How One Librarian Tried to Squash “Goodnight Moon”
There鈥檚 a reason this classic is missing from the New York Public Library鈥檚 list of the 10 most-checked-out books of all time.
By Dan Kois

Anne Carroll Moore was appointed New York Public Library’s first “superintendent of work with children” in 1906.
On Monday, January 13, 2020, the New York Public Library, celebrating its 125th anniversary, released a list of the 10 most-checked-out books in the library鈥檚 history. The list is headed by a children鈥檚 book鈥擡zra Jack Keats鈥 masterpiece The Snowy Day鈥攁nd includes five other kids鈥 books. The list also includes a surprising addendum: One of the most beloved children鈥檚 books of all time didn鈥檛 make the list because for 25 years it was essentially banned from the New York Public Library. Goodnight Moon, by Margaret Wise Brown, would have made the Top 10 list and might have topped it, the library notes, but for the fact that 鈥渋nfluential New York Public library children鈥檚 librarian Anne Carroll Moore disliked the story so much when it was published in 1947 that the library didn鈥檛 carry it 鈥 until 1972.鈥 Who was Anne Carroll Moore, and what was her problem with the great Goodnight Moon?
As it turns out, this footnote on the NYPL鈥檚 anniversary list hints at a rich, surprising story of power, taste, educational philosophy, and the crumbling of traditional gatekeepers. Moore was appointed the NYPL鈥檚 first 鈥渟uperintendent of work with children鈥 in 1906, at a time when the very idea of children even being allowed into libraries was brand-new. (Children who couldn鈥檛 read yet would gain nothing from a library, the theory went, and older children might be corrupted by all the trashy adult books.) Moore oversaw the beautiful Central Children鈥檚 Room in the library鈥檚 flagship building on Fifth Avenue. As Leonard S. Marcus writes in his biography of Margaret Wise Brown, Moore became perhaps the leading figure in popular children鈥檚 books in the first half of the century, and many of her methods seem strikingly modern. She scheduled scores of story hours for children; she encouraged any children who could sign their names to check out a book; she trained librarians drawn from a diverse range of backgrounds and then sent them out into a city of immigrant children, preaching the gospel of reading.
She was also a tastemaker whose NYPL-branded lists of recommended children鈥檚 books could make or break a book鈥檚 fortunes. 鈥淥ther libraries around the country looked to the NYPL, and if she didn鈥檛 buy it, they didn鈥檛 buy it,鈥 explains Betsy Bird, a children鈥檚 book blogger and longtime NYPL librarian who鈥檚 now at the Evanston Public Library in Illinois. 鈥淚f Anne Carroll Moore didn鈥檛 like a book, she could effectively kill it.鈥 Marcus writes that 鈥渆ditors, authors, and illustrators routinely stopped by to visit with Miss Moore and seek her counsel on their works in progress鈥; she supposedly had a custom-made rubber stamp reading 鈥淣OT RECOMMENDED FOR PURCHASE BY EXPERT,鈥 and she was not afraid to use it.
But Miss Moore鈥檚 taste was particular. She loved Beatrix Potter and The Velveteen Rabbit and was a steadfast believer in the role of magic and innocence in children鈥檚 storytelling. This put her in opposition to a progressive wave then sweeping children鈥檚 literature, inspired by the early childhood research of the Cooperative School for Student Teachers, located on Bank Street in Greenwich Village. The Bank Street School, as it became known, was also a preschool and the teacher training facility where Margaret Wise Brown enrolled in 1935. This progressive wave was exemplified by the Here and Now Story Book, created by Bank Street鈥檚 leading light Lucy Sprague Mitchell in 1921. A collection of simple tales set in a city, focusing on skyscrapers and streetcars, it was a rebuttal to Moore鈥檚 鈥渙nce upon a time鈥 taste in children鈥檚 lit.
Anne Carroll Moore was not a fan of Margaret Wise Brown鈥檚 work. Brown, with her Bank Street training, was 鈥渓ooking at the mind of a child, operating at the level that a child understands,鈥 says Bird. 鈥淪he was trying to get down on their level, whereas Anne Carroll Moore placed herself above the children鈥檚 level, handing what she viewed as the best of the best down to them.鈥

