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Children's book reviews: The Sun's Asleep Behind the Hill, by Mirra Ginsburg

by Moe Zilla

Created on: March 24, 2010

In 1982 Mirra Ginsburg adapted an Armenian song into a beautiful bedtime picture book. "The Sun's Asleep Behind the Hill" reads like a lullaby, describing the arrival of a peaceful evening as it's greeted by the creatures around the world. Simple words are written in bold letters - it could easily be a child's very first book. But best of all, all the sentences rhyme!



"The sun shone in the sky all day,
the sun grew tired and went away..."

The breeze notes that the sun sleeps behind a hill, signaling "It's time that I was still." The leaves notice the sleeping breeze, and decide they'll also take a rest. Soon the birds notice the resting leaves and also relax, and a nut-gathering squirrel notices the relaxing birds, and curls up in its hollow branch. Then a mother with her child notes the sleeping squirrel, and then carries home her own sleeping child.

"It's time for you to rest."

But the story holds one last surprise - one creature that discovers that all the world's asleep. An orange moon creeps into the sky, and declares "I am alone!" The sun is asleep, the breeze is still, the bird is quiet, and the leaves sleep over the lake. Even the child is at rest, and the moon survey's the empty landscape in a grand, silvery drawing.

"I am alone. And I will shine with a silver light
in the wide, silent sky all night."

Paul O. Zelinsky contributed illustrations that are colorful and detailed. As the sun sets, there's a cat on a fence, picnickers leaving the grass, and a man rowing a boat across a shadowy lake. Zelinsky uses pastel colors, and his colorful impressionism gives the book a friendly tone - even as the colors turn darker to show sleepers on a quiet night. Drawings of nature suggest a calm dusk, as a pink sunset reflects in the grey-blue of a lake. And sometimes Zelinsky's careful illustrations seem to capture the magic of life, like the drawing where leaves of several trees are lit by the sun as their branches bend in the wind...

"The leaves grew tired, they do not shake,
they are asleep over the lake."

The real purpose of a bedtime story is to lull a child to sleep. And this book seems like it could accomplish that with both relaxing pictures and a simple story that repeats the same words - all about how it's time to rest. The book's cover calls it a "just-right bedtime book." And I'd have to agree.

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