99% Invisible - 415- Goodnight Nobody [rebroadcast]

Episode Date: May 31, 2023

The unlikely battle between the creator of the New York Public Library children's reading room and the beloved children’s classic Goodnight Moon.Goodnight Nobody ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars. January of 2020 marked the New York Public Library's 125th anniversary. And to celebrate, they published a list of the 10 most checked out books in the history of the library. And there's one thing about the list that you really can't help but notice right away. That's our producer Joe Rosenberg. It's made up almost entirely of children's books.
Starting point is 00:00:31 So the snowy day, the cat in the hat, where the wild things are, Charlotte's web. Dan Coise is a writer, it's late. To kill a mockingbird, arguably a children's book, also on the list. Well, I mean, I like it righty as a kid, I'm not sure. Anyway. Fine, but come on. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's stoned. The very hungry caterpillar.
Starting point is 00:00:52 The only books, quote unquote, for adults, on this list are 1984, Fahrenheit 451, and how to win friends and influence people by Dale Carnegie, love that that book is still on there. All told, seven of the ten books were for kids. Taking together they were checked out over two and a half million times. But the very bottom of the list, Dan Coise knows this little footnote. And it just said, you know, fun fact, good night moon.
Starting point is 00:01:21 Of course one of the most beloved children's books of all time was not on the list. The footnote was almost like an apology, because if there's one title that you'd expect to be on the list, it's Good Night Moon. The famous picture book where the little toddler rabbits says Good Night to all the objects in its massive bedroom. Good night socks, Good Night clocks, Good Night, you know, Moon. I was really surprised not only because I know of its popularity, but because I have always sort of viewed it as a kind of platonically perfect children's picture book for the exact moment in the day when you most need a picture book.
Starting point is 00:01:59 That moment when you need your child to fall asleep, so you can finally take a shower or watch TV or do anything except parent. Still, the book had only been checked out about half as many times as the lowest drinking book on the list, but it wasn't because of lack of interest. No, it was because of one person. According to the New York Public Library, an influential children's librarian at the library, had disliked the story so much when it was published in 1947 that the library didn't even carry the book until 1972. And this librarian's name, according to the press release, was Anne Carroll Moore.
Starting point is 00:02:40 Anne Carroll Moore was the head children's librarian at the New York Public Library for pretty much the whole first half of the 20th century. And from nearly three decades, she single-handedly kept Good Night Moon out of the entire library system. The children's librarian could just say no New York Public Library will stock this book and the idea of like children everywhere in the world growing to love Good Night Moon except for in New York City where they grew up sad and Good Night Moonless just seemed bananas to me. Now at this point, if you're imagining your stereotypical rule-mongering moralizing librarian giving you the stink eye, Dan Koyce says you don't need to imagine it.
Starting point is 00:03:20 There are pictures. At the time that there were finally photographs of her taken, she was an older lady who looked like the quintessential bun in the hair, shushing librarian, who's a really easy villain. But as Dan would find out, Moore was and remains a very complicated historical figure. Because long before she became a villainous banner of books, and Carol Moore was a hero of children's literature, who left the world with one undeniably good thing. She pretty much single-handedly invented
Starting point is 00:03:53 the children's library. Julepore is a professor of history at Harvard and a staff writer for the New Yorker who wrote about Moore for the magazine. And she says that perhaps no single person has ever done more to get books into the hands of children. And she did so by creating a place for kids to read. So when you go into your neighborhood public library and there is a thing
Starting point is 00:04:15 called the children's room and they have potted plants there and they have toys and they have a cozy rug and a rocking chair and they have story hours and they have fun art on the walls. Like all that stuff was invented by Anne Carole Moore. Today with all the emphasis we place on instilling kids with love of reading, it's hard to imagine your local public library without a children's reading room. But LaPore says that before Moore came along,
Starting point is 00:04:42 children weren't even allowed to enter the one place, they would be sure to find a book. Kids really couldn't go to libraries. Libraries were for grownups. The late 19th century saw some of the first public libraries being built in America. This was an age in which there was a surge in support for government-funded progressive institutions intended for the betterment of all. Or in the case of libraries, the betterment of everyone except children.
Starting point is 00:05:08 You had to be, I think, 14 or 16 in most places and in most places you had to be a boy. And the Brooklyn Public Schools had a policy that children below the third grade do not read well enough to profit from the use of library books. The thinking went that if you were too young to read, obviously there would be no need for you to go to the library. What good would that do to you? And if you were old enough to read that you were still a child going into a library which was full of trashy, romance novels and westerns would just corrupt your mind. And so certainly there's no reason for you to go into a library either.
