Green Eggs and Ham
Green Eggs and Ham is a children's book by Dr. Seuss. It was published by the Beginner Books imprint of Random House on August 12, 1960. The book follows Sam-I-am as he follows an unnamed man, repeatedly asking him if he would like to try some green eggs and ham before the man eventually tries it and likes it. Seuss began writing Green Eggs and Ham after his editor Bennett Cerf bet him $50 that he could not write an engaging children's book with a vocabulary of 50 words. Finding the challenge difficult, Seuss used notes, charts, and checklists to keep track of his progress. The book covers themes of conflict between individuals, though Seuss has said that it lacks any deeper meaning. Green Eggs and Ham was widely praised by critics for its writing and illustration, and challenge of writing a book in 50 words is regarded as a success. The book has been the subject of multiple adaptations, including a television series of the same name in 2019.
This article is about the book. For the Netflix series, see Green Eggs and Ham (TV series).Author
Dr. Seuss
Dr. Seuss
United States
English
August 12, 1960
Plot[edit]
Sam-I-am rides an animal back and forth in front of an unnamed man, holding signs saying "I am Sam" and "Sam I am". Sam-I-am offers the man a plate of green eggs and ham, but the man says that he does not like them. Sam-I-am continues to offer the man a plate of green eggs and ham as they come across different places and things, including a mouse in a house, a fox in a box, a car, a tree, a train, a dark tunnel, the rain and a goat on a boat. After the car and train crash into the boat, all of the people and animals they encountered float in the water with them, and Sam-I-am once more offers the man a plate of green eggs and ham. The man gives in so Sam-I-am will stop asking, and upon tasting them he realizes that he does like green eggs and ham. He announces that he will eat them anywhere, and he thanks Sam-I-am.
Writing and release[edit]
Green Eggs and Ham was written by Theodor Seuss Geisel under his pen name Dr. Seuss. He wrote the book after his editor at Random House, Bennett Cerf, bet him $50 (equivalent to $515 in 2023) that he could not write an engaging children's book using a vocabulary of only 50 distinct words.[1][2] The bet was a response to Seuss's previous success, The Cat in the Hat, which was written using 236 distinct words.[3] Seuss took extensive notes to work out how to best use 50 words, creating different charts and checklists.[4][5][6] By the time he finished arranging the words, he had memorized many of the statistics of how he used them.[7]
Seuss found the restriction especially challenging, and he rewrote many pages before he was satisfied with the rhymes.[5] The drafts were typed on rice paper, which Seuss attached to his illustrations.[8] His wife Helen Palmer sometimes placed his discarded drafts back on his desk in the hope that he would approve of them after looking at them a second time, though he rarely did.[5]
Early drafts had the unnamed man speak more aggressively to Sam-I-am. When the two characters were in a car atop the tree, he was originally written as saying "Sam-I-am. You let me be. Not in a car. You let me be!". Seuss changed this to "I would not, could not in a tree. Not in a car! You let me be.", making the outburst less direct and moving the exclamation point away from the command. In another example, he is written as saying "I do not like you, Sam-I-am". The drafts also described the subject as green ham and eggs instead of the final wording, green eggs and ham.[9]
Dr. Seuss finished writing Green Eggs and Ham in the early spring of 1960.[5] A reading was scheduled for April 19 in the office of Louise Bonino at Random House. These readings were often attended by the entire staff, but Cerf was out of the office that day, so a dinner party was arranged for the reading.[10][11] The reading ended with applause, but Seuss remained self-critical and scrutinized pages that he felt did not get the reaction he had hoped.[10] Phyllis Cerf had intended to announce Green Eggs and Ham with two other children's books, Are You My Mother? and Put Me in the Zoo, and a publicist was sent to request that reviewers postpone reviews after advance sheets had been distributed early.[6]
Green Eggs and Ham was published on August 12, 1960.[2] At the time, approximately three million Dr. Seuss books had already been sold.[12]
Analysis and themes[edit]
Dr. Seuss believed that children's books had more power to do good or evil for society than any other medium, and Green Eggs and Ham was the first of Seuss's Beginner Books to carry a lesson for children.[1] Despite this, Dr. Seuss has said that there is no deeper meaning in the book, insisting that "the only meaning was that Bennett Cerf, my publisher, bet me fifty bucks I couldn't write a book using only fifty words".[12]
Green Eggs and Ham reverses the traditional structure of an adult trying to convince a child to try new foods.[13] It is one of many Dr. Seuss books about a defiance of norms—in this case, the persistence of Sam-I-am after his offer of green eggs and ham is rejected. It explores the underlying social connection between individuals set in opposition to one another, but it does so in a way that appeals to the interests of children.[14][15] Both characters refuse to move from their decision throughout the book until the adult finally gives in at the end.[16]
Green Eggs and Ham only uses 50 words: a, am, and, anywhere, are, be, boat, box, car, could, dark, do, eat, eggs, fox, goat, good, green, ham, here, house, I, if, in, let, like, may, me, mouse, not, on, or, rain, Sam, say, see, so, thank, that, the, them, there, they, train, tree, try, will, with, would, and you.[3] Of these words, anywhere is the only one to have more than one syllable.[5][6] The different words are combined for a total length of 681 words,[13] and the most common words are not and I, which are used 82 and 81 times, respectively.[6]
The narrative of Green Eggs and Ham is told in a question-and-answer structure.[1] Consistent use of the name Sam-I-am instead of simply Sam allowed Seuss to maintain meter when rhyming it with the titular green eggs and ham. The title of Green Eggs and Ham is a play on the common phrase ham and eggs, inverting it to draw the reader's attention.[4]
Literature professor Donald E. Pease described Sam-I-am as "a young Grinch-like creature".[13] One academic, Tim Wolf, argued that Sam-I-am has no distinguishing gender or sex and could be read as male or female.[17]
It has been reported that the book was banned in China from 1965 to 1991 because it supposedly contained themes of "early Marxism"— that is to say, Soviet-style socialism (which was at odds with Chinese socialism). Allegedly, the breakfast was interpreted as a metaphor for Soviet socialism, with many initially rejecting it but eventually coming to enjoy it after "trying" it.[18]