babysitter. Just some old lady whispering one word over and over again.

      2. Between this blog post and these Debbie downer comments, I am dying. Hilarious!

  592. I have a thought that will make you feel much better about the color theme of the bedroom.. it’s CARROT colored. What’s more comforting to Bunnies than a carrot colored bedroom.. I would want a chocolate croissant colored bedroom.. or maybe super mocha fudge chunk colored…

  593. Wow. You are a lot of fun. With a room as big as you describe a little glove dryer shouldn’t be a problem.

  594. Thank you. I can’t remember when I’ve laughed that hard.

  595. I can’t remember how many times I read this book to my children. I loved the calming effect it had on me and the boys. It was one of their favorites. When my boys are parents, I will definitely buy them a copy of their own to share.

  596. Noreen Baldwin Avatar
    Noreen Baldwin

    What a wonderful sense of humor you have
    Reading the book to my grandson each night this past summer, I did notice those things but this summer I am not sure I will be able to get through a reading without laughing.
    Thank you!

  597. Penelope Avatar
    Penelope

    This was hilarious! Keep it coming!
    I am truly sorry for the growing number of people who don’t “get” good humor like this.
    (Teri and Camille, take note)

  598. Clare s Avatar
    Clare s

    Having a bad day and this just made it better. I too have read that book to my son 2,500 times at least. This gives a whole new(hysterical) perspective!!! Thank you!!

  599. MJBominicious Avatar
    MJBominicious

    I’m surprised that you did not mention the Goodnight Moon book sitting on the bureau next to the bed. How can it be that the book we are reading already exists INSIDE the story we are reading. The existentialism of the mouse’s presence is magnified 1000X by the presence of the book we are reading.

  600. Dawn Anderson Avatar
    Dawn Anderson

    Illustrator was Clement Hurd.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Hurd
    He was a real person.
    I know it is supposed to be funny. sigh.

  601. Have you read “Love You Forever” by Robert Munsch? So troubling….

    1. Raquel D'Apice Avatar
      Raquel D’Apice

      It is! The books is very weird but the story behind it is actually sort of sad.

  602. When the book was written, many British books were published in a set. The ‘encyclopedia’ is not that; it is a depiction of a typical set of books that would include dozens of children’s stories. I have a set myself and it is a wonderful collection of stories in a uniform colored set of books. Check out some antique stores or other historic references.

  603. Ellen Ron Avatar
    Ellen Ron

    What about the tiger skin (?) rug? And are bunnies so difficult to awaken that it takes two clocks to do the job?

  604. Makenzie Avatar
    Makenzie

    I understand this was supposed to be funny, but personally I didn’t find it all that historical (personal preference I suppose, slam me all you’d like for being a “killjoy”). As someone who is thoroughly educated on this particular time period I don’t find the majority of the items pointed out here to be all that abnormal, in fact they were perfectly normal, i.e. telephones in children’s bedrooms, fireplaces that we now consider un-childproofed, large bookcases and even larger rooms, more over the entire styling of the bedroom is fitting to the time period – therefore I found that this person simply was uneducated on the time period which it is supposed to be reflective of and as a result is mocking a skilled artist (the individual who drew these photos for the book) for no particular reason other then ignorance. Furthermore, it is a child’s book, Disney is equally known for having unrealistic depictions, but their are more along the lines of “you can live in a peach” or “how about we have a kid flying around, taking children to far away lands.”

    1. Raquel D'Apice Avatar
      Raquel D’Apice

      Weirdly, when I watch Peter Pan I don’t even go “What is this nonsense of having a flying child adventurer,” I constantly fixate on “How is it ok that the dog is in charge of watching the kids????” I guess it’s just what you focus on?

    2. Thank you Makenzie. It is a children’s book written in a very different era (1947). In a children’s book, we let go of reality and live within its pages. Every time I read it to my daughter I was there with her in that room enjoying the clocks, the socks, the kittens, the mittens–all of it.

  605. Carolyn Avatar
    Carolyn

    um, Raquel, regarding your book cover, there’s a baby left unattended on a changing table. such a no no. 60 years from now you’ll be lucky if a robot blogger writes a humor piece. good luck!

    1. Raquel D'Apice Avatar
      Raquel D’Apice

      the baby’s glued down to the table, which seriously is the best way to get them to stay there!

