
Horn Book Magazine editors
Bertha
Mahony Miller
founder of Horn Book, editor from 1924 to 1951
Bertha Everett Mahony Miller was
born in 1882. She joined the staff of the Women’s Educational
and Industrial Union which protected and promoted the status of
Boston’s working women, in 1906. Ten years later, under
the auspices of her employer, she opened the Bookshop for Boys
and Girls. In 1924, when she and colleague Elinor Whitney decided
the shop should publish a booklist of recommended titles, they
called their new journal The Horn Book.
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editorial | More about Bertha Mahony
Miller

Jennie
D. Lindquist
editor from 1951 to 1958
When Jennie Lindquist, formerly
managing editor of The Horn Book, became editor in 1951, she was
face to face with a children’s book publishing industry
creating a greater variety of books than ever before. She skillfully
kept the magazine on course under this onslaught of titles —
plumping up the issues, and allowing the reviews to grow a bit
longer and occasionally more controversial.
sample
editorial

Ruth
Hill Viguers
editor from 1958 to 1967
As the third editor, Ruth Hill
Viguers, took over the magazine in 1958, The Horn Book —
which had been sailing right along with the stable, dependable
breezes generated by the publishing and library communities —
hit stormy seas. Social realism in books for the young was here,
as were the heated arguments concerning it, and the magazine reflected
the tempest. In addition to writing provocative editorials on
that and other subjects, Ruth Viguers stirred up the readership
by publishing Frances Clarke Sayers’s passionate “Walt
Disney Accused.”
sample
editorial

Paul
Heins
editor from 1967 to 1974
Paul Heins, Horn Book editor between
1967 and 1974, brought an extensive literary background and substantial
teaching experience to an editorship rich in both intellectual
and international concerns. He also refereed what was possibly
the most heated controversy ever to appear in the pages of the
magazine: a knock-down, drag-out verbal duel between critic Eleanor
Cameron and author Roald Dahl. (Photo:
Fred Staples)
sample
editorial

Ethel
L. Heins
editor from 1974 to 1985
Immediately after the bulging,
bountiful fiftieth anniversary issue, Ethel L. Heins, a long-time
reviewer and an experienced librarian, took over the magazine.
Her emphasis on the importance of looking both forward to the
best new books and backward to the gems of the past, through features
such as “A Second Look” and “Out of Print —
But Look in Your Library,” added yet another dimension to
the magazine.
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editorial | more
about Ethel Heins

Anita
Silvey
editor from 1985 to 1995
In 1985, when Anita Silvey became
the sixth editor of the magazine, she came armed with years of
valuable publishing experience, and her keen perception of the
children’s book world sent varied flags up the masthead.
“It is my hope,” she stated, “that the pages
of this magazine . . . will reflect the entire children’s
book community.” New columns and features included “A
Publisher’s Perspective,” “Young Adult Books,”
and “Books in the Classroom,” to name a few. In 1989,
Ms. Silvey launched a new publication, The Horn Book Guide.
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editorial

Roger
Sutton
editor from 1996 to present
Roger Sutton became editor in chief
of The Horn Book, Inc., in 1996. In each issue, his provocative
editorials keep readers abreast of what’s good, what’s
bad, and what might be a little bit of both in the field of children’s
books. Intent on keeping the Magazine up-to-date, Mr. Sutton has
added columns on the paperback field, non-print media, and expanded
coverage of international children’s books. With a dash
of humor and controversy, Mr. Sutton brings new readers to the
Magazine while giving longtime subscribers food for thought.
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editorial | more about
Roger Sutton