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Johanna Spyri (1827–1901)

Author of Heidi

595+ Works 23,329 Members 285 Reviews 9 Favorited

About the Author

Johanna Spyri was born in the village of Hirzel, Switzerland on June 12, 1827. She was tutored at home and attended school both at home and in Zurich. She married Bernhard Spyri, a lawyer, in 1852 and moved to Zurich. She wrote her first story, A Leaf on Vrony's Grave, in 1871. She wrote numerous show more stories for both children and adults, but her most famous work was Heidi, which was published in 1880. Both her husband and son died in 1884. She spent her remaining years writing, raising her niece, and doing charity work. She died on July 7, 1901. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by Johanna Spyri

Heidi (1880) — Author — 14,322 copies, 175 reviews
Heidi (Great Illustrated Classics) (1880) 1,072 copies, 9 reviews
Heidi's Children (1939) 830 copies, 5 reviews
Heidi (Illustrated Junior Library) (1945) 543 copies, 2 reviews
Heidi (A Little Golden Book) (1974) 429 copies, 3 reviews
Heidi (Children's Classics) (1998) 424 copies, 3 reviews
Heidi (Classic Starts) (2007) 318 copies, 2 reviews
Heidi (Treasury of Illustrated Classics) (2001) 250 copies, 1 review
Heidi (Dalmatian Press Adapted Classics) (2002) 201 copies, 2 reviews
The Story of Heidi (Usborne Young Reading) (2006) 195 copies, 1 review
Heidi: Childrens Classics (1988) 184 copies, 1 review
Heidi (2009) 173 copies, 5 reviews
Heidi: Her Years of Wandering and Learning (1880) 161 copies, 7 reviews
Cornelli (1920) 140 copies, 2 reviews
Vinzi (1892) 103 copies
Moni, the Goat Boy and Other Stories (1993) 90 copies, 2 reviews
Heidi (Gateway Classics) (1988) 85 copies, 1 review
Mazli (2006) 81 copies
Heidi (Penguin Readers) (2000) 76 copies, 27 reviews
Gritli's Children (1924) 73 copies, 1 review
Heidi (Priory Classics) (2004) 66 copies
Tomi Ungerer's Heidi (1990) 64 copies, 1 review
Eveli (2019) 62 copies
Heidi (Books of Wonder) (1996) 57 copies
Heidi 53 copies, 1 review
Children of the Alps (1925) 47 copies
Heidi (Read Me a Story Program) (1946) 46 copies, 1 review
Heidi (Companion Library) (1963) 46 copies
Trini, The Strawberry Girl (2018) 40 copies
Uncle Titus in the Country (2005) 40 copies, 1 review
Heidi (The Weekly Reader Classics) (1983) 39 copies, 1 review
Heidi (Nosy Crow Classics) (2019) 38 copies, 1 review
Heidi (Classic Collection) (2012) 37 copies, 1 review
Heidi Childrens Classics (1954) 34 copies
Dora (1924) 33 copies, 1 review
Heidi (Treasure Books) (1983) 33 copies
Eveli, the Little Singer (2004) 27 copies
Otra vez Heidi (1901) 26 copies, 1 review
Heidi to Read Aloud (1961) 26 copies
The Shirley Temple Treasury (1959) — Contributor — 25 copies
Heidi (Classic Adventures) (1990) 25 copies
Heidi (Ladybird Classics) (1995) 24 copies
Heidi (Dominoes Starter) (2011) 23 copies
Maxa's Children (2005) 22 copies
HEIDI (MAGNUM EASY EYE) (1968) 21 copies
Toni the Little Woodcarver (1882) 20 copies
Rico and Wiseli (2008) 20 copies
Penguin Minis: Heidi (2019) 20 copies
Heidi [2005 TV movie] (2005) — Author — 18 copies, 1 review
Veronica (2006) 17 copies, 1 review
Heidi grand'mère (1958) — Inspirateur — 16 copies
Erick and Sally (2004) 16 copies
Heidi (Macmillan Readers) (2008) 14 copies, 2 reviews
A Little Swiss Boy (1936) 13 copies
Heimatlos (1908) 12 copies
Renz and Margritli (1931) 12 copies
Heidi omnibus (2014) 12 copies
The Rose Child (2010) 12 copies
Heidi. ( Ab 4 J.). (2001) 11 copies, 1 review
Schloss Wildenstein (1904) 10 copies
Au pays de Heidi (1958) 9 copies
Heidi 9 copies
Arthur and Squirrel (1888) 9 copies
Heidi 9 copies
Moni the goat boy (2015) 8 copies
Little Miss Grasshopper (2017) 8 copies
Heidi jeune fille (1958) 8 copies
Wiseli (1994) 7 copies
Heidi / Heidi Grows Up (1927) 7 copies
Heidi (Adapted by Rosemary Harris) (1983) — Original Author — 7 copies
Stories of Swiss children (1925) 7 copies
What Sami Sings with the Birds (2004) 7 copies, 1 review
In the Swiss mountains (1929) 6 copies
Heidi: Level 1 (1986) 5 copies
The Fairy Of Intra (1925) 5 copies
Heidi (2017) 5 copies
Heidi et le cirque (1991) 5 copies
Heidi - Bancroft Classics (1973) 4 copies
Heidi / Black Beauty (1985) 4 copies
Francesca at Hinterwald (2011) 4 copies
Heidi. (1975) 4 copies
Das Bunte Gritli Buch (1972) 4 copies
Swiss Stories (1920) 4 copies
heidi 3 copies
Castell (Mira Dins) (2009) 3 copies, 1 review
Shirley Temple in "Heidi" (1937) 3 copies
Heidi 3 copies
Heidi (1978) 3 copies