  606. Chelsea Avatar
    Chelsea

    I don’t think I have ever left a comment on a single thing I’ve ever read on the internet, but feel compelled to for the first time now because this was so hysterical. This was my absolute favorite book as a child, and this is such a genius take on the whole bedroom situation that I somehow have never thought about. So creative.Thank you for brightening my day/week/life!

    1. Raquel D'Apice Avatar
      Raquel D’Apice

      thanks for letting me know it was enjoyed!

  607. Anne Starnes Kingsbury Avatar
    Anne Starnes Kingsbury

    Bravo!!

  608. Tony Anaya Avatar
    Tony Anaya

    These sound like the angry, bitter ramblings of someone who grew up in a beige-colored bedroom and then chose to live in NYC, where housing prices are so astronomical that only the uber-wealthy enjoy any real living space. Move to the mid-west and buy yourself a real home with full-size human rooms.

    Then, spend 20 years filling it with crap like electrified doll houses and hundreds of over-sized books so you can experience the thrill of wallowing in junk!!!

  609. Damaris Kryah Avatar
    Damaris Kryah

    How disappointing to see a children’s classic bashed to death. Perhaps you need some loftier reading material. Or something else to occupy your mind. Have you Read To the Lighthouse or TheWind in the Willows or The Secret Garden or The Lone Pilgrim or Orlando? Curious George? Sorry don’t agree with you. What about Pat the Bunny? Too pink?

  610. Steph Avatar
    Steph

    I’ve always assumed it was a one room cabin. No ideas where I got that from, just that I’ve had it since my mom was reading this to me as a child. Then, never questioned the absurdities.
    Not that it being a one room cabin makes hairbrush mush and rabid mice any less absurd…
    Thank you for this. It’ll keep me in better humor when my son finds our “lost” copy again.
    Not that it matters, I can recite it from memory.

  611. Maria Avatar
    Maria

    I just laughed out loud on the bus. At least three people near me now believe me insane.This incredibly funny piece was wasted on many of the sticks in the mud commenting before me. Lighten up! Life is too short to be so sour.

  612. Deb Rosevear Avatar
    Deb Rosevear

    I laughed so hard reading this that tears kept rolling down my face. I read this book countless times to my son & daughter and they are now reading it to my grandchildren. The illustrations are oddly done, yet somehow comforting. Your take on the book is priceless. I so enjoyed reading this. I read a few of the serious negative comments and thought, whew, these people need to lighten up and not take things so seriously. Thanks!

    1. Therese Avatar
      Therese

      here! hear! it seems pretty clear none of these serious-minded-readers got to the bear marriage counseling session… too bad

  613. JoAnne Weber Avatar
    JoAnne Weber

    She’s a single mom, it’s their HOUSE, she’s knitting for her Etsy page before climbing into their freakishly small bed, with her child. Her friends donated misc. furniture to her after her ugly divorce, but she’s colorblind. The books were from graduate school, but she can’t get a job, there are no university jobs anymore, which is why they are eating mush; school loans, no social safety net, they only qualify for $4 in food stamps, etc. The mouse is brazen because the landlord doesn’t care about vermin, or missing radiators, matching curtain rods, or drafty windows. He’s struck a deal with the cats for any leftover mush, the mouse, not the landlord. The phone is for phone calls to daddy, who isn’t happy he has to pay child support, so he insists on the phone or he’ll call CPS and drag her back to court with allegations of neglect and abuse (he suspects falsely the garish colors are from her experimenting with LSD), the picture of the bears in couples therapy remind her too much of all the years she spent in therapy, all for naught, she gets angry enough the next morning that she throws it in the fire, and tells her child she did it to heat the drafty room. The laundry is hanging in the house because there is no laundry. I speak from experience, sort of?? Which is why I’m always telling my kid to “shush”

    1. Oh, I appreciate your reply. (Humor? Only to sick minds – maybe male spouses themselves.) I could learn to appreciate that room for my total living space. Thanks for your well worded reply. I know I am not alone.

  614. Christi Avatar
    Christi

    I, too laughed extremely hard at this article!!!! Thanks for writing some of my thoughts down, and for adding some that I hadn’t even thought of, but were hysterical!!!!

  615. Actually, the girl mouse was Talya. What Jew names their daughter Tanya?

    1. Raquel D'Apice Avatar
      Raquel D’Apice

      This is a good point. Was just going by the wiki page information– apologies!

  616. Bunny Blue Avatar
    Bunny Blue

    “Husband Bear: God, you are so CRITICAL OF EVERYTHING.” ‘Nuff said.

  617. Mokeimi Avatar
    Mokeimi

    You are a frickin’ genius.

