
The Night
Is Singing
ISBN 0-8037-3004-7• 32 pages
$16.99• Ages 2–5
Dial
Books for Young Readers
Ready for bed,
a little girl lingers, listening for the sounds of the night...
Hear the hissing,
Soft as kissing
From the raditator grate.
Hear the chiming
Tell-the-timing
Of the hall clock striking eight.
This gracefully
illustrated lullaby evokes that comfy-cozy time of night when sleep
is still a blink away. Delightful and soothing, this book is a perfect
addition to any bedtime ritual.
Download the Teacher
Guide for this book
Order
the book
Reviews
Ready for bed with
her favorite bunny tucked under her arm, a little girl climbs the stairs
to her room while the sounds of the night begin to sing their lullabies.
But each new sound of the hissing radiator, the chiming clock, the squalling
geese, her romping tabby cat, the blowing wind, the thunder and rain,
makes the little girl increasingly awake and anxious until the “tip-tap
beat” of her “mama's feet” brings mother’s singing
to her room. The patterned rhyming text—“Now the moon beams
down upon you,/ And the stars ignite the skies./ ’Til you rise,/
’Til you rise, / The night will sing you lullabies”—moves
the child from acquiescence, to play, to fear, to soothing comfort and
finally to sleep. Fabric/paper collage on oil paintings in multiple
colors of blues and dark purples provide a lot of detail and texture
to the nocturnal scenes featuring an otherwise standard theme. Gratifying
and readable night after night.—Kirkus
This perfect bedtime
read captures the sounds of a creaky old house in the country as well
as the noises outside. Vivid images evoke the contrast between the stormy
fall night and the snug coziness indoors: “Hear the hissing,/Soft
as kissing,/From the radiator grate./Hear the chiming/ Tell-the-timing/Of
the hall clock striking eight.” Attractive, full-page folk-art
illustrations that combine collage and oil paint on gessoed watercolor
paper lend an old-fashioned charm to the rural scene and the comfort
and security within.—Sally R. Dow, Ossining Public Library, NY,
School Library Journal
This atmospheric
bedtime book offers a quiet celebration of nighttime sounds. At dusk
in a picturesque country village, a little girl preparing for bed identifies
after-dark creaks, rustles, and rumbles as “lullabies” sung
by the night. Lilting verse in a second-person voice (“Up you
go / Tippy-toe”) invites children inside cozy domestic scenes,
as the rocking-chair rhythms and soothing words demystify scary unknowns:
“Hear the hissing / Soft as kissing, / From the radiator grate.
. . . The house is singing lullabies.” The text lacks a true story
line, but it conveys a vivid sense of cocooning safety, unpunctured
even in the wake of a “crashing” thunderstorm, and Brooker’s
distinctive collage-and-paint illustrations effectively juxtapose the
bright farmhouse interiors with the increasingly dramatic outdoor scenes.
Some of the verse imagery, such as one image involving a pet cat “shadowboxing
with your nose,” may not speak to children, but kids who harbor
bedtime anxieties will gain courage from the notion of a night filled
with friendly, serenading presences. —Jennifer Mattson, Booklist