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Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. Records, 1899-1992
Summary
Main Entry: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc.
Title: Records, 1885-1992. Bulk dates: 1945-1980
Size: 189 linear ft.
Access: Unrestricted
Source: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc.
19 Union Square West, New York, New York 10003
Purchase, 1992.
Processed by: John Bolender and Liavon Iurevich
Funding: We gratefully acknowledge the assistance
of the National Endowment for the Humanities and Farrar, Straus & Giroux,
Inc., for providing funds for the processing of this collection.
Historical Statement:
The publishing company Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. was founded
in 1945 as Farrar, Straus & Company by John Farrar and Roger Straus.
After numerous changes in management and corresponding changes in name,
the company became known as Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. (FSG)
in 1964 when Robert Giroux became editor-in-chief. The company firmly
established itself as a quality publisher in the 1960s and '70s. FSG
remained staunchly independent of conglomerate publishing for many
years. Even after selling controlling interest to the German publisher
Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck in 1994, FSG maintained much of
the freedom of an independent publishing house.
Description:
Correspondence, manuscripts, contracts, photographs, posters, audio
tapes, bound volumes, and related materials documenting the rise of
the firm from a small struggling house to a leading independent publishing
company. Editorial files organized by author and book title comprise
most of the collection. There is also a series consisting entirely
of correspondence to and from Robert Giroux. The collection contains
significant correspondence by or pertaining to Colette, T.S. Eliot,
Wilhelm Reich, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Susan
Sontag, Edmund Wilson, Tom Wolfe, and Marguerite Yourcenar.
Organizational History
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
John Farrar and Roger W. Straus III founded Farrar, Straus & Company
in New York City in 1945. Farrar, of Farrar & Rinehart, left that
firm in 1944 after returning from overseas duty in the Office of War
Information. Straus, in addition to a background in journalism and
magazine editing, also had the necessary financial resources to launch
a publishing house. (Straus' mother was a Guggenheim, and his father's
family were the Strauses who owned Macy's.) The original board included
Farrar as chairman, Straus as president and chief executive officer,
and Stanley Young, the well-known author and literary critic for The
New York Times.
The company's first title, issued under a joint imprint with Duell
Sloan & Pearce, was Yank, the G.I. Story of the War, a
compilation of material from Yank, the Army's famous weekly
publication. The first list included James Branch Cabell's There
Were Two Pirates, a posthumous collection of short stories by
Stephen Vincent Benét, an historical novel by Willa Gibbs, and
Theodor Reik's Ritual: Psychoanalytic Studies. None of the
first list's titles were substantially lucrative.
Despite publishing such works of quality as Carlo Levi's Christ
Stopped at Eboli (1947), Shirley Jackson's The Lottery (1949)
and Alberto Moravia's The Woman of Rome (1949), the company
remained in financial ill health until 1950. In that year, however,
the firm successfully executed a number of coups saving it from ruin
and placing it on the road to prominence. Early that year, (Bengamin)
Gayelord Hauser, the popular fitness expert, having recently left
the house of Coward-McCann, Inc., published Look Younger, Live
Longer (partly ghost-written by Frances Warfield Hackett) with
Farrar, Straus & Company. The book was a shot in the arm for
the fledgling house, selling 300,000 copies in 1950 and 500,000 during
the next ten years. The company executed another coup that year when
Edmund Wilson left Doubleday due to a dispute over a legal bill and
joined the Farrar, Straus & Company list. Straus also contracted
for a collection of essays by Wilson which Random House had turned
down the previous year. The essays were published in 1950 as Classics
and Commercials, a literary chronicle of the 1940s. (Wilson
would remain on the company's list for the rest of his life.) Also
in 1950, André Gide was added to the list, and Rabbi Philip
S. Bernstein's What the Jews Believe and Quentin Reynold's Courtroom proved
to be bestsellers. With Young's rise to the rank of editor in December,
the company underwent the first of many changes in name, becoming
Farrar, Straus & Young. The following year witnessed yet another
substantial step forward as the company acquired Creative Age Press
from Eileen Garrett, thereby adding Robert Graves, Gerald Sykes and
James Reynolds to its list.
