Today is the birthday of Margaret Wise Brown. If she were with us, she'd be the coolest 97-year-old great-granny around because she could spin a yarn to captivate any kind of kid. Brown is the author of the eternally popular and ubiquitous Goodnight Moon, the Big Red Barn, Runaway Bunny, Wait 'til the Moon is Full, The Golden Egg Book, The Important Book....

She is the author of so many children's books and was so popular in her time that she took pseudonyms to create the illusion that one writer wasn't saturating the market--that one woman wasn't the market! Brown helped make picture books popular--marketable--because she asked children to help her determine good books from bad ones. Brown also understood that kids see books as tactile objects, things to be touched and turned and tossed and tasted. She gave her audience what they wanted. (See Robin's Room, for example.) Brown gave kids books with pictures and enormously powerful truths without fanfare, excuse, or apology. Kids liked that. Brown was a creative woman whose muse was no slave to deadlines. She left a legacy of wisdom and truth. If only her publisher would capture the complete Margaret Wise Brown in one volume so her readers wouldn't have to search for old titles in basements and bookstalls.

Her first published work, When the Wind Blew, fetches around $9,000 these days. This is a wonderful story of a solitary elderly woman who devotes her life to her cats. Then, one cold and windy night when she has a toothache but has no place to turn for help, the smallest cat in the bunch climbs into bed with her and rests himself against her cheek like a little hot water bottle. The least of these comes to the rescue. We all have our place and our gifts; we have only to give them. Thank you, Margaret Wise Brown, for yours.