Why
is it called “The Horn Book”?
Back
in the sixteenth century, English monks began to make hornbooks
to help their pupils learn to read. Usually a wooden paddle with
an alphabet and a verse glued to the surface, hornbooks derived
their name from the piece of transparent horn protecting the verse.
The picture to the right shows a modern replica of a hornbook.
In 1924, when Bertha Mahony and Elinor Whitney
were preparing the first issue of the Horn Book for publication,
they still had not found a suitable name. Eulalie Steinmetz Ross
describes the moment in The Spirited Life: Bertha Mahony Miller
and Children’s Books (Horn Book, 1973):
“Then one noon, while sitting on a park
bench near the Union, deep in discussion of early children’s
books, they suddenly turned to each other and ‘like spontaneous
combustion’ shouted together, ‘The Horn Book!’
“. . . Bertha and Elinor were delighted
with the mutually-inspired name for their periodical; it seemed
perfect that the first magazine concerned with children’s
books should be named after the first paddle-primer for children.
“. . . Lest the name of their magazine indicate
too didactic an approach to children’s literature, its editors
chose a gay picture-pun for their cover design: three scarlet-coated
huntsmen who, with horns a-tilt, hunted and hollo’d in pursuit
of good books for boys and girls. The exuberant drawing was adapted
from an illustration by Randolph Caldecott for his nineteenth-century
English picture book, The Three Jovial Huntsmen.”

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