About the Author:
Ruth Freeman Swain has been a preschool instructor and taught creative movement. She is the author of two books illustrated by Cat Bowman Smith, "Bedtime!," a National Council of Social Studies Notable book, and "Hairdo!: What We Do and Did to Our Hair,": which Booklist praised as "an entertaining, informative picture book," and which Kirkus Reviews call "a cut above." A native of Pennsylvania, Ms. Swain now lives in Maine.
From Publishers Weekly:
Though books about bedtime abound, young readers are unlikely to find many books like this one, about the beds themselves. Swain's picture book debut takes a quirky, informative look at beds through the ages. In an inviting storytelling style, she spans time and geography to describe the furniture on which people sleep, from the wooden bed frames used in ancient Egypt to large communal beds of 16th-century Europe and South American hammocks. Along the way, she frequently makes comparisons between historic and modern sleeping quarters and also provides some fun facts, pointing out, for example, the unusual places where truck drivers, astronauts and mountain climbers catch some shut-eye. But Swain's attempt to cover so much territory in a traditional picture book format results in a few awkward transitions in the text. Smith's (Nine for California) cheery watercolors capture both well-researched details and the illustrator's sunny sense of humor (kids will chuckle at King Louis XIV jumping on one of his 413 magnificent beds). No matter where they are tucked in, her many slumbering subjects look cozy indeed. Ages 4-8. (Sept.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.