by Barbara Joosse (Author) Kevin Barry (Illustrator)
It's a snowy winter's night in the city. The bedroom lights are off and it's time to settle down to sleep.
But wait! What's that?
Strange and scary sounds are coming from the streets outside. What can be making these sounds? Are monsters coming? Don't worry! All will soon be revealed.
These monsters aren't here to frighten. They are here to help.
Through rhyming text and atmospheric artwork, young readers can first imagine what might be making these mysterious sounds.
Then a turn of the page identifies the actual "monsters"--vehicles and equipment like snowplows and garbage trucks--that help keep a city running smoothly. And now that all is well, it's time to go to bed! This clever concept is based on a bedtime ritual the author used with her own grandchildren to assuage their nighttime fears.
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Monsters that huff, claw, growl, and gnaw prowl a street at night... or do they? Joosse blends the anxiety, imagination, and mystery that can accompany a child's experience of bedtime fears in this reassuring exploration of the nocturnal rhythms a city keeps. Tucked into bed on a wintry night, a child hears frightening noises outside. Once the child grabs "Papa,/ goggles,/ shield,/ and sword," the pale-skinned duo look out the window. The eerie noises emanating from what first appear to be fantastically fearsome creatures actually come from "helping monsters" that keep the city safely humming. A tigerlike beast turns out to be a snowplow, and others are revealed to be a garbage truck and a city bus. Barry's primarily b&w images toggle between eerie and realistic renderings, all illuminated by streetlamps, headlights, and moonglow. It's a look at things that go bump in the night that may help some readers to rest easier. Human characters are portrayed with various skin tones. Ages 6-7. (Aug.)
Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.