John Habberton
John Habberton (February 24, 1842 – February 24, 1921)[1] was an American author and journalist.
Biography
He was born at Brooklyn, New York, and educated in the public schools of Illinois,[2] where he went to live with an uncle after his fathe
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John Habberton (February 24, 1842 – February 24, 1921)[1] was an American author and journalist.
Biography
He was born at Brooklyn, New York, and educated in the public schools of Illinois,[2] where he went to live with an uncle after his father died when he was six years old.[1] He served in the army during the Civil War.[2] After the war, he got a job with Harper & Brothers, where he stayed until 1872.[1] After an unsuccessful attempt to become a publisher himself,[1] in 1873 he became literary editor of the Christian Union[2] (later called the Outlook), where he remained until 1877.[1] From 1876 to 1893, he was literary critic on the staff of the New York Herald.[1]
Helen's Babies
Habberton's first major work of fiction was Helen's Babies (published in 1876 by Loring Publisher, Boston, and in the early 20th Century by George Routledge and Sons, London) based on his sons' adventures. The work was initially rejected, but finally published anonymously. Later the author's identity was revealed.[1] The novel is subtitled: "Helen's Babies with some account of their ways...innocent, crafty, angelic, impish, witching and repulsive by THEIR LATEST VICTIM." It was immensely popular.[2]
The book was one of the Ruby Books series for boys and girls. Habberton is acknowledged as the author of the book in an advertisement within the 1903 edition of Andersen's Fairy Tales published by Routledge. Habberton is acknowledged, also, in an inexpensive cardboard-back edition of Helen's Babies published by (and copyrighted by) Whitman Publishing Company of Racine, Wisconsin in 1934. That edition is copiously illustrated by Pauline Adams.
Helen's Babies was intended as just a piece of humour and aimed at an adult audience. But the hilarious novel almost instantly became a major juvenile literature success, highly estimated by the youngsters as well as authorities like Rudyard Kipling. It became a classic ranking on par with "Tom Sawyer", "Wind in the Willows", "Winnie-the Pooh" and the like. Popularity dwindled a bit after World War II (although George Orwell mentions it very favourably in his 1946 essay on early American literature, Riding Down from Bangor), but started rising again in the 1980s. It was translated into numerous foreign languages.
Other work
Habberton is also known for his stories about early California life, many of which were collected in his 1880 book Romance of California Life: Illustrated by Pacific Slope Stories, Thrilling, Pathetic and Humorous (New York: Baker, Pratt & Co., 1880).
He was also known under the pseudonym "Smelfungus."[3]
Personal life
In 1868, he married Alice Lawrence Hastings, who later suggested recording his sons' adventures.[1]
Partial bibliography
All He Knew
Helen's Babies (1876)
The Annals of a Baby, by One of Its Slaves (1877)
He and I, by the author of "Annals of a Baby" (1877)
The Barton Experiment, by the author of "Helen's Babies" (1877)
The Jericho Road; A Story of Western Life (1877)
Romance of California Life: Illustrated by Pacific Slope Stories, Thrilling, Pathetic and Humorous (1880)
The Worst Boy in Town (1880)
Helen's Babies and Mrs. Mayburns Twins (1881)
Canoeing in Kanuckia
Other People's Children (1877)
Country Luck (1887)
The Scripture Club of Valley Rest
The Barton Experiment
Trif and Trixie: a story of a dreadfully delightful little girl and her adoring and tormented parents, relations, and friends - copyright 1897- Published by Henry Altemus[4]
Caleb Wright; A Story of the West (1901)
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