Alfred A. Knopf Sr.

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Alfred A. Knopf Sr.
File:Alfred A. Knopf.jpg
Knopf in 1935, photograph by Carl van Vechten
Born Alfred Abraham Knopf
(1892-09-12)September 12, 1892
New York City, United States
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Purchase, New York, United States
Education Columbia University (1912)
Spouse(s) Blanche Wolf Knopf 1916–1966 (her death)
Children Alfred A. Knopf Jr.
Relatives Edwin H. Knopf (brother)

Alfred Abraham Knopf Sr. (September 12, 1892 – August 11, 1984) was an American publisher of the 20th century, and founder of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. His contemporaries included the likes of Bennett Cerf and Donald Klopfer, and (of the previous generation) Frank Nelson Doubleday, J. Henry Harper and Henry Holt. Knopf paid special attention to the quality of printing, binding, and design in his books, and earned a reputation as a purist in both content and presentation.[1]

Biography

Knopf was born into a Jewish family in New York City. His father, Samuel Knopf, was an advertising executive and financial consultant, his mother was Ida Japhe, a school teacher.[2] Samuel Knopf was originally from Warsaw, Poland, but came to New York with his parents, where he worked his way up the directorship at a small mercantile bank.[2] Alfred's mother, Ida, was from a Latvian Jewish family who settled in New York.[2] For a time Knopf's parents lived in the Midwest and in Virginia. Ida committed suicide when Alfred was five years old and his sister Sophia was almost two.[2] That same day, Alfred's father had filed for divorce in which he named Ida as an adulteress.[2] His father later married Lillian Harris, who had a daughter, Bertha, from a previous marriage. With Lillian, Samuel had another son, Edwin H. Knopf, who worked for Alfred briefly, then became a film director and producer.

Alfred attended Columbia University,[2] where he was a pre-law student and a member of the Peithologian Society (a debating and literary club) and the Boar's Head Society.[3] He began to show an interest in publishing during his senior year, becoming advertising manager of an undergraduate magazine. His interest in publishing was allegedly fostered by a correspondence with British author John Galsworthy. Galsworthy was the subject of Knopf's senior thesis and after visiting Galsworthy in England, Knopf gave up his plans for a law career, and upon his return went into publishing.[2]

Knopf was introduced to his future wife and business partner, Blanche Knopf, at a party at the Lawrence Athletic Club in 1911.[2] Their relationship was built on their mutual interest in books. Blanche said of their relationship, "Alfred had realized I read books constantly and he had never met a girl who did ... I saw him and [all we did was] talk books, and nobody liked him--my family least of all. But I did, because I had someone to talk books to and we talked of making books...We decided we would get married and make books and publish them."[2] Alfred and Blanche were married on April 4, 1916.[4][5]

Knopf worked as a clerk at Doubleday[2] (1912–1913), then as an editorial assistant to Mitchell Kennerley (1914).

Knopf, along with Blanche Knopf, founded the publishing house Alfred A. Knopf in 1915.[2] The company initially emphasized European, especially Russian, literature, hence the choice of the borzoi as a colophon. At that time European literature was largely neglected by American publishers; Knopf published authors such as Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Joseph Conrad, E. M. Forster, Sigmund Freud, André Gide, Franz Kafka, D. H. Lawrence, Thomas Mann, W. Somerset Maugham, T.F Powys, Wyndham Lewis and Jean-Paul Sartre. While Blanche was known to as a superb editor, Alfred was always interested in more of the sales side than in editing.[6]

Knopf also published many American authors, including Conrad Aiken, James Baldwin, James M. Cain, Theodore Dreiser, Shirley Ann Grau, Dashiell Hammett, Langston Hughes, Vachel Lindsay, H.L. Mencken, George Jean Nathan, John Updike, and Knopf's own favorite, Willa Cather. From 1924 to 1934, he published the famous literary magazine founded by Mencken and Nathan, The American Mercury. He often developed a personal friendship with his authors. Knopf's personal interest in the fields of history, sociology, and science led to close friendships in the academic community with such noted historians as Richard Hofstadter, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., and Samuel Eliot Morison. A prominent Republican until Watergate, Knopf often drew legislators into lengthy correspondence by mail. He was also a member of the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors from 1940 to 1946.[7]

Knopf himself was also an author. His writings include Some Random Recollections, Publishing Then and Now, Portrait of a Publisher, Blanche W. Knopf: July 30, 1894–June 4, 1966, and Sixty Photographs.