Starting point is 00:05:40 Gillipore says that for the children of the wealthy and middle classes, who often had their own small book collections at home, being banned from libraries wasn't really a problem. But it left the children of the poor with virtually no access to literature. It's completely bound up with class discrimination, right? Because it's not really till the 1920s that you have a very strict regulation against child labor. So the children of the poor are working, like they're not reading, they're not even learning to read.
Starting point is 00:06:08 But then at the turn of this entry, Anne Carole Moore, the crusty old librarian who hated Good Night Moon, came along and flipped the purpose of the library on its head. So I was very surprised recently to read in an article someone described her as the quintessential librarian with the bun in her hair and shushing the children when in actual fact that was exactly what she did not do. Jan Pinbaro is an editor in Children's Book author, and she says that in the 1890s, more
Starting point is 00:06:40 it was the most vocal and energetic among a small group of young progressive librarians who'd begun experimenting with a radical idea. What if they finally let kids into a library, stocked an area with children's books, and then made that area just for kids? And what she was trying to do, and this is what's really important, she was trying to provide a childhood to working class kids. She was trying to give them all the luxury and leisure of having a space with books that are made
Starting point is 00:07:08 for them to be able to read so that they would have, what we would think of now is, you know, way to address an achievement gap and she was trying to level that field. And in 1906, more got the chance to run this experiment on an unrivaled scale. The New York Public Library was building its iconic main branch at the corner of 42nd Street in Fifth Avenue, and it would feature a dedicated children's reading room that
Starting point is 00:07:34 would be designed, stocked, and run by more. And there are just these incredible photographs of that children's room when it opened in 1911. The photos depict one of the earliest public spaces designed exclusively for kids. More started by borrowing the idea of kid-sized tables and chairs from kindergarten, but she took the concept even further. She had benches, windows seats, built at the bottoms of the windows, giant windows, but they're like pint size.
Starting point is 00:08:05 Like if you were five years old, you could sit in those window seats and your feet would touch the floor. More especially wanted to provide poor kids from the tenements, access to the beauty of the natural world. So she installed pink floor tiles to catch the light coming through the windows
Starting point is 00:08:20 and then filled the room with shell collections, butterflies, and dozens of bowls of freshly cut flowers. And these children, a lot of them were start for nature, and they would line up for the chance to look at and smell the flowers when she brought them in. More took down the silent signs. The library was now space for puppet shows and musical performances and story hours, featuring stories in multiple languages, so that the children of immigrants who did not yet read or speak English would still feel welcome. But most importantly, more filled the shelves of the new reading room, with hundreds and eventually thousands of children's books, not locked in a cabinet or in a rich kid's nursery,
Starting point is 00:09:00 but out in the open, for any child to pick up, leave through, and read. And if a child liked the expensive book they were holding, they could take it home. The only requirement was that they signed their name in a big black ledger alongside a pledge. When I write my name in this book, I promise to take good care of the books I use in the library and at home and to obey the rules of the library.
Starting point is 00:09:24 And it was a kind of sanctified moment. of the books I used in the library and at home and to obey the rules of the library. And it was a kind of sanctified moment. The pledge turned the process of checking out a book into a child's first act of citizenship. The room was an overnight success. Rich and poor kids alike flocked to the library. And more began training librarians to establish new reading rooms throughout New York. Including Nella Larson, the prominent African-American writer who created the first children's room in Harlem. By 1913, just two years after the children's room opened, more could boast that one third of the volumes borrowed from the city's branch libraries were children's books.
Starting point is 00:10:01 And children's rooms were springing up even more quickly in the rest of the country. By the end of the 1920s, by one estimate, there were perhaps as many as 1,500 children's rooms in the US alone. And her reach was really worldwide. And there are places and countries where people would say, well, if you walk into that library, you'll realize that that was touched by Anne Carole Moore.
Starting point is 00:10:25 The spread of Moore's reading remodel was also instrumental in establishing children's literature as literature. Moore convinced the library going public that books like the Velveteen Rabbit, Winnie the Pooh, and the works of Beatrix Potter were in fact art. In the 1920s, saw an explosion ined children's departments at major publishers, and prizes like the Newbury Medal, which more helped create. So for multiple generations of New York children, Anne Carole-Mar was the reason that the libraries became places that fostered their love of storytelling and love of books. But all this came with a crucial caveat, which is that Ankerl Moore's vision was never limited to simply creating a place for kids to read.
