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Pantheon Books

Pantheon Books is an American book publishing imprint with editorial independence. It is part of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.[4]

Pantheon Books
Parent companyRandom House
Founded1942; 81 years ago (1942)
FounderKurt Wolff & Helen Wolff,[1]
Kyrill S. Schabert,[2]
Jacques Schiffrin[3]
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationNew York City
Key peopleDan Frank, Editorial Director, 1996-2021
Publication typesBooks
Official websitepantheon.knopfdoubleday.com

Dan Frank was Editorial Director from 1996 until his death in May 2021.[5] Lisa Lucas joined the imprint in 2020 as Senior Vice President and Publisher.[6]

Overview

Bertelsmann, the German company that also owns Bantam Books, Doubleday Publishing, and Dell Publishing, acquired Random House in 1998, along with its imprints Pantheon Books, Modern Library, Times Books, Everyman's Library, Vintage Books, Crown Publishing Group, Schocken Books, Ballantine Books, Del Rey Books, and Fawcett Publications,[7] making Bertelsmann the largest publisher of American books.

In addition to classics, international fiction, and trade paperbacks, recently Pantheon has moved aggressively into the comics market. It has published many critically acclaimed graphic novels and comics collections, including Ice Haven, La Perdida, Read Yourself RAW, Maus, In the Shadow of No Towers, and Black Hole. Many of its comics publications are high-quality collected editions of works originally serialized by other publishers such as Fantagraphics Books.

History

Pantheon Books was founded in 1942 in New York City by Helen and Kurt Wolff who had come to the United States to escape fascism and the Holocaust.[8][9] Pantheon is currently part of Bertelsmann. Important early works published by Pantheon were Zen and the Art of Archery by German scholar Eugen Herrigel, the Bollingen series (composed of C. G. Jung's collected works in English and books of noted Jungian scholars), the first complete translation of the I Ching, and Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago.[8]

When Random House bought Alfred A. Knopf in 1960, the front page of the New York Times reported that the merger "united two of the nation's most celebrated publishers of quality writing".[10] The following year, Random House would buy Pantheon, which would be moved into the Knopf Publishing Group. Also in 1961, Pantheon hired André Schiffrin as executive editor of Pantheon Books.

Under the direction of Schiffrin, Pantheon continued to publish important works by European writers such as The Tin Drum by Günter Grass, who would later receive a Nobel Prize for his work; Madness and Civilization by Michel Foucault, The Lover by Marguerite Duras, and Adieux by Simone de Beauvoir. By the late 1960s, Pantheon started to bring American writers such as Noam Chomsky, James Loewen and Studs Terkel to European readers.[8] In 1965, RCA bought Random House.[11] Throughout the 1970s, Pantheon continued to publish intellectual and often leftist works of fiction and nonfiction "without a profit-and-loss sheet in sight".[12] In other words, Pantheon editors prided themselves on subsidizing the cost of publishing less commercially successful (but socially or intellectually important) works with the profits from more commercially successful books.[8]

In 1980, RCA sold Random House to Samuel Irving Newhouse, Jr., and Pantheon Books came under pressure to increase profits.[8]

In early 2009, long-time Pantheon publisher Janice Goldklang was laid off as part of a general restructuring of Random House and its publishing divisions.[13]

Controversies

Pantheon and Random House, which at the time was owned by SI Newhouse, were plagued with controversy throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s. In December 1989, Alberto Vitale, a former banker, replaced Robert L. Berstein as chairman and president of Random House.[14] In February 1990, Schiffrin was "asked to resign after he refused to reduce the number of titles published [by Pantheon] or to trim Pantheon's 30-member staff".[15] In protest at Schiffrin's forced resignation and other changes in staffing, such as the hiring of Erroll McDonald, editors and staff Tom Engelhardt, Wendy Wolf, Sara Bershtel, Jim Peck, Susan Rabiner, David Sternbach, Helena Franklin, Diane Wachtell, Gay Salisbury, and several others resigned in the following months.[14][15][16] Authors of books published by Pantheon, Random House, and other related imprints, including Studs Terkel, Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Princeton historian Arno Mayer, and Barbara Ehrenreich, held a protest outside Random House in March 1990 during which they argued that the termination of Schiffrin amounted to corporate censorship of the books that would not be printed without him.[15] Novelist E. L. Doctorow used his acceptance speech for a fiction prize at the March 1990 National Book Critics Circle award ceremony to criticize Random House for ousting Schiffrin.[17]