HEIDI 3 copies
Heidi à Paris 3 copies
Heidi (2018) 3 copies
El lago de los ensueños (1977) 3 copies
Heidi 3 copies
Heidi en Peter 3 copies
Kornelli 3 copies
Heidi-bøkene 3 copies
Heidi ystävämme (1980) 3 copies
Peppino 3 copies
De kleine Heidi 3 copies
Vergessene Geschichten (1997) 2 copies
Sans patrie (1878) 2 copies
Der Freundschaftsbund (1956) 2 copies
El lago de los ensueños (1975) 2 copies
Heidi (2023) 2 copies
Heidi (1979) 2 copies
Beim Weiden-Joseph (1882) 2 copies
Jo, the Little Machinist (1962) 2 copies
Heidi (1900) 2 copies
In Hinterwald (1962) 2 copies
Heidi Book and Record (1973) 2 copies
Heidi 022796 (1992) 2 copies
El Lago de los Ensuenos (1986) 2 copies
Heidi, tristes noticias (1978) 2 copies, 1 review
Heidi (1956) 2 copies
Heidi feiert Weihnachten (1988) 2 copies
Heidi (2006) 2 copies
HEIDI 2 copies
Heidi und Gritli (1986) 2 copies
Heidi 1927 (1927) 2 copies
Heidi a la mer (1978) 2 copies
Lc: Heidi (2022) 2 copies
Kleine Heidi 2 copies
Kurze Geschichten (1961) 2 copies
Heidi - Folio Junior - A partir de 9 ans (2011) — Author — 2 copies
Hajdi 2 copies
Heidi, 207-52 (1982) 2 copies
Heidi voyage (1996) 2 copies
Heidi Sammelband (1990) 2 copies
Heidi et le grand hiver (2000) 2 copies
Grittli 1 copy
Heidi i byen 1 copy
Heimweh (1925) 1 copy
Heidi kasvaa 1 copy
Heidi c.1 (2009) 1 copy
M©Þzli 1 copy
Jörli 1 copy
Χάϊντι 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi — Author — 1 copy
HEIDI #8 (1973) 1 copy
Heidi, llegada a los alpes (1987) 1 copy, 1 review
Visita a la abuelita (1987) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi, ¡ha llegado la abuela! (1976) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi, la Srta. Rottenmeier (1987) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi, otra vez juntas (1988) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi, carta de Clara (1976) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi, ¡vuelvo a casa! (1988) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi (1962) 1 copy
Peligro en los pastos (1987) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi, ¡Eres una cobardica! (1988) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi (2015) 1 copy
Clara se pone mala 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi (1978) 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Heiða 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Heidi - II 1 copy
Heide (1961) 1 copy
Grittli 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Verônica 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Heidi Spanish (2019) 1 copy, 1 review
Heidi gaat studeren (1973) 1 copy
Heidi 1 & 11 1 copy, 1 review
VERÔNICA 1 copy
Pet Lamb 1 copy
Meieli 1 copy
In de bergen 1 copy
海蒂 (2015) 1 copy
Heidi kehrt heim (1990) 1 copy
Heidi. CD (2004) 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Heidi. Schmökerspaß. (2001) 1 copy
Heidi * Gritli (1977) 1 copy
Sonnige Tage (1967) 1 copy
Heidi et l'edelweiss (1899) 1 copy
Heidi Livro 1 (1996) 1 copy
Glückliche Kinder (1961) 1 copy
Heidi Dalla Tv (1978) 1 copy
Heidi wieder daheim (1967) 1 copy
Heidi - Stage 1 (2020) 1 copy
Los niños Gritli (1961) 1 copy
Heidi DK Classics (1998) 1 copy
Rósalín 1 copy
Elsli 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Una nueva amiga (1976) 1 copy
Heidi (2017) 1 copy
Das bunte Heidi- Buch (1987) 1 copy
Lauris Krankheit (1935) 1 copy
Heidi nimmt Abschied (1987) 1 copy
In sicherer Hut (1938) 1 copy
Heidi Tx270 (1966) 1 copy
Heidi 2 1 copy
Uncle Titus 1 copy
Der Mutter Lied (1949) 1 copy
Heidi demenage (1979) 1 copy
Hidi 1 copy
Heidi 1 copy
Heidi (1974) 1 copy
هايدي 1 copy
Heidi c.2 (2009) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Illustrated Treasury of Children's Literature, Volumes 1-2 (1955) — Contributor — 523 copies, 4 reviews
Heidi (Junior Classics for Young Readers) (2011) — Original Author — 213 copies, 1 review
Heidi (DK Young Classics) (1998) 184 copies
Heidi [1937 film] (1951) — Original book — 120 copies, 1 review
Heidi [1993 TV mini series] (1994) — Original book — 41 copies
Heidi [1968 TV movie] (2000) — Original book — 39 copies, 1 review
Johanna Spyri's Heidi (1960) — Original Author — 37 copies
Heidi (Young DK Classics for Chick-fil-A) (2002) — Original Author — 22 copies
Heidi [retold by Marc D. Falkoff] (1999) — Original Author — 14 copies
Le sourire de Heidi (1992) 6 copies
Heidi's Song [1982 film] (1982) — Original book — 5 copies
Aarteiden kirja. 4 : Maailma on avara (1974) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