Starting point is 00:11:09 From the beginning, it was also about what counted as children's literature. So even as she was letting more children than ever into the library, Moore was keeping all kinds of books out. And as the head of the children's department in the New York Public Library, she was in charge of choosing the books that the children's departments of all those libraries acquired. And the NYPL's purchases often set the standard for libraries nationwide. Back then, children's titles were only published once a year in fall. So every year, around the same time, more would make a list of her favorite upcoming books. And that list was used by other librarians across the country.
Starting point is 00:11:46 So if you ran a library in Dubuque, Iowa, and you were trying to figure out, well, what am I going to spend my budget on? You just go right down the list, you go, I'm going to buy one of this, two of this, three of this, one of this, oh, none of this, whatever. You would use that list to guide your purchasing?
Starting point is 00:12:02 More also had a regular review column. The parents and librarians alike used to decide which books were worth buying and which weren't. You would use that list to guide your purchasing? More also had a regular review column. The parents and librarians alike used to decide which books were worth buying and which weren't. So she's the most dominant children's book reviewer in the country, but then because she was also the chief purchaser for books, she quickly accumulates really far too much power. At the height of her career in the 1920s and 30s, she was like the Anna Win-Tor of Kids Lit.
Starting point is 00:12:28 Editors and authors were routinely seen walking up the steps of the public library's main branch between the two marble lions to drop off their books and await Morris verdict. If they were lucky, she'd send back notes for suggested changes, which they would doodfully incorporate into the final draft. Others weren't so fortunate.
Starting point is 00:12:45 The story about Anne Carole Morrell, though no one, including her biographers, knows whether this was apocryphal or not, was that she actually had a custom-made rubber stamp that read, not recommended for purchase by expert, and that if she didn't like your book, she would stamp that on your book, and you, that's it, your book's dead.
Starting point is 00:13:04 No one's gonna order your book better luck next time. And there were a lot of manuscripts not recommended for purchase by expert because Anne Caromore had very specific tastes in children's literature. She may have been a great advocate of children's books as art, but in her zeal to protect kids from the horrors of poverty and urban life, more almost invariably favored magical once upon a time stories that felt pastoral and tweey. The whole point was for them to take the less fortunate into their warm bougie embrace. So her favorite children's books, the ones that she approved, certainly weren't meant to represent
Starting point is 00:13:42 anything that a child certainly weren't meant to represent anything that a child might actually see or experience in his or her everyday life. They were meant to be little mini escapes into this magical world of talking animals and rabbits and waste coats and whatnot. To be honest, this is kind of where most of my experts for this story get off the ankle more train. Like she was a sharp-eyed critic. It's just, it's not my eye, so I'm trying to be charitable here. Say, like, you know, like she likes gooey. And she likes super sweet. And she likes silly animals that talk.
Starting point is 00:14:18 Because Winnie the Pooh is great, right? But for a few decades of children's literature, from the 19 teens to the 1920s, pretty much everything coming out of the publishers was very poo. Meanwhile there were almost no books for kids that took place in cities, no books for kids that depicted real world problems, and very few children's books containing messy ideas or ambiguous endings, stories with those qualities never made it past more. Although sometimes a book can meet all of Moore's criteria,
Starting point is 00:14:50 and she would still have it killed, for reasons known only to her. Do you think more, you said she's a pretty sharp-eyed critic. Do you think she had a kind of systematized notion of her own yaykeeping rules, or was she just like shooting from the hip. You know, I have no idea. I think she was drunk with power. Like, I think she loved being the lady in charge. Like, I think she just loved having the entire publishing industry at her
Starting point is 00:15:18 back in call. And she thinks she's right. And she has no doubts about it. Like, she thinks she's right and she has no doubts about it. Like she thinks she's right. But even as Anne Carroll Moore held the publishing world in her iron grip, a small group of preschool teachers were busy writing stories for kids that embodied everything in children's literature that Moore hated. Their stories would go on to influence an entire generation of children's book authors, and they worked just a few blocks away at an experimental school in Greenwich Village, called Bank Street. Bank Street came along and said that picture books ought to be stories about modern urban
Starting point is 00:15:56 life. Leonard Marcus is a historian of children's literature, and he says that the Bank Street Cooperative School for Student Teachers, founded by the great educational reformer, Lucy's Brock Mitchell, was in many ways the ancestor of today's progressive schools. They believed that teachers should let children guide their own learning experience. And it just so happened that when people trained as teachers at Bank Street, they didn't read textbooks. They were trying to write stories for children.