In the week following the protests, 40 Random House editors and publishers signed a statement that defended the personnel changes at Pantheon, stating: "like Pantheon, we abhor corporate censorship. We have never experienced it, nor do we believe that Pantheon has ever experienced it. We would not tolerate censorship of any form, and we are offended by any suggestion to the contrary. But, unlike Pantheon, we have preserved our independence and the independence of our authors by supporting the integrity of our publishing programs with fiscal responsibility".[18] Another supporter of Schiffrin's termination wrote that the protests and resignations were "a hilarious specimen of people intoxicated by self-importance. It also is a case study of the descent of intellectuals' leftism into burlesque".[19]

In 1998, Random House made news again when it was bought by Bertelsmann. The Authors Guild approached the Fair Trade Commission, arguing that "the $1.4 billion acquisition of Random House by Bantam's parent, Bertelsmann AG, the German media conglomerate, would create a "new economic behemoth" with the potential to restrict readers' choices and authors' ability to market their works".[20] Bertelsmann was allowed to make the purchase, however, making it the largest publisher of English-language trade books. Again, Schiffrin protested, noting that in the eight years since Random House had come under the direction of Vitale, "Random House's 'high end'—the literary translations and books of criticism, cultural history and political analysis that had built the reputation of the Knopf and Pantheon imprints—were being sacrificed" and that concerns for the "bottom line" would outweigh intellectual and social concerns.[21]

Schiffrin published a memoir in 2000, in which he explains his side of the controversies surrounding Pantheon and Random House called The Business of Books: How International Conglomerates Took Over Publishing and Changed the Way We Read, in which he accused Vitale and those with money-making interests of homogenizing the publishing industry by focusing too much on profits, and warns: "the resulting control on the spread of ideas is stricter than anyone would have thought possible in a free society".[8] In a 2003 interview, former Pantheon editor Tom Engelhardt reflects on the Pantheon controversy in light of the acquisition by Bertelsmann: "Pantheon was a very specific place, publishing a very specific kind of book, and we felt that was being wiped out. As it turned out, what happened at Pantheon was the beginning of the gargantuan feasting on the independent publishing house and not-so-independent houses as well."[22]

Pantheon today

Pantheon continues to publish well-respected fiction and non-fiction, and has more recently expanded further into graphic novels. Pantheon re-issued books in the graphic-based "...For Beginners" series (originally published by Writers and Readers Cooperative) in the 1970s and 1980s; deciding to bring the series back in 2003.[23]

One of the first original graphic novels Pantheon published was the highly acclaimed Maus: A Survivor's Tale by Art Spiegelman in 1986. Spiegelman has become somewhat of a comics consultant, advising editor-in-chief Dan Frank.[24] Another key member of the Pantheon Graphic Novels team is graphic designer Chip Kidd.[25]

In 2000, Pantheon published The Acme Novelty Library by Chris Ware.[24] In 2005, Pantheon published The Rabbi's Cat, a graphic novel by Joann Sfar that "tells the wholly unique story of a rabbi, his daughter, and their talking cat".[26] Notable cartoonists whose graphic novels have been published by Pantheon include Spiegelman, Ware, Dan Clowes, Charles Burns, Ben Katchor, Marjane Satrapi, and David Mazzucchelli.

