jeanne merrill

Merrill was born on January 27, 1923, in Rochester, New York, to Earl and Elsie Almetta Merrill. She grew up on the shores of Lake Ontario in Webster, New York (now a suburb of Rochester).[1] Merrill received her Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Theatre in 1944 from Allegheny College in Meadville, Pennsylvania and was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa Society. She received her master’s degree from Wellesley College in 1945.

 

Merrill started writing books while working at Literary Cavalcade, including Henry, The Hand-Painted Mouse (1951) and The Woover (1952). Merrill received the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1963 for The Superlative Horse.

In 1964, Merrill published her best-known work, The Pushcart War, for which she won her second Lewis Carroll Shelf Award, in 1965. Set in New York, the book was written in the style of a historical report from the future, looking back at earlier events from a class warfare struggle between trucking companies and pushcart owners. Alberta Eiseman of The New York Times wrote “…it’s rare to find a book for young people with both a point of view and a sense of the ridiculous.” The book has been reissued a number of times, with the dates adjusted to keep it set in the future. In 2006, a musical adaptation was presented by Edric Haleen in Holt, Michigan.

Merrill published The Black Sheep in 1969. In The New York Times Book Review, Natalie Babbitt wrote that “…her fable is a satisfying sandwich in which the peanut butter, sticky and nourishing, slides down with ease due to judicious use of jelly.” This was followed in 1972 by The Toothpaste Millionaire. Set in Cleveland, the story relates how a Caucasian sixth-grader girl who just moved into town becomes friends with her neighbor and classmate, an intelligent African-American boy entrepreneur, and becomes rich by selling their home-made toothpaste. In 1974, an ABC afternoon special was based on The Toothpaste Millionaire.

In 1992, Merrill published The Girl Who Loved Caterpillars, based on a 12th century Japanese tale. True to the original manuscript, whose ending had been lost, the story ends abruptly.

Books had a great impact on Merrill as a child, which motivated her to try to write children’s stories that would have a similar effect. Her books often illustrate universal human values serving to resolve conflict

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