An Indian family embarks on an overnight trip on a sleeper train.
They settle into their cabin, pull open their bunk beds, and get ready for bed. While Mum and Dad quickly drift off, their child is too excited to sleep. But the young narrator has an idea: “I thought it might help if I tried to think of all the different places I have slept.” The youngster remembers slumbering in a tent in a field, sleeping over at Grandma and Granddad’s house, and staying overnight at the hospital for an operation—an especially scary experience. Though the child seems to be “the only person on the train not sleeping, except the driver,” eventually the rocking train lulls the little one to sleep. At last the train reaches its destination, and the family spends time with friends in a different city. And now, the child has a new memory to rely on should sleep prove elusive again. This comforting story creates a circle of love and protection around the child and the family, who present as Sikh. The vibrant, stylized illustrations make use of bright pinks, blues, yellows, and reds and depict everyday objects that many South Asian families will recognize. Images of the family relaxing and spending time together add to the homey atmosphere.
A soothing bedtime story sure to get readers thinking about their own favorite bedtime locations.
(Picture book. 4-8)