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In the early 1930's, most publishers thought the market for quality books was limited to a handful of elite readers. Allen Lane, then managing director of the Bodley Head, a British publishing company, had other ideas. While searching for something to read on his trip back to London after visiting Agatha Christieand only finding popular magazines and reprints of Victorian novelshe was convinced that there was a need for cheap editions of good-quality contemporary writing. He was determined to give the public an opportunity to buy the best works at nominal prices.
Setting up his business in the crypt of London's Trinity Church, he began to reprint outstanding fiction and nonfiction in low-cost paperback editions. In July 1935, he revolutionized reading with the introduction of the first ten Penguin paperbacks. Within a year, more than one hundred titles were in print and one million Penguin books had been sold. In 1946, Allen Lane published classical scholar E.V.Rieu's translation of The Odyssey which went on to sell three million copies worldwide. That was the beginning of the Penguin Classics, Lane then asked Rieu to commission translations of other works for the new series. Little did Lane realize the impact his "paperback revolution" had on readingtoday more than 600 million paperbacks are sold annually worldwide. Now Penguin and Penguin Classics trade paperbacks carry the most recognized logo of any book publisher in the world, with a list as stimulating and diverse as readers themselves. Covering such subjects as literature, biography, memoir, history, science, business, psychology, popular reference, and self-help, the Penguin list now has more than 3,000 books in print in the United States. Penguin has long been committed to publishing great fiction, including the work of Nobel laureates, National Book Award winners, Pulitzer Prize winners, and bestselling authors. Chris Abani, Reinaldo Arenas, Melissa Bank, Charlene Baumbich, Saul Bellow, Jorge Luis Borges, T. C. Boyle, Geraldine Brooks, Elizabeth Buchan, Andrea Camilleri, J. M. Coetzee, Robertson Davies, Don DeLillo, Roddy Doyle, Kim Edwards, Nuruddin Farah, Jasper Fforde, Helen Fielding, Nadine Gordimer, Jessica Hagedorn, Mark Helprin, Josephine Humphreys, James Joyce, Jan Karon, Garrison Keillor, Jack Kerouac, Ken Kesey, Sue Monk Kidd, D. H. Lawrence, Robert Littell, Donna Leon, Penelope Lively, David Lodge, Mary McGarry Morris, Arthur Miller, John Mortimer, Iris Murdoch, Tim O'Brien, Ruth Ozeki, Ann Ross, Gwyn Hyman Rubio, Peter Sheridan, Carol Shields, Zadie Smith, Wallace Stegner, John Steinbeck, Amy Tan, Pramoedya Ananta Toer, William Trevor, William Vollman, Susan Vreeland and Carlos Ruiz Zafon are only a few of the writers whose work is published by Penguin. On the nonfiction side, Penguin publishes many such knowledgeable and wonderful writers as Caroline Alexander, David Allen, Jon Lee Anderson, Karen Armstrong, John M. Barry, Antony Beevor, John Berendt, Mark Bowden, Douglas Brinkley, Iris Chang, Steve Coll, Blanche Wiesen Cook, The Dalai Lama, Jared Diamond, Daniel Dennett, Niall Ferguson, Zlata Filipovic, Roger Fisher, John Lewis Gaddis, Elizabeth Gilbert, John Glusman, Francine du Plessix Gray, Tony Judt, Mary Karr, John Keegan, Ross King, Peter Kramer, Mark Kurlansky, Ray Kurzweil, Michael Lewis, Aung San Suu Kyi, Diane Middlebrook, Andrea Mitchell, Peggy Noonan, Nathaniel Philbrick, Kevin Phillips, Steven Pinker, Michael Ruhlman, Paul Rusesabagina, Jeffrey Sachs, John Phillip Santos, Dava Sobel, Rebecca Solnit, Jonathan Spence, Amy Tan, Jeff Taylor, Lewis Thomas, Jim Trelease, and Garry Wills. Penguin Compass, The Pelican Shakespeare, and Penguin Mysteries round out the Penguin list with books on spiritual matters, classic nature writing, new editions of Shakespeare's plays, and mystery and crime novels, respectively. The Penguin Classics comprise more than 1300 titles, making it the largest publisher of ancient and modern classic literature in the English-speaking world. The Classics list includes a vast array of fiction, nonfiction, drama and poetry based on definitive texts and introduced by experts, and have given us magnificent translations including Robert Fagles' translation of Homer, Pevear and Volokhonsky's award winning translation of Anna Karenina, Lydia Davis's monumental new translations of Proust's Swann's Way, and Tiina Nunnally's translation of Sigrid Undset's 3 volume epic Kristin Lavransdatter. The Penguin Classics are also the exclusive publisher of modern authors such as John Steinbeck, Saul Bellow, Arthur Miller, Graham Greene, Jack Kerouac, Ken Kesey, Bruce Chatwin, Robertson Davies and Iris Murdoch. Included in the series are Penguin Classics Deluxe editions, the Penguin Classics Portables and the Penguin Classics Deluxe editions featuring covers illustrated by such renowned graphic artists as Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, and Roz Chast. Penguin Classics continues the major re-launch begun in 2003 with a complete repackaging program for the entire list, updated noted and introductions, even better paper quality and an incredible new title publishing program, all on the cutting edge of scholarship, packaging and interest both to the trade and academia. The Penguin list continues to grow, to embrace new writers, and to keep in print the works of some of the world's most important authors. Readers' needs and tastes change, and the Penguin list has evolved over more than sixty years. With its familiar logo that stands for quality and distinction, the Penguin also represents what is fresh, contemporary and bestselling in paperback publishing.
