This article originally appeared in PW's
Children's Bookshelf.
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By Wendy Werris -- Publishers Weekly, 9/17/2009
Four
works of Leo Politi (1908–1996), who wrote and
illustrated dozens of children’s books primarily set in
the Latino communities of Southern California, are being
made available again in October from Getty Publications.
Children were often featured in Politi’s gentle
watercolor paintings. Song of the Swallows won
the Caldecott Medal in 1950. Pedro: The Angel of
Olvera Street (1946) and Juanita (1948)
both received Caldecott Honors. The fourth title to be
reissued is Emmet, which was published in 1971.
John Harris, Getty’s children’s book editor, was
approached by Politi’s heirs at last year’s Bologna Book
Fair about republishing the books, long out of print.
Although
the four titles represent a slight departure for the
Getty, which typically publishes books that are tied to
the museum’s collection, the Los Angeles and California
themes found in Politi’s books made for a strong
creative alignment. According to Leslie Rollins, rights
manager at the Getty, the Politi estate was eager to get
the books back in print, so no contentious rights issues
were involved in the negotiations with attorney Martin
Burton.
“As part of our commitment to the Los Angeles community,
we are proud to bring back these beloved classics under
[our] imprint,” Getty Publications president Gregory
Britton told PW. “Leo Politi’s award-winning
books will now find a new generation of readers and his
art a new generation of admirers.”
The
Getty published its first book, a guide to the museum
collection, in 1958, following up with 900 titles in the
fields of art and photography, art history and
children’s literature over the next 50 years. They began
publishing children’s books in 1995; the children’s list
currently includes 28 titles. Their strongest sellers
include
If... by Sarah Perry;
Marguerite
Makes a Book by Bruce Robertson and Kathryn Hewitt;
and
P Is for Peanut by Lisa Gelber and Jody
Rogers.
Politi, born to Italian immigrants in Fresno, Calif.,
spent part of his career in Italy and London before
settling in Los Angeles in 1930. Drawn to Olvera Street,
the historic Latino neighborhood in downtown Los
Angeles, Politi often sketched there, and sold drawings
and paintings to the many tourists who frequented the
area. It was there that he met Scribner editor Alice
Dalgliesh, who was vacationing in Los Angeles in 1946.
Charmed by Politi’s work, she signed him up for
Pedro, the first of many books by the artist that
Scribner would go on to publish.