CCBC-Net Archives

[CCBC-Net] Minders of Make-Believe: Taste Makers

From: Susan Kuklin <skuklin1>
Date: Fri, 18 Jul 2008 11:05:30 -0400

I'm a member of the advisory committee of the PEN World Voices festival. We are always on the lookout for YA and children's writers from around the world. During the festival we have a program specifically devoted to children and YA literature. The writers also take part in additional panels, as well as one-on-one public conversations with an American counterpart. As Marc mentioned, the authors visit schools, an experience that many have said is the highlight of the week. If you know of a wonderful writer, we are open to suggestions. Send me your list.

Thanks,

Susan Kuklin www.susankuklin.com skuklin1 at nyc.rr.com

-----Original Message----- From: ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
[mailto:ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu] On Behalf Of Bookmarch Sent: Friday, July 18, 2008 9:51 AM To: leonardsma; mayra.negron at gmail.com; ayg at comcast.net Cc: ccbc-net at lists.education.wisc.edu Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] Minders of Make-Believe: Taste Makers

To be fair, the decline in popularity of children's books from other countries is exactly matched by a similar decline in adult books. I recall a study of bestseller lists from a few years ago that compared the former popularity of French, German, -- and later Central European, Latin American, and finally Indian authors with the current A list of American fiction and nonfiction. Parents who feel no need to read books in translation or from other countries are, of course, less likely to believe their children need that experience. That said, there are some efforts CCBCers should know about: http://www.wordswithoutborders.org/ is a very active and lively organization. Every year PEN hosts a World Voices festival in New York, and they have a section devoted to books for younger readers. http://www.pen.org/page.php/prmID/1096 PEN does an especially good job at bringing these authors from around the world into schools to meet kids. And if we expand our sense of literature to inc
 lude, say, Manga, there are some kinds of foreign books that are more popular and influential in America than ever before.

Marc Aronson

www.marcaronson.com bookmarch at aol.com 973-763-9343 (phone) 973-763-6601 (fax) 917-257-7072 (cell)


In a message dated 07/18/08 09:32:03 Eastern Daylight Time, leonardsma writes: At the Bologna International Book Fair earlier this year, US publishers were selling foreign rights far more often than they were buying them. I've heard it said that one reason for this is that publishers here think there is an advantage to having the authors they publish on hand to help promote their books. The sense of the market of Barnes and Noble's buyers is most likely another major factor in publishers' decisions on this score. I also think that the nation's leaders set a tone that can have reverberations throughout the culture, and that in the last several years we've obviously seen a wholesale turning away from interest in the rest of the world. Wedo have Kane-Miller, a small publishing company that has been going now for something like thirty years, which specializes in importing picture books from around the world. But for now they're unique on the US publishing scene.







Leonard S. Marcus

54 Willow Street, #2A

Brooklyn, New York 11201



tel 718 596-1897

e-mail leonardsma at aol.com

web www.leonardmarcus.com




-----Original Message-----

From: Mayra Negron <mayra.negron at gmail.com>

To: Annette Goldsmith <ayg at comcast.net>

Cc: leonardsma at aol.com; horning at education.wisc.edu; ccbc-net at lists.education.wisc.edu

Sent: Thu, 17 Jul 2008 10:31 pm

Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] Minders of Make-Believe: Taste Makers



  
     Having just attended tonight a round table with 7 renowned Chilean (IBBY) authors who are writing (and have written)? excellent children's books, I am saddened that their work is not as known in the US. Listening to Victor Carvajal, Veronica Uribe, Alicia Morel, and others describe the books they have authored, makes me think of all the Spanish-speaking children that are missing these authors' work because the bridges from the North and South Americas are non-existent right now. How many children that can read Carvajal and his ecological stories are not doing so because the adults in their lives don't know that this literature exists? As I told Victor Carvajal tonight, our group, a Fullbright group of teachers and librarians studying Chilean literature,? is beginning to build the bridge. I hope others will join us.

  

Mayra, counting the hours until tomorrow, when we get to listen to 8 more authors,

Santiago, Chile




On Thu, Jul 17, 2008 at 5:20 PM, Annette Goldsmith <ayg at comcast.net> wrote:

 Leonard, could you comment on how children's book editors view

 internationalism today? Jella Lepman and the generation that created IBBY

 had the impetus of post-war reconstruction to build bridges of understanding

 through children's books; what do you think drives the movement now? I'm

 thinking in particular of books from other countries, especially those

 translated into English for the U.S. market, rather than multicultural books

 originating with U.S. houses.

