Story by John Coy, Illustrations by Peter McCarty
Night Driving
A warm-hearted portrait of a simple event that encapsulates the bond between a father and a son.
This warm and thoughtful story about a father and son on an all-night drive to the mountains is just right for Father’s Day.
The Horn Book, starred review
Perfect bedtime beckoning for would-be roamers.
New York Times Book Review
KIRKUS
Staying up all night is one of those small yet significant childhood rites of passage, a first glimpse at adulthood, recreated here by two picture-book newcomers. A father and son drive all night to the mountains. In a narrative comprised of a series of moments rather than events, they listen to baseball, watch mule deer, and drive without headlights, with only the moon “like a giant’s night light.” More a coming- of-age memory than a story, the nocturnal sojourn is complete with the boy’s first sip of coffee, a flat tire, stargazing, and a visit to a diner. The black-and-white pencil on paper drawings are stark yet soft, like those in Chris Van Allsburg’s The Mysteries of Harris Burdick (1984). Each one is striking in composition, reminiscent of a photograph, preventing the story from being just another piece of nostalgia. A series of hushed, starlit illustrations creates the impending sense that magic is just around the bend. While adults may appreciate this look at an uncomplicated childhood, younger readers will find the text soothing and the parent/child companionship reassuring.
Book of the Times
Turning Pages to Children’s Pleasures
…The narrator and his father drive all night to get to the mountains where they plan to camp out. They talk, they listen to a baseball game, they sign, they stop for breakfast in a diner. Soft gray pencil drawings capture the moonlit world through which they make their sleepy way to the sound of “the thp, thp, thp of tires rolling over the cracks in the road.”…