The Hunter of the Magic Tales - Mr Harry Potter
魔幻童话的猎手--哈利·波特先生
Barry Cunningham still laughs about that moment in 1997,when he told a single mother with a knack for fantasy storytelling to find herself a day job,because writing children’s books did not pay.
He could not have known then that his decision to publish a book about a boy wizard would start an international publishing phenomenon,or that within six years the first-time children’s book writer in question would be richer than the Queen of England.The“find a day job”blunder has become part of the legend of Harry Potter,as has Mr Cunningham’s role in picking up the book on behalf of Bloomsbury,its publisher in the UK,after other,longer-established companies had turned it down.
But the cheerful 51-year-old’s story does not end with the career-making move of signing J.K.Rowling,Harry Potter’s creator.In fact,the former marketing director left Bloomsbury weeks before the publication of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone,the first instalment of the boy wizard’s adventures.Today,he is running his own boutique children’s book publisher-The Chicken House-and,once again,being credited with turning little-known storytellers into bigtime bestsellers.
His career began in the late 1970s at Penguin Books.There,Mr Cunningham says,he learnt the importance of promoting authors directly to children."Children’s authors have enormous respect for their market-and I understood that they were thinking about children,whereas adult writers are not thinking about the outside world [when they write];their process is internal,"he says.After being ap pointed marketing director for Penguin Books he was headhunted by Random House,where he became director of sales and marketing for its British operations.
But the long-lunch lifestyle took its toll and Mr Cunningham eventually left Random House to do freelance work,before being approached by Nigel Newton,Bloomsbury’s chief executive,with the idea of creating a children’s list for the company.
"I said to Nigel,‘I can do this for you.I know what children want.’I had never edited a book or commissioned one.Much to his credit,he said OK,"Mr Cunningham says.