Kathryn Court President and Publisher Kathryn Court joined Penguin Books in 1977 and became Editorial Director two years later. In l984 she was named Editor in Chief of Viking Penguin and in l992 Senior Vice-President, Publisher, and Editor in Chief of Penguin Books. She was named President of Penguin Books in August 2000. Among the authors she has worked with are Reinaldo Arenas, Andrea Camilleri, J.M. Coetzee, Slavenka Drakulic, Mary Relinda Ellis, Robert Fagles, Josephine Humphreys, Garrison Keillor, Nora Okja Keller, Donna Leon, Mary McGarry Morris, John Mortimer, Richard Rodriguez, C.J. Samsom, Jim Trelease, and William Trevor.
Stephen Morrison Editor in Chief and Associate Publisher Stephen Morrison was named Editor-in-Chief and Associate Publisher of Penguin Books in 2005. Before this appointment, he was most recently Director of Rights and Executive Editor for Bloomsbury USA. He was a Senior Editor at Penguin from 2000 to 2003, when he acquired such titles as the bestselling Word Freak by Stefan Fatsis and Anthony Doerr’s award-winning The Shell Collector; republished the cult classic, Coffee, Tea, Or Me by Trudy Baker and Rachel Jones with Donald Bain, and acquired the French bestseller How I Became Stupid by Martin Page as a Penguin Original.
Awards The Nobel Prize for Literature
The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
The Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction
The Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
The National Book Award
The National Book Critics Circle Award
The Booker Prize
Agatha Award for Best Novel
Alex Award for Adult Boooks for Young Adults
ALA Notable Book of the Year
American Academy of Arts and Letters:
American Society of Journalists and Authors' Nonfiction Award
Asian American Literature Award
Biennial Valiente Award
Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Award for Fiction
Book Sense Book of the Year for Nonfiction
Borders Original Voices Award for Fiction
Borders Original Voices Award for Non-Fiction
Bouchercon Lifetime Achievement Award
California Book Awards: Nonfiction
California Book Award Gold Medal
California Book Award Silver Medal
Christopher Award for Nonfiction
Christy Award for Contemporary/General Fiction given by The Christian Booksellers Association
Council of Foreign Relations Arthur Ross Award
Irish Times Literary Prize for Fiction
Irish Times Literary Prize for Nonfiction
The James Beard Foundation Award for Writing on Food
Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Award for Translation of Japanese Literature
Jerusalem Prize for Freedom of the Individual in Society
Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award
Koret Jewish Book Award: Fiction
Lannon Literary Award in Poetry
Lettre Ulysses Award for Literary Reportage
Lionel Gelber Prize
The Los Angeles Times Book Prize
The Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Mystery
MacArthur Foundation Fellows
McCavity Award for Fiction
Mark Lynton History Prize
National Parenting Publication Award
Nebraska Book Award
New York City Book Award for Historical Fiction
New York Public Library Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism
New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award
The Orange Prize for Fiction
The PEN/ Martha Albrand Award for Best First Book of Nonfiction
The PEN USA West Award for Fiction
The PEN BOMC Translation Prize
The PEN Center USA Literary Awards
Public Service Award given by The National Science Board
San Diego Book Prize for Best Mainstream Novel
San Francisco Bay Area Book Reviewers Association Best Work of Nonfiction
Sidney Hillman Journalism Award in the Book Category
Southern Book Award for Fiction
Spain’s Prince Asturis Award of Letters
Storyteller of the Year Award
Theodore Geisl Best Book of the Year Award
Theoligos Award for Best Academic Book
Wisconsin Literary Award
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