The Time of Their Lives
The Golden Age of Great American Book Publishers, Their Editors, and Authors
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Narrated by:
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Tom Weiner
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By:
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Al Silverman
About this listen
Relying on the eyes, ears, and memories of more than 120 notable publishing figures, including Alfred Knopf, the Doubleday fathers and sons, and the Thornhills of Little, Brown and Company, the author offers an intimate history of never-before-told stories about how some of the most important books in postwar America came into being. Along with houses that go back to the mid-1800s, Silverman covers publishing's post-WWII newcomers such as Roger Straus, who amassed nineteen Nobel Prizes in his time, and Barney Rosset, whose Grove Press freed such banned authors as D. H. Lawrence and Henry Miller. He takes a close look at the paperback revolution of the 1950s and the 1960s and pays particular homage to the Golden Age's talented horde of editors, who offer marvelous stories about their authors.
It was Arthur Thornhill, Sr., in his years as president of Little, Brown and Company, who said about the occupation he loved, "I wanted to be part of something that was good." In this fascinating and elegiac history, Al Silverman illuminates a period in publishing that not only was good but also formed a distinguishing landmark of culture in American life.
©2008 Al Silverman (P)2009 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Critic Reviews
"In a difficult publishing era, it's a delight to share these recollections of the days before Wall Street ruled Publishers Row." ( Publishers Weekly)
"Of course, Al Silverman is both a 'bookman' par excellence and also the ultimate publishing insider, so it almost goes without saying that he is exactly the right person to write the story of book publishing since the Second World War, in the now bygone age of independent publishers and bigger-than-life editors." (Michael Korda, author of Charmed Lives)