The book community lost an influential figure in children’s author Beverly Cleary, who passed away Thursday in Carmel, California, at 104 years old, HarperCollins Publishers announced on Friday.
Chances are when you were growing up, you escaped into the worlds of Ramona Quimby and Henry Huggins or followed Ralph S. Mouse and his many adventures with his motorcycle — all worlds created by the incomparable Cleary.
Cleary, known for her beloved titles such as Ramona Quimby, Age 8, The Mouse and the Motorcycle, Henry Huggins, and Dear Mr. Henshaw, was a staple of many people’s childhoods. Cleary’s characters were authentic and relatable, which made her stories resonate with so many children over the last 70 years.
Her first book — Henry Huggins — was published in 1950. Since then, Cleary wrote more than 40 books, which have been translated into more than 29 different languages, and sold 91 million copies worldwide.
“We are saddened by the passing of Beverly Cleary, one of the most beloved children’s authors of all time,” said HarperCollins Children’s Books President Suzanne Murphy in the company news release.
“Looking back, she’d often say, ‘I’ve had a lucky life,’ and generations of children count themselves lucky too — lucky to have the very real characters Beverly Cleary created, including Henry Huggins, Ramona and Beezus Quimby, and Ralph S. Mouse, as true friends who helped shape their growing-up years,” Murphy said.
People took to Twitter to mourn Cleary’s loss, celebrate her life and share their thoughts on how she and how her books have impacted them.
Ramona Quimby made being loud and reckless and annoying and sensitive and conflicted feel like traits to aspire to, not run from. I wanted to be a pest like Ramona. And I'll love you forever, Beverly Cleary.
— Anne T. Donahue (@annetdonahue) March 26, 2021
Whenever I'm doing a virtual author visit and kids ask why I became a writer, I reach behind me to show them the Ramona books on my bookshelf and explain that I loved Beverly Cleary's books so much, they made me want to write my own stories, too. #ThankYouBeverlyCleary
— katemessner (@KateMessner) March 26, 2021
Holding Beverly Cleary’s family and loved ones in my heart. Ramona brought me so much joy as a child and inspired me to ask my Grandma Ginger to quit smoking for my 8th birthday (she did!). Have loved sharing her books with my children.
May her memory be a blessing. https://t.co/SMWPubdPzg— Chelsea Clinton (@ChelseaClinton) March 26, 2021
Beverly Cleary wrote great American literature. Rest in power 👑
— Min Jin Lee (@minjinlee11) March 26, 2021
Beverly Cleary has died at 104 years old. But she left Ramona, Henry Huggins, Beezus & Ralph the Mouse & so many more feisty characters & stories to entertain children for years to come. 91 million parents have bought her books- so far. 🙏🏽 pic.twitter.com/0UymgmTqyl
— Mia Farrow (@MiaFarrow) March 26, 2021
Saddest day. Just got word that Beverly Cleary has died (at 104!). Thank you, maam, for narrating the best parts of my childhood. And thank you, thank you, thank you, THANK YOU for THIS badass: pic.twitter.com/TsRx4frMB2
— Patricia Smith (@pswordwoman) March 26, 2021
Beverly Cleary was a literary treasure whose lively characters brought so much joy to this world. I have the fondest memories reading the Ramona series. May she Rest In Peace ❤️ pic.twitter.com/DLBK4XLLsS
— Reese Witherspoon (@ReeseW) March 27, 2021
Beverly Cleary shaped my childhood more than anyone in my family ever did. The world was a little better because she existed. #RIPBeverlyCleary
— The “Stacie” 🦖 half of Dave and Stacie💙💚 (@JustStacie5683) March 27, 2021
farewell beverly
for the present
from a kid who
loved all of yours#beverlycleary pic.twitter.com/MkgRRnRWOl— solid marble eyes (@posthumouspoems) March 26, 2021
Raise your hand if a Ramona book was one of the first chapter books you ever read. Keep it raised if you can trace your love of reading directly to that experience. What a gift she gave us.
Love you, Beverly Cleary.
— Kelli María Korducki (@kelkord) March 26, 2021
Just realized why everyone is talking about Beverly Cleary. 💔 It meant a lot to read her books & see the Quimbys go through the same things my family did (unemployment, financial hardship, parental stress, dead pets, huge arguments, tons of love)—in Oregon, to boot.
— Nicole Chung 정수정 (@nicolesjchung) March 26, 2021
Grant Park here in NE Portland has many wonderful reminders of how Beverly Cleary drew from her childhood home to capture young readers’ hearts & minds. While we mourn this iconic Oregonian’s passing, we also are thankful for her timeless contribution to kids’ literature. pic.twitter.com/BHjyL6XECi
— Ron Wyden (@RonWyden) March 26, 2021
After 104 trips around the sun, Beverly Cleary has left this world. Rest easy, Ms. Cleary. Your words and work have left an indelible mark on me and countless readers. My beat-up childhood copy of The Mouse and the Motorcycle will forever live on my bookshelf and my psyche. pic.twitter.com/gxP1C3qK6S
— Jarrett J. Krosoczka (@StudioJJK) March 26, 2021
RIP to Beverly Cleary, whose Ramona (along with Pipi, Harriet, Meg, Margaret and a few others) taught girls it was normal to be less than perfect, sometimes a little bratty, and to never quite have their clothes in order. pic.twitter.com/LwoRn3y4fx
— Clara Jeffery (@ClaraJeffery) March 26, 2021
Beverly Cleary and Judy Blume were the Ruth and Gehrig of youth literature for four or five generations, writing books that targeted different demographics, but could open your eyes to experiences outside of your little circle.
Beverly Cleary was at an absolute pinnacle. https://t.co/rNTxIfl4iv
— Daniel Fienberg (@TheFienPrint) March 26, 2021
"If you don't see the book you want on the shelves, write it."
-Beverly Cleary, launching the journey of a million authors who suddenly felt seen✨ pic.twitter.com/OYKAWldxN4
— Jess Keating (@Jess_Keating) March 26, 2021
Aaahhh maaaan. Ramona the Brave was my spirit animal. Thank you, #BeverlyCleary. You helped me learn to love books—and be cool with being an awkward, annoying little sister. 😢 pic.twitter.com/5NaPxoZUsC
— Kimberly D. Manning, MD (@gradydoctor) March 26, 2021
Thank you for everything, Beverly Cleary—especially your irrepressible, spirited girls who could care less that they are too much. #RIPBeverlyCleary pic.twitter.com/FVqAYvh9ru
— Amy Sullivan (@sullivanamy) March 27, 2021
Ramona was the GOAT. I have read pretty much every book in the Ramona/Beezus/Henry/Ribsy universe. 104 years is a blessing. Thank you Beverly Cleary for shaping my love of reading.
— Tami Sawyer (@tamisawyer) March 26, 2021
cherished
1. to hold or treat as dear; feel love for.2. another way to describe the irreplaceable Beverly Cleary. https://t.co/sdC17T3zx7
— Dictionary.com (@Dictionarycom) March 26, 2021
My whole feed tonight is fellow authors whose life work was shaped by Beverly Cleary.
She didn't just give us Ramona and a way to feel less alone. She inspired us to share our own stories – our own versions of Ramona – to reach all kinds of kids. That, my friends, is a legacy.
— katemessner (@KateMessner) March 26, 2021