Go the Fuck to Sleep | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Adam Mansbach |
Illustrator | Ricardo Cortés |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Children's literature |
Publisher | Akashic |
Publication date | June 2011 |
ISBN | 978-1617750250 |
Go the Fuck to Sleep is a book written by American author Adam Mansbach and illustrated by Ricardo Cortés. Described as a "children's book for adults",[1] it reached No. 1 on Amazon.com's bestseller list a month before its release, thanks to an unintended viral marketing campaign during which booksellers forwarded PDF copies of the book by email.
Contents |
When Adam Mansbach's daughter Vivien was two, she would take up to two hours to fall asleep. Exhausted and exasperated, one night Mansbach posted a note on Facebook, "Look out for my forthcoming children’s book, Go the — to Sleep". Following his post, friends of Mansbach responded enthusiastically, so that Mansbach began writing what was then only a hypothetical book. Mansbach had the illustrations for the picture book done by a friend, illustrator Ricardo Cortés (a contributor to The New York Times[2]), and approached Akashic Books, a book publisher from New York.[1]
Go the Fuck to Sleep was subject to an unintended viral marketing campaign after PDF copies of the book, presumably from advance copies sent to booksellers, were distributed via email. While the book was originally scheduled for release in October 2011, by the end of April the book had hit No. 2 on Amazon.com's bestseller list,[1] and by May 12 the book was No. 1. In the meantime, the publishing date was moved up to June, and the publisher increased its first printing to 150,000 copies.[3] Akashic, which acknowledged the importance of social media in popularizing the book ("it's a miracle from the heavens for us"[1]), is trying to prevent piracy of the book.[4] The rights for the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth were acquired by Canongate.[2] The film rights have been optioned by Fox 2000.[4]
The audiobook company Audible.com has published an audiobook version of Go the Fuck to Sleep, narrated by Samuel L. Jackson.[5] The CD has a total running time of just over 7 minutes, which includes an unabridged reading of the book by Jackson, a brief introductory monologue by Jackson explaining why he decided to record the book, and approximately 2 minutes' worth of introductory and legal matter (spoken copyright notice, etc.).
The cats nestle close to their kittens now.
The lambs have laid down with the sheep.
You’re cozy and warm in your bed, my dear
Please go the fuck to sleep.[6]
Go the Fuck to Sleep is written as a "children's book for adults".[4] While it has the writing style of classic children's bedtime stories, it also includes the parent's profanity as commentary on the tricks used by Mansbach's daughter to avoid having to go to bed.[7]
Positive initial response to the Facebook posts was matched by positive criticism from reviewers. Macy Halford, writing for The New Yorker, said "the book is super funny, and the art, by Ricardo Cortés, is perversely sweet, so sweet and genuine that it made me cringe."[6] Some of the reviewers chimed in from experience, as did Sarah Western Balzer, writing for Here Is The City. After citing a stanza in which the parent comments on the child's supposed thirst ("I know you’re not thirsty. That’s bullshit. Stop lying. / Lie the fuck down, my darling, and sleep."), she says: "It goes on a bit too long, and by the end, he's kind of in a rage. But then, putting a two- or three-year-old to bed can be totally fucking enraging at times."[7]
According to Mansbach, the frustrations he wrote about "are not permissible to talk about. We're not completely honest because we don't want to be bad parents."[3] Macy Halford said this frustration elicits a response particular to modern parents:
Whatever the cause, it is definitely the case that, when faced with a kid who refuses to go to sleep, we get annoyed, like all parents before us, but, rather than just abandoning the child to the dark and telling it that it can go to sleep or stay awake as it likes but it is staying in the bed until morning (remember Proust at the opening of Swann’s Way?), we sit there with it, reading to it and singing to it and distracting it with swirling night lights until it decides it feels like going to sleep, all the while thinking to ourselves, Go the fuck to sleep, kid.[6]
According to Mark Rotella, an editor at Publishers Weekly (and father of two), this is one of the books "that are less earnest about raising your child. They help parents step back and laugh at themselves a bit ... It's more like a parenting book for when the parent is inconsolable in the middle of night and frustrated."[3] The publisher for the UK and the Commonwealth, Canongate, likewise pointed to the book as a parents' book: "This book perfectly captures the familiar and unspoken tribulations of putting your child down for the night. In the process, it opens up a conversation about parenting, charming and enraging as it can be, and chimes a note of solidarity with tired parents everywhere."[2]
As well as the audio book read by Samuel L. Jackson, the book attracted several celebrity readings including by German film director Werner Herzog at the official launch of the book at the New York Public Library.[8] Kevin Pollak, doing a vocal impression of Christopher Walken, read the story on the Kevin Pollak's Chat Show.
As part of a rapidly growing internet meme, Australian actress Noni Hazlehurst read the book to camera in the style she formerly used on the children's television program Play School. She immediately offered to record a reading of the book after being sent a copy by the publisher.[9]
The senior vice president and director of Macmillan Children's Publishing feels the book is a parody of Macmillan's book It's Time to Sleep, My Love by Eric Metaxas and Nancy Tillman, saying "Except for the profanity laced throughout, the book has the same kind of lilting lullaby as Eric's, and the art style is the same as Nancy's." Both books contain very similar illustrations of sleeping tigers.[10] "I really have a number of feelings about this because to me it's about the mainstreaming of vulgarity in American culture," Metaxas has said. "It's funny, but it's just wrong. ... Innocence is constantly punctured, lampooned, and when you have something really, really beautiful like a lullaby for children that there's something that kind of saddens me that we have to turn it into a joke. ... Are people going to look at my book now, and is it going pollute their ability to enjoy what I have written?"[11]
In July 2011, MensHealth.com published a retort to the book: a parody poem written from the child's perspective titled "Get the F**k Out of My Room" and containing parenting advice.[12]