19th century (157) Alps (139) chapter book (97) children (403) children's (647) children's book (66) children's books (160) children's classics (137) children's fiction (184) children's literature (303) classic (602) classics (647) family (120) fiction (1,361) hardcover (104) Heidi (133) historical fiction (89) juvenile (111) juvenile fiction (94) kids (71) literature (166) mountains (79) novel (99) orphans (144) own (68) read (131) Swiss (69) Switzerland (575) to-read (251) young adult (86)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Spyri, Johanna Louise
Other names
Huesser, Johanna Louise (birth)
Birthdate
1827-06-12
Date of death
1901-07-07
Gender
female
Occupations
novelist
children's book author
Short biography
Johanna Spyri was born Johanna Louise Heusser in Switzerland, the fourth of six children of a village doctor and his wife. Her rural home was at the foot of the Alps, just south of Zürich. As a child, she spent several summers in the area around Chur in Graubünden, a setting she would later use in her writing. She was tutored at home, attended the local school, then studied languages and piano in Zürich. In 1852, she married Bernhard Spyri, a lawyer, with whom she had a son. The couple moved to a home in Zürich overlooking the lake where she wrote her first novel, A Leaf on Vrony's Grave (1871), published anonymously when she was 43 years old. Based on its success, she became a prolific author of works for adults and children. Her book Heidi's Apprenticeship Years (1880) was so popular that she produced a followup, Heidi Uses what She Has Learned (1881). Together, the two works make up the novel now called simply Heidi— the work for which she is remembered today.
Nationality
Switzerland
Birthplace
Hirzel, Zürich, Switzerland
Places of residence
Hirzel, Kanton Zürich, Switzerland (birth)
Zürich, Switzerland (death)
Place of death
Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
Burial location
Friedhof Sihlfeld, Zürich, Switzerland
Associated Place (for map)
Zürich, Switzerland

Members

Discussions

Reviews

309 reviews
I enjoyed this book immensely, read for the first time in my life at 64 years old! The cover above is the one on the book I read and it captures the feeling of the story so perfectly.