In 1953, the acquisition of the Chicago company of Pellegrini & Cudahy
brought with it not only the children's book company of Ariel Books
but also a new partner, Sheila Cudahy. Cudahy replaced Young who resigned
his managerial and editorial functions while remaining a member of
the board. After briefly changing its name back to Farrar, Straus & Company,
the firm became Farrar, Straus & Cudahy in 1955. In becoming a
partner, Cudahy added many authors of Catholic interest to the firm's
list. Accordingly, 1955 saw the beginning of Vision Books, a series
of biographies of Catholic saints, martyrs and heroic figures designed
for young (nine- to thirteen-year-old) readers. In the same vein, 1958
saw the acquisition of the Catholic publishing company of McMullen
Books, Inc. The firm further established its reputation as a house
of quality during the 1950s by publishing Marguerite Yourcenar's Hadrian's
Memoirs as well as The Mask of Innocence and The
Lamb written by the Nobel Laureate François Mauriac.
In 1955, Robert Giroux joined the firm as both editor-in-chief and
vice-president. Giroux's first editing experience, while a student
at Columbia University, was for The Columbia Review in which
he published such future FSG authors as John Berryman and Thomas Merton.
Giroux had been editor-in-chief of Harcourt Brace & Company since
1948 when he left for Farrar, Straus bringing with him seventeen new
authors including T. S. Eliot, Flannery O'Connor, John Berryman and
Bernard Malamud. Never before had such a large number of important
authors followed an editor from one house to another. In 1964, two
years after Cudahy's departure, Robert Lowell's For the Union Dead became
the first title to be published under the Farrar, Straus & Giroux
imprint. Under the combined leadership of these three men, the company
firmly established itself as a quality house in the 1960s and 1970s.
Over the years, FSG has acquired many publishing houses of quality.
In 1957, the firm purchased L. C. Page & Company, a long-established
publisher of children's books and reprints of classic novels (see L.
C. Page: Organizational History below). The acquisition of
Noonday Press, Inc. in 1960 added the Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis
Singer to the house's list. The acquisitions of Octagon Books, Inc.
in 1968 and Hill & Wang, Inc. in 1971 (see Hill & Wang:
Organizational History below) further strengthened the company.
After John Farrar's retirement in 1972 and death two years later,
Roger Straus took on a greater leadership role in the company, becoming
a staunch opponent of conglomerate takeovers in publishing. In the
late 1970s, Straus resigned from the Association of American Publishers
because of what he considered to be its tendency to defend conglomerates
over authors and independent publishers.
By the late 1970s, Farrar, Straus & Giroux was publishing such
noteworthy authors as Philip Roth, Susan Sontag, Tom Wolfe, Walker
Percy, John McPhee, Donald Barthelme and Jean Stafford. By 1990, FSG
had published the following Pulitzer prize winning books: 77 Dream
Songs (1965) by John Berryman, The Fixer (1967) by Bernard
Malamud, Collected Stories (1970) by Jean Stafford, The
Dolphin (1974) by Robert Lowell, Lamy of Santa Fe (1975)
by Paul Horgan, The Morning of the Poem (1981) by James Schuyler
and The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love (1990) by Oscar Hijuelos.
Between 1945 and 1985, the firm published the work of thirteen authors
who were, or who were to become, Nobel laureates. They include Joseph
Brodsky, Elias Canetti, T.S. Eliot, William Golding, Nadine Gordimer,
Knut Hamsun, Hermann Hesse, Juan Ramon Jimenez, François Mauriac,
Czeslaw Milosz, Salvatore Quasimodo, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn and Derek Walcott among others. In addition to its many
Nobel and Pulitzer prize-winning authors, FSG has assured its financial
independence by occasionally publishing books directed toward a popular
audience. In addition to works by Gayelord Hauser, such books include
David Stern's Francis (1946), a story about a talking mule;
Kenneth Heuer's Men of Other Planets (1950); and Dorothy Finkelhor's How
to Make Your Emotions Work for You (1952).