Starting point is 00:16:23 So the future teachers would really know from their own experience what kinds of stories are meaningful to kids at different ages. And when the teachers tried to write stories for the youngest kids at Bank Street, they noticed something important. Children are interested in the world. They find themselves in. Certainly there are children who have flights of fancy and think about dragons and wizards and whatnot. But anyone who's had a four-year-old knows that often the thing that is most interesting to them is the garbage truck that comes by every Tuesday afternoon. So instead of a book about magical realms, a book published by Bank Street would be
Starting point is 00:16:56 about the child's more immediate world, focusing on the kinds of things that small children in cities really, really like, like street cars and a trip to the grocery store and steam shovels. Designed for the very young, these stories rarely had plots. They were more like games, circular, interactive, and open-ended. Plot wasn't the most important thing at Bank Street. Much more important was being invited to participate. Bank street stories might depict a jackhammer or a train going by and then ask the child to imitate those sounds,
Starting point is 00:17:32 but also in the other sounds they might feel like imitating. Giving the child an opening to expand them infinitely if they wanted to, not just sit there and listen to the once-a-pound-a-time story. All of which pretty much stood in diametric opposition to the philosophy of Ancaro Mor. The idea that the everyday life of a child with no magic whatsoever involved in it is something that ought to be immortalized in a children's book. Definitely was not, that was not Ancaro Mor's speed. To more, these plotless games for the very young, with their emphasis on experience over
Starting point is 00:18:09 imagination, simply didn't count as literature. She made sure they weren't included in her annual list of best books. She didn't even dare to write her usual scathing review. In the very first Bank Street books, I'll be here in now series, stayed off the library shelves. But Bank Street's earliest called the Here and Now series, stayed off the library shelves. But Bank Street's earliest stories had another more fundamental problem. I think the stories in the first year now,
Starting point is 00:18:31 book, they're boring. Mac Barnett is the author of over 40 children's books. And he says that from the point of view of craft, which is to say, of actually capturing a kid's attention, Bank Street's first attempts at children's literature were terrible. Although they were new at the time and feel sort of radical, they are being written according to a formula.
Starting point is 00:18:51 You can see the philosophy, they're theory driven. The writing in most of these early stories came across as stiff and formulaic. There were only occasional illustrations with no real interplay between image and words. And every story started with an introduction describing his pedagogical intent. Here's one from a chapter called The Sky Scraper.
Starting point is 00:19:10 The story tries to assemble into a related form many facts well known to seven-year-olds and to present the whole as a modern industrial process. So right there, like, as soon as your story begins with a mission statement, it's already over. Like, the thing is lying on the floor. The writers at Bank Street were just as blinded by their own dogma, as Anne Carrollmore, and with the same end result.
Starting point is 00:19:35 Their stories could never achieve their high-minded aspirations, because they felt stale and doctrinaire. But in the 1930s, one person managed to make the Bank Street style come alive, the future author of Good Night Moon. Margaret Wise Brown was a teacher at Bank Street who didn't want to be a teacher. She wanted to be a famous literary writer. She wanted her short stories to be published
Starting point is 00:19:58 in the New Yorker, but that wasn't going to happen. And honestly, neither was the teaching thing. Like all of her evaluations say like, you know, I don't think she's going to be a great teacher. So she couldn't write for adults and she couldn't teach kids. But when Margaret Wise Brown tried to write Bank Street stories for kids, something weird happened. They were good.
Starting point is 00:20:21 In Brown's hands, these stories for the very young, with their circular rhythms and game-like structures, were transformed into something new. The big bank street realization, I think, from Margot Wise Brown is that through talking to kids, she discovered her purpose as a writer, because she found that kids are the best audience for poetry. Margot Wise Brown's books were more than stories or games.
Starting point is 00:20:46 They were poems for children who were still open to novel ways of seeing and describing the world around them. Consider a story from a series of books Brown first started in collaboration with Bank Street, the noisy books. The story is about a little dog who hears a tiny, almost imperceptible noise and tries to identify it. Brown asked the reader to guess what the sound might be, but instead of suggesting things that we might think of as making sounds, she points to things that don't. So it says, was it butter melting? Was it a little blue flower growing? Was it a skyscraper scraping the sky? The early Bank Street books would have simply asked the reader to register that a skyscraper was tall, but Brown was encouraging them to perceive it in an entirely new poetic fashion.
