West Cork Rare BookfairINANNA MODERNWest Cork Reading Holidays
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The Horn Book Magazine / [Edited by Paul Heins, Ethel L. Heins, Anita Silvey]

[Haugaard, Erik] Asimov, Isaac and others.

The Horn Book Magazine / [Magazine] About Children’s Books and Reading. With articles by Erik Haugaard, Isaac Asimov [″Views on Science Books” in the June 1963 – copy)] and many others [Edited by Paul Heins, Ethel L. Heins, Anita Silvey].

64 Issues (Duplicates: 1964, 1968, Oct & Dec 1979, 1984). Boston, The Horn Book, 1963, 1967-70, 1973, 1975-81, 1983-1989. 15.3 cm x 22.8 cm. Circa 7500 pages. Featuring black and white frontispieces by book illustrators. With many black and white illustrations throughout by famous illustrators taken from various children’s books. Original Softcover. Very good+ condition with only minor signs of external wear. Only minor discoloration to covers and edges. Some covers have minor pen markings. From the reference library of Hans Christian Andersen-Translator Erik Christian Haugaard.

Includes for example the following articles: Two Heroes. Dietrich of Berne and Hakon of Rogen’s Saga Reviewd by Ruth Hill Viguers / Dark Corners of the Mind: Dicken’s Childhood Reading (Volume XXXIX, 1963) / My Goals as an Illustrator by Marcia Brown / Writing a Book by Phillipa Pearce / A Writer Comments by Erik Christian Haugaard / Keep the Bough Green by Carol Ryrie Brink (Volume XLIII, 1967) / On the Writing of Ghost Stories by Madeleine A. Polland / Centenary of “Little Women,” 1868-1968 Articles by Cornelia Meigs, Lavinia Russ, Aileen Fisher and Olive Rabe, Frank T. Merill Illustrations (Volume XLIV, 1968) / Report on a Thousand Cranes by Betty Jean Lifton / The Centipede and the Creative Spirit by Madeleine L’Engle / Poetry for Children by Leonard Clark / The Part Played By Boston Publishers of 1860-1900 In The Field Of Children’s Books by Helen L. Jones / In Transylvania (Poem) by Elizabeth Jamison Hodges (Volume XLV, 1969) / No Laughter in Heaven by Lloyd Alexander / The Art of Elizabeth Enright. Conclusion. By Eleanor Cameron / Mrs Trimmer-Guardian of Education by Judith St. John (Volume XLVI, 1970) / “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”: A Reply by Roald Dahl / A Collage: Eight Women Who Write Books in Swedish for Children by Mary Orvig (Volume XLIX, 1973) / A Short Talk with a Prospective Children’s Writer by Astrid Lindgren/ Old Words and New: Anti-Feminism in “Watership Down” (Volume L, 1974) / The Poet Who Lives By Erik Christian Haugaard / A Second Look: “The Mouse and His Child”. By John Rowe Townsend (Volume LI, 1975) / Laughter and Children’s Literature by Sid Fleishchman / Early Children’s Books and Their Illustration (Volume LII, 1976) / Through the Looking Glass: Notes on an Antiquarian Children’s Bookshop / The Bookshop for Boy’s and Girls / Letters from England: Bookselling in Schools (Volume LIII, 1977) / Children and The Art of Memory / The Infernal City: The Arcadian Lament in Children’s Picture Books by Jane Resh Thomas / Characters and Other Clues by Ellen Raskin (Volume LIV, 1978) / Recommended Paperbacks / “Before I Was Born”: History and the Child. Part II by Aidan Chambers (Volume LV, 1979) “Poetry Issue 1979” / Laura Ingalls Wilder Award Acceptance by Dr.Seuss / Joan W. Blos by Betty Miles (Volume LVI, 1980) / Editorial: Babies Need Books by Dorothy Butler / Paperbacks in the Classroom (Volume LVII, 1981) / Perspectives on Criticism by Mary Kingsbury / Boston Globe-Horn Book Award Acceptance by Virginia Hamilton, Daniel S. Davis and Vera B. Williams / Conflict in Children’s Fiction by Nancy Bond / Poem by Myrna Haugaard / Norma H. Faber 1909-1984 by Barbara Harrison (Volume LX, 1984) / A Lion in the Room by Meredith Ann Pierce / Caldecott Medal Acceptance by John Schoenherr (Volume LXIV, 1988) etc.

A truly remarkable and special magazine collection, colouring the timeless world of children’s books and reading. Founded in 1924 by Bertha Mahony Miller, each magazine features a unique illustration as the frontispiece, borrowed from a well-known illustrator. The magazines also feature spring, summer, fall and winter booklists, reviews, poems, recommendations, views on science books, advertisements and classifieds, as well as notes on contributors and letters to the editor, providing a plethora of wisdom and knowledge on the art of children’s book writing and reading. Erik C. Haugaard and his wife Myrna, who once owned this personal collection, both made valuable contributions to numerous volumes.

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The Horn Book Magazine, founded in Boston in 1924, is the oldest bimonthly magazine dedicated to reviewing children’s literature. It began as a “suggestive purchase list” prepared by Bertha Mahony Miller and Elinor Whitney Field, proprietresses of the country’s first bookstore for children, The Bookshop for Boys and Girls. Opened in 1916 in Boston as a project of the Women’s Educational and Industrial Union, the bookshop closed in 1936, but The Horn Book Magazine continues in its mission to “blow the horn for fine books for boys and girls” as Mahony wrote in her first editorial.

In each bimonthly issue, The Horn Book Magazine includes articles about issues and trends in children’s literature, essays by artists and authors, and reviews of new books and paperback reprints for children. Articles are written by the staff and guest reviewers, including librarians, teachers, historians and booksellers. The January issue includes the speeches of the winners of the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and each July issue includes the same from the winners of the year’s Newbery Medal and Caldecott Medal. The Fanfare list, published in December, is the editors’ selection of the best children’s and young adult books of the year.[3] No lists were published from 1941 to 1945, or 1955 to 1958. (Wikipedia)

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We ship per DHL Express

We ship per DHL Express

The Horn Book Magazine / [edited by Paul Heins and Ethel L. Heins]
The Horn Book Magazine / [Edited by Paul Heins, Ethel L. Heins, Anita Silvey]