Eve Merriam (1916–1992)
Author of 12 Ways to Get to 11
About the Author
Eve Merriam (July 19, 1916 - April 11, 1992) was an American poet and writer. Her first book was entitled, Family Circle. She was born as Eva Moskovitz in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After graduating with an A.B. from the Cornell University in 1937, Merriam moved to New York to pursue graduate show more studies at Columbia University. Her book, The Inner City Mother Goose, was described as one of the most banned books of the time. It inspired a 1971 Broadway musical called Inner City and a 1982 musical production called Street Dreams. Merriam won an Obie Award from the Village Voice in 1976 for her play, The Club. In 1981 she won the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. Merriam died on April 11, 1992, in Manhattan, NY from liver cancer. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Works by Eve Merriam
Ben Franklin 36 copies
Out of Our Fathers' House: Based on Eve Merriam's "Growing up Female in America: Ten Lives" (1975) 12 copies
Male and Female Under 18: Frank Comments from Young People About Their Sex Roles Today (1973) — Editor — 2 copies
A Sky Full of Poems 1 copy
Variety 1 copy
Weather 1 copy
EPAMINONDAS 1 copy
The Stray Cat 1 copy
The Clock Ticks 1 copy
Nixon Poems, The 1 copy
Story of Ben Frankiln, The 1 copy
The Matriarchal Myth 1 copy
Associated Works
Never Take a Pig to Lunch: And Other Poems About the Fun of Eating (1994) — Contributor — 346 copies, 12 reviews
Firsts: 100 Years of Yale Younger Poets (Yale Series of Younger Poets) (2019) — Contributor — 15 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 11, July 1977 — Contributor — 2 copies
Mainstream : volume 1 number 4 Fall 1947 — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Eva Moskovitz
- Birthdate
- 1916-07-19
- Date of death
- 1992-04-11
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Cornell University
University of Pennsylvania - Occupations
- poet
playwright
lecturer
children's book author
teacher
feminist - Organizations
- City College of New York
- Awards and honors
- NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children (1981)
Obie Award (Playwriting, 1977) - Relationships
- Lewin, Leonard C. (husband|divorced)
Lerner, Gerda (co-writer)
Salt, Waldo (husband)
Salt, Jennifer (stepdaughter) - Short biography
- Eva Moskowitz was born to Russian Jewish immigrants in Philadelphia who ran a small chain of women's dress shops. As a child, she began writing poems and was deeply impressed by the Gilbert & Sullivan musicals her parents took her and her siblings to see. She contributed poems to her high school magazine and weekly newspaper. After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania in 1937, she moved to New York City for graduate study at Columbia University but then went to work writing for radio. She chose the pen name Merriam from the famous dictionary. She became fashion copy editor for Glamour magazine and a freelance writer. Her first collection of adult poetry, Family Circle (1946) won the Yale Younger Poets Prize. In addition to her adult poetry, she also wrote picture books and many poetry books for children. In 1951, she and historian Gerda Lerner wrote a musical revue, "Singing of Women." Eve Merriam's controversial book Inner City Mother Goose (1969) inspired two musicals. She published more than 40 books in her career and articles on a wide variety of subjects in publications such The New York Times, Newsweek, and The New Republic. She married four times and had two sons and a stepdaughter.
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
- Place of death
- Manhattan, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- New York, USA
Members
Reviews
Twenty-six spooky poems from author Eve Merriam, one for each letter of the alphabet, are paired with intensely creepy illustrations from artist Lane Smith in this marvelous Halloween picture book. From Apple—"Apple, / sweet apple, / what do you hide? / Wormy and / squirmy, / rotten inside"—to Zero—"Round blank / Round blank / Only bubbles / mark where it sank"—the poems here are dark, capturing the more disturbing, frightening aspect of the holiday. The accompanying artwork, done in show more oil paint, is perfectly suited to the text, and is likewise terrifying...
