The Dark Wood of the Golden Birds

$22.00
by Margaret Wise Brown

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A Marginalian Editions rediscovery: Goodnight Moon author Margaret Wise Brown’s little-known, philosophical children’s book about love and loss, lushly illustrated by Ofra Amit. In 1950, when the love of her life fell gravely ill, Margaret Wise Brown turned to the solace of storytelling, writing a love letter in the form of a children’s book. The Dark Wood of the Golden Birds brings us into a hushed and numinous world, illuminated by Brown’s signature poetic prose. The story begins near the house of an old man who tends to honeybees and asparagus while living on the edge of a magic forest. Behind his home lies the dark wood—a place from which “there is no return”—where golden birds sing through the night and day. When two orphaned children wander onto his farm, he gives them a home and he warns them never to venture past the edge of the wood. But then the old man falls ill, and the boy decides to brave the unknown in search of the song that he believes can heal him. What secret knowledge will he find there? With lush new illustrations by Ofra Amit and a foreword by Maria Popova, this rediscovered work of uncommon beauty and tenderness lights a path through love and loss for readers of all ages. Praise for Margaret Wise Brown: “Brown was a seductive iconoclast with a Katharine Hepburn mane and a compulsion for ignoring the rules . . . [Her books] were radical for their time . . . Brown helped create a new type of children’s literature that provided both aural and visual feasts. Her books . . . delighted, surprised, and sometimes disturbed.” —Anna Holmes, The New Yorker “ Goodnight Moon , and indeed most of Brown’s exceptional and quirky bibliography, are that perfect marriage of mesmerizing for children and tantalizing for adults. They’re a pleasure to read—precise and rhythmic—words that don’t rhyme still harmonize so beautifully that even the most halting reader can become a poet, telling her child a blessing . . . Brown’s books are stories told through the eyes of children, with equal parts wonder and terror at the infinite world, and a brave yearning for independence.” —Barrie Hardymon, NPR “Brown was solely a writer, not an illustrator. She is known for the lyrical poetry of her texts . . . Goodnight Moon , with its simple, reassuring and cadenced text, elevated the craft of children's book writing to art.” —Edith Kunhardt Davis, The New York Times Book Review “Why has Margaret Wise Brown’s picture book Goodnight Moon sold upward of 48 million copies? . . . Like most of the hundreds of children’s books, poems, and songs Brown wrote during her short life, Goodnight Moon is less a story than an incantation. It summons a cocoon around reader and listener, a sensation of being pulled out of the hurly-burly of the world into a pocket of charmed tranquility . . . Her picture book texts—with their repetitions, impulsive digressions, and eccentric non sequiturs—always sound a bit like a story a child is making up as she goes along, or, rather, like the story that child would be trying to tell if she could only make the words come out right. Many great children’s authors replicate the tone of a beloved grown-up, but Brown, more than any other, speaks with the voice of a child.” —Laura Miller, Slate “Brown was anything but forgettable. She was gorgeous, vivacious and luminous, a firefly in Hepburn slacks. She had stormy relationships with both men and women. One of her favorite pastimes was beagling, a sport that requires chasing hares on foot. She was partial to furs; she preferred writing with quill pens; in her Greenwich Village apartment, she held festive parties for the Birdbrain Club, her friends’ answer to the Algonquin Round Table.” —Jennifer Senior, The New York Times Margaret Wise Brown was a prolific and beloved author of children’s literature, cherished for her unique ability to convey a child's experience and perspective of the world. Best known for her classics such as  Goodnight Moon and  The Runaway Bunny , other perennial favorites by Brown include  My World ;  Christmas in the Barn ;  The Dead Bird ;  North, South, East, West ; and  Good Day, Good Night . Based in Tel Aviv, illustrator Ofra Amit creates visual narratives in response to life events, fictional and non-fictional, self-generated or in collaboration with others. She primarily uses acrylic, graphite, or colored pencils on paper and wood. Her work has earned her awards such as gold medals from the Society of Illustrators and 3x3 Magazine as well as the World Illustration Award for Alternative Publishing. Maria Popova thinks and writes about our search for meaning—sometimes through science and philosophy, sometimes through poetry and children’s books, always through the lens of wonder. She is the creator of The Marginalian (born in 2006 under the name Brain Pickings ), which is included in the Library of Congress permanent digital archive of culturally valuable materials. She has written some

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