Helen Palmer

Helen Marion Palmer
(1898-09-16)September 16, 1898
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.

October 23, 1967(1967-10-23) (aged 69)
La Jolla, California, U.S.

Helen Geisel

Children's book author, editor, screenwriter,

(m. 1927)

Life[edit]

Early life and college[edit]

Helen Palmer was born in New York City in 1898 and spent her childhood in Bedford–Stuyvesant, a prosperous Brooklyn neighborhood. As a child, she contracted polio, but recovered from it almost completely. Her father, George Howard Palmer, an ophthalmologist, died when she was 11.


She graduated from Wellesley College with honors in 1920.[1] She then spent three years teaching English at Girls High School in Brooklyn before moving with her mother to England to attend Oxford University.[2]


She met her future husband, Ted Geisel, in class at Oxford.[3][4] She had a profound influence on his life, starting with her suggestion that he should be an artist rather than an English professor.[5] She later stated, "Ted's notebooks were always filled with these fabulous animals. So I set to work diverting him; here was a man who could draw such pictures; he should be earning a living doing that."[5] They married in 1927. She could not have children because of medical conditions.[6]

Post-war success[edit]

Following World War II, she worked in Hollywood with her husband. The two shared the writing credit on Design for Death, which won the 1947 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.[7][8]


For the next decade, she was the primary source of encouragement for and was an editor of her husband's prolific books for children.[3] She was an uncredited author for many of her husband's books and ideas. That support continued a few years more even as her health became an issue.[4]

Illness and suicide[edit]

Palmer died by suicide with an overdose of barbiturates on October 23, 1967,[9] after a series of illnesses spanning 13 years. She wrote in her suicide note:

Eight months later, in August 1968, Seuss married Audrey Dimond, with whom he had been having an affair.[9]


Nonetheless, Seuss later described how he felt at her death: "I didn't know whether to kill myself, burn the house down, or just go away and get lost."[10] His niece Peggy commented: "Whatever Helen did, she did it out of absolute love for Ted." Secretary Julie Olfe called Palmer's death "her last and greatest gift to him."[10]

Works[edit]

Helen Palmer's best-known book is Do You Know What I'm Going To Do Next Saturday?, published in 1963. This book combined Palmer's stories with photographs by Lynn Fayman, as did two other books: I Was Kissed by a Seal at the Zoo (1962) and Why I Built the Boogle House (1964). The photographs in I Was Kissed by a Seal at the Zoo were taken at the San Diego Zoo in Balboa Park, San Diego, California, and featured children from the Francis Parker School in San Diego interacting with the zoo's animals and staff.


She also expanded the Dr. Seuss short story "Gustav the Goldfish" into the book A Fish Out of Water (1961), which was illustrated by P. D. Eastman.[11]

Morgan, Judith; Morgan, Neil (1995). . Random House. ISBN 0-679-41686-2.

Dr. Seuss & Mr. Geisel

at Library of Congress, with 14 library catalog records

Helen Marion Palmer