
Biographical Information
More about the authors and artists
featured in our Virtual History Exhibit, including Roald Dahl,
James Marshall, Beatrix Potter, Rosemary Wells, and Laura Ingalls
Wilder.

Lloyd Alexander
(1924–2007)
Considered one of the world’s
master storytellers, Lloyd Alexander has written both picture
books and novels, including the Newbery Medal recipient The
High King. Writing as a career did not seem possible to a
young Alexander; his parents pleaded with him to do something
more “sensible,” so he took his first job as a bank
messenger. He left that job for college, but soon felt he needed
adventure. He joined the army, and was sent to Wales, Alsace-Lorraine,
the Rhineland, and southern Germany, and eventually attended the
University of Paris. After returning to the United States, Alexander
made his living as a cartoonist, advertising writer, and editor
for a small magazine while trying to get his novels published.
He wrote and published for adults for ten years, and then began
writing for young people, using Welsh mythology and his memories
of the enchanted land of Wales to bring alive his magical kingdoms.
His Prydain chronicles continue to be favored reading for many
fantasy fans.
1965
letter from Lloyd Alexander | More
about Lloyd Alexander


Isaac
Asimov
(1920?–1992)
To list Isaac Asimov’s honors,
as to list his books, would be excessive. Let it simply be noted
that Isaac Asimov was the most famous, most honored, most widely
read, and most beloved science fiction author of all time. In
his five decades as an author, he wrote more than four hundred
books, won every award his readers and colleagues could contrive
to give him, and provided pleasure and insight to millions. He
died in 1992, still at work. (From HarperCollins
web site. Permission granted.)
In addition, Asimov reviewed science
books for The Horn Book Magazine from 1958 to 1960 and
wrote the “Views on Science Books” column from 1961
to 1967.
1964
letter from Isaac Asimov


Arna
Bontemps
(1902–1973)
Born in 1902, Arna Bontemps was
a highly respected writer, educator, and librarian whose literary
awards include a Newbery Honor and the Jane Addams award for Story
of the Negro (1948). Bontemps's books for children, numbering
more than thirty, also include Sad-Faced Boy, Golden
Slippers, Popo and Fifina, Chariot in the Sky,
The Story of George Washington Carver, Lonesome Boy,
Five Black Lives, and Young Booker. Bontemps
died in 1973.
1938
letter from Arna Bontemps


Marcia
Brown
At one time, Marcia Brown thought
about becoming a doctor. If medical school hadn’t been so
expensive, she says, she might actually have done that. But as
one of three sisters growing up in a minister’s family during
the Depression, she knew she had to settle on something more practical:
teaching.
In the fall of 1936, Brown enrolled
in the New York State College for Teachers, the University at
Albany’s predecessor, where she majored in English and drama.
She went on to teach those subjects at Cornwall High School in
the lower Hudson Valley, but left the profession after three years
to move to New York City and pursue her dream of writing and illustrating
children’s books.
Today, Brown is an internationally
renowned illustrator and author of children’s books. Winner
of the Caldecott Medal, awarded by the American Library Association
for the most distinguished picture book of the year an unprecedented
three times, Brown has produced over 30 children’s books
during her 49-year career. Many of her titles have been produced
in other languages, including Afrikaans, German, Japanese, Spanish
and Xhosa-Bantu. She is noted for her spare texts, strong images
and the vitality of her experimentation with a variety of media
ranging from her trademark woodcuts to pen and ink and gouache.
Her characters — lively and humorous, full of magic and
enchantment — include handsome princes, sly cats, evil sorcerers,
flying elephants and snow queens.
Note
and painting from Marcia Brown (undated)


Susan
Cooper
British author Susan Cooper has
written many books for children and adults, and received numerous
honors and awards for her work, including the Newbery Medal for
The Grey King and the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award
and Newbery Honor Award for The Dark Is Rising. She currently
lives in Connecticut.
For more information, visit http://www.thelostland.com/
1976
letter from Susan Cooper | 1986
letter from Susan Cooper