Starting point is 00:21:36 Sky-Scriper scraping the sky and suddenly you can hear it. Brown was also a master of writing poetry that worked in tandem with the art in a book, particularly by deploying page turns. Your average contemporary children's picture book will contain 14 page turns, and most authors will use these moments to build suspense. If you want to know what happens, you've got to turn the page. But Markerwise Brown's page turns, just as often zig-zag, setting up patterns and then breaking them. So you get, was it an ant crawling?
Starting point is 00:22:06 Was it a bee-wondering? Page turn. Was it an elephant tiptoeing down the stairs? And you move across that page turn from this very intimate domestic scene of a dog very small on the page, listening at the stairs, to this giant two-page spread this elephant and the scale is gigantic he barely fits in the frame. Page turns like these can be disorienting
Starting point is 00:22:33 and that's the point. You feel like you're constantly crashing into new worlds and discovering new things which again like that's what being a kid feels like a lot of the time. Brown also helped change the look and feel of children's books. As an editor at Scott Publishing, a small imprint associated with Fang Street, she developed one of the first tactile books, featuring lambs with real toy bells and bunnies with real cotton ball tails, turning the book into a physically interactive object. But perhaps Margaret Wise Brown's greatest accomplishment was bridging the divide between the two factions of children's literature. Her stories provided interactive experiences
Starting point is 00:23:14 focusing on everyday things, but they also contained elements like talking animals, and they weren't afraid to lean into nostalgia and whimsy. So instead of rejecting the documentary realism of Bank Street, or the magical escapism of Anker Almoor, Brown found a way to combine them. And nowhere did she do this better than in Good Night Moon. For Good Night Moon, Brown took inspiration from something in her own daily life. Whenever she woke up feeling sad and struggled to get out of bed, she'd perform a kind of ritual. and struggled to get out of bed. She'd perform a kind of ritual.
Starting point is 00:23:44 She would line bed and look around and focus on different objects in the room that she was glad to have in her presence and would essentially count her blessings. She would take in the books on her shelf, the pattern of her sheets, the view from her window. And then, when she was finished,
Starting point is 00:24:03 she would write it all down in a list. Get up and face the day. For Good Night Moon, Brown simply reversed the ritual. It's a list you read to fall asleep. What are we gonna read today? Good Night Moon. The beginning of Good Night Moon really is nothing more than a list. Documenting the objects in the bedroom of a little bunny getting ready to go to sleep. In the great green room, there was a telephone, and a red balloon, and a picture of... There's no plot, no tension, just things. The cow jumping over the moon.
Starting point is 00:24:42 But then you move into the second section unannounced. Good night bears. Good night chairs. And yet everyone knows what to do when they get there. Good night kittens. Which is chime in. And good night mittens. Right.
Starting point is 00:25:03 What about this one next to it? And then you come to the page that says, good night, nobody. Nobody. Well, what do you do with that? And it's up to the child to decide. And that's pure bank street. And I would say pure magic. And Anne-Karol Moore hated it.
Starting point is 00:25:25 Oh, yeah, she hated it. Yeah, she was totally opposed to it. By the time Good Night Moon came out in 1947, Moore was technically retired from her job at the library. But even in retirement, she remained in control of the children's department, showing up at meetings uninvited and making sure her policies remained in place. Even when her successor would like try to change the meeting room at the last minute, and Carol Moore was still just magically show up and run that meeting.
Starting point is 00:25:51 Leonard Marcus says we know what more thought of Good Night Moon because the New York Public Library maintained internal reviews of every book that was submitted to them. And I was secretly shown the report on Good Night Moon, secretly because nobody outside of the library staff was ever supposed to see them, but I found someone who's willing to leak the report to me. The report described Good Night Moon as an unbearably sentimental piece of work.
Starting point is 00:26:20 Which is just funny when I think of unbearable sentimentality as like the jacket copy of a book you write for Anne Carole Moore. But it didn't matter. Good Night Moon had the stink of Bank Street on it. The book was not recommended for purchase by expert. Good Night Moon sold only a handful of copies before more or less disappearing from stores. Mar-O has brown, but I'd only a few years later, in 1952. Following complications from a surgery, she was just 42 years old. But even if she didn't know it, it was right around this time
Starting point is 00:26:56 that Good Night Moon's fortune to begin to change. It was the era of the baby boom. Pop psychology was in. And parents eager to raise their children using the latest methods devoured books and articles about what children needed at various stages of life. And in 1951, there was a column saying that if you have a two-year-old and he is not going to sleep, read them this book, Good Night Moon. It'll work.
