"New Bed-Time Stories" by Louise Chandler Moulton is a compilation of heartwarming late 19th-century short stories that examines themes of childhood purity, empathy, and the ties that bind people together. The tales appear to target both young and old and feature characters that seem to echo real parts of life, frequently connecting the journeys of children with the difficulties that adults encounter. The story begins with Miss Endell's arrival at her new home in London and follows her interactions with. The stories show character development of characters, like Johnny, a silent orphan introduced in London, and his connection with Miss Endell to show the significance of empathy and how being kind can deeply change people's lives.

New Bed-Time Stories
By Louise Chandler Moulton
In a world of compassion and connection, a newfound friendship shows how kindness can change lives.
Summary
About the AuthorLouise Chandler Moulton was an American poet, story-writer and critic.
Contributing poems and stories of power and grace to the leading magazines, Harper's Magazine, The Atlantic, The Galaxy, the first Scribner's, she also published a half-dozen very successful books for children, Bedtime Stories, Firelight Stories, Stories Told at Twilight, and others that were considered popular in their day. She collected a few of her many adult tales into volumes, Miss Eyre of Boston and Some Women's Hearts. It is in Boston that she did the greater part of her work, including her books of travel, Random Rambles and Lazy Tours, published her four volumes of poetry, and edited and prefaced biographies, A Last Harvest and Garden Secrets, and the Collected Poems of Philip Bourke Marston, as well as a selection from Arthur O'Shaughnessy's verses.
Louise Chandler Moulton was an American poet, story-writer and critic. Contributing poems and stories of power and grace to the leading magazines, Harper's Magazine, The Atlantic, The Galaxy, the first Scribner's, she also published a half-dozen very successful books for children, Bedtime Stories, Firelight Stories, Stories Told at Twilight, and others that were considered popular in their day. She collected a few of her many adult tales into volumes, Miss Eyre of Boston and Some Women's Hearts. It is in Boston that she did the greater part of her work, including her books of travel, Random Rambles and Lazy Tours, published her four volumes of poetry, and edited and prefaced biographies, A Last Harvest and Garden Secrets, and the Collected Poems of Philip Bourke Marston, as well as a selection from Arthur O'Shaughnessy's verses.