Bedtime for Frances
Bedtime for Frances book cover

Bedtime for Frances

Paperback – Picture Book, September 29, 1995

Price
$7.18
Format
Paperback
Pages
32
Publisher
HarperFestival
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0064434515
Dimensions
7.88 x 0.12 x 10 inches
Weight
4 ounces

Description

It's bedtime for young Frances--an adorable and irrepressible little badger--and everyone is ready but her. At 7:00 p.m. Frances is wide awake and bursting with youthful excitement. She tries every delay tactic she can muster--from demanding extra hugs and kisses to volleying a series of urgent last-minute questions ("May I sleep with my teddy bear?" "May I have my door open?"). She's almost positive there are spiders, giants, and tigers in her room. Any parent will quickly identify with this phenomenon--how the last minutes of the day suddenly become the most action-packed. Garth Williams's illustrations complement Russell Hoban's sweet story perfectly, capturing the endless energy and overactive imagination of Frances, and the waning patience of her exhausted parents. Bedtime for Frances is the perfect goodnight story to tell your wide-eyed children. And never fear, like Frances, they too will eventually, contentedly, drift off to sleep. (Ages 4 to 8) "An enchanting picture book with winsome illustrations and a text in which there is humor and a real sympathy for the maneuvering of the reluctantly retiring young."--" Bulletin of the Center forChildren's Books""Anyone who has ever put a little one to bed will find this delightfully familiar, and the children themselves will enjoy the gentle humor and coziness of the story."--" School Library Journal""Here is the coziest, most beguiling bedtime story in many a day."--" The Kirkus Reviews"(Pointer reviews) The big hand of the clock is at 12.The little hand is at 7.It is seven o' clock.It is bedtime for Frances. It may be bedtime for Frances, but before Frances can sleep, she needs a glass of milk, a kiss from Father, one from Mother, her teddy bear, her doll, another kiss from Father, and another one from Mother. And then there are tigers and giants and ominous cracks in the ceiling to keep her up. Will Frances ever go to sleep? Russell Hoban was the author of A Bargain for Frances , A Baby Sister for Frances , Best Friends for Frances , A Birthday for Frances , and Bread and Jam for Frances , all illustrated by Lillian Hoban. He also wrote Bedtime for Frances , illustrated by Garth Williams. Garth Williams is the renowned illustrator of almost one hundred books for children, including the beloved Stuart Little by E. B. White, Bedtime for Frances by Russell Hoban, and the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder. He was born in 1912 in New York City but raised in England. He founded an art school near London and served with the British Red Cross Civilian Defense during World War II. Williams worked as a portrait sculptor, art director, and magazine artist before doing his first book Stuart Little , thus beginning a long and lustrous career illustrating some of the best known children's books. In addition to illustrating works by White and Wilder, he also illustrated George Selden’s The Cricket in Times Square and its sequels (Farrar Straus Giroux). He created the character and pictures for the first book in the Frances series by Russell Hoban (HarperCollins) and the first books in the Miss Bianca series by Margery Sharp (Little, Brown). He collaborated with Margaret Wise Brown on her Little Golden Books titles Home for a Bunny and Little Fur Family, among others, and with Jack Prelutsky on two poetry collections published by Greenwillow: Ride a Purple Pelican and Beneath a Blue Umbrella . He also wrote and illustrated seven books on his own, including Baby Farm Animals (Little Golden Books) and The Rabbits’ Wedding (HarperCollins). Read more

Features & Highlights

  • This beloved classic bedtime book continues to spark giggles and is a perfect read-aloud at bedtime.
  • It may be bedtime for Frances, but before Frances can sleep, she needs a glass of milk, a kiss from Father, one from Mother, her teddy bear, her doll, another kiss from Father, and another one from Mother. And then there are tigers and giants and ominous cracks in the ceiling to keep her up. Will Frances ever go to sleep?
  • Frances the badger made her debut with this title, long a favorite for the gentle humor of its familiar going to bed ritual.
  • "Here is the coziest, most beguiling bedtime story in many a day." —
  • Kirkus Reviews
  • (starred review)
  • The big hand of the clock is at 12.
  • The little hand is at 7.
  • It is seven o' clock.
  • It is bedtime for Frances.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(505)
★★★★
25%
(210)
★★★
15%
(126)
★★
7%
(59)
-7%
(-59)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Crazy talk

This is a great book, and brilliantly illustrated. The others in the series (like Bread and Jam for Frances) did not use the same artist and have an inferior look. The picture of Frances and her Father brushing their fangs before bed is incredibly cute, and my children think the picture of the father half awake in bed is hilarious. The original black and white illustrations are actually better and more scary-looking. Get an older copy if you can find it.
To the more hysterical people in this forum who think their children are irreparably harmed by the spanking reference: I think what you really don't like is that the father threatens a spanking without being portrayed as some horrible monster. Aren't books supposed to be about learning? Just tell your children that back when this book was written (1960) smacking kids on the butt was a fairly common form of discipline. Tell them that you think this is wrong, although some parents today disagree. If your children are still traumatized, then you better home school them, because they are simply too emotionally fragile to go out in the real world.
83 people found this helpful
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Spanking the badger

Francis was my favorite as a kid - and I love her still. I think it is sad that something as completely wonderful as a Francis book has to spark controversy - but then nowadays what doesn't? Thank God I grew up in the seventies when we were still allowed to have fun, be kids and yes, occassionally, get our little badger bottoms beat if we got cheeky.

