Portrait of Eleanor H. Porter
the Glad-Game writer
"When you look for the bad in mankind expecting to find it, you surely will."
— Eleanor H. Porter, Pollyanna

Eleanor H. Porter

The writer of Pollyanna

Eleanor Hodgman was born in a small New Hampshire town. Her mother and father loved music, and Eleanor grew up wanting to be a concert singer. She studied at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston.

But Eleanor's health wasn't strong enough for a singing career. She gave concerts and led church choirs for a while, but eventually had to stop. So she did what she'd always done on the side, she wrote. Magazine stories first, then novels.

Quick Facts

  • Born: December 19, 1868
  • From: New Hampshire, USA
  • Job: Singer, then writer
  • Famous for: Pollyanna and its sequels
Did you know?

The word 'Pollyanna' is now in real dictionaries! It means a person who's stubbornly cheerful, looking for the silver lining in everything. Eleanor's character was so famous her name became an actual English word.

Her Life, Year by Year

From music to the Glad Game

Eleanor Porter's life was quiet, but her cheerful heroine touched millions.

1868

Born in New Hampshire

Eleanor Hodgman is born in Littleton, New Hampshire.

1888

Music school

Eleanor enrolls at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, hoping to become a concert singer.

1892

She marries John Porter

Eleanor marries John Porter, a businessman. She becomes Eleanor H. Porter.

1901

She turns to writing

With her singing career closed by poor health, Eleanor starts publishing stories in magazines.

1907

Cross Currents

Eleanor publishes her first novel, Cross Currents. It's modest but lets her keep writing.

1913

Pollyanna

Eleanor publishes Pollyanna, the book that will make her famous. It tells the story of an orphan girl whose Glad Game changes her gloomy aunt and an entire town.

1915

Pollyanna Grows Up

Eleanor publishes a sequel showing Pollyanna as a teenager. Readers love it.

1920

She dies unexpectedly

Eleanor dies in Cambridge, Massachusetts, age 51. Other writers continue the Pollyanna series after her death, but none capture her original spirit.

The Glad Game

What Pollyanna taught

Pollyanna's Glad Game is the heart of the book. Here's how it works.

The Game

Find something to be glad about

In any situation, no matter how hard, Pollyanna tries to find ONE thing to be glad about. When she's sent a pair of crutches instead of a doll, she's glad because she doesn't need crutches.

Why it works

It changes everyone around her

Pollyanna doesn't lecture people. She just plays the Game out loud. Her neighbors slowly start playing it too. The whole gloomy town lights up.

What it's NOT

It's not pretending things are fine

Pollyanna feels sad too. She's an orphan. Things go wrong for her. The Glad Game isn't denial. It's finding the small bright thing in a hard moment.

Wait… really?!

Six surprising things about Eleanor H. Porter

1

Pollyanna is in the dictionary

Eleanor's character became so famous that 'Pollyanna' is now a real English word. It means a person who's relentlessly cheerful, always looking for the bright side.

2

She wanted to be a singer

Eleanor trained at the New England Conservatory of Music and hoped to be a concert singer. Poor health made that impossible, so she turned to writing instead.

3

Pollyanna sold over a million copies

The book was one of the bestselling novels in America in the 1910s. It was made into a play, a Disney movie, and many other adaptations.

4

Disney made a famous Pollyanna movie

In 1960, Disney made a Pollyanna movie starring Hayley Mills. The movie won Mills a special Academy Award and helped keep the book famous for new generations.

5

She wrote over a dozen novels

Pollyanna is by far her most famous, but Eleanor wrote at least 13 other novels including Miss Billy, Just David, and Sister Sue.

6

She died young

Eleanor died unexpectedly at age 51. Other writers continued the Pollyanna series after her death, but none captured her original tone.

Good questions, answered

Eleanor Porter FAQ

Is 'Pollyanna' really a word?+

Yes! Eleanor's character became so famous that 'Pollyanna' is now in real English dictionaries. It means a person who's stubbornly cheerful, always finding the bright side.

What's the Glad Game?+

It's the game Pollyanna's father taught her. In any situation, no matter how hard, you try to find one thing to be glad about. When she gets crutches instead of a doll, she's glad she doesn't need them.

Is the Glad Game too cheerful?+

Some people think so. But Pollyanna also feels sad in the book. The Game isn't about pretending nothing's wrong, it's about finding small things to be grateful for even in hard times.

What age is Pollyanna good for?+

Pollyanna works as a read-aloud from age 6, and as a chapter book from age 8. The Worldly version is adapted to fit each reader's level.

Did Eleanor write the sequels?+

She wrote Pollyanna Grows Up (1915). After Eleanor died in 1920, other writers continued the series, but those are not Eleanor's work and don't have her original tone.

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