Surprisingly, Sylvia Plath's only book for young children, written in the early sixties and published after her death, is nearly as intense as her poetry. Her playful and imaginative take on the classic bed time story begins with a statement about beds---that they should NOT be ordinary, that the best beds are different. "Not just a white little, tucked-in-tight little, nighty-night little, turn-out-the-light little bed." Indeed not! We then go on a night time adventure on a rocket bed, a snack bed, and an elephant bed among a few whimsical others.
I can however see that her voice seems a bit forced, like she's trying to keep her tone light, and reign in her intensity, which can make some of the rhymes seem stretched and stilted. Other than that small issue (and some antiquated language), which probably only glares out at me because I have been reading Plath's other work for quite a number of years, I have no complaints about this delightful book, which I ordered from my local main library. The illustrations done by Emily Arnold McCully are wonderfully done and deserve a review all their own, but do not feel qualified to give, as I am not much of visual artist, nor am I an art critic. Do pick up the book and read it to a little one, or surprise a Sylvia Plath scholar!