  618. I tried to find the humour in this as I do often find an alternative take on parenting tools and children’s books etc amusing, but just found it sad that such a classic and genuine original was ripped to pieces. It’s a book that is resonant of its period and covers so many lovely aspects of the bedtime and goodnight ritual that we partake in with our children that it’s cruel to slam it. And if that can’t be understood then just appreciate it for a made up story for a small child by an author with an imagination….thats what stories are meant to be!

    1. Terra Avatar
      Terra

      Oh get over it Emma

    2. Terrie True Avatar
      Terrie True

      I felt the same as you. It’s a complete misunderstanding of many, many lovely nuances from a bygone era.

  619. Cmott Avatar
    Cmott

    It’s so funny how “perception” works. I never took this as a bedroom. I took it as a poor family and this is the ENTIRE home. Like a one room house. I’ve always felt that, even when I was young.

    1. Cmott– Same here!

  620. Clearly you don’t have any perspective or understanding of life in the 1940’s. this is not a kids room, it’s a studio apartment and the “non-childproofed” fireplace is their only source of heat.

  621. The room? It’s a nursery, the classic sort that housed all the kids in all the great stories–even in less affluent families–Large because it is bedroom, schoolroom, washroom, and playroom…a place where children spent most of their time. The small clothesline? It is there, near the fireplace, expressly for warming and drying socks and mittens. Colors? Have you seen Victorian homes? Garish was the go-to. Now, this may not be a Victorian era story (the phone fouls that up), but they may not have redecorated since then. Pricey. Other than that, costs of color printing meant…choose four colors and be happy with that. Beatrix Potter had the market cornered on soft watercolor shades. Goodnight Moon went wintry bold. The books? See above note on nursery/schoolroom…The phone…well, it just pisses me off. My whole Victorian argument is thrown by the anachronistic 40s era phone sitting at a child’s bedside. Maybe it foretold the coming cell phone era, but the vision was fuzzy.

  622. JoAnne Gallagher Avatar
    JoAnne Gallagher

    Wow! The Velveteen Rabbit better watch out! Bib bad critic is coming to get her

  623. No comment on the picture of the bunny fishing in the river?
    Disturbing.

  624. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    Hahahaha. As a person who appreciates oddities, this was incredibly funny. When I was in a bad mood and reading to my kids, I would take some of those booKS that we really loved and berate them with funny comments. My kids loved it and now appreciate my weird sense of humor. You obviously share in my unique perspective on things. Are we related?? I totally LOVED this.

  625. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    This is absolutely hilarious! I was laughing the entire time through. Especially at the conversations of the bears and the interior designers. Bravo!

  626. Marialaina Avatar
    Marialaina

    You have way too much time on your hands to pick apart a child’s book like that. Try to do something a little more useful with your time.

  627. Oh Dear Avatar
    Oh Dear

    You’re trying too hard, hon.

  628. Paula Avatar
    Paula

    We’re you trying to be funny and/or clever? I guess you were because you made a few people laugh. I thought your article was dumb in an unimaginative way. Maybe I should have read it all the way through before coming to this conclusion, but I was too bored. Sorry. Better luck next time.

  629. Greg Francis Avatar
    Greg Francis

    Thank you for this brilliant piece. So observant and clever. As one of millions of parents who spent hours reading this classic to engaged children, I never thought to look at the illustrations and wonder why.Wow -I’m going to have to search out your book.

  630. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    Can we talk about the red balloon? WHO KEEPS A BALLOON IN A ROOM WITH AN OPEN FIRE, TWO CATS, AND A SLEEPING CHILD?!!! 😉

  631. Susan Lynn Avatar
    Susan Lynn

    Did you also think that about the children’s room in Peter Pan?

  632. Roy Geesa Avatar
    Roy Geesa

    I honestly thought this whole piece was a joke. If the negative comments were serious, I have to ask if there is any limit to how often some bleeding hearts will find opportunities to feel guilty and then try to make the whole civilized world feel guilty because we are not living in a shoe box. Get over your idiotic guilt!

  633. It’s just a children’s book . I can’t imagine why anyone would care about all this much, less bother to write about it. And no, I’m not trying to be rude. I’m really not.

  634. Sonnie Avatar
    Sonnie

    I enjoyed your article on Goodnight Moon. I agreed fully with you on many points. With the mouse, I was surprised you didn’t note that it moves about the room. On each page it’s in a different location in the room. It’s quite alarming. Thank you for sharing your thoughts.

