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Death of Christine Baker, the editor who introduced Harry Potter to France

2023-04-25T08:18:23.469Z


Gallimard announced the death of this great lady of French publishing. She was 71 years old.


Christine Baker was a lady of great discretion.

We have read

Harry Potter

by JK Rowling,

At the crossroads of the worlds

by Philip Pullman... without knowing her name when it is through her that these great English sagas arrived in France.

Without Christine Baker, the literature of the last millennium would have been changed.

The former editorial director of Gallimard jeunesse died at the age of 71, the publishing house announced.

“Christine has been a key figure in youth publishing,”

reads her press release.

For more than 44 years, Christine Baker has defended

"the most beautiful texts, the greatest authors and illustrators of children's literature".

Michael Morpurgo, Timothée de Fombelle, Lian Hearn, Quentin Blake, it's still her.

By her flair and her convictions, she knew how to constitute

“a unique literary heritage”.

The entire Gallimard Jeunesse team is deeply saddened to announce the death of Christine Baker.

A key figure in children's publishing, she has for more than 44 years defended the most beautiful texts, the greatest authors and illustrators of children's literature.

pic.twitter.com/HDvn2IiEYC

— Gallimard Youth (@GallimardJeun) April 24, 2023

Christine Baker was born in Sens in 1952. After studying modern literature, she became a bookseller in Paris where she had already shown her ambitions for children's literature, and had created the first youth department.

Then she went to London, to the Children's Book Centre, then the only specialized children's bookstore in the world.

In 1978, when she met Pierre Marchand, who had just launched a youth department within Gallimard, she had joined the prestigious publishing house.

Twenty years after her arrival, she revolutionized children's literature.

Last January, Hedwige Pasquet, director of Éditions Gallimard jeunesse, told Le Figaro:

“In 1998, Christine Baker was our editor in London.

She heard about Harry Poter from a librarian in Scotland.

She read it, immediately liked it and did everything to have it published in France.

” READ ALSO – 25 years ago, France discovered the magic of Harry Potter

A crazy bet, while the novels of more than 300 pages, moreover written with long sentences and difficult themes, went against the publishing habits of the time.

But Christine Baker believed in the magic of JK Rowling's book.

“Some thought that we could not give complex subjects to children”,

analyzed Hedwige Pasquet.

We know the rest, when the world exhibition of Harry Potter has just opened in Paris, on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the publication of the first volume in France.

Today, the 7 Harry Potter books have exceeded 35 million copies in French.

"Always guided by a search for excellence and innovation, Christine has never ceased to develop the catalog in all its diversity, giving it a French and international influence, for fiction as for non-fiction and for all the ages”,

we still read in the press release from Gallimard Jeunesse.

"We are losing a colleague, a friend, a great lady, an inspiring figure."

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2023-04-25

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