In 1994, FSG sold controlling interest to the German publisher Verlagsgruppe
Georg von Holtzbrinck, a company which also owns Henry Holt and St.
Martin's Press. Nonetheless, Farrar, Straus & Giroux has retained
much of the freedom of an independent publishing house.
Hill & Wang
Hill & Wang was founded by Lawrence Hill and Arthur Wang in New
York City in 1956. Both Wang and Hill had formerly worked at the publishing
firm of A. A. Wyn, Inc., Wang as editor-in-chief and Hill as sales
manager. The partners launched their new firm by purchasing eighty-eight
backlist titles from Wyn as well as five outstanding contracts for
future titles.
Hill & Wang earned its initial reputation that same year by inaugurating
the Dramabooks series. Dramabooks originally presented
the work of such drama critics as G. K. Chesterton and George Bernard
Shaw. Its Mermaids series also presented seventeenth-century
English plays. Eventually, the works of such twentieth-century playwrights
as Jean Cocteau, Jean Giraudoux, Jean Anouilh, Max Frisch and Arthur
Kopit were added to the Dramabooks series. Dramabooks also
includes ten volumes of Lanford Wilson's plays including Hot L
Baltimore (1970).
In 1959, Hill & Wang bought the rights to twenty-six titles in
the American Century series from Thomas Yoseloff. This was the beginning
of extensive publishing of U.S. literature by the firm. Hill & Wang
has also published scholarly nonfiction in the areas of semiotics,
science, and politics. The company has published translations of eighteen
books by Roland Barthes, Elements of Semiology (1977) and A
Lover's Discourse (1977) among them. In 1979, Hill & Wang
published an illustrated edition of Darwin's The Origin of Species abridged
and annotated by the paleontologist Richard Leakey. A number of political
titles prepared by the American Friends Service Committee have appeared
under the Hill & Wang imprint. These include Peace in Vietnam (1968), Struggle
for Justice (1971) and A Compassionate Peace (1982).
In 1971, Farrar, Straus & Giroux acquired Hill & Wang, making
the company a division of FSG in the process. That same year, Hill
left to form his own publishing company, Lawrence Hill & Company.
Wang has remained as editor-in-chief of the Hill & Wang imprint.
L.C. Page & Company
In 1891, having recently graduated from Harvard, Lewis Coues Page
began working for the Boston publishing firm of Estes & Lauriat
of which his stepfather, Dana Estes, was a partner. Page was soon made
treasurer of the Joseph Knight Company, a division of Estes & Lauriat.
When Knight resigned in 1896, Page assumed leadership of Knight's former
company and renamed it L. C. Page & Company.
Although L.C. Page initially published such contemporary novelists
as Gabriele d'Annunzio, it soon found a niche in juvenile series including
Lucy Maud Montgomery's popular Anne of Green Gables series
beginning in 1908. But the greatest success of all was the 1913 publication
of Eleanor Hodgman Porter's Pollyana. The story of the tirelessly
cheerful young Pollyanna sold more than a million copies in its first
year. The multi-volume series which followed, written mostly by other
authors, led to the addition of the word "Pollyanna" to North
American English.
In addition to its series for young readers, the company published
reprints of established classics by authors such as Victor Hugo, Omar
Khayyam, Leo Tolstoy, Sir Walter Scott, Charles Dickens, Lord Byron
and Alexandre Dumas. The literary conservatism of L.C. Page & Company,
however, proved to be the undoing of its independence. Mr. Page abhorred
what he called "sophisticated literature," by which he evidently
meant contemporary fiction especially if by a foreign author. In 1937,
he declared that the great bulk of the U.S. public simply wanted reprints
of classics and had no taste for more modern writing. Predictably,
the company's sales declined. In 1957, the year following Page's death,
his firm was acquired by Farrar, Straus & Cudahy, Inc. which had
become successful publishing the very literature which Page had disdained.
Farrar, Straus & Giroux discontinued the L. C. Page imprint in
1980.
Forward to FSG Records. Scope and Content Note
M. Yolles
June 1997