Peter Usborne
Thomas Peter Usborne CBE (18 August 1937 – 30 March 2023) was a British publisher. In the early 1960s, Usborne co-founded the satirical magazine Private Eye.[1] In 1973 he founded the children's book publisher Usborne Publishing.[1][2] EducationUsborne was educated at Summer Fields School,[1] an independent boys' boarding and day preparatory school in the city of Oxford, followed by Eton College,[1] an independent boys' boarding school near the town of Windsor, in Berkshire. He then went up to Balliol College at the University of Oxford,[1] followed by INSEAD business school,[1] at the time based in Fontainebleau, a commune of the city of Paris, in France. CareerUsborne was the first managing director of the London-based satirical magazine Private Eye from its foundation in 1961, before leaving to study at INSEAD.[3] After taking a position at the British Printing Corporation, he started working in children's books when he found out he was going to become a parent.[1] Soon afterwards, in 1973, he set up his own company.[4][5][6][1] His eponymous publishing company was named Children's Publisher of the Year at the British Book Awards in both 2012 and 2020,[7] Independent Publisher of the Year at the Independent Publishing Awards in 2014,[8] and Private Business of the Year in 2015.[9] Usborne specialised in illustrated children's books: according to his Daily Telegraph obituary, most of the company's books were "conceived, written and designed in-house".[1] Its best-known books include the Usborne Puzzle Adventure series,[10] the World of the Unknown series[11][12][13] the Book of the Future, Poppy and Sam's Farmyard Tales,[11] Sticker Dolly Dressing and the "That's not my"[11] series of touchy-feely board books for babies by Fiona Watt.[14] Personal lifeUsborne said that parenthood had been the greatest privilege of his life, and that publishing children's books had been an extension of that.[15][16] In 2007, the Usborne family founded The Usborne Foundation,[17] a registered charity[18] which harnesses research, design and technology to create playful media addressing issues from literacy to health. Teach Your Monster to Read[19] is a series of games that has helped millions of children learn to read, funded by The Usborne Foundation. His son, Martin, also runs a publishing company, Hoxton Mini Press.[20][21] Death![]() On 30 March 2023, Usborne died "suddenly but peacefully", surrounded by his family. He was 85. Usborne was survived by his wife, Wendy, children Nicola and Martin, and his five grandchildren.[22] Awards and honoursUsborne was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2011 New Year Honours for services to the publishing industry,[23] and Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2022 New Year Honours for services to literature.[24] He was awarded the London Book Fair Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015.[25][26] References
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