Happy 100th Birthday, Beverly Cleary!

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Beloved children’s author Beverly Cleary turned 100 on April 12, 2016. Once a children’s librarian, she turned her hand to writing in the 1940s, and her first book, Henry Huggins, was published in 1950. That book, and her subsequent body of work as a whole, became classic favorites of American children. Her best-loved characters included Henry and Ribsy (his dog), rambunctious and funny little Ramona Quimby (Ramona the Pest), and Ellen Tebbits (who found her new best friend in ballet class when they bonded in embarrassment over the long underwear their mothers made them wear). These children’s lives were portrayed realistically, and, although Cleary mined humor from the situations they got themselves into, she always was gentle with them and sympathetic to the effect of their embarrassment and other trials on their inner lives.

Many of Cleary’s stories are set, implicitly if not explicitly, in her hometown of Portland, Oregon (she was born in nearby McMinnville). Tillamook Street and Klickitat Street were the homes of Ellen Tebbits and Ramona Quimby, respectively. And although Ramona’s misadventure in the pouring rain—she got stuck in a field of mud and had to be carried out, leaving her beloved new rain boots behind—admittedly could have happened anywhere, knowing that Portland has about 155 rainy days per year adds to the sense of place. Portland, in turn, has embraced its Cleary heritage by naming an elementary school after her, establishing a children’s sculpture garden in the city that immortalizes several of her characters, and offering Beverly Cleary walking tours, among many other tributes.