  

 Annette Goldsmith

 Doctoral Candidate

 College of Information

 Florida State University

 Tallahassee, Florida

  





 -----Original Message-----

 From: ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu

 [mailto:ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu] On Behalf Of

 leonardsma at aol.com

 Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2008 4:03 PM

 To: horning at education.wisc.edu; ccbc-net at lists.education.wisc.edu

 Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] Minders of Make-Believe: Taste Makers

  

 ?Moore was many things, and it's important to recognize all of them. I agree

 that she is an easy target for satire, and also that her accomplishments

 were great, not least when you consider the resistance she had to overcome

 from publishers, librarian management, just about everyone... As for her

 interest in what we now call multi-culturalism, yes this was important to

 her. She was a realist about the fact that New York City was an

 international crossroads and a magnet for immigrants and her realism

 expressed itself at the library both in the collections she organized, which

 included books in many languages and from many "lands," as they said in

 those days, and in the staffing of the library. After World War II, NYPL was

 one of the libraries to which Japan sent young women to train as children's


 librarians with a view to returning home to aid in the cultural

 reconstruction of their devastated homeland.

  

  

  

 As I say in MINDERS, May Massee was another internationalist, who published


 many books with foreign settings and about foreign cultures. She did so with

 the stated purpose of opening American children's minds to an awareness of

 the rest of the world, and she did so within a few years of America's

 rejection of membership in the League of Nations, and of the Red Scare--so

 it wasn't an easy position for her to be taking.

  

  

  

 Margaret McElderry worked for Anne Carroll Moore in Rm 105, the inner

 sanctum of NYPL, in the years before World War II. When McElderry returned

 from military service in Office of Army Intelligence in Europe, she became

 Harcourt, Brace's children's book editor, and took up the cause of

 internationalism on an even grander scale. Hers was the generation that

 created IBBY and the one that perhaps has believed most fervently that

 children's books could make a difference in the quest of lasting world

 peace. Velma Varner came on to the scene at about the same time, first at

 Putnam and later at other houses, including Viking, and she too was an

 internationalist. Ann Beneduce, who later founded Philomel was her protegee.

 So, it's possible to trace this line of editors who a commitment to

 internationalist right up to the present day.

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

 Leonard S. Marcus

  

 54 Willow Street, #2A

  

 Brooklyn, New York 11201

  

  

  

 tel 718 596-1897

  

 e-mail leonardsma at aol.com

  

 web www.leonardmarcus.com

  

  

  

  

 -----Original Message-----

  

 From: Kathleen T. Horning <horning at education.wisc.edu>

  

 To: ccbc-net at lists.education.wisc.edu

  

 Sent: Thu, 17 Jul 2008 3:07 pm

  

 Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] Minders of Make-Believe: Taste Makers

  

  

  

  

  ? ?Leonard, thanks for your quick and thoughtful response. ?I can see why

 Anne Carroll Moore may have been viewed as a sentimentalist and

 romanticist when it cames to children's literature, and people do love ? to


 talk about her eccentricities, such as her constant companion, a ? wooden

 doll named Nicholas, whom she treated like a real person. But I ? do think

 we also have to give credit to ACM for her understanding of the ? importance

 of honoring ethnic diversity, rather than pushing for ? assimilation. She

 was very well aware of all the different cultural ? identities represented

 in NYC neighborhoods, and made sure that her ? children's librarians

 understood and celebrated the communities they ? served. ? ?My children's

 literature professor, Gertrude Herman, worked as a ? children's librarian

 under ACM in the New York Public Library System, ? and I loved getting her

 to tell stories about that time. She worked in a ? Czech neighborhood, and,


 as a result, had to learn ev

 ?erything she could ? about Czech culture. She said after a few years at

 NYPL, she knew more ? about the Czech people than she did about her own

 cultural heritage. ? ? I've always wondered if ACM's great affinity for

 cultural diversity is, ? at least in part, what led to the publication of so

 many novels set in ? other countries during from the late 1920s through the


 1950s. Did that ? come up at all in your research? ? ?KT ? ?Kathleen T.

 Horning ?Director ?Cooperative Children's Book Center ?4290 Helen C. White

 Hall ?600 N. Park St ?Madison, WI 53706 ? ?Phone: 608-263-3721 ?FAX:

 608-262-4933 ? ?horning at education.wisc.edu

 http://www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/ ? ? ? ?leonardsma at aol.com wrote: ?>