I can't possibly give an objective review, though. That's because this book, to me, is about another little dark-haired, dark-eyed girl who loved animals, flowers, and the wind in pine trees: My mother.

Heidi was one of the most favorite books from my mom's childhood. She was a lifelong, avid reader, having show more learned to read very early, perhaps as early as 4 years old. I do know that by age 5 (Heidi's age at the start of the story) and specifically by July 8, 1947, she was being paid a nickel a day to read the daily newspaper aloud to an elderly, nearly blind woman down the street. She read to her the local newspaper, The Roswell Daily Record. But that's another story.

After having finally read Heidi myself, I now wish desperately that I had read it while Mom was still alive and can't quite figure out why I never did, except that with like so many things, we think we have plenty of time and we think we know more than we, in fact, do. It's only after someone is gone that we realize we have questions still. I long for her to tell me all the reasons why she loved it and what those parts of the story meant to her. I would ask how exactly did she learn to read so young. How did she get the book to read before she was even in school yet? Did her older sister, Audrey, with whom she always shared a bedroom, have something to do with it? Did they read it together? Did she cherish that memory of her sister after she died in a car accident when Mom was just 13 and Audrey was just 15? I'll never know.

Instead I have to make my own suppositions, and as I read I was awash in such ponderings. It's not very hard to imagine why my mother -- or any little girl -- would love Heidi and her story. But as I read, I became aware of extra magic that must have been there for my mom, like the blind neighbors they each read to.

Also I know that my mom's best friend was a neighbor boy and I'm sorry his name escapes me, although I know it wasn't Peter.

I know my mother felt the loss of her father all her life although she was too young to remember much about him; he died during WW II, from tuberculosis when she was just two. She surely related to Heidi being an orphan. Feeling the keen absence of her father, she would have longed for a caring male relative in her life, someone like Heidi's grandfather, Uncle Alp.

Mom's young life was filled with hardships and had to have been harder still for the sensitive, dutiful person she was. Faith, at that time was a regular part of her life as a practicing Catholic until she was a teen; so perhaps the Christian messages about suffering would have been comforting to her.

I also wondered which illustrations were in the book she would have read. In the edition I read, they were the 1956 ones by Cecil Mary Leslie. Mom's copy could only have included those from at least 10 years before that. In my mind's eye I easily saw her, a shy obedient little thing, lying on her bed quietly reading and then stopping for long gazes at the pictures.

I don't know for certain about the things that I've supposed. And I must reconcile that there's nothing to do with my sadness of never knowing. Instead, I can only embrace the gladness that she told me she loved Heidi and how it was an especially pleasant part of her childhood. I am grateful to know those few things for certain, and grateful that reading such an universally beloved story became intertwined with my love and tenderness for another dark-haired, dark-eyed little girl.
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I knew this book had made an impact on my five-year-old when he asked to drink his milk from a bowl this morning, like Heidi. It wasn't goat's milk, but I'm not sure he's adventurous enough for that. Maybe if we were on the Alm.

This book has a similar theme as Frances Hodgson Burnett's A Little Princess, but the characters are even more perfect. I mean, everyone is a sweetheart, except for Fraulein Rottenmeier and Peter at times, and even their misbehaviors can be explained by personal show more weakness (fear and jealousy) so that we can forgive them. Of course, Heidi is never tried to the degree that Sara Crewe is, so maybe she'd be less sweet if really given a test, and who knows how she acted as a teenager (there would be an interesting book).

But what's funny is that while I normally can't stand stories with people who are ridiculously kind, I really, really enjoyed this one. It's just a heart-warming story, and I don't even care if it's totally unrealistic.
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This book has sold more than fifty million copies worldwide, has been translated into over fifty languages, and has been enjoyed by generations of children. Heidi is a charming story is about an orphaned girl who is sent away from her aunt to live with her grandfather in the Swiss Alps. Heidi’s grandfather is a cold hearted and mean man when they first meet. Slowly they get to know one another and the love between Heidi and her grandfather grows. Heidi also becomes friends with two other show more children, Peter and Clara. When Peter, who is Heidi's grandfather's shepherd, starts to become jealous of her relationship with wheelchair bound Clara, he sets in motion a terrible, yet ultimately wonderful event.

