Merle Good Explained

Merle Good
Occupation:writer, publisher
Period:1970s–present
Nationality:American
Notableworks:Happy as the Grass Was Green
Alma Mater:Eastern Mennonite University

Merle Good (born February 10, 1946) is an American author and publisher born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.[1] He is best known for his 1971 novel Happy as the Grass was Green, an important work of American Mennonite literature, which was adapted into the film Hazel's People.[2]

Career

Good is the author of several books including Happy as the Grass was Green (1971), These People Mine (1973), Today Pop Goes Home (1993), Going Places (1994), Surviving Failure (and a Few Successes) (2018), and Christine’s Turn (2022). He has also written numerous children's books and some works of non-fiction.

Good is the also the founder of Good Enterprises, which publishes cookbooks, how-to books, and other books with Mennonite and Amish themes.[3] In 2018, he started a new publishing company Walnut Street Books.[4]

Early life

Good grew up in Lancaster, Pennsylvania and earned a BA at Eastern Mennonite College, now Eastern Mennonite University in Harrisonburg, Virginia and a MDiv at Union Theological Seminary (New York City) in 1972.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Happy as the Grass was Green. Merle Good. Herald Press. 1971.
  2. Web site: Hazel's People. 12 January 2017 . Anabaptist Historians. September 2, 2022.
  3. Web site: Shunned:An outcast's lonely mission. Baltimore Sun. September 2, 2022.
  4. Web site: Cookbook among first offerings. Lancaster Online. September 2, 2022.
  5. "Good Family: Creative 'Benevolent' Capitalists," Crossroads, summer 2010, posted at issuu.com/easternmennoniteuniversity/docs/crossroads-summer-2010, pp. 17–19.