>From the beginnings of library service to children at the turn of the ? >

 last century, public librarians emerged as the leading arbitors of ? >

 quality in children's literature. Anne Carroll was certainly the best ? >

 known member of the group, and quite powerful, but she wa

 ?s not ? > all-powerful. She had a rival just across the East Rive

  

 r in Clara ? > Whitehill Hunt, who headed children's services at the

 Brooklyn Public ? > Library system starting in 1903, which was three

 years before ACM went ? > to New York Public. In fact, Moore left her

 position at the Pratt ? > demonstration library when she saw that Hunt

 was about to trump her in ? > Brooklyn. Moore was right to realize that

 the NYPL, with its proximity ? > to publishers' offices, was the biggest

 prize of all, and she seized ? > that opportunity when it came her way

 and made the most of it. From ? > then on Moore was involved in

 everything: the establishment of Book ? > Week and of the Newbery and

 Caldecott Medals (though it was Hunt who ? > served as the first Newbery

 chair), the publication of her own annual ? > lists, review work for the

 Herald Tribune and the Horn Book, and less ? > formally as an advisor to

 publishers. There are letters from the ? > D'Aulaires both to Moore and

 Hunt thanking each of them for

 ?having ? > been the one librarian to inspire them to begin making

 picture books. ? > They must have been a very politic pair. ?> ?>

 Some publishers listened to Moore and others didn't. May Massee, a ? >

 former librarian and Booklist editor when she founded Doublday's ? >

 juveniles dept in the early 1920s, allied herself closely with Moore. ? >

 Later when Massee moved to Viking she published Ruth Sawyer (winner of

> the Newbery for ROLLER SKATES), who was a good friend of Moore's and a

> sometime storyteller at NY Public. It certainly helped the young ? >

 Robert McCloskey to win the approval of Moore that he was Sawyer's ? >

 son-in-law, and that his wife was herself a children's librarian. ?>

> Louise Bechtel of Macmillan was politic but as often as not scornful

> Moore's opinions. Bechtel published Lewis Hines' photo essay MEN AT

> WORK, knowing in advance (one can assume) that Moore would dismiss the

> book as Bank

 ?Street-inspired here and now realism (it's a book of ? > photos t

  

 hat follows the construction of the Empire State Building, and ? > has

 since won a place as a classic of documentary photography). Ursula ? >

 Nordstrom, who belonged to the next generation of editors, was more ? >

 openly contemptuous of Moore. ?> ?> But Moore as I said was not the

 only powerful librarian. Alice Jordan, ? > at Boston Public Library,

 tutored the founder of The Horn Book in ? > children's literature when

 the latter was just starting out as the ? > proprietor of a children's

 bookshop built on reformist ideals. And ? > Jordan was far more

 responsive to the kinds of experimental books that ? > Margaret Wise

 Brown was writing than Moore was, so there was a range ? > of critical

 opinon, even at the time when a few powerful voices ? > dominated the

 scene. ?> ?> From the 1920s onward, progressive educators led by Bank

 Street's Lucy ? > Mitchell put themselves forward as minders with a

 different philosophy ? > frp, that of

  ?Moore, whom they viewed as a sentimentalist and Romantic ? > about

 childhood. Alice Dalgliesh, who founded the Scribner juvenile ? >

 department in the mid-1930s, came from Teachers College, Columbia ? >

 University, which was another center of progressive education thought ? >

 and practice, and so was not likely to fall into line unquestioning ? >

 with Moore's pronouncements, either. ?> ?> In the 1940s the creators

 of Golden Books found a way to bypass the ? > library system altogether

 by publishing inexpensive books that parents ? > could buy directly at

 five and dime stores, drug stores, and later ? > supermarkets. The

 editors craved the respectibility that library ? > approval could confer

 on a publishing enterprise, and when they had ? > the chance to persuade

 a Caldecott winning artist (for instance ? > Elizabeth Orton Jones) to

 work for them, they did so. But the great ? > success of Golden Books in

 the middle decades of the 19

 ?00s is perhaps ? > the best proof of all of the limits of the lib

  

 rarians' power as "minders." ?> ?> Leonard S. Marcus ?> 54 Willow

 Street, #2A ?> Brooklyn, New York 11201 ?> ?> tel 718 596-1897

> e-mail leonardsma at aol.com ?> web www.leonardmarcus.com ?> ?>

 -----Original Message----- ?> From: Kathleen T. Horning

 <horning at education.wisc.edu> ?> To:

 ccbc-net at lists.education.wisc.edu ?> Sent: Thu, 17 Jul 2008 12:32 pm

> Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] Minders of Make-Believe: Taste Makers ?>

> Leonard, first of all, thanks so much for being our guest for the next

 two ? weeks, while we discuss your book "The Minders of the Make ? Believe."