This is one of those classic books that I would highly recommend to anyone, from a ten year old to an adult. It demonstrates the power of friendship. Unlike the angst driven young characters of today, Heidi is a heartwarming girl who is always grateful and contented, no matter what her situation. Is it realistic? Probably not, but it's still a lovely story. The first time I read Heidi was 55 years ago and occasionally I like to go to my “nostalgia” bookshelf and recapture a moment of childhood magic. It's hard to find a more magical story than “Heidi”.
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Mostly during primary school my chosen prospective career was saint.

Ah, but then there was the period where I discovered Heidi and as I read and reread it a bunch of times, I most fervently wanted to become a goatherd, with all that this entailed. The bell. The sleeping snuggled into warm hay in the attic. The eating of too much cheese.

So taken was I with the idea of Switzerland that when we were asked, about grade 6, where we were going for the term holiday, I – who had never been on a show more holiday because we were way too poor – said Switzerland. I just might have gotten away with this but for the fact that my mother taught in the senior school. Since I had further elaborated when pressed, that we were going by boat – another fixation I had throughout childhood, seafaring – and the term holiday was a mere fortnight, news soon spread through the school that my mother was leaving her teaching job. In case you don’t get the plot so far, I was weaving this fantasy in Australia where I was born and raised.

Never mind the trouble I got into for this, it didn’t in the least affect my taste for anything Swittish.

Since then, as an adult I’ve been able to visit Switzerland five times, mostly Geneva. By no means goatherd territory, but still. You can see Geneva as a straightforwardly beautiful city. You can see it through Australian eyes as having that aesthetic qualities of age that our cities so lack, not to mention the mountain backdrop the like of which we would never see at home. Or you can see it, I discover, as a young child would whose dreams were always of other places. I confess as I’ve wandered about the city, staring at those snow-capped mountains, to feeling that I have come home in some way that I’m sure derives from the profound effect this utterly magical book had on me when I read it so long ago.

I don’t know if other people wonder if they have let down the small bundles of hopes and dreams they once were, but I do. It breaks my heart, the idea that I might have disappointed that little hopeful dreaming thing I was once, and I have found it a very emotional experience being in this dream I once went to sleep with every night. I really can’t remember, but I hope she – I – did always believe dreams come true. Yeah, well. Sometimes they do.
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Associated Authors

Helen B. Dole Translator
William Sharp Illustrator
Charles Tritten Translator
Mary Caprio Adapter
Alice Thorne Adaptor
Maja Dusíková Illustrator
John Escott Retold by
Steffie Lerch Illustrator
Milo Winter Illustrator
Josette Frank Contributor
Mark Twain Author
Marian Edwardes Translator
John Tenniel Illustrator
Briony May Smith Illustrator
Earl Norem Illustrator
Corinne Malvern Illustrator
Tomi Ungerer Illustrator
Jon Sayer Illustrator
Alan Marks Illustrator
June Goldsborough Illustrator
Jada Rowland Illustrator
Erika Weihs Illustrator
Ruth Wood Illustrator
Robert Patterson Illustrator
John Worsley Illustrator
M. Rosenbaum Translator
Miriam Troop Illustrator
Maria L. Kirk Illustrator
Louise Brooks Translator
Rozier-Gaudriault Illustrator
Clara M. Burd Illustrator
Eleanor Mill Illustrator
Arthur Pober Afterword
Eileen Hall Translator
Vincent O. Cohen Illustrator
Elisabeth Stork Translator
Cecil Leslie Illustrator
Miska Petersham Illustrator
Shirley Watkins Translator
Anne Anderson Illustrator
Leonard Weisgard Illustrator
Maud Petersham Illustrator
Scott McKowan Illustrator
Ruth Sanderson Illustrator
Judith Cheng Illustrator
Wayne Blickenstaff Illustrator
Eva Ibbotson Introduction
Pelagie Doane Illustrator
Lawrence Illustrator
Nick Harris Illustrator
John Lawrence Line illustrations
Antoine Guémy Commentaires
Tritten Charles Translator
Ariane Chotin Commentaires
Paul Hey Illustrator
Ruskin Bond Introduction
George Carlson Illustrator
Mandi Granfelt Translator

Statistics

Works
595
Also by
20
Members
23,329
Popularity
#904
Rating
3.9
Reviews
285
ISBNs
1,432
Languages
36
Favorited
9

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