When the Knopfs' son Alfred A. Knopf Jr. left the company in 1959 to found Atheneum Publishers,[8] Alfred and Blanche became concerned about the eventual fate of their publishing house, which had always been a family business. The problem was solved in 1960, when Knopf merged with Random House, which was owned by the Knopfs' close friends Bennett Cerf and Donald Klopfer. Knopf retained complete editorial control for five years, and then gave up only his right to veto other editors' manuscript selections. The editorial departments of the two companies remain separate, and Knopf, Inc., retains its distinctive character. Knopf called the merger "a perfect marriage."

Random House itself eventually became a division of Bertelsmann AG, a large multinational media company. The Knopf imprint remains in existence.

Blanche Knopf died in June 1966. Alfred remarried in April of the following year, to Helen Norcross Hedrick. He died of congestive heart failure on August 11, 1984, at his estate in Purchase, New York.[9]

Personality

Knopf had little enthusiasm for most of the changes that took place in the publishing industry during his lifetime. "Too many books are published, and they are overpriced", he told The Saturday Review. These are things "about which all publishers agree, and about which no publisher does anything." The most fundamental change he noted was the increased importance of the editor. "In the early days, things were quite simple. The books came in; we published them as written... A publisher was regarded – and so, in turn, was the writer – as a pro. A writer's job was to write a book and give it to you." And he remarked to Shenker: "I guess business became more complicated and publishers less literate. It ceased to be the fact that publishers publish and authors write. Today authors submit manuscripts and editors write books." The editor is now hired largely to acquire books, "and if he can't get good books, he usually takes what he can get – books that are not so good. And then he sometimes wrecks himself trying to make a silk purse out of what can never become anything but a sow's ear."

Knopf was generally unimpressed with current literature, though he admired John Hersey, John Updike, Jorge Amado, and a few other contemporary authors. In Publishing Then and Now he wrote: "Frequently... our American author, whatever his age, experience in life, and technical knowledge, simply can't write. I don't mean that he is not the master of a prose style of elegance and distinction; I mean that he can't write simple straightforward and correct English. And here, only an exceptional editor will really help him." American authors are not very durable, he said in 1964, and "there are no giants in Europe now." Though twelve Knopf authors had won Nobel Prizes, Knopf acknowledged that "some Nobel Prize books aren't very good," calling Doctor Zhivago, for example, "incredibly tedious ... If Krushchev had banned it for dullness instead of its political implications, he might have been in the clear."

Among other authors he rejected were Sylvia Plath, Jack Kerouac, Anne Frank, George Orwell, Jorge Luis Borges, Vladimir Nabokov, Isaac Bashevis Singer and Anaïs Nin.[10] He turned down an early novel by Ursula K. Le Guin but encouraged her to keep writing.[11]

Knopf also lamented the "shockingly bad taste" that he felt characterizes much modern fiction, and warned of the danger of a "legal backlash" against pornography, and a possible revival of censorship.

This outspoken aspect of his character sometimes found voice in letters of complaint to hotels, restaurants, and stores that failed to meet his high standards. These letters grew increasingly frequent and more severe as he aged. One striking example is the six-year-long war of words he waged against the Eastman Kodak Company over a roll of lost film.[12]

Bibliography

  • John Tebbel, A History of Book Publishing in the United States, Volume II: The Creation of an Industry, 1865–1919 (1975); Volume III: The Golden Age Between Two Wars, 1920–1940 (1978);
  • Bennett Cerf, At Random, Random House, 1977;
  • Alfred A. Knopf, Some Random Recollections, Typophiles, 1949; Publishing Then and Now, New York Public Library, 1964; Portrait of a Publisher, Typophiles, 1965;
  • New Yorker, November 20, 1948, November 27, 1948, December 4, 1948;
  • Saturday Review, August 29, 1964, November 29, 1975;
  • Publishers Weekly, January 25, 1965, February 1, 1965, May 19, 1975;
  • Current Biography, Wilson, 1966;
  • New York Times, September 12, 1972, September 12, 1977;
  • New York Times Book Review, February 24, 1974;
  • Saturday Review/World, August 10, 1974;
  • W, October 31-November 7, 1975;
  • Los Angeles Times, August 12, 1984;
  • New York Times, August 12, 1984;
  • Chicago Tribune, August 13, 1984;
  • Newsweek, August 20, 1984;
  • Time, August 20, 1984.

References

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  8. Later acquired, in 1978, by Simon & Schuster
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  10. Oshinsky, David (September 9, 2007), "No Thanks, Mr Nabokov", The New York Times, Sunday Book Review.
  11. "The Art of Fiction No. 221: Ursula K. Le Guin," in The Paris Review, Fall 2013, p. 57.
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External links

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