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		Popular children's book author Beverly Cleary dies at 104
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		 [March 27, 2021] 
		By Bill Trott 
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - American children's 
		book author Beverly Cleary, who responded to a young reader's plea for 
		realistic characters by bringing rare insight and humor to the lives of 
		Ramona Quimby, Henry Huggins and the other children who populated her 
		more than 40 books, has died at age 104, publisher HarperCollins said.
 
 Cleary died on Thursday at her home in Carmel, California, where she had 
		lived since the 1960s, a statement from HarperCollins said. No cause of 
		death was given.
 
 The author said she had aspirations of writing as a sixth grader, but 
		first became a librarian. At a library in Yakima, Washington, a young 
		boy provided the impetus for her writing career when he asked Cleary 
		where he could find books about "kids like us."
 
 Cleary decided she wanted to write about ordinary "grubby kids," she 
		told the Los Angeles Times, rather than the English schoolboys and girls 
		who seemed to dominate the plots of children's literature at the time.
 
 That led to "Henry Huggins," her 1950 book about a boy growing up on 
		Klickitat Street in Portland, Oregon, not far from the street where 
		Cleary herself had lived. There would be six books about Henry and his 
		dog, Ribsy, but he would be overshadowed by Ramona Quimby, who started 
		as a supporting character in the Henry books and eventually was 
		celebrated in her own series of eight books.
 
		
		 
		
 Ramona was precocious, excitable and brimming with imagination in 
		"Ramona the Pest," "Beezus and Ramona," "Ramona the Brave" and other 
		books.
 
 Cleary's works did not offer heroic tales, lessons in life or grand 
		adventures. Instead, they focused on kids' everyday lives, telling the 
		story with enough humor to keep young readers engaged and ample 
		understanding of how children see the world. She knew what made her 
		readers happy, scared, angry and confused.
 
 Cleary told the New York Times she was fortunate to have strong memories 
		of her own childhood to draw on and that she also used the experiences 
		of her twins - a boy and a girl born in 1955 - for fodder.
 
 "Beverly just beautifully captures the essence of childhood," 
		best-selling children's writer Judy Blume told the Times. "We might not 
		all have childhoods like that but there's still something so universal 
		about it. I think kids will always love those books."
 
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			Author Beverly Cleary in an undated photo. Courtesy HarperCollins 
			Children's Books/Alan McEwan 
            
			 
            Cleary's other works included "Ellen Tebbits," "Otis Spofford," 
			"Lucky Chuck," "The Mouse and the Motorcycle" and two memoirs - "My 
			Own Two Feet" and "A Girl From Yamhill." Her books sold more than 85 
			million copies worldwide, HarperCollins said.
 "Her timeless books are an affirmation of her everlasting connection 
			to the pleasures, challenges, and triumphs that are part of every 
			childhood," said Suzanne Murphy, president and publisher of 
			HarperCollins Children's Books.
 
 In 1995 the city of Portland created the Beverly Cleary Sculpture 
			Garden for Children, with statues of Ramona, Henry and Ribsy. A 
			school in the city also is named for Cleary.
 
 Cleary spent her early years on a farm in Yamhill, Oregon, before 
			her family moved to Portland when she was 6. She was not much of a 
			reader until she hit the third grade, she said.
 
 The Library of Congress declared Cleary a "living legend" and in 
			1984 she won the Newbery Medal, given annually for the most 
			distinguished contribution to U.S. children's literature, for "Dear 
			Mr. Henshaw," a novel about a boy who struggles with his parents' 
			divorce as he corresponds with his favorite author.
 
 Cleary, who wrote her last book in 1999, met her future husband, 
			Clarence Cleary, when she was a student at the University of 
			California. He died in 2004.
 
 (Reporting by Bill Trott and Lisa Richwine; Editing by Leslie Adler 
			and Rosalba O'Brien)
 
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