Roald
Dahl
(1916–1990)
Roald Dahl was born in Wales in
1916 and educated in English boarding schools. During World War
II, he was a Royal Air Force fighter pilot in North Africa and
Greece. He was transferred to Washington D.C., where he saw his
first piece of work published, “A Piece of Cake,”
an account of a fighter plane crashing in Libya. Soon after he
published his first piece of fiction, a story called “The
Gremlins.” Fifteen years later, Mr. Dahl found himself telling
bedtime stories to his children over and over again. These stories
became the basis for James and the Giant Peach. After
that came Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The
BFG, and Matilda. Every book of Roald Dahl’s
was written in a little brick hut in an apple orchard about two
hundred yards away from his home. He wrote them all in pencil.
More can be learned about Roald Dahl by reading the autobiographical
Boy: Tales of Childhood and Going Solo. Roald
Dahl died in 1990 at the age of seventy-four. (Biographical
information posted with the permission of Farrar, Straus &
Giroux)
1972
letter from Roald Dahl | Charlie
and the Chocolate Factory controversy (1972–73)


James
Marshall
(1942–1992)
James Marshall was born in San
Antonio, Texas, and grew up sixteen miles outside of the town
on the family farm. His father, who worked for the railroad, had
his own dance band in the thirties and appeared on the radio.
His mother, also musical, sang in the church choir. So it wasn't
surprising when Jim considered playing the viola for a career
and received a scholarship to attend the New England Conservatory
of Music in Boston. But during an airplane trip he was jerked
out of his seat and injured his hand, and that was the end of
his musical career.
He returned to San Antonio College
and later Trinity, where he studied French under Harry Allard,
his future collaborator. After moving East, Jim graduated from
Southern Connecticut State University with a degree in history
and French. The French major somehow wound up trying to teach
Spanish in a Catholic school in Boston. Before long he was looking
for a new profession.
On a fateful summer afternoon in
1971 James Marshall lay on his hammock drawing pictures. His mother
was inside the house watching Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf on
TV. The strident voices of the movie's protagonists, George and
Martha, split the quiet air, and as the sketches began to take
shape, history was made . . . and James Marshall
never had to look for another profession.
And so, with "tongue-in cheek,"
Jim Marshall began his career and became one of the most prolific
and successful author/illustrators of children's books. He is
best known for his series on the mischievous exploits of Fox,
a debonair, lazy showoff; the uproarious adventures of the two
Cut-Ups, Spud and Joe; George and Martha; and the misadventures
of the Stupid family.
The Washington Post said
in a review of his work, "There are few better writers and
illustrators for children now than Marshall. Certainly there is
no one else working today who more successfully captures the child's
point of view than does the creator of George and Martha and the
Stupids." The New York Times said about the Fox
books: "The miracle of Mr. Marshall's work is that so often
his stories are as profound as they are simple." He illustrated
new versions of many children's classics including Goldilocks
and the Three Bears, for which he received a Caldecott Honor,
Red Riding Hood, The Three Little Pigs, and
Hansel and Gretel.
In an interview with Texas
Monthly, Jim Marshall said about his work: "People have
very odd ideas of what a children's writer should be like. Children
always expect me to look like a hippopotamus and adults assume
that by nature I have to be a little off the wall."
James Marshall died in October
of 1992. He divided his time between an apartment in the Chelsea
district of New York and his home in Mansfield Hollow Connecticut.
(Copyright © Penguin Putnam Books
for Young Readers. Reprinted with permission from Penguin Putnam
Books for Young Readers.)
1986
radio interview with James Marshall


Leo
Politi
(1908–1996)
Leo Politi’s life was the
stuff that picture books are made of. Born into an Italian family
in Fresno in 1908, he was transported to Italy at the age of seven
— in an “Indian Chief suit,” via transcontinental
railroad and ocean liner — and grew up, constantly drawing,
in his mother’s native village near Milan. After art school,
and some designing and illustrating, he returned to the States
— via the Panama Canal, with its Latino color — and
settled on Los Angeles’s quaintly Mexican Olvera Street,
where he sketched tourists and sold drawings alongside potters,
weavers, and other artisans-in-residence. Whatever the authenticity
of Olvera Street, Politi’s affection for the Mexican-Americans
and their folkways was genuine; an affinity. Most especially,
as a devout Catholic at home with Italian saints, he responded
to Mexican ritual. Children — natural, spontaneous children
— he loved without reserve or distinction. Drawing Mexican
children, for magazines and books, gave him an American career
and a professional identity. In 1980, the Fresno Public Library
was named for him, and in 1991, the Leo Politi Elementary School
in Los Angeles was dedicated.
— Barbara Bader
1947
illustrated envelope from Leo Politi | More
about Politi’s Horn Book connection


