Children’s publisher Peter Usborne has died at the age of 85, his publishing company has announced.
Mr Usborne was also the first managing director of Private Eye when the satirical magazine was founded in 1961.
He has been described as a “genius” who had a “child-like energy and curiosity”.
He then started his own business, with Billy And The Mini Monsters, Puzzle Adventure and Farmyard Tales Poppy And Sam book series among its titles.
Usborne Publishing said Usborne, its founder and chairman, died on Thursday “suddenly but peacefully” surrounded by family.
The company added: “Peter was, in the truest sense of the word, a genius – his brilliance was matched only by his determination to make books accessible to all children.
“This determination was fuelled by his passion for ‘doing things better’ than any other children’s book publisher, matched with a child-like energy and curiosity that made him light up every room he stepped into.
“He was an exceptional publisher, an inspirational leader and a very kind, generous man who will be sorely missed by everyone who was lucky enough to know him. ”
Usborne was awarded for his services to literature and the publishing industry
During an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle this year, Mr Usborne was made a CBE for his services to literature.
This came after he was made an MBE in 2011 for his services to the publishing industry.
The publisher also celebrated the 50th anniversary of Usborne Publishing this year.
Nicola Usborne, Mr Usborne’s daughter and the managing director of Usborne Publishing, said she was “heartbroken” by the death of her father.
She described him as a “brilliant, ever curious, ever enthusiastic man, who was also very kind, very generous and honourable and principled to his core”.
“The key man was Peter Usborne. He was the man who said ‘An end to pub talk, let’s make it a proposition.’ Without him, Private Eye would never have got going. He was the one that tied the knot.” – Christopher Booker, first editor of Private Eye. 1/4 pic.twitter.com/Y2Jckj8Duy
— Private Eye Magazine (@PrivateEyeNews) March 31, 2023
Her statement added: “He was the best dad I could imagine.
“He always joked that he intended never to die, and we all hoped he’d have many more years. We take some solace in the fact that he had such a very full life right up until the end.”
Peter Usborne had 'whole day meeting' on his 'very last day'
During his “very last day”, she said her father had a “whole day meeting” with HarperCollins US.
Ms Usborne added: “He never ever understood why anyone would want to retire, and he would have been so pleased that he never, even remotely, did.”
Private Eye took to Twitter following the news and said that Mr Usborne “was the driving force” as well as a “proud and involved shareholder”.
“Usborne wasn’t just about business: it was also he who, while putting together a student mag at the end of the 1950s, introduced John Wells to Richard Ingrams and cartoonist Willie Rushton,” the post added.
A quote from Christopher Booker, the first editor of Private Eye who died in July 2019 at the age of 81, was also posted by the magazine.
Mr Booker said Mr Usborne was the “key man … who said ‘An end to pub talk, let’s make it a proposition’.
“Without him, Private Eye would never have got going. He was the one that tied the knot.”
The current editor of Private Eye is Ian Hislop - a regular panellist on BBC comedy news show Have I Got News For You.
Mr Usborne leaves a wife, Wendy, children Nicola and Martin, and five grandchildren.
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