Starting point is 00:27:21 And sure enough, 1951 is when sales of Good Night Moon at bookstores slowly began to rise. And that book was read by kids in the late 50s who grew into adults, who remembered reading that book more than any other book, so bought it for their own kids, who then grew into adults, who loved that book more than any other. And that's how it happened. It happened in a way that maybe is most terrifying to Anker Almore,
Starting point is 00:27:47 Anker Almore is sort of irrelevant to the success of that book. In 1972, the New York Public Library caved and finally put Good Night Moon on the shelves. At that point, it was selling nearly 100,000 copies a year. As of 2017, it sold nearly 48 million. Leonard Marcus says that Clamot heard the illustrator of Goodnight Moon showed him a fan letter once. He was from a mother whose little boy had wanted the book read to him every night,
Starting point is 00:28:17 six times, from start to finish. And one night after the sixth reading, she laid the book down on his bed, and he stood up. It was open to a page with one of the color, full color illustrations of the room. And he put his foot down on the page, and then he burst into tears. His mother didn't know what to make of it,
Starting point is 00:28:38 so she just waited to see what would happen next. And then he put his second foot down and just completely melted down. And then she realized what was happening. And she wrote to him and said, my son wanted to, was trying to climb inside your room. That's how real it is to him. Jillipore said she also came across a letter.
Starting point is 00:29:01 But this one was about Anne Carroll more. More died in 1961, and upon hearing of her death, a prominent editor wrote to a friend, quote, much as she did for children's books, I can't help feeling her influence was baleful on the whole. Am I wrong? It's an incredibly powerful, I mean, final epitaph on her life. It seems totally fair to me. She did an extraordinary amount for children's literature and for children early on, and then I think she kind of lost her grip.
Starting point is 00:29:38 Lapor, however, is also quick to defend more, and so is Dan Coise. Walk into the children's reading room of any library in the country at story time, he says. And you're witnessing her contribution. The notion that the library's mission remains to serve children and to make them feel at home in the space and to make them feel like reading is a thing for them is remarkable and I don't want to lose sight of that. And to make them feel like reading is a thing for them is
Starting point is 00:30:07 Remarkable and I don't watch a lose Side of that and for all her faults and flaws. That's because of her If you go back and look at the list of the New York public libraries top 10 checked out books a lot of the titles are ones more Probably would have banned that she's still been around. After all, where the wild things are, the snowy day, the very hungry caterpillar, they all owe something to the work of Market Wise Brown and the teachers at Bankstreet. But the fact that the top 10 list is mostly children's books in the first place, that's something we owe to Anne Carole Moore.
Starting point is 00:30:45 ["The End of the World"] Next up, the story of a doll that delighted children and possibly terrified adults at the New York Public Library after this. Okay, so I'm here with Joe Rosenberg. So one of the reasons why we invented this little code section is there's often little outtakes from the story that we couldn't quite fit in. And I hear you have some really good bonus material for me. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:21 And I wanted to save it for the code up because it is the one subplot in this whole saga that is maybe the thing I most wanted to talk about. But if we talked about it in the main piece, it would just derail the story. Like it would just bring the entire story to a crashing hole. I know exactly what you mean, I'm totally bit there. Yeah, yeah, and it's because whenever this comes up, everyone is just like, wim-wim-wim-wim-wim-wim, stop. What? And it is the story of Nicholas Nickerbacher. I already love it.
Starting point is 00:31:53 So who is Nicholas Nickerbacher? And how does it fit into the story? So Nicholas Nickerbacher was this creation of Anne Caramore that perhaps represents everything that is most wonderful and most problematic about her all at once, because Nicholas was this little wooden articulated doll that more like to use to talk to kids. It was about eight inches high. And when she was in the reading room, if a young child was acting shy, perhaps because
Starting point is 00:32:23 their English wasn't very good yet, and she wanted to bring them out of their shell, she would pull this doll out of her handbag and basically say, I want to introduce you to Nicholas. That's so sweet. I actually kind of like that sort of a Mr. Rogers kind of quality to it. So was Nicholas like, did Nicholas have a certain personality, or was he just kind of in Carol Moore? Yeah, so Nicholas apparently was a little Dutch boy with like a little Dutch boy outfit, which I kind of suspect was a nod to the idea that so many of the children using the reading room were immigrants.