  635. Diane Avatar
    Diane

    Hilarious! I’m glad I’m not the only one who notices odd details and has fun with them. I read the book to my kids and now to my grandchildren. Oh yeah, and thanks for for getting that damn song in my head! 😉

  636. Kathy Avatar
    Kathy

    Love this book, one of my youngest son’s favorites. But you left out my biggest pet peeve. On the black and white page where they say good night to the mittens, the pair of socks has mysteriously disappeared from the clothesline!

    1. Raquel D'Apice Avatar
      Raquel D’Apice

      now this is going to bother me forever.

  637. Tem Po Avatar
    Tem Po

    I love this book. My daughter’s now in her mid-30s and we continue to quote bits of Goodnight Moon from time to time in our faraway evening texts. “Goodnight, Moon!” “Goodnight, Mush!” That said, I also love this take on it, with its cheeky sense of humour! …. Those who don’t care for it, I’d respectfully suggest: read something else 🙂 …. Goodnight Moon is a story of warmth, love and nonsense, told with utter simplicity and a twinkle of the eye. Twinkling back seems more than fitting. I’m certain Ms D’Apice’s take on things has that cow leaping over the moon laughing all the way.

  638. Jane S Gabin Avatar
    Jane S Gabin

    It’s the lady’s house; the kid is just staying there while his parents are away in Atlantic City for a weekend of drinking and gambling. The buunykin can’t sleep because of the colors and anyway, it’s not his bed. Watching the knitting needles is mesmerizing, though.

  639. C. Todd-Mandler Avatar
    C. Todd-Mandler

    Big picture: kids LOVE this book. It’s all that matters. I think it’s big & colorful because toddlers are small, so everything looks different to them.
    Don’t worry, just read it slowly & go with the flow. It’s not about you, anyway. It’s about feeling safe, language, comfort, structure, routine care-taking and your child being able to self-soothe so they can go to sleep.
    All those repetitive questions young kids ask as they acquire language is answered. This is their world.
    This is an important story which was part of my children’s chilhood & my own. After we read this book, we would tell everything in the child’s bedroom good night. It’s preparing them for you to leave the room and allow them to sleep in their own bed. You have provided them with language and an internalized script. I cannot tell you how often I would hear (over the baby monitor) my children self-soothing by repeating this telling all of their toys goodnight business.
    Try not to over analyze this wonderful story. It’s popular for mysterious reasons only knowable to the very young.

    1. That’s basically what the author said. This is a humor piece, not an analysis.

  640. Max boeck Avatar
    Max boeck

    What about the weird fishing picture on the left!!!? It seems to imply a rabbit is fishing for another rabbit in the river!! What kind of weird rabbit-centric universe is this??!

    1. Max, hat fishing picture is actually a picture taken from one of the authors other books, “Runaway Bunny,” where the little bunny says he would run away and become a trout in a stream. Mother bunny replies with how she would become a fisherman and fish for him.

    2. Sally Keehn Avatar
      Sally Keehn

      The fishing picture refers to another charming picture book by Margaret Wise Brown – “The Runaway Bunny.” It was a favorite in our house.

  641. Maryanne Avatar
    Maryanne

    Found this hilarious!!

  642. Lisa ridgway Avatar
    Lisa ridgway

    I think you have carcinoma of the attitude. You need to move west.

  643. LJacoby714 Avatar
    LJacoby714

    That’s not tomato soup red. That’s carrot orange with leafy green accents—perfect colors for a bunny home.

  644. The Rat Avatar
    The Rat

    Completely wrong. To start, the room is described as a great green room. Based upon its contents, it is the main room of the apartment which doubles as (among other things) the child’s bedroom. This is why there are a number of items (thick books, a fireplace, phone, mush AND hair care items next to each other) that would be completely out of place in a normal child’s bedroom. Additionally, the fact is, the family involved is clearly poor (kid sleeping in the living room, mismatched furniture, MUSH!), so all interior decorating comments are simply stupid. Hell, I could go on… The article author is clearly a cultural elitist who has no concept of how to relate to any environment outside of her own. If she took the time to actually pay attention, she would learn more about 1930’s life than by simply viewing it through her own, myopic, lens.

  645. Will you also do Big Red Barn as an encore? That book bothers me SO MUCH.

  646. Charlotte Griffin Avatar
    Charlotte Griffin

    I recently noticed that in the last picture, the mouse has crept up onto the windowsill, and is looking out at the stars.

