From Here to Paternity

A new father's guide to parenthood

Is this a children’s book or a police report?

One thing we did while Bea was pregnant was to read at least a book a day to Matthew. We’ll continue that now that Matthew is born, but one book we’ll be leaving out is the story of a somewhat psychotic mother.

Before I summarize the book, let me explain to you that “Love You Forever” by Robert Munsch is one of the best-selling children’s books of all-time, according to Publishers Weekly . It has sold about 15 million copies. So it’s very popular. Of course, so is Danielle Steele.

Now, some children’s authors are great. Chicago-born Shel Silverstein, who by the way is probably the creepiest-looking children’s book author of all time, is one of our favorites. It’s hard to read “The Giving Tree” without crying.

Some children’s authors are not so great. Probably most annoying of the bad children’s authors today is the celebrity syndrome. No, I don’t want to read children’s books by Madonna, Jamie Lee Curtis, or Maria Shriver. Larry King has a children’s book out, did you know that? It’s called “Daddy Day, Daughter Day.” It’s about how a child handles his parents getting divorced. Presumably, King relied heavily on his own court papers to write it.

“Love You Forever” is the type of children’s book that aims to be touching and instead is a little too touching. As in creepy.

The mother in the story seems OK at the beginning. She enjoys rocking her son to sleep, while singing the following lullaby: “I’ll love you forever, I’ll like you for always, As long as I’m living my baby you’ll be.” Aw, isn’t that cute?

So the boy grows into a toddler, and the mother still rocks and sings to him at night. Then he’s a wild teenager.

But still, late at night, when the teenager falls asleep, the mother sneaks into his room, rocks him and sings to him. A little too Oedipal for my tastes, but hey, we can let it slide.

Then comes the kicker: “That teenager grew,” the book says. “He grew and he grew and he grew. He grew until he was a grown-up man. He left home and got a house across town. But sometimes on dark nights the mother got into her car and drove across town.”

Whoa, hold on there. What? To cap the paragraph off, I swear to God, there is an accompanying illustration of a car driving at night with a ladder tied to the roof. A ladder! The only question I have is whether the mother tied it to the roof whenever she got an urge to visit her son in the middle of the night, or if she always just kept it tied to her roof just in case. Either way, it’s nuts. Let’s continue:

“If all the lights in her son’s house were out, she opened his bedroom window, crawled across the floor, and looked up over the side of his bed. If that great big man was really asleep she picked him up and rocked him back and forth, back and forth, back and forth.”

What that paragraph should have read was:

“If all the lights in her son’s house were out, she opened his bedroom window, crawled across the floor, and looked up over the side of his bed. But his son wasn’t there, because he had heard someone trying to break in through his bedroom window and had hid in the closet with a baseball bat. And because it was so dark out, he didn’t know it was his mother when he came out to confront who he thought was a burglar. And you can imagine what happened next. The End.”

The End.

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Comments

John Burhans says:
Tue, 05/27/2008 - 22:04

Well I see fatherhood hasn't detracted from your abilities as a writer. Hope you are enjoying fatherhood and are getting enough sleep. Maybe I'll make my way west sometime this summer. Never been to Chicago =) Take care. ...Oh and Hi Bea....and Matthew!!!

Brian says:
Tue, 05/27/2008 - 22:09

As a father of two I find comfort in knowing that I am not alone in thinking Shel Silverstein is not only the creepiest children's book author but also one of the best. Try reading "Hug-o-War", that is one of my favorites.

Sylvia Pitocchelli says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 06:26

This is a wonderful idea. This way you can keep us posted as what Matthew is up to. Can't wait to see him. Give my love to Bea and a kiss for Matthew. Oh, and of course you too!
Love,
Auntie Sylvia

Papa says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 06:57

What a great way of keeping us informed about our grandson. Pictures are a good idea as well. It was nice to see the cover of the book, but I would have preferred to see Matthew's expression when you told him about the baseball bat ending. That would have rocked anyone.

Papa
PS. Was it an aluminum or wood bat?

"great" uncle Julio says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 08:06

I guess I'll have to teach Matthew how to swing a bat and please untie that ladder from Bea's car, he's only one week old!
All kidding aside, love the post and can't wait to see you all.

UJ

Bridget Botelho says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 08:40

Its nice to know that parenthood doesnt dull the sense of humor. Brilliant!

Congrats on the little one.

Matt says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 09:55

Reminds me of "Runaway Bunny" a book my mom used to read me about a baby rabbit that tried to get a little space, but mom kept creeping on him, sometimes disguised as a cloud, sometimes a tree, etc.

Matt says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 09:56

Reminds me of "Runaway Bunny" a book my mom used to read me about a baby rabbit that tried to get a little space, but mom kept creeping on him, sometimes disguised as a cloud, sometimes a tree, etc.

Mike Baez says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 10:01

Mark/Bea........Congratulations on the birth of Mathew!!! Happy to know all is going well. This "blog" is a great idea. Stop reading Mathew those creepy children books, find something by Patterson or Baldacci, they seem tame compared to Munsch. By the way do you know if Munsch is "registered"??
My best to you, Bea and Mathew!
Mike

Captain Collins says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 10:42

Which book store are you shopping at: Borders or Borderline-Felonies?

The Citizen says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 11:25

Howdy, folks. Images added!

Stephen Pitocchelli says:
Wed, 05/28/2008 - 14:58

Reminds me of an Italian mother that can't cut the cord.Mark if you mother was living closer she would be sneaking over and feeding you and your son bran muffins or crispy wheat and rasins in the middle of the night.Hope everyone is ok can't wait to meet our new cousin.

Stephen

Shween says:
Tue, 06/03/2008 - 11:32

OK, first off, that math question they make you answer to let you type a response almost got me. But phew, I'm in.
Second of all, love the blog! Keep it coming! :) I cant believe someone wrote a book about a mom crepping into her grown son's house to rock him to sleep. Gross.
I think the author stripped this story idea from an SVU episode I saw once.
oh, and CONGRATS ON MATTHEW!
I cant wait to meet him!

Jeff S says:
Tue, 06/03/2008 - 18:59

Sooo... You are saying this isn't normal? I guess I better have a talk with my mom. For me, she actually takes a plane to California with a ladder as checked luggage. It does creep the wife out now that I think about it.

Later buddy

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About this blog

So many times we've heard the adage that having kids will change your life. Now my wife Bea and I are ready to find out. We're welcoming a new member into our family, a son we plan on naming Matthew, but once he comes out, who knows, maybe we'll name him Dweezil.

Follow us on our exciting adventures as we hit the sack at 8 p.m. to try to get some sleep and then wake up at 10 p.m., midnight, 2 a.m., 4 a.m. and 6 a.m. to feed the baby and change his diaper. Oh, this is going to be great!

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