Select bibliography

Literature and criticism

Selections from the Bollingen Series

Comics and graphic novels

References

  1. ^ McGuire, William. Bollingen An Adventure in Collecting the Past, Princeton University Press (1989), p 273.
  2. ^ "Obituaries: Kyrill S. Schabert, 74, Dead; Ex-Head of Pantheon Books", New York Times (April 10, 1983).
  3. ^ Pantheon history on World Without End.
  4. ^ Random House, Inc. Datamonitor Company Profiles Authority: Retrieved June 20, 2007, from EBSCO Host Business Source Premier database.
  5. ^ "Dan Frank, revered editor at Pantheon Books, dead at 67". AP. May 24, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  6. ^ "National Book Foundation's Lisa Lucas To Head Knopf's Pantheon and Schocken". Publishing Perspectives. July 15, 2020. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  7. ^ Miller, M. C. (March 26, 1998), "And then there were seven", Opinion, The New York Times, p. A.27.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Schiffrin, A. (2000). The Business of Books: How International Conglomerates Took Over Publishing and Changed the Way we Read. London/New York: Verso.
  9. ^ Korda, Michael (1999). Another Life: a memoir of other people (1st ed.). New York: Random House. ISBN 0679456597.
  10. ^ Talese, B. G. (April 17, 1960). "Random House will buy Knopf in merger". New York Times. p. 1.
  11. ^ Funding Universe Company Profile on Random House
  12. ^ Engelhardt, T. (1990), "Pantheon purge", The Progressive, 54(5), 46.
  13. ^ Neyfakh, Leon (January 8, 2009). "Pantheon Publisher Janice Goldklang Latest Victim of Layoffs at Random House Inc". New York Observer.
  14. ^ a b McDowell, E. (February 28, 1990). "New Pantheon head named amid resignation protest". New York Times. p. D.2.
  15. ^ a b c McDowell, E. (March 6, 1990). "250 protest resignation at Pantheon". New York Times. p. D.21.
  16. ^ "More Pantheon editors resign in protest". New York Times. May 3, 1990. p. C.21.
  17. ^ Cohen, R. (March 9, 1990). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; Top Random House author assails ouster at Pantheon". New York Times. p. D.18.
  18. ^ McDowell, E. (March 13, 1990). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; 40 at Random House critical of Pantheon". New York Times. p. D.23.
  19. ^ Will, G. F. (March 25, 1990). "The 'Right' to lose other people's money". The Washington Post. p. c.07.
  20. ^ Barringer, F. (May 30, 1998). "F.T.C. clears merger path for publishers". New York Times. p. D.1.
  21. ^ Schiffrin, A. (April 30, 1998). "Eyes on the bottom line". The Washington Post. p. A.21.
  22. ^ Lara, A. (July 6, 2003). "Q & A /Tom Engelhardt / "Getting the business end of publishing"". San Francisco Chronicle. p. M.2.
  23. ^ MacDonald, H. (2003). "Pantheon re-offers 'for beginners' series". Publishers Weekly. Vol. 250, no. 51. p. 26.
  24. ^ a b Wolk, D. (2005). "The GN imprint that isn't". Publishers Weekly. Vol. 252, no. 10. p. 46.
  25. ^ Tamura, Taylor. . Humboldt State University. Archived from the original on January 12, 2015. Retrieved January 12, 2015.
  26. ^ Pantheon web site.

External links

  • Official website
  • Finding aid to Pantheon Books records at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
  • Finding aid to André Schiffrin papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
  • Pantheon Books at Database – Jewish Publishers of German Literature in Exile, 1933-1945

