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Scribners
- Five Generations in Publishing
- Narrated by: Charles Scribner III
- Length: 8 hrs and 18 mins
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Summary
Scribners tells the inside story of five generations—over 150 years—at the legendary publishing house of Charles Scribner's Sons, beginning with its founding in downtown New York through its golden era on Fifth Avenue above the famous landmark bookstore, and down to the present day.
The author, the fifth of the Charleses to work at that house of celebrated authors, provides here an inside view—"between the covers" of illustrious and notorious books—of the family members, editors, and authors of this colorful literary history.
Among the writers who illuminate this story, we find in the early years Robert Louis Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Teddy Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and John Galsworthy. Then, with the arrival of "editor of genius" Max Perkins, the story takes off into the heights of 20th-century fiction with Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Wolfe, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Marcia Davenport, Alan Paton, James Jones, and—above all—Ernest Hemingway, that most loyal and enduring author whose works were published by four generations of Scribners.
This engaging personal account of family history—both in and out of the office—includes the most colorful controversies: from Mussolini and Trotsky to Lindbergh and C. P. Snow, as well as behind-the-scenes adventures of the author's father as he navigated the seas infested with publishing corsairs before finding a safe harbor at Macmillan, and finally, after the demise of tycoon Robert Maxwell, Simon & Schuster.
The author, an art historian, found himself for 30 years in the company of writers by "an accident of birth". But it proved an adventure beyond his reckoning. As Fitzgerald wrote: "If it wasn't life, it was magnificent."