Once upon a time there was...A telephone. A red balloon. A comb and a brush, and bowl full of mush. Not much of a story, you say? So said Anne Carroll Moore, the children's librarian at the New York ...
In 1996, the New York Public Library, which did not add the book to its own collection until 1972, included "Goodnight Moon" on its Books of the Century list. Today, "Goodnight Moon" has sold a total ...
It’s the first book many babies receive as a gift, and one of the few that parents will keep when their child is grown. Why does this 75-year-old story have such staying power? Credit... Supported by ...
Without mystery, hero, handsome prince or fairy godmother — Goodnight Moon has now lulled millions of children to sleep, in more than two dozen languages, for 75 years. Written by Margaret Wise Brown, ...
Goodnight Moon is part of the fabric of baby lit–and for good reason. It’s both heartwarming and frankly, it slaps. Chances are you’ve read it so many times you can recite it by memory while half ...
Remember the joy involved in reading Goodnight Moon at bedtime? The cozy green room, the big red balloon, the little old lady whispering "hush?" Well, get ready to relive that magic IRL, because the ...
Beloved by generations, "Goodnight Moon" inspired this storybook hotel suite brought to life by Marriott Bonvoy’s Sheraton Hotels & Resorts. Step into the Goodnight Moon Suite at the Sheraton Boston ...
Hotel guests in Boston this winter can say goodnight in a great green room, with a telephone, red balloon, and a picture of the cow jumping over the moon. The Sheraton Boston Hotel in the Back Bay ...