Goodnight Moon author’s poetry to be published posthumously
Brooklyn-born writer Margaret Wise Brown is best known for her childrens book Goodnight Moon, a classic thats inspired many parodies, including the delightful Goodnight Dune. She was only 42 when she died in 1952, leaving behind what Publishers Weeklys Sally Lodge describes as a treasure trove of unpublished manuscripts, including a collection of lullabies thats being published by Sterling Childrens Books this month.
Lodge writes that the songs/poems that comprise the book were discovered by Amy Gary, co-founder of the Alabama-based publisher WaterMark, who visited the home of Browns sister, Roberta Rauch, on the advice of several librarian friends (moral of the story: listen to your friends, especially when theyre librarians). Visiting Rauch in 1990, Gary wasnt expecting to come across something that shed be able to publish. I asked Roberta if any of her sisters unpublished manuscripts existed, she told PW, even though I assumed that if they had, someone would have already found and published them. But Rauch informed her that there was a trunk (a literal treasure chest!) in her barn attic with a collection of manuscripts, including the unpublished songs.
Gary took on the task of developing them into a collection, with Rauchs permission, which turned out to be a lengthy process, since Brown would often use phrases that had appeared in her published works. Researching the rights to her lyrics took many years, Gary explained. It wasnt until 2011 that she was able to place the book with a publisher, choosing Sterling in part because of its 2007 edition of Puff the Magic Dragon.
The new book is packaged with a CD of the lullabies performed by Emily Gary and Tom Proutt. It features illustrations contributed by twelve artists, each one paired with a different song by art director Meredith Harte.
http://www.mhpbooks.com/goodnight-moon-authors-poetry-to-be-published-posthumously/