  647. Debbie Kaye Avatar
    Debbie Kaye

    GOODNIGHT MOON is a fictional book…that is all…so GET OVER IT and anything else you don’t like about it!!!

  648. Crystal Avatar
    Crystal

    Clearly, you have way too much time on your hands. I love this book and all the fantasy about it remains intact despite your efforts to ruin it with your criticism. It’s a children’s book! Manhattan real estate and design don’t apply here.

  649. That’s a drying rack, not “a tiny clothesline”, although it’s basically the same function.

    The floor is orange. Like a carrot. Because they’re bunnies. The mouse on it is there too amuse kids. The whole reason the room is packed is to give kids things to point to and look at. I feel so bad for the poor kid who had to read Goodnight Moon with you.

  650. Thanks for a great laugh! 🙂

  651. Miriam Peskowitz Avatar
    Miriam Peskowitz

    Suspend your disbelief.

  652. That’s it. I’m adding you to my list of People With Whom I’d Love To Have A Coffee- along with Maria Montessori & Shirley Jackson. Except you’re living.

  653. The painting omn the left above the bookcase. How could you miss it? It’ss a rabbit fishing in a stream that’s GOT ANOTHER RABBIT HOOKED ON THE LINE. They’re cannibals.

  654. Tracy L Richardson Avatar
    Tracy L Richardson

    It’s a children’s book. Where reality can be suspended, rooms expanded, and colors brightened. Where mice and mittens and bowls of mush are perfectly placed. Kids get it. That’s why they don’t write silly blogs.

  655. Abra kolar Avatar
    Abra kolar

    This is the funniest and wittiest thing I’ve read in years! It made me laugh out loud at work several times. Thank you!

  656. Thank you for making me laugh till I cried. Doesn’t happen nearly enough, and I needed that. You are funny.

  657. Christina Kemp
    Not everyone “decorates” their kids nursery, a lot of people have to make do and matching wouldnt come into it. Whoever wrote this sound a bit materialistic and maybe they’re very young.

  658. That enormous puce spot-bandaid rug really ties the room together.

  659. Old Lady Avatar
    Old Lady

    What a snob.

  660. So funny! You are so right, these illustrations are incredible bizzare! Someone needs to make this room happen in real life and do a photo shoot of it.

  661. Jimmy Carl Black Avatar
    Jimmy Carl Black

    I’m sorry, but you claim you’ve lived in small apartments in NYC and you don’t know what a folding wooden drying rack is? I call bullshit.

  662. Shanna Mendez Avatar
    Shanna Mendez

    I love the language and relatability of this article. I loved it so much I went on to find more posts and you kept me laughing silently while wedged in bed between my sleeping five year old and 6 month old. As a part time tutor and part time writer from home (when?) who is also dedicated to being a full time mom who homeschool I love the semi serious self deprecating tone of your writing. More please!!

  663. Shawnda combs Avatar
    Shawnda combs

    Hilarious!!! I love the book and this mocking of it!!

  664. Alexis Avatar
    Alexis

    I kept waiting for you to say something about the part saying “goodnight nobody”… what! nobody! Is there a ghost in the room! That always creeps me out but I do love the book. I can “read” it to my kid without the book but have to because he likes the pictures. This cracked me up.

  665. Where is the mouse in the closing picture? (12) It’s in the first picture (1).

  666. Teresa Avatar
    Teresa

    Loved the humor of this all…but seriously the language! Even if it is so-called “bl**ped” out! This is about a CHILDREN’S book. Yes- mostly adults read this, but I wouldn’t let you anywhere near my child with language like that. Clean it up! It’s totally gratuitous and unnecessary!

  667. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Don’t understand the mocking of a book that was clearly illustrated in a time when all of these types of colours and illustrations were normal, waste of time really.

  668. Kellie Avatar
    Kellie

    I also never understood why a rabbit would have 2 cats as pets…what the heck?

  669. This article is petty as can be.

  670. Dharma Bodhi Avatar
    Dharma Bodhi

    Either you’re pretending to be silly or you’re an idiot. It’s a children’s book. It’s meant to be of its own universe. You better stay away from Beatrix Potter. That’s really going to mess your tiny brain up.

  671. Maureen Avatar
    Maureen

    Wow… Millenia hipster? Must be you’re generation thing as I was raised in the 60’s/70’s & my kids in the 80’s
    OCD with to much time on you’re hands?
    Whao ho the hell dissects a children’s book wrote like in the 1930’s LIKE THIS???
    I can’t imagine what you would do to Dr. Seuss books?
    Okay, some of this started out funny…or tragic a person does this to this degree ,but… creepier then the book is you’re views!