 Bouncing off the last paragraph of your response below, ? could you please

 tell ? us a bit more about the "taste makers" -- who they ? were and how

 they ? influenced the field? ?How much of an influence did ? they have on

 the editors ? you interviewed? ? ?KT ? ?Kathleen T. Horning ?Director

 Cooperative Children's ? Book Center ?4290 Helen C. White Hall

 ?600 N. Park St ?Madison, WI 53706 ? ? ?Phone: 608-263-3721 ?FAX:

 608-262-4933 ? ?horning at education.wisc.edu

 <mailto:horning at education.wisc.edu>

 http://www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/ ?> ? ? ? ? leonardsma at aol.com

 <mailto:leonardsma at aol.com> wrote: ?> ?Well, that's ? a large

 question. ?> ?> ?> ?> There have been many changes in subject

 and ? emotional content, format, and ? even genre. ? > ?> ?> ?>

 Picture books and ? cloth and board books for the youngest ages were rare

 before ? William R. Scott, ? a small experimental publishing house inspired


 by progressive ? education ? theory, hired Margaret Wise Brown as its first


 editor in the late ? 1930s, and ? published books like Brown and Leonard

 Weisgard's NOISY BOOK and ? Brown and ? Esphyr Slobodkina's FIVE LITTLE

 FIREMEN. A few years later, Simon and ? Schuster ? brought out Dorothy

 Kunhardt's PAT THE BUNNY, and a new age category ? for ? children's books

 was firmly established. Think

 ?of all the more recent ? ? books--those by Eric Carle,Tana Hoban and

  

 ?Lois Ehlert, for instance--that have ? ? grown out of that beginning. ?>

> ?> ?> At Harper, Ursula Nordstrom worked ? across all age groups

> ?to deepen the ? emotional range and pyschological real ?> ?> ism

 of books for young readers. Think of ? Brown and Hurd's THE RUNAWAY BUNNY,

 which may be the most rhapsodic piece of ? writing for young children in the

 entire literature; or GOODNIGHT MOON, which, ? as I have written elsewhere,


 brought together the librarians' idea that ? make-believe was what small

 children want and need with the opposing idea of the ? progressive educators

 of ? the time, who believed that preschoolers had a natural ? affinity for

 "here and ? now" stories about their own everyday reality. Brown had ? a

 great, synthetic ? vision -- and was able to make a place in the Great Green

 Room for both points ? of v ?> iew. The peacefulness in GOODNIGHT MOON Is

 not just the sense of peace ? that a ? child facing the dark needs a

 ?t the end of the day; it is also a ? reconciliation ? of the warring ideas


 of the "minders" of children's literature ? of her day. ?> ?> ?>

> Of course books like HARRIET THE SPY and later THE ? OUTSIDERS and THE

 CHOCOLATE ? WAR took the ?> ?literature into other new terrain. Robert

 Cormier's agent the late ? Marilyn ? Marlow had a very hard time placing THE

 CHOCOLATE WAR. Even Ursula ? Nordstrom ? found it too disturbing, as did

 Viking's Velma Varner (lots of Vs ? there!), who ? had been willing to take


 a chance of THE OUTSIDERS. Nordstrom also ? passed on A ? WRINKLE IN TIME,

 but she was generally closed to fantasy; ? tempamentally, the ? genre did

 not appeal to her. But 25 other editors rejected ? L'Engle's book as ? well,

 and the ultimate success of that book was instrumental ? in bringing about

 a greater openness among American readers to fantasy ? literature generally.

 Prior to that, I think the American tradition was ? fundamentally realist in

 or

 ?ientation, a tendency that can be traced back to ? Puritan New Engla

  

 nd and ? fear of the "sporting lie" that made all fiction ? suspect. ?>

> ?> ?> Louise ? Seaman Bechtel's essays, which are collected in a

 book called BOOKS IN ? SEARCH ? OF CHILDREN (which Susan Hirschman ?>

 published during her tenure as head of ? Macmillan's Dept of Boo ?> ?>

 ks for Boys and Girls) are well worth reading. Bechtel ? had one foot in the

 librarians' camp and the other in that of the progressive ? educators like

 Bank ? Street's=2 ?> 0founder Lucy Sprague Mitchell. As such she was one

 of the few ? figures who ? bridged the great divide in critical thinking

 during much of the ? last century ? about what was "good" for children to

 read. ?> ?> ?> ?> Having ? said all this, it's also worth noting

 at the start that the official ? taste ? makers were responsible for

 relatively few of the children's books that ? ? children themselves were

 most enthusiastic about. When Ursula Nordstrom started ? ? in as head of

 Harper's departmen

 ?t in 1940, one of the first things she did was ? ? stop at a newsstand and


 pick up a sampling of the latest comic books. She knew ? ? that that's what


 chidlren were actually reading, and she wanted to learn the ? ? secret of

 those critically shunned publications' great success. ?> ?> ?>

> ? ?> ? ?> ?> ?> ?> ?Leonard S. Marcus ?> ?> 54

 Willow Street, #2A ?> ?> Brooklyn, New York 11201 ? ?> ?> ?>

> tel 718 596-1897 ?> ?> e-mail leonardsma at aol.com

 <mailto:leonardsma at aol.com> ? ?> ?> web www.leonardmarcus.com

 <http://www.leonardmarcus.com> ?> ?> ?>

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Mayra in Milwaukee   
    
  
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Received on Fri 18 Jul 2008 10:05:30 AM CDT