

But to yourself you must always tell the truth". Ole Golly gives Harriet the unlikely but practical advice that: "Sometimes you have to lie. Hardly the feminine girl heroine typical of the early 1960s, Harriet is a writer who notes everything about everybody in her world in a notebook which ultimately falls into the wrong hands. Harriet is the daughter of affluent New Yorkers who leave her in the care of her nanny, Ole Golly, in their Manhattan townhouse. As her New York Times' obituary, published November 19, 1974, states: "The book helped introduce a new realism to children's fiction and has been widely imitated". Today, it is a much sought-after book on used-book websites.įitzhugh's best-known book was Harriet the Spy, published in 1964 to some controversy since so many characters were far from admirable. Although a parody of both Eloise and beatnik conceit, the book sprang to life as a genuine work of literature. Fitzhugh worked closely with author Sandra Scoppettone to produce Suzuki Beane, which incorporated typewriter font and line drawings in an original way. After high school, she primarily dated women.įitzhugh was the illustrator of the 1961 children's book Suzuki Beane, a parody of Eloise while Eloise lived in the Plaza, Suzuki was the daughter of beatnik parents and slept on a mattress on the floor of a Bleecker Street pad in Greenwich Village.

She was married briefly to Ed Thompson, whom she dated in high school.

She lived most of her adult life in New York City and had houses in both Long Island and Bridgewater, Connecticut. According to her obituary in the New York Times, Fitzhugh graduated from Barnard College in 1950. She attended Miss Hutchison's School and three different universities, without obtaining a degree.
