Jolly Bedtime Tales for Big & Little People
by
Book Details
About the Book
Jolly Bedtime Tales for Big & Little People is a collection of ten delightfully wicked stories dealing with the fortunes and misfortunes of the pseudonymous author’s family members. Not since Slovenly Peter have naughty children (and heedless adults) been so expertly skewered, beginning with the hilarious history of “The Little Boy Who Blew His Legs Off,” which never fails to elicit uninhibited laughter from juvenile audiences, despite what some prudish adults may think of it. Other tales include the “Curious Case of Crybaby Christopher,” who screams so hard that, in a reversal of the Pinocchio legend, he turns into a girl; the equally metamorphic mystery of “Princess” Nina, who goes in search of a frog prince and gets more (or less, depending on one’s viewpoint) than she expects; and the unsettling story of Grandma Hartley, whose dining on Santa’s favorite reindeer Rudolph has such cataclysmic results. As for Grandpa Hartley, after enduring all this and more with his customary forbearance, he is carried by great Zeus himself to the summit of
These and all the other tales in the collection are illustrated with the sly watercolors of the artist John Bobbish, and the book begins and ends with two brief poems by Grandpa. Although not always “politically correct,” Jolly Bedtime Tales for Big & Little People—as its title promises—is aimed squarely at fun-loving “children of all ages.”
About the Author
AFTER GRADUATING summa cum laude from Morganza, the exclusive prep school in western Pennsylvania, Grandpa Hartley went on to earn degrees at several of the nation’s leading universities—Columbia, Yale, and eventually Harvard, where he received a combination doctorate in business and religion. His incredibly diverse background includes work as a biochemist and medical researcher in the early space program; a distinguished career as a university professor of classics and theatre studies; publication of nearly two hundred books and articles; and over half a century as a well-known outdoorsman and mountaineer, whose numerous achievements include the first interview with the Yeti or Abominable Snowman, whom Grandpa persuaded to marry his favorite grandchild Jennifer (an act for which he was roundly denounced by PETA). As related in the final chapter of his Jolly Bedtime Tales, Grandpa presently resides on
John Bobbish, the book’s illustrator, continues to work as an artist and teacher of drawing and painting in