Beatrix
Potter
(1866–1943)
Beatrix Potter was born in London
in 1866. During a typically sheltered upper class childhood, she
and her brother kept a succession of animals which they drew and
studied. Potter excelled at drawing from nature and attempted
to publish her scientific drawings with little success. In her
thirties, she turned to writing and illustrating children’s
stories. After being rejected by several publishers, Peter
Rabbit, her first book, was published in 1902 and was an
immediate success. Her thirty animal stories are still in print
and widely read. Potter spent the final portion of her life as
Mrs. William Heelis, living in the Lake District farming sheep,
collecting antiques, and preserving the countryside she has become
so firmly associated with through her books. She died in 1943.
Three letters from Beatrix Potter
(1927, 1934,
1941) | More
about Beatrix Potter and the Horn Book


William
Steig
(1907–2003)
William Steig was born into a family
of artists in New York City in 1907. He attended City College
and the National Academy of Design. In 1930, Steig’s work
began appearing in The New Yorker, where his drawings have been
a popular fixture ever since. He published his first children’s
book, Roland the Minstrel Pig in 1968, embarking on a new and
very different career. Steig’s books reflect his conviction
that children want the security of a devoted family and friends.
In 1970, Steig received the Caldecott Medal for Sylvester
and the Magic Pebble. His books also include The Amazing
Bone, a Caldecott Honor Book, Abel’s Island
and Doctor De Soto, both Newbery Honor Books. He has
won numerous other international awards, and published collections
of drawings for adults. (Biographical
information posted with the permission of Farrar, Straus &
Giroux.)


Rosemary
Wells
Born in New York City, Rosemary
Wells grew up in a house “filled with books, dogs, and nineteenth-century
music.” Her childhood years were spent between her parents’
home near Red Bank, New Jersey, and her grandmother’s rambling
stucco house on the Jersey Shore. Most of her sentimental memories,
both good and bad, stem from that place and time.
A self-proclaimed “poor student,”
Wells attended the Museum School in Boston after finishing high
school. It was, she recalls, “a bastion of abstract expressionism
an art form that brought to my mind things I don’t like
to eat, fabrics that itch against the skin, divorce, paper cuts,
and metallic noises.”
Without her degree, she left school
at 19, married, and began a fledgling career as a book designer
with a Boston textbook publisher. When her husband, Tom, applied
to the Columbia School of Architecture two years later, the couple
moved to New York, where she landed a job as a designer at Macmillan.
Wells wrote and illustrated Unfortunately Harriet, her
first book with Dial, in 1972. One year later she wrote the popular
Noisy Nora. “The children and our home life have
inspired, in part, many of my books. Our West Highland white terrier,
Angus, had the shape and expressions to become Benjamin and Tulip,
Timothy, and all the other animals I have made up for my stories.”
Her daughters Victoria and Beezoo were constant inspirations,
especially for the now famous “Max” board book series.
“Simple incidents from childhood are universal,” Wells
says. “The dynamics between older and younger siblings are
common to all families.”
But not all of Wells’ ideas
come from within the family circle. She admits, “I put into
my books all of the things I remember. I am an accomplished eavesdropper
in restaurants, trains, and gatherings of any kind. These remembrances
are jumbled up and changed because fiction is always more palatable
than truth. Memories become more true as they are honed and whittled
into characters and stories.”
Her writing career, spanning nearly
three decades, has been a “pure delight,” she says.
“I regret only that I cannot live other lives parallel to
my own. Writing is a lonely profession and I am a gregarious sort
of person. I would like someday to work for the FBI. A part of
me was never satisfied with years of tennis. I still yearned to
play basketball.” (From HarperCollins
web site. Permmission granted.)
1986
radio interview with Rosemary Wells


Laura
Ingalls Wilder
(1867–1957)
Laura Ingalls Wilder was born in
1867 in the log cabin described in Little House in the Big
Woods. As her classic Little House books tell us, she and
her family traveled by covered wagon across the Midwest. She and
her husband, Almanzo, made their own covered-wagon trip with their
daughter, Rose, to Mansfield, Missouri. There Laura wrote the
classic Little House books and lived until she was ninety years
old. For millions of readers, however, she lives forever as the
little pioneer girl in the classic Little House books. (From
HarperCollins web site. Permission granted.)
1953
letter from Laura Ingalls Wilder