Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
As the sun sets on Manhattan-esque Tired Town, this antic picture book's collaborators (Now Everybody Really Hates Me) portray the city's thoroughly exhausted residents: "The spaghetti is so drained, it can't stand up straight. The eggs are so fried, they can't keep their yolks open," Marx writes. But sleep is a no-go for pale-skinned Nellie Bee Nightly, who sports wide-open eyes and a bright cloud of red hair. "I went to sleep LAST night," she tells her pleading parents, and then devises a long list of pre-bed to-do's . In Chast's comically anxious watercolors, which fairly vibrate with activity, the child persuades doll Naked Nancy to don pj's, gives goldfish Cheesy a makeover, and creates a walkway from her bed to the bathroom. As the child finally lies down ("I'm not sleeping... I'm pretending to be a log"), the bedroom lamp calls a halt to the goings-on, turning itself off with a "KLIK" as Nellie, at last, drifts off. The recalcitrant sleeper is a mainstay of picture books, but this silly soporific by two of contemporary humor's best brings real verve to the event. Ages 3--6. Author's agent: Esther Newberg, ICM Partners. Illustrator's agent: Jin Auh, Wylie Agency. (Oct.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
When the whole bedroom, city, and even planet are bedding down for the night, how long can a wide-eyed child last? The spaghetti may be sighing limply, the popcorn feeling "too pooped to pop," a group of clustered high-rises themselves yawning, and even the sun sinking down with a weary wave to the moon--but Nellie Bee Nightly is wide, wide awake beneath her huge mop of electric red hair. Even her sleepy parents' five-minute warning only forces her to lower the general volume…and maybe lie down on the bed for a moment: "I'm not sleeping," she tells her goldfish, Cheesy. "I'm pretending to be a log." Sure she is. And so, by the time the light has turned itself off and all the books are closed (including an oddly familiar copy of Goodnight, Cheddar), she is "dreaming of a girl who is dreaming of a girl who is dreaming of a girl who is not tired at all." Nighty night. As in all the best bedtime reads, rhythmic language joins somniferous images in both the art and the narrative to weave an effective spell that will send listeners in Nellie Bee's wake straight to dreamland. Nellie and her parents are light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.) No chance of insomnia when even the bedroom floor is snoring. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.