  672. All great points–

    But most arguments get thrown or the window when you consider that these are rabbits. Big room? For rabbits, sure. In real life though, the house in this book is probably about the size of a dog house. Still seem large?

    And the color scheme?
    I mean, it was probably designed by rabbits. Considering how well they did, I think they’re worthy of applause.

    Pretty good for rabbits.

  673. Wow, I didn’t realize that some people down here the comments were actually mad! Mine was only meant to be facetious! It’s actually a funny article. I’m pretty sure the author isn’t seriously criticizing the makers of Goodnight Moon, people.

  674. These criticisms are all based on modern standards. The colors are just simplified (non patterned block color) versions of the wallpapered, verdant rooms of wealthy people in years gone by. They were tasteful! And giving kids their before bed snack, then setting it on a night table next to a hairbrush, is no more unusual than an open fire. And your library would contain few (if any) books especially for children.

  675. Bev Morse Avatar
    Bev Morse

    What a classic commentary. I’ve read the book so many times in English and in French (Bonsoir lune) to my children and now my grandson and his ‘English is my third language’ 2 year old cousin. We always look for the mouse who seems to be the only thing to move around from frame to frame. Keep you the commentary..

  676. Goodnight Buttmunchers Avatar
    Goodnight Buttmunchers

    The piece is simply brilliant, Raquel.

    For all of you a**holes who can’t find at least a little humor in this, go have a kid of your own to really taste the spice of life. (And if you don’t have one, why are you even reading this?!?!?) If you already have a kid and STILL can’t find a little humor in Raquel’s analysis, well, your poor kid has at least one stuck-up, corn-cob-in-the-ass-carrying parent, who forgot what being a kid is all about. May a ‘Goodnight Elderly Parent in a Crappy Nursing Home’ themed book be in your dismal future. Cheers!

  677. This was hilarious! As a mother of a teenager who read this book a million times, I thank you for the laughs. My child noticed something new every time when we read it together. Please ignore the sour pusses that commented.
    If they keep sucking on lemons maybe it will keep their mouths shut!

  678. I remember loving this book as a kid, but as a parent find it quite peculiar (as with many kids books, actually). I wonder what kids and parents thought of it when it was published in 1947, 70 years ago!

  679. Nick Charles Avatar
    Nick Charles

    I am glad to have stumbled upon this article… I’ve always felt that I had to keep quiet over the issue I have with Goodnight Moon. It is just not a good book at all. It is a piece of shyt to be more specific. Somehow we ended up with TWO copies of this god awful book after having our baby last year, but thank God she does not like it and finds little interest in it. I really lucked out on that because she LOVES books and being read to. What about the black and white picture behind the mustard yellow colored book shelf that has a freaking rabbit either attempting to kill a baby rabbit or lure it into a fishing net or catch it some some crazy crap?!? It is using a fishing pole with a carrot as bait, attempting to catch a baby rabbit… but for what? To eat?!?! Cannibal!

  680. The bunny is quite obviously in his mother’s bedroom. That explains the large bed, large bedroom, thick books, unsafe fireplace, and telephone. Also, it’s not unreasonable that some of the Bunny’s toys (the playhouse) are in his mother’s bedroom.

  681. Three things are clear from your analysis:
    a. Your are not in the arts nor do you have any sort of imagination (hello, red and green are complementary colors and visually pop for children. I highly recommend you not read Alice in Wonderland).
    b. You failed to remember this is a children’s book (not architectural digest nor Elle decor nor related to NYC apartments).
    c. You have way too much time on your hands
    (Please go volunteer 🙂

  682. I so needed this today. Thank you! I posted on FB too. Best piece I’ve read in ages. ❤️

  683. Now I know in advance it’s probably a dumb question, but why is the mouse in every room picture on here except the last one. is it a different picture?

  684. Great send up of what sounds like a great book for kids. It’s odd, I have 4 daughters, all grown up now & I read to them everyday when they were kids but never Goodnight Moon. Can’t remember ever hearing about it, I feel so deprived now. Maybe one of my grandchildren will have it. What I do remember though, going back a long long way, is that all rooms seemed that huge when I was a child,

  685. hahah! I love this!!!! I am currently reading this book 4 times a day. I always think the bears look like they’re in an AA meeting. Also: how about the bunny fishing picture of the left?

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