The Coziest Place on the Moon
- Regular price
- $29.99
- Sale price
- $29.99
- Regular price
-
- Unit price
- / per
Feeling like the loneliest creature on Earth, Re decides to go live in the coziest place on the moon. Re packs a suitcase and takes off on a beam of light, shooting out into the cosmic aloneness of space. Re's aim is to go into the cozy nook that the moon is said to possess. But shortly after arriving, Re makes a surprising discovery: Re is not alone. Indeed, another lonely soul has beaten Re there! And so, Re meets Mi, and while each lives in their own chamber of the nook, these two single souls still become, at times, a kind of togetherness. Each remains alone but less lonely, and now each can watch over the solitude of the other. Moreover, on certain nights, the solitary songs of them both might be heard cadencing the night together, in harmony, across the vast and starry sky.
Praise for The Coziest Place on the Moon
A Publishers Weekly Big Indie Children's Book of Fall 2025!One of Betsy Bird's Top Unconventional Children's Books of 2025! A Politics & Prose Children & Teen Favorite of 2025!STARRED REVIEW! ? "This sweet interstellar adventure story is packed with fun science and linguistic facts, all wrapped in the language of poetry, ensuring both enchantment and learning. Its soft, textured, star bright illustrations also delight in the magic found between Earth and the Moon-and, indeed, throughout the universe."
Foreword Reviews
One of Betsy Bird's Top Unconventional Children's Books of 2025! "The sentences that Popova conjures up in this odd little brew are the kind of thing that makes a person feel confident that AI will never pose a true threat so long as we have Popovas in the world. Listen to this: 'At exactly 7:26-a pretty number, a pretty hour-Re mounted a beam of light and sailed into space.'"
A Fuse #8 Production (A School Library Journal blog)
I am absolutely in love with the illustrations in Maria Popova and Sarah Jacoby's picture book, The Coziest Place on the Moon, from Enchanted Lion. The text is fanciful and gently funny, and the art is simply magical; Jacoby's illustrations look the way a Haruki Murakami book feels.
Publishers Lunch
This is a sweet one... Delves deep into the difference between solitude and aloneness and how solitude can nourish your spirit.
A Fuse #8 Production (A School Library Journal blog)
Maria Popova thinks and writes about our search for meaning—sometimes through science and philosophy, sometimes through poetry and children's books, always through the lens of wonder. She is the creator of The Marginalian (born in 2006 under the name Brain Pickings), which is included in the Library of Congress permanent digital archive of culturally valuable materials, and has spent ample happy hours making An Almanac of Birds: Divinations for Uncertain Days. She has written some very long books (Figuring and Traversal) and one other very short book besides The Coziest Place on the Moon (The Snail with the Right Heart), and her show The Universe in Verse—a charitable celebration of the wonder of reality through stories of science winged with poetry—has also become a book the length of a day on Saturn. Sarah Jacoby is the award-winning author and illustrator of such picture books as Doris, Can I Sit with You?, and Forever or a Day. Her work is mostly book-oriented these days, though she has worked with folks like The New York Times and The Washington Post. Jacoby’s work is evocative and delightfully unexpected, playful and effortlessly profound. Her work is characterized by a deeply felt empathy, a keenly observant eye, and an intuitive ability to capture and convey what it means to think, feel, and be in this world as a human. She lives and works in a little row home in Philadelphia.
You May Also Like
View moreSign up to our Newsletter
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.