Originally published in 1987 as Halloween ABC, and then reprinted in a slightly revised format in 2002 as Spooky ABC—the text of the two titles is identical, with an afterword being added to the revised edition, as well as a somewhat different visual presentation of the artwork, now on colorful rather than cream backgrounds—this picture book is definitely on the scarier end, when it comes to seasonal fare for Halloween. According to the afterward in Spooky ABC (although it was Halloween ABC I checked out of my local library, I ended up reading both editions, accessing Spooky ABC via the Internet Archive), Lane Smith's artwork here came first, and was paired with Eve Merriam's poems after the fact, necessitating the changing of some of the paintings. As the afterword contained some of the artwork that was rejected from the initial title, I think on the whole I recommend seeking out Spooky ABC, even though I myself started with Halloween ABC. Leaving that aside, this was a very satisfying collection of poems for the season, sure to give readers and listeners a chill. I would recommend it for slightly older audiences, than would normally consume a picture book of this level, given the themes explored. Perhaps six or seven and above? As for me, I am already a Lane Smith admirer, but will definitely try to seek out more poetry from Eve Merriam. show less
Originally published in 1987 as Halloween ABC, and then reprinted in a slightly revised format in 2002 as Spooky ABC—the text of the two titles is identical, with an afterword being added to the revised edition, as well as a somewhat different visual presentation of the artwork, now on colorful rather than cream backgrounds—this picture book is definitely on the scarier end, when it comes to seasonal fare for Halloween. According to the afterward in Spooky ABC (although it was Halloween ABC I checked out of my local library, I ended up reading both editions, accessing Spooky ABC via the Internet Archive), Lane Smith's artwork here came first, and was paired with Eve Merriam's poems after the fact, necessitating the changing of some of the paintings. As the afterword contained some of the artwork that was rejected from the initial title, I think on the whole I recommend seeking out Spooky ABC, even though I myself started with Halloween ABC. Leaving that aside, this was a very satisfying collection of poems for the season, sure to give readers and listeners a chill. I would recommend it for slightly older audiences, than would normally consume a picture book of this level, given the themes explored. Perhaps six or seven and above? As for me, I am already a Lane Smith admirer, but will definitely try to seek out more poetry from Eve Merriam. show less
I’ve read more books on Benjamin Franklin than on any other historical figure and it started with the thin little Story of Ben Franklin by Eve Merriam that I bought from Scholastic in third grade. I still have that book scrawled with the sloppy signature of my seven year old self, but minus the worn front cover. I’ve read many others since. He fascinates me. He's not a cartoon -- a jovial old man with a kite and a pocket of proverbs. I think I know the man pretty well and yet he was so show more multi-faceted that there seems to be something new to discover in every biography I read. This was an excellent book to start my lifelong learning about the man.
Find more of my reviews at Mostly NF. show less
Find more of my reviews at Mostly NF. show less
Ok, I wasn't brave enough to read every word or examine every picture. But people (of all ages!) who like the feel of chills up their spine, and people who like dark fairy tales and Goosebumps books, will enjoy this. Eve Merriam is one of my very favorite poets - she writes for children but doesn't talk down to them even when she's writing about bunnies and flowers. This collaboration is a masterpiece. Try to get this newer edition so you can see the 'making of' essay and the 'lost' pictures.
Eve Merriam is so prolific that most readers, including me, will love some of her stuff, and be nonplussed by some of the rest. The verses here reflect that: some I like quite a bit, others seem just ok. But the thing is, it's unlikely that your favorites match mine, or that your child will agree with either of us. There is quite a variety in here, and so I do recommend it.
If you don't do anything else with the book, memorize the following, and recite to your child when she's working up to a show more temper tantrum. I bet you'll get giggles instead, especially if you, yourself, follow the instructions and make that angry face.
*How to Be Angry*
Scrunch your eyebrows
up to your hair,
pull on your chin
and glare glare glare,
puff out your cheeks,
puff puff puff,
then take a deep breath
and huff huff huff.
I also liked the more current/ relevant alternative to "One Two Button Your Shoe:"
*Counting*
One for the rooster
two for the hen,
three for the pig,
four for the pen.
Five for the garden,
six for the snail,
seven for the boat,
eight for the sail.
Nine for the bluebird,
ten for the nest,
and you are the one
I love the best. show less
If you don't do anything else with the book, memorize the following, and recite to your child when she's working up to a show more temper tantrum. I bet you'll get giggles instead, especially if you, yourself, follow the instructions and make that angry face.
*How to Be Angry*
Scrunch your eyebrows
up to your hair,
pull on your chin
and glare glare glare,
puff out your cheeks,
puff puff puff,
then take a deep breath
and huff huff huff.
I also liked the more current/ relevant alternative to "One Two Button Your Shoe:"
*Counting*
One for the rooster
two for the hen,
three for the pig,
four for the pen.
Five for the garden,
six for the snail,
seven for the boat,
eight for the sail.
Nine for the bluebird,
ten for the nest,
and you are the one
I love the best. show less
Lists
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 99
- Also by
- 14
- Members
- 4,196
- Popularity
- #5,990
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 106
- ISBNs
- 144
- Languages
- 1




























