Click the group of books
beginning with number:

Penguin 500
Penguin
575
|
Penguin, the first true mass market paperback published in an
English-speaking country, had a good shot at becoming the first publisher
of paperbacks in the United States, as well. But Allen Lane, the man
behind Penguin, was extremely conservative … far too conservative for most
Americans, including Ian Ballantine, his Chief of American Operations
(which, at first, simply consisted of importing books printed in England
and circulating them in the States).
Ballantine started the American business
firm
in 1939 (only months after Pocket Book had published its first ten books)
with a staff of three: himself, his wife, Betty, and a stock boy.
The original shipments had to be carried by hand up to Ballantine's
apartment in New York, where they were stored for distribution. By 1940,
the "offices" had been moved once, and then moved again during the war to
accommodate growing needs for more space.
In 1941, Lane visited New York, and he
wasn't happy with the operation. He hired Kurt Enoch to be the firm's
American vice president. With the advent of the war, Ballantine was forced
out of his job as importer into the true role of publisher. First,
shipments from England were endangered by U-boat attacks; and secondly,
Ballantine signed a historic agreement with the Army's Military Service
Publishing Company (see the Infantry folder). Enoch would eventually become instrumental in Penguin's
transition to New American Library (Signet and Mentor).
The biggest difference in philosophy in the
early years probably involved the question of what should be on the covers of
the books. In England, the Penguin concept of cover art was pretty straight
forward. There usually was none at all; only the title and famous Penguin colophon were
present on most covers. That simply wouldn’t do for the more visually-oriented Yanks.
On the west side of the pond, the cover sold the work. That law of
publishing economics had been firmly established by the wonderful world of pulp magazines. Covers,
at first, were very simplistic. In fact, it was not until the Signet years
that they became true works of art in themselves.
The first American Penguin was #501, but there are a few of the pre-500 books represented in the database,
which were imports of earlier British books. Penguin
#659 is considered the last Penguin book, though Signet reprinted it as
659A. Notice the differences between the two printings as Penguin became
New American Library. The Penguin name lingered for another year (see some
"Penguin/Signets" in the Signet section). In the
database, a later printing of a Penguin number will often be a Signet
publication.
The Penguin S-series wartime books can be
viewed in the Infantry folder.
This folder was updated in January, 2008 |