Starting point is 00:32:55 But more importantly, she would tell the children that Nicholas came alive at night and had access to this kind of magical world, hiding just behind this one. And so the idea was that you might think you were in a normal old boring room, but when Nicholas showed up, he would help reveal the magic all around you. Right. I mean, that just reminds me of all the types of books that she was really fond of. I mean, she always liked those escapist stories.
Starting point is 00:33:21 Right. Very once upon a time, none of that boring, bank street stuff. Right, right. No garbage trucks, no city problems. Right, where you just get the child to the light in the mere room itself. No, you know, so the whole point of Nicholas was to propel the child into these flights of imagination that would take them beyond here and now
Starting point is 00:33:42 into these magical nighttime realms. I mean, that all seems pretty wonderful. That seems like a good librarian thing to do. You mentioned that it was kind of, it represented the problematic way in which she operated. How did it manage to do that? Yeah, so the problem is that as with so many things related to ant-cural more, there is a dark side to Nicholas Nickerbacher.
Starting point is 00:34:07 And in this case, it's that Nicholas' life was not restricted to the confines of the reading room. Dan Coise was telling me that apparently after a while, people started noticing that Moore was carrying Nicholas around with her, like almost all the time. I can only speculate as to what people thought about. And Carol Moore carrying around Nicholas Nicarbacher. There are photos of her just like out in the park in Bryant Park, I assume, just carrying Nicholas the doll under her arm.
Starting point is 00:34:39 And I don't know if it was her way of connecting to children or if she just had some kind of weird-ass fixation. And I don't know if it was her way of connecting to children or if she just had some kind of weird-ass fixation. Well, I mean, I can see his concern or maybe other people's concern, but like a generous reading of this is like, you know, she had a cool companion, she had a doll, she talked to kids, it seems like it seems okay to me so far.
Starting point is 00:35:01 Okay, fair enough, but keep in mind that walking around the park with the doll was just like the tip of the iceberg. Because apparently she would also host these dinner parties. And when everyone sat down for dinner, Nicholas would be seated at the table, like with his own spot and his own place setting and everything.
Starting point is 00:35:24 And at like at a dinner party where you're supposed to talk to Nicholas, is that part of the deal? Yeah, I think so. And even Jan Pinbarrow, who of everyone I talked to for this story is probably the most ardent defender of Anchor Elmore, admitted that this could be a challenge for more friends and colleagues. It's been said that some people didn't like Nicholas because she did, I think, sometimes hide behind him.
Starting point is 00:35:49 Like if she didn't want to give someone bad news, she might say, oh, Nicholas doesn't like that. You know, so I can imagine how that would grate on a person. Me too. Yeah, so, you mean, you can see where this is going, right? Because when Nicholas disapproved of something, whether it was like at a party or a work meeting, you were still expected to respond and apologize or whatever because this is Anne Carol Moore. Remember, she is this titan of children's books.
Starting point is 00:36:23 And your career was in her hands. So you would just kind of be stuck talking to this doll. My hunch is that everyone talked about Nicholas Nickerbacher when Anne Carrollmore wasn't around. And when Anne Carrollmore was around, everyone was like, oh, hey, hi, Nicholas, how are you? You know, she wielded just a remarkable amount of power inside the library.
Starting point is 00:36:46 And so what would you do if you were in that situation and the person you depended on carrying around a wooden doll? You would be like, hey, Nicholas, good to see you. Have a seat at the table. Can I get you a cup of tea? And by some point, according to Jolapor, the whole conceit was taken so far that Nicholas actually had his own letterhead. And more would write letters to children's book authors and editors in the voice of the doll.
Starting point is 00:37:13 Oh my. And they would be signed Nicholas with a return address on the back of the envelope flap that said Nicholas Nickervacher and then the address of the central branch of the New York Public Library. So he lives at the library.. So he lives at the library. Right, he lives at the library. Comes the library. And the library.
Starting point is 00:37:29 Sure. Why not? That's when he writes his letters. Yeah. That's when he gets his best work done. Exactly. That is that is when he's at home. And so did the children's, you know, book editors and authors.
Starting point is 00:37:42 Did they write back to Nicholas? Was that like part of the deal of this fantasy? You know, I don't know. I do know that very frequently authors would send him their warm regards by way of Ankeral Moore. Like, please tell Nicholas, I say hello, because it was just understood that more and Nicholas were like a package deal. Yeah, that makes sense.