pantheon, books, american, book, publishing, imprint, with, editorial, independence, part, knopf, doubleday, publishing, group, parent, companyrandom, housefounded1942, years, 1942, founderkurt, wolff, helen, wolff, kyrill, schabert, jacques, schiffrin, countr. Pantheon Books is an American book publishing imprint with editorial independence It is part of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group 4 Pantheon BooksParent companyRandom HouseFounded1942 81 years ago 1942 FounderKurt Wolff amp Helen Wolff 1 Kyrill S Schabert 2 Jacques Schiffrin 3 Country of originUnited StatesHeadquarters locationNew York CityKey peopleDan Frank Editorial Director 1996 2021Publication typesBooksOfficial websitepantheon wbr knopfdoubleday wbr comDan Frank was Editorial Director from 1996 until his death in May 2021 5 Lisa Lucas joined the imprint in 2020 as Senior Vice President and Publisher 6 Contents 1 Overview 2 History 3 Controversies 4 Pantheon today 5 Select bibliography 5 1 Literature and criticism 5 2 Selections from the Bollingen Series 5 3 Comics and graphic novels 6 References 7 External linksOverview EditBertelsmann the German company that also owns Bantam Books Doubleday Publishing and Dell Publishing acquired Random House in 1998 along with its imprints Pantheon Books Modern Library Times Books Everyman s Library Vintage Books Crown Publishing Group Schocken Books Ballantine Books Del Rey Books and Fawcett Publications 7 making Bertelsmann the largest publisher of American books In addition to classics international fiction and trade paperbacks recently Pantheon has moved aggressively into the comics market It has published many critically acclaimed graphic novels and comics collections including Ice Haven La Perdida Read Yourself RAW Maus In the Shadow of No Towers and Black Hole Many of its comics publications are high quality collected editions of works originally serialized by other publishers such as Fantagraphics Books History EditPantheon Books was founded in 1942 in New York City by Helen and Kurt Wolff who had come to the United States to escape fascism and the Holocaust 8 9 Pantheon is currently part of Bertelsmann Important early works published by Pantheon were Zen and the Art of Archery by German scholar Eugen Herrigel the Bollingen series composed of C G Jung s collected works in English and books of noted Jungian scholars the first complete translation of the I Ching and Boris Pasternak s Doctor Zhivago 8 When Random House bought Alfred A Knopf in 1960 the front page of the New York Times reported that the merger united two of the nation s most celebrated publishers of quality writing 10 The following year Random House would buy Pantheon which would be moved into the Knopf Publishing Group Also in 1961 Pantheon hired Andre Schiffrin as executive editor of Pantheon Books Under the direction of Schiffrin Pantheon continued to publish important works by European writers such as The Tin Drum by Gunter Grass who would later receive a Nobel Prize for his work Madness and Civilization by Michel Foucault The Lover by Marguerite Duras and Adieux by Simone de Beauvoir By the late 1960s Pantheon started to bring American writers such as Noam Chomsky James Loewen and Studs Terkel to European readers 8 In 1965 RCA bought Random House 11 Throughout the 1970s Pantheon continued to publish intellectual and often leftist works of fiction and nonfiction without a profit and loss sheet in sight 12 In other words Pantheon editors prided themselves on subsidizing the cost of publishing less commercially successful but socially or intellectually important works with the profits from more commercially successful books 8 In 1980 RCA sold Random House to Samuel Irving Newhouse Jr and Pantheon Books came under pressure to increase profits 8 In early 2009 long time Pantheon publisher Janice Goldklang was laid off as part of a general restructuring of Random House and its publishing divisions 13 Controversies EditPantheon and Random House which at the time was owned by SI Newhouse were plagued with controversy throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s In December 1989 Alberto Vitale a former banker replaced Robert L Berstein as chairman and president of Random House 14 In February 1990 Schiffrin was asked to resign after he refused to reduce the number of titles published by Pantheon or to trim Pantheon s 30 member staff 15 In protest at Schiffrin s forced resignation and other changes in staffing such as the hiring of Erroll McDonald editors and staff Tom Engelhardt Wendy Wolf Sara Bershtel Jim Peck Susan Rabiner David Sternbach Helena Franklin Diane Wachtell Gay Salisbury and several others resigned in the following months 14 15 16 Authors of books published by Pantheon Random House and other related imprints including Studs Terkel Kurt Vonnegut Jr Princeton historian Arno Mayer and Barbara Ehrenreich held a protest outside Random House in March 1990 during which they argued that the termination of Schiffrin amounted to corporate censorship of the books that would not be printed without him 