Mary Ann Hoberman |
Mary Ann Hoberman, the award-winning author and former Children's Poet Laureate who wrote poetry for more than 65 years, died July 7. She was 92.
Megan Tingley, president and publisher, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, said, "Mary Ann and I worked together for my entire career, from the first month I started working at Little, Brown as an editorial assistant in 1987, until 2023 in my current role; publishing over 25 books together. For Mary Ann, writing poetry was as essential as breathing. She had a gift for finding the extraordinary in everyday things--buttons and pennies, butter and jam--she could write a poem about anything. She was still writing until the week she passed away, composing a new farewell poem to share at a 'bon voyage' party she hosted for family and friends. That is quintessential Mary Ann--creating joy out of a sorrowful occasion."
Hoberman earned a BA in history from Smith College and later received an MA in English literature from Yale University. She was a founding member of The Pocket People, a local children's theater group, for which she wrote and performed plays and songs. Her first poetry collection, All My Shoes Come in Twos, was published in 1957 and illustrated by her husband, architect Norman Hoberman.
Among her best-known books are A House Is a House for Me, which won the National Book Award in 1983; The Seven Silly Eaters, illustrated by Marla Frazee; and The Llama Who Had No Pajama, a collection of 100 of her favorite poems. At the time of her death, she was working on How Elegant the Elephant, a compilation of poems about the world of animals and insects, illustrated by Frazee, to be published in fall 2024.
A longtime volunteer with Literacy Volunteers of America, Hoberman made literacy one of her primary concerns, and the cause inspired her to write the bestselling You Read to Me, I'll Read to You series, published by LBBYR. In 2020, she published, with Carolyn Hopley, the anthology Coming to Age: Growing Older with Poetry.
Hoberman's poems have been widely anthologized, and her books have been translated into several languages. In 2003, she received the Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children from the National Council of Teachers of English. She was an active member of the Garden Conservancy and a board member of the Chamber Players of the Greenwich Symphony.
Hoberman served as the Poetry Foundation's Children's Poet Laureate (now the Young People's Poet Laureate) from 2008 to 2011. Former president of the Poetry Foundation John Barr said at the time that "whether she's writing about lonely pets or befuddled fauna or little kids still figuring out the world, Hoberman's poems are always fundamentally about the language, and about introducing its capacity for magic and puzzlement and emotional meaning to the world's youngest poetry readers."