Claire Huchet Bishop


Claire Huchet Bishop was a Swiss children's writer and librarian. She wrote two Newbery Medal runners-up, Pancakes-Paris and All Alone, and she won the Josette Frank Award for Twenty and Ten. Her first English-language children's book became a classic: The Five Chinese Brothers, illustrated by Kurt Wiese and published in 1938, was named to the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award list in 1959.

Life

Claire Huchet was born in Geneva, Switzerland and grew up in France or Geneva. She attended the Sorbonne and started the first children's library in France. After marrying the American concert pianist Frank Bishop, she moved to the United States, worked for the New York City Public Library from 1932–36, and was an apologist for Roman Catholicism and an opponent of antisemitism.
She was a lecturer and storyteller throughout the US and was a children's book editor for Commonweal for some time.
Bishop was the President of the International Council of Christians and Jews from 1975–77 and the from 1976-81.
Two of her books were made into films.
After residing in New York for 50 years, Bishop returned to France and died in Paris in 1993. She was 94 years old and died of a hemorrhage of the aorta.

Awards

Works

Children's books

Adult books

  • 1938 French Children's Books for English-speaking Children, bibliography,
  • 1947 France Alive.
  • 1950 All Things Common.
  • 1950 Boimondau: A French Community of Work
  • 1971 Jesus and Israel by Jules Isaac, edited with a foreword by Claire Huchet Bishop; translated form the French by Sally Gran
  • 1974 How Catholics look at Jews: Inquiries into Italian, Spanish, and French Teaching Materials.

Other Writings

Quotes

  • "Government is too big and too important to be left to the politicians."
  • "Those who marry to escape something usually find something else."