Review by Booklist Review
A young boy clutching his teddy bear hops aboard the Night-train, night-train, hold-on-tight train to ride a train snaking into the darkness of the countryside. He watches the colors as they pass by: red for the stoplights and switches, blue for a window, white for a star, yellow for the moon, and orange for sparks. Rhyming text announces the into-morning-bright train as the last two wordless double-page spreads show the colorful city and a happy welcome from Mom. The realistic illustrations highlight the award-winning Minor's ability as he depicts the black night morphing into gray and then dawn and bright sunlight. A footnote explains his desire to depict accurately the Dreyfuss Hudson locomotive, the last of a generation of steam engines of the 1930s and '40s. The soft pencil drawings complement the poetic writing as the passing sights blur with the rapid train: Can't stop. Can't stay. Night train, night train, wish-I-might train. It's a perfect story for all train-lovers and a nostalgic nod to those who love the magic of the rails.--Lolly Gepson Copyright 2018 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In chalky grayscale art with occasional splashes of color, a steam train from the 1930s and '40s (identified by Minor as a Dreyfuss Hudson locomotive) rolls along through the night while a boy with a teddy bear watches from the train windows. Burleigh describes the sights, writing in a gentle rhythm that mimics the locomotive's soothing chug: "A barn. A house/ against the sky./ Big blue window/ like an eye." Illustrations show a bird's-eye perspective of the train (two Canada geese fly far above) as well as views of the train emerging from a tunnel, passing stations, and riding over bridges. Finally, the boy and bear peer out the window onto a hazy, dawn-lit cityscape. Wendell's evocative scenes capture the nostalgia of train travel and the thrill of a nighttime journey. Ages 2-5. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 1-A young boy happily travels alone through the night on a steam locomotive in the early to mid 1900s. He is excited by all that he sees, hears, and feels-the black sky filled with white stars, the clanging and dinging of wheels and bells, and the speed of the fast-moving train. There is much to stimulate the senses, and the trip is full of wonder and delight. This rhyming picture book for young children is soothing and cadenced. The lyrical stanzas are short and succinct and printed in a large bold font that accentuates color words. The illustrations, done in graphite with colorful accents added digitally, perfectly set the mood for the midnight journey. The warm colors of the sunrise will envelop readers. Young children who are fascinated with trains will absolutely love this book and ask to read it again and again. The illustrator's brief note about the Dreyfuss Hudson locomotive at the end is a perfect finishing touch. VERDICT A dreamy, lyrical picture book for young train enthusiasts.-Amy Shepherd, St. Anne's Episcopal School, Middleton, DE © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review
On the one hand, its a bedtime book: a little boy and his teddy bear sit cozily in their train seat as they watch the nighttime world go by. But on the other, its a good-morning-to-you book, as the boy, the train, and the new day, by books end, arrive at their destination. While the rhymed text, which generally keeps to an appropriately click-clacking rhythm, stays with the boys experience (Mountain. Tunnel. / Darker dark. / Wheels on iron. / Orange spark), the graphite illustrations portray the train and the scenery from all kinds of perspectives. Whether showing us the train from the viewpoint of wild geese high above or from down the track at an impending stoplight, glowing red, the drawings are always dramatically and expertly drafted. A (somewhat tricky; youll have to practice) refrain alternates with the descriptive verses; its variations on the title (Night train, night train, go-left-go-right train) allow Minor space for glorious renditions of the train in motion, each time headed straight to the page-turn. The book begins in black and white, but color comes in from neon signs and occasional houses and as day dawns (nice sunrise there, Wendell), when the boy and his bear and his mother, attired in 1940s fashions, are off the train and sauntering down the platform. An illustrators note describes his model, the Dreyfuss Hudson locomotive, the last of a generation of steam engines. roger Sutton (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A passenger train travels to the city overnight in this rhyming picture book. On a wordless opening page, a young rider, seated near their teddy, looks out the window as the train travels in the dark. The train (pulled by a Dreyfuss Hudson steam locomotive) takes off, and then rhythmic words chug along: "Train ride! / Bump-bump. / Chug-chug. Slow. / Faster. Faster. / Off we go." The following double-page spread introduces the refrain: "Night train, night train, hold-on-tight train." Burleigh replicates the initial meter on the next page as the rider takes in their surroundings. As with the other verses, the refrain changes slightly along with the scenery. The visual structuretwo full-page panels bordered by white followed by a double-page spreadrepeats in sync with the rhythm of the text. Together, the words and pictures help this train run smoothly. One by one, isolated colors (black, red, blue, etc.) pop into the night world, highlighted in the color of the type that spells out the color's name and in some feature in the illustration. Some of the instances of color are quite subtle (for instance, the text's "big blue window" is actually quite small, as it's viewed from a distance), but, at the same time, such details add to the value of the nightscape. Minor's black-and-white graphite illustrations intimately capture the shadows and shapes of the train's night ride, ending in a beautiful full-color double-page spread as night turns to day and the ride is completed, the child and their mother, both white, alighting on the platform.A nostalgic, Depression-era nocturne for train lovers. (illustrator's note) (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.