This book has an iOS and Android app by Oceanhouse Media. The final line of the book is a simple, unmetered "Good night". A Warning is printed on the inside cover of the book that "this book is to be read in bed" as it is intended to put children to sleep. Towards the end of the book the sleepers in the world are recorded by a special machine ("The Audio Telly O-Tally O-Count"). This yawn spreads (as yawns are terribly contagious) and then the book follows various creatures, including the Foona-Lagoona Baboona, the Collapsible Frink, the Chippendale Mupp, the Offt, and the Sleepwalking Curious Crandalls, throughout the lands who are sleeping, or preparing to sleep. For starters, the end of The Shining’s novel. This book begins with a small bug, named Van Vleck, yawning. As amazing as the ending to Doctor Sleep’s movie sounds, the ending for Stephen King’s book was way different. Mike Flanagan is proving to be my favorite adaptor of King’s material with this and Gerald’s Game. Van Vleck, a very small bug, is getting sleepy, and his yawn-contagious as yawns are-sets off a chain reaction, making all those around him feel sleepy, too! With typically Seussian nods to alarm clocks, sleepwalking, and snoring, this charming ode to bedtime will lull listeners (and readers) toward dreamland. I think the awesomest thing about it was that they reconciled this movie’s end with the original book ending of The Shining, thus fixing for King one of his problems with Kubrik’s changes on the original movie and fixing Dr. Seuss’s classic rhyming good-night picture book. Seuss's Sleep Book is a book written by Dr.
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