15 Novelist E L Doctorow used his acceptance speech for a fiction prize at the March 1990 National Book Critics Circle award ceremony to criticize Random House for ousting Schiffrin 17 In the week following the protests 40 Random House editors and publishers signed a statement that defended the personnel changes at Pantheon stating like Pantheon we abhor corporate censorship We have never experienced it nor do we believe that Pantheon has ever experienced it We would not tolerate censorship of any form and we are offended by any suggestion to the contrary But unlike Pantheon we have preserved our independence and the independence of our authors by supporting the integrity of our publishing programs with fiscal responsibility 18 Another supporter of Schiffrin s termination wrote that the protests and resignations were a hilarious specimen of people intoxicated by self importance It also is a case study of the descent of intellectuals leftism into burlesque 19 In 1998 Random House made news again when it was bought by Bertelsmann The Authors Guild approached the Fair Trade Commission arguing that the 1 4 billion acquisition of Random House by Bantam s parent Bertelsmann AG the German media conglomerate would create a new economic behemoth with the potential to restrict readers choices and authors ability to market their works 20 Bertelsmann was allowed to make the purchase however making it the largest publisher of English language trade books Again Schiffrin protested noting that in the eight years since Random House had come under the direction of Vitale Random House s high end the literary translations and books of criticism cultural history and political analysis that had built the reputation of the Knopf and Pantheon imprints were being sacrificed and that concerns for the bottom line would outweigh intellectual and social concerns 21 Schiffrin published a memoir in 2000 in which he explains his side of the controversies surrounding Pantheon and Random House called The Business of Books How International Conglomerates Took Over Publishing and Changed the Way We Read in which he accused Vitale and those with money making interests of homogenizing the publishing industry by focusing too much on profits and warns the resulting control on the spread of ideas is stricter than anyone would have thought possible in a free society 8 In a 2003 interview former Pantheon editor Tom Engelhardt reflects on the Pantheon controversy in light of the acquisition by Bertelsmann Pantheon was a very specific place publishing a very specific kind of book and we felt that was being wiped out As it turned out what happened at Pantheon was the beginning of the gargantuan feasting on the independent publishing house and not so independent houses as well 22 Pantheon today EditPantheon continues to publish well respected fiction and non fiction and has more recently expanded further into graphic novels Pantheon re issued books in the graphic based For Beginners series originally published by Writers and Readers Cooperative in the 1970s and 1980s deciding to bring the series back in 2003 23 One of the first original graphic novels Pantheon published was the highly acclaimed Maus A Survivor s Tale by Art Spiegelman in 1986 Spiegelman has become somewhat of a comics consultant advising editor in chief Dan Frank 24 Another key member of the Pantheon Graphic Novels team is graphic designer Chip Kidd 25 In 2000 Pantheon published The Acme Novelty Library by Chris Ware 24 In 2005 Pantheon published The Rabbi s Cat a graphic novel by Joann Sfar that tells the wholly unique story of a rabbi his daughter and their talking cat 26 Notable cartoonists whose graphic novels have been published by Pantheon include Spiegelman Ware Dan Clowes Charles Burns Ben Katchor Marjane Satrapi and David Mazzucchelli Select bibliography EditThis is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources Literature and criticism Edit Force and Freedom Reflections on History by Jacob Burckhardt 1943 The World is Not Enough by Zoe Oldenbourg 1948 The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell 1949 The I Ching or Book of Changes translated by Richard Wilhelm and Cary F Baynes 1950 Contains an extensive Introduction by Carl Jung Originally issued in two volumes subsequently in one volume Winds by Saint John Perse 1953 The Collected Works of Paul Valery in English 15 Volumes and Bibliography Bollingen Series XLV General Editor Jackson Mathews Various Translators Published by Pantheon Books New York Volume One issued in 1956 with later volumes following in the ensuing years Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak first published in 1957 later published in 1959 The Tin Drum by Gunter Grass 1963 Madness and Civilization A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason by Michel Foucault 1965 Division Street America by Studs Terkel 1967 American Power and the New Mandarins by Noam Chomsky 1969 At War with Asia by Noam Chomsky 1970 Hard Times An Oral History of the Great Depression by Studs Terkel 1970 The Order of Things An