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Max and Milo Go to Sleep by H. & E. Long
Author(s) -
Brittany Gregson
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the deakin review of children s literature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1927-1484
DOI - 10.20361/g2xp4f
Subject(s) - brother , nephew and niece , feeling , legend , psychology , comics , psychoanalysis , art , art history , literature , sociology , law , social psychology , anthropology , political science
Long, Heather and Ethan.  Max and Milo Go to Sleep.  New York: S&S/Aladdin, 2013. Print. In Max and Milo Go to Sleep , we read about two brothers who share a room. Max, the elder and very sleepy brother, is kept up by his younger brother Milo’s antics. Milo has tried counting sheep and still can’t sleep. Like any younger brother would, Milo calls to Max for help. Max suggests that Milo read a book but of course he doesn’t do that quietly, nor is that the last problem Milo has that night. After a series of problems, Max snaps. He can’t take Milo and his nightly sleep aversion routine. Mid lecture, Max realizes that Milo has finally gone to sleep. But will Max be able to catch his Zzzzs that night? This book is one of those children’s books that the parent may enjoy more than the child. It is written like a comic book so the cartoonish illustrations are crucial to the story. Max and Milo both have huge expressive faces which make it quite easy to pick up how each brother is feeling. Parents will surely sympathize and laugh out loud at Max’s exasperation with Milo who “never really [tries] to go to sleep.”   A lot of detail was put into the pictures, for example Max had The Legend of Sleepy Hollow on his bedside table. My five-year old nephew thought that this book was ‘awesome and so funny’. Max and Milo is likely to become a bedtime favourite. Highly recommended:  4 stars out of 4 Reviewer: Brittany Gregson Brittany Gregson is a graduate of MacEwan University’s Library and Information Technology program.She works at the Family and Community Resource Centre, Alberta Children’s Hospital as the Child Health Information Specialist. Other than reading she enjoys both baking and crafting.

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