Starting point is 00:38:06 But, you know, despite the creep factor, give a mind that like, you know, kids also wrote to Nicholas, right? Yeah. And some of the correspondence and gifts Nicholas received from adults also suggests that a lot of people saw Nicholas as this benign or even kind of benevolent presence. So, for example, the author of Billy Goat's Gruff made Ankerl more a miniature version of her first book for Nicholas to carry around.
Starting point is 00:38:33 Beatrix Potter sent her these little hand-drawn postcards depicting Peter Rabbit and Nicholas together, almost as if they were friends. And according to Jan, one of the employees from the library was like this Russian emigre. And she apparently gave Nicholas a Faberje egg. Whoa, like a real Faberje, like gemstones in it, type of Faberje egg.
Starting point is 00:38:57 Yeah, well, she said there was a gem inside. So I can go with at least a, yes, a Faberje egg with one gem. But the point is that in the end, you can make an argument that Nicholas Nicarbocker's reign in the balance, you know, did more good than harm. And as was so much of what Anne Caramore did, it's, it's a close call. Well, I mean, creating a character to make kids comfortable in the library is
Starting point is 00:39:22 a totally nice and joyful thing to do. Making her employees, adult employees, talk to it is a little odd, but I hope it was good on balance. I mean, I hope for everyone's sake, it was good on balance. So Nicholas Nicobocker as an extension of Anne Carol Moore's personality. Did she just take it with her when she retired or did it sort of like live on in the libraries? It's like mascot. Excellent question, because this is where this whole weird side story kind of climaxes, which is when the elaborately rendered fiction of Nicholas collides with the reality. I'm good.
Starting point is 00:40:07 You know, he's just a doll. And dolls can be lost. Oh no. It was actually an employee of the library who was writing with Anne Carole Moore in a taxi cab and she was in charge of minding Nicholas and left it in the cab. Oh, I mean, I don't mean to disparage anyone's character, but I'm suspecting foul play here. I mean, if I was the indulged employee of Anne Carole Moore, and I was in charge of the doll, who I had to talk to and serve cookies to, I might be inclined to leave it in a cab too.
Starting point is 00:40:43 Yeah, you know, we'll never know. I'll give them the benefit of the doubt and say they're innocent, but I am sure many of more colleagues secretly cheered when this happened. But then a little while later, apparently more just went out and found a new little wooden Dutch boy. And basically said, like, oh, good news, everyone. Nicholas is back. Oh my goodness.
Starting point is 00:41:08 Oh, the rain of Nicholas keeps going. Yeah. And so much like Anne Carole Moore herself, Nicholas Nicarbocker, refused to retire. Oh, that's so good. Oh, that's so fascinating. I can totally see why that didn't belong in the story because I would be totally preoccupied with it. Today, Nicholas Nicobocker and many of the other figures in the story are getting to
Starting point is 00:41:35 live a strange afterlife thanks in part to this week's experts. Go to your local library and browse the children's section and you'll come across dueling picture books whose author's names, if you've been paying attention, will look familiar. Miss Moore thought otherwise how Anne-Karole Moore created libraries for children is written by Jan Pinbroe, and the important thing about Margaret Wise Brown is by Mac Barnett. Two books have two very different takes on what Anne-Karole Moore was really up to in our reading room. Whether she would have recommended either of them for purchase by expert, we will never
Starting point is 00:42:07 know, but a good library and a good bookstore should carry them both. Thanks to all of our experts in today's story, if you're looking for a adult book on brown, check out Leonard Marcus' Margaret Wise Brown Awakened by the Moon. Thanks also to Settle Air, whose voice we did not get to include in this story, but whose book Children's Literature from Esaube to Harry Potter is a great guide to the deeper history of Kislet. 99% Invisible was produced this week by Joe Rosenberg with many assists from Vivian Le, original episode mixed by Bryson Barnes, music by Swan Rihale.
Starting point is 00:42:49 Our senior editor is Delaney Hall, Kurt Colstad is the digital director. Thresor team is Chris Barube, Jason Dillion, Emmett Fitzgerald, Martin Gonzales, Christopher Johnson, Losh Medon, Jacob Maldonado Medina, Kelly Prime, and me Roman Mars. The 99% Invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence. We are part of this Titcher and Sirius XM podcast family. Now, headquartered in the Pandora Building within a mile of six public library branches, in beautiful, uptown, Oakland, California.
Starting point is 00:43:19 You can find the show and join discussions about the show on Facebook. You can tweet me at Roman Mars and the show at 99PI Org on Instagram, Reddit, and TikTok too. You can find links to other Stitcher shows I love as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org. you

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