PRESCHOOL
McKinlay, Meg

How to Make a Bedtime

(2) PS Illustrated by Karen Blair. Clad in blue pajamas, an adult bear (who serves as narrator) guides a young human child through their nightly bedtime routine in this comforting, lightly surreal tale. Walking on all fours at first, the bear gives the child a piggyback ride up the stairs and to the tub. McKinlay’s rhyming text is both lulling and lively as the youngster, adorned with a soap-bubble beard, plays with a rubber duckie. A page-turn later, the ursine caregiver has become more anthropomorphized, standing on two legs. The child, now in pajamas and reunited with a briefly lost teddy bear, seems ready to fall asleep. However, amusingly, it is the grownup who keeps stretching out the bedtime process by singing lullabies and reading a multitude of stories about dragons, fairies, trucks, and, in a meta moment, this very book. Blair deftly employs soothing colors in her illustrations, capturing the coziness of this warm ritual; the large bear never feels imposing, and the child’s sleepy body language is sweet. A coda shows the tired adult bear ambling off to a special sleeping spot for the night. A bear hug of a book that could become a bedtime favorite.

RELATED 

Get connected. Join our global community of more than 200,000 librarians and educators.

This coverage is free for all visitors. Your support makes this possible.

We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing.

ALREADY A SUBSCRIBER?