Archaeology of the Human Sciences by Michel Foucault 1970 Problems of Knowledge and Freedom by Noam Chomsky 1971 The Archaeology of Knowledge by Michel Foucault 1972 For Reasons of State by Noam Chomsky 1973 Peace in the Middle East Reflections on Justice and Nationhood by Noam Chomsky 1974 Working People Talk About What They Do All Day and How They Feel About What They Do by Studs Terkel 1974 Mississippi Conflict amp Change by James Loewen and Charles Sallis 1974 Reflections on Language by Noam Chomsky 1975 Sound Effects Youth Leisure and the Politics of Rock n Roll by Simon Frith 1981 When Things of the Spirit Come First Five Early Tales by Simone de Beauvoir 1982 The Empire s Old Clothes What the Lone Ranger Babar and Other Innocent Heroes Do to Our Minds by Ariel Dorfman 1983 Adieux A Farewell to Sartre by Simone de Beauvoir 1984 After The Second Sex Conversations with Simone de Beauvoir by Alice Schwarzer and Simone de Beauvoir 1984 The Lover by Marguerite Duras 1985 Women Writing About Men by Jane Miller 1986 The Woman Destroyed by Simone de Beauvoir 1987 The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography by Angela Carter 1988 Manufacturing Consent The Political Economy of the Mass Media by Edward S Herman and Noam Chomsky The Death of Rhythm amp Blues by Nelson George 1988 On Record Rock Pop and the Written Word by Simon Frith and Andrew Goodwin 1990 Stop the Violence Overcoming Self Destruction by Nelson George 1990 The Book of Disquiet by Fernando Pessoa 1991 Felix The Twisted Tale of the World s Most Famous Cat by John Canemaker 1991 Rhythm Oil A Journey Through the Music of the American South by Stanely Booth 1991 Pasolini Requiem by Barth D Schwartz 1992 Einstein s Dreams by Alan Lightman 1993 The Birth of the Beat Generation Visionaries Rebels and Hipsters 1944 1960 by Steven Watson 1995 Deep Sightings and Rescue Missions Fiction Essays and Conversations by Toni Cade Bambara and Toni Morrison 1996 In the Country of Country People and Places in American Music by Nicholas Dawidoff 1997 Holy Clues Investigating Life s Mysteries with Sherlock Holmes by Stephen Kendrick 1999 House of Leaves by Mark Z Danielewski 2000 The Whalestoe Letters by Mark Z Danielewski 2000 Parallels and Paradoxes Explorations in Music and Society by Daniel Barenboim Edward W Said and Ara Guzelimian 2002 Boogaloo The Quintessence of American Popular Music by Arthur Kempton 2003 Against Love A Polemic by Laura Kipnis 2003 The End of Blackness Returning the Souls of Black Folk to Their Rightful Owners by Debra Dickerson 2004 Give our Regards to the Atomsmashers Writers on Comics by Sean Howe 2004 Shakespeare After All by Marjorie B Garber 2004 Tango The Art History of Love by Robert Farris Thompson 2005 On Michael Jackson by Margo Jefferson 2006 Only Revolutions by Mark Z Danielewski 2006 The Good Husband of Zebra Drive by Alexander McCall Smith 2007 The Little Book of Plagiarism by Alexander Posner 2007 Bambi vs Godzilla On the Nature Purpose and Practice of the Movie Business by David Mamet 2007 Toussaint Louverture A Biography by Madison Smartt Bell 2007 The Father of all Things A Marine His Son and the Legacy of Vietnam by Tom Bissell 2007 Soon I Will Be Invincible by Austin Grossman 2007 SUM by David Eagleman 2009 Incognito The Secret Lives of the Brain by David Eagleman 2011 The Familiar Volume 1 One Rainy Day in May by Mark Z Danielewski 2015 The Familiar Volume 2 Into the Forest by Mark Z Danielewski 2015 The Brain The Story of You by David Eagleman 2015 The Familiar Volume 3 Honeysuckle amp Pain by Mark Z Danielewski 2016 The Familiar Volume 4 Hades by Mark Z Danielewski 2017 The Familiar Volume 5 Redwood by Mark Z Danielewski 2017 Livewired The Inside Story of the Ever Changing Brain by David Eagleman 2020 Selections from the Bollingen Series Edit Myths and Symbols in Indian Art and Civilization eds Heinrich Robert Zimmer and Joseph Campbell 1946 The I Ching or Book of Changes Wilhelm R and C Baynes 1967 With foreword by Carl Jung 3rd ed Bollingen Series XIX Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1st ed 1950 The Collected Works of C G Jung by Carl Jung 1953 Psychological Reflections An Anthology of the Writings of C G Jung by Carl Jung 1953 Creative Intuition in Art and Poetry by Jacques Maritain 1953 Egyptian Religious Texts and Representations by Alexandre Piankoff and Natacha Rambova 1954 The Origins and History of Consciousness by Erich Neumann 1954 Painting and Reality by Etienne Gilson 1957 Yoga Immortality and Freedom by Mircea Eliade 1958 Zen and Japanese Culture by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki 1959 Art and Illusion A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation by E H Gombrich 1960 Of Divers Arts by Naum Gabo 1962 The I and the Not I A Study in the Development of Consciousness by Mary Esther Harding 1965 Birds by Saint John Perse and Georges Braque 1966 Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter by Karl Kerenyi 1967 Comics and graphic novels Edit The for Beginners series of comics Go for Beginners by Kaoru Iwamoto and Ishi Press 