VIVA LA FRANCIS!!!
59 people found this helpful
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spanking

I cannot believe that I read multiple reviews before I bought this book and no one mentioned that this discusses spanking (in more than one place in the book)! I was aghast when I was reading it the first time with my 2yr old daughter (shame on me for not reading it alone first) - she does not even know what spanking is but is a highly curious child - the book also describes lots of scary nighttime scenarios in great details - ones that my child never would have come up with on her own (various monsters/animals/etc that are "out to get" francis) - sure, the moral of the story is that none of those things really happen but francis is still scared that, if she goes to talk to mother/father, she will be spanked for not staying in bed - yikes!!!
32 people found this helpful
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I read lots of not "politically correct" stories to my kids

I read *lots* of not "politically correct" books to my child but not this one, b/c of the "spanking issue". It is not at all obvious to me - as an adult - that the father would not really spank her as one reviewer suggests.
For some kids these may be ploys to stay up but for many night-fears are very real. I would not want to introduce more fears (spiders, etc.) for a child sensitive on this issue. I don't think it wd/ help a child over-come them either. (I don't read any of Rosemary Well's "unready" books as I don't want to introduce issues but I think they cd/ help someone overcome them.)
It's not just that this book was written years ago, it is that it seems to have been written without kids in mind. My daughter would not laugh at the mention of spanking!
19 people found this helpful
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This is the ONE Frances book to avoid

I have found most books in this series to be very appealing to little children, and gentle and humorous into the bargain. However, this one could be all too easily misinterpreted! The story is based on the assumption that a child who cannot sleep is deliberately inventing excuses not to do so, and that genuine terror (which is a fact of life for many) that might cause such sleeplessness is imaginary and manipulative on the child's part, and can be dispelled by a fear of punishment.
This would be devastating for a child to believe - but all the more dangerous were such a viewpoint held by a parent who may have a child who has genuine insomnia or night terrors. The rest of the Frances series is worthwhile, but this one is a nightmare.
19 people found this helpful
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Cute classic book & easy fix for spanking reference

This a a classic book I remembered from my childhood and I wanted it for my 21 month old daughter who had outgrown/gotten bored with her current set of books. I was surprised there was a reference to a "spanking" so I just took a black sharpie and blacked out two lines on two separate pages. Simple fix! The story is adorable and my daughter loves it especially the page where Frances gets a piggy back ride- it makes her crack up. For those deeply offended by the spanking reference; it is an old book just use a sharpie and all is good. Happy reading!
17 people found this helpful
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Classic.

I bought the cassette tape of the Frances stories for the car. My 3 year old son loves and I mean LOVES the stories. We bought the books after listening to the tape 200 times. The Frances stories are hilarious. Frances loves but sometimes is annoyed with her baby sister Gloria. Frances insists on eating only bread and jam, only to become utterly bored with this delicacy. Frances' friend Albert is a too the point, absolutely honest child, as most children this age are. Frances loves chompo bars which we now buy for our son. We call the Nestle Crunch bar a chompo and he is quite happy eating it. Frances does not like to go to bed and while it is no longer appropriate to spank a child, which is mentioned in this book, my son, who have never been spanked, does not dwell on this issue that book. Frances also makes up little songs in all of her books which are hilarious. My son whom I thought only loves trucks, cars and trains loves these books and adores the tape. Accordingly, this book comes highly highly recommended by one very satisfied 3 (almost 4) year old boy.
17 people found this helpful
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Disturbing threats of child abuse!

Father badger tells little Frances that if she doesn't stay in bed, she will be spanked. Poor Frances is scared by the noise coming from the window, but stays in bed out of fear. Not a great message to send to children!
14 people found this helpful
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Hate to say it....

but, I have to agree with the person who talked about the spanking in this book. It is a bit too much...also, afraid to encourage my child with new ways to avoid bedtime.
12 people found this helpful
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I hate that spanking reference in the book

WTH? This book is not for today's children. I was horrified when I heard my sister in law reading this book to our children. Spanking a child to get them to go to sleep at night? YIKES!!!
12 people found this helpful