Margaret Wise Brown
By the time Brown鈥檚 most famous book was published in 1947, Moore had ostensibly retired, though鈥攁s Jill Lepore noted in the New Yorker in a story about Moore鈥檚 war with another children鈥檚 classic, Stuart Little鈥攕he still essentially ran the children鈥檚 section, leading department meetings even when her put-upon acolyte and successor, Frances Clarke Sayers, tried changing the meeting room at the last minute. Margaret Wise Brown wanted librarians to adopt Goodnight Moon; she even blurred out the udder of the cow who jumped over the moon to avoid offending those 鈥淚mportant Ladies.鈥 But it certainly wasn鈥檛 enough for Moore, or Sayers, or the NYPL: Marcus notes that 鈥渋n a harshly worded internal review, the library dismissed the book as an unbearably sentimental piece of work.鈥 And so the book wasn鈥檛 purchased by the New York Public Library, and while children were encouraged to check out all kinds of books from the library鈥檚 extensive children鈥檚 department, Goodnight Moon was not one of them.
As Bird notes in a fascinating blog post, the legacy of Anne Carroll Moore is one that many children鈥檚 librarians struggle with. 鈥淪he is the quintessential bun-in-the-hair shushing librarian,鈥 says Bird. 鈥淪he鈥檚 such an easy villain.鈥 Her discriminating book recommendations delivered from on high represent the exact opposite of the credo pledged by most children鈥檚 librarians today: that the library鈥檚 role is to provide the widest possible array of titles and allow children to find the books they love. Yet Moore did more than anyone else in the first half of the 20th century to encourage children of all races and incomes to read. To adopt a 21st-century rallying cry, Bird notes, Anne Carroll Moore 鈥渨as all about diverse books waaaaaay before anyone else was.鈥
Perhaps in part because of Moore鈥檚 blacklisting, Goodnight Moon wasn鈥檛 an immediate commercial success; by 1951 sales had dropped low enough that the publisher was considering putting it out of print. So no one was pressuring the NYPL to stock the book, least of all Brown, who died in 1952. (Recovering from surgery for an ovarian cyst in a hospital in France, she playfully kicked her leg up, cancan-style, to show a nurse how well she was feeling; the action dislodged an embolism from a vein in her leg, which traveled to her brain, killing her nearly instantly.) The book regained popularity in the 1950s and 1960s as chains like Waldenbooks and B. Dalton grew; soon, libraries ceded their position as the primary buyers of children鈥檚 books to parents. By 1972, the book鈥檚 25th anniversary, Goodnight Moon was nearing 100,000 copies sold a year. Perhaps it was that anniversary, speculated the NYPL鈥檚 Lynn Lobash, that spurred the library finally to stock the book.
Since 1972, Goodnight Moon has been checked out about 100,000 times from New York City libraries, placing it somewhat below the No. 10 book on the list, The Very Hungry Caterpillar. But, says the NYPL, it鈥檚 rising fast. No doubt at the library鈥檚 150th anniversary, Goodnight Moon will have surpassed some of the more dated titles on the list, like How to Win Friends and Influence People. Sorry, Anne Carroll Moore. Margaret Wise Brown won this round.
This article originally appeared in Slate magazine (Jan. 31, 2020) and is used with permission. 漏2020 The Slate Group LLC.
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Margaret Wise Brown Prize Celebrates Fifth Year

Each year, Hollins invites nominations for the prize from children鈥檚 book publishers from across the country and around the world. A three-judge panel consisting of established picture book authors reviews the nominations and chooses a winner.
Hollins established the Margaret Wise Brown Prize in Children鈥檚 Literature as a way to pay tribute to one of its best-known alumnae and one of America鈥檚 most beloved children鈥檚 authors. The cash prizes are made possible by an endowed fund created by James Rockefeller, Brown鈥檚 fianc茅 at the time of her death.
The engraved medal presented to the winners was conceived by award-winning sculptor and painter Betty Branch 鈥79, M.A.L.S. 鈥87.
Margaret Wise Brown graduated from Hollins in 1932 and went on to write Goodnight Moon, The Runaway Bunny, and other children鈥檚 classics before she died in 1952.
2020听聽聽 Wendy Meddour won for Lubna and Pebble, illustrated by Daniel Egn茅us and published by Dial Books.
2019聽聽聽 John Sullivan won for his debut children鈥檚 book, Kitten and the Night Watchman, illustrated by Taeeun Yoo and published by Simon & Schuster.
2018聽聽聽 Elaine Magliaro won for her debut children鈥檚 book, Things to Do, illustrated by Catia Chen and published by Chronicle Books.
2017聽聽聽 Adam Rex won for School鈥檚 First Day of School, illustrated by Christian Robinson and published by Roaring Brook Press.
2016聽聽聽 Phil Bildner, the author of more than 20 children鈥檚 books, won for Marvelous Cornelius, illustrated by John Parra and published by Chronicle Books.