1976 ISBN 0394733312 Lenin for Beginners by Richard Appignanesi and Oscar Zarate 1978 Freud for Beginners by Richard Appignanesi and Oscar Zarate 1979 Trotsky for Beginners by Tariq Ali 1980 Ecology for Beginners by Stephen Croall and William Rankin 1981 Marx s Kapital for Beginners by David N Smith and Phil Evans and Karl Marx 1982 Nuclear Power for Beginners by Stephen Croall and Kaianders Sempler 1983 Economists for Beginners by Bernard Canavan 1983 Love is Hell by Matt Groening 1985 Maus I A Survivor s Tale My Father Bleeds History by Art Spiegelman 1986 Read Yourself RAW by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly 1987 School is Hell A Cartoon Book by Matt Groening 1987 Childhood is Hell A Cartoon Book by Matt Groening 1988 The Big Book of Hell A Cartoon Book by Matt Groening 1990 Maus II A Survivor s Tale And Here My Troubles Began by Art Spiegelman 1991 Love is Still Hell A Cartoon Book by Matt Groening 1994 The Jew of New York by Ben Katchor 1998 Ethel amp Ernest by Raymond Briggs 1998 David Boring by Daniel Clowes 2000 Jimmy Corrigan The Smartest Kid on Earth by Chris Ware 2000 Julius Knipl Real Estate Photographer The Beauty Supply District by Ben Katchor 2000 In the Floyd Archives A Psycho Bestiary by Sarah Boxer 2001 Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi 2003 In the Shadow of No Towers by Art Spiegelman 2004 Persepolis II by Marjane Satrapi 2004 Amy and Jordan by Mark Beyer 2004 Black Hole by Charles Burns 2005 Embroideries by Marjane Satrapi 2005 Epileptic by David Beauchard 2005 Ice Haven by Daniel Clowes 2005 The Rabbi s Cat by Joann Sfar 2005 Chicken with Plums by Marjane Satrapi 2006 La Perdida by Jessica Abel 2006 A Scanner Darkly by Philip K Dick adapted by Richard Linklater 2006 Alias the Cat by Kim Deitch 2007 Breakdowns Portrait of the Artist as a Young by Art Spiegelman 2008 My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down by David Heatley 2008 Asterios Polyp by David Mazzucchelli 2009 A D New Orleans After the Deluge by Josh Neufeld 2009 Habibi by Craig Thompson 2011 The Cardboard Valise by Ben Katchor 2011 My Brother s Husband by Gengoroh Tagame 2014 References Edit McGuire William Bollingen An Adventure in Collecting the Past Princeton University Press 1989 p 273 Obituaries Kyrill S Schabert 74 Dead Ex Head of Pantheon Books New York Times April 10 1983 Pantheon history on World Without End Random House Inc Datamonitor Company Profiles Authority Retrieved June 20 2007 from EBSCO Host Business Source Premier database Dan Frank revered editor at Pantheon Books dead at 67 AP May 24 2021 Retrieved July 4 2021 National Book Foundation s Lisa Lucas To Head Knopf s Pantheon and Schocken Publishing Perspectives July 15 2020 Retrieved July 4 2021 Miller M C March 26 1998 And then there were seven Opinion The New York Times p A 27 a b c d e f Schiffrin A 2000 The Business of Books How International Conglomerates Took Over Publishing and Changed the Way we Read London New York Verso Korda Michael 1999 Another Life a memoir of other people 1st ed New York Random House ISBN 0679456597 Talese B G April 17 1960 Random House will buy Knopf in merger New York Times p 1 Funding Universe Company Profile on Random House Engelhardt T 1990 Pantheon purge The Progressive 54 5 46 Neyfakh Leon January 8 2009 Pantheon Publisher Janice Goldklang Latest Victim of Layoffs at Random House Inc New York Observer a b McDowell E February 28 1990 New Pantheon head named amid resignation protest New York Times p D 2 a b c McDowell E March 6 1990 250 protest resignation at Pantheon New York Times p D 21 More Pantheon editors resign in protest New York Times May 3 1990 p C 21 Cohen R March 9 1990 THE MEDIA BUSINESS Top Random House author assails ouster at Pantheon New York Times p D 18 McDowell E March 13 1990 THE MEDIA BUSINESS 40 at Random House critical of Pantheon New York Times p D 23 Will G F March 25 1990 The Right to lose other people s money The Washington Post p c 07 Barringer F May 30 1998 F T C clears merger path for publishers New York Times p D 1 Schiffrin A April 30 1998 Eyes on the bottom line The Washington Post p A 21 Lara A July 6 2003 Q amp A Tom Engelhardt Getting the business end of publishing San Francisco Chronicle p M 2 MacDonald H 2003 Pantheon re offers for beginners series Publishers Weekly Vol 250 no 51 p 26 a b Wolk D 2005 The GN imprint that isn t Publishers Weekly Vol 252 no 10 p 46 Tamura Taylor Good is Dead Graphic Designer Chip Kidd Humboldt State University Archived from the original on January 12 2015 Retrieved January 12 2015 Pantheon web site External links EditOfficial website Finding aid to Pantheon Books records at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Finding aid to Andre Schiffrin papers at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Pantheon Books at Database Jewish Publishers of German Literature in Exile 1933 1945 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pantheon Books amp oldid 1133473011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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