POCKET BOOKS
'Pocket Books' is a division of Simon & Schuster which primarily publishes paperback books.
Pocket produced the first mass-market, pocket-sized paperback books in America in early 1939 and revolutionized the publishing industry. The German Albatross Books had pioneered the idea of a line of color-coded paperback editions in 1931 under Kurt Enoch; Penguin Books in England had refined the idea in 1935 and had one million books in print by the following year.
In 1944, the founding owners sold the company to Marshall Field III, owner of the ''Chicago Sun'' newspaper. Following his death, in 1957 Leon Shimkin, a Simon & Schuster partner, and James M. Jacobson bought Pocket Books.
Penguin's success inspired entrepreneur Robert de Graff, who partnered with publishers Simon & Schuster to bring it to the American market. Priced at 25 cents and featuring the logo of Gertrude the kangaroo (named after the artist's mother-in-law), Pocket Books' editorial policy of reprints of light literature, popular non-fiction and mysteries was coordinated with its strategy of selling books outside the traditional distribution channels. The format size, and the fact that the books were glued rather than stitched, were cost-cutting innovations.
The first ten Pocket Book titles include:
★ #1, ''Lost Horizon'' by James Hilton
★ #2, ''Wake Up and Live'' by Dorothea Brande
★ #3, ''Five Great Tragedies'' by William Shakespeare
★ #4, ''Topper'' by Thorne Smith
★ #5, ''The Murder of Roger Ackroyd'' by Agatha Christie
★ #6, ''Enough Rope...'' by Dorothy Parker
★ #7, ''Wuthering Heights'' by Emily Brontë
★ #8, ''The Way of All Flesh'' by Samuel Butler
★ #9, ''The Bridge at San Luis Rey'' by Thornton Wilder
★ #10, ''Bambi'' by Felix Salter
The edition of ''Wuthering Heights'' hit the best-seller list, and by the end of the first year Pocket Books had sold more than 1.5 million units. Robert de Graff continued to refine his selections with movie tie-ins and greater emphasis on mystery novels, particularly those of Christie and Erle Stanley Gardner.
Pocket and its imitators thrived during World War II because material shortages worked to their advantage. During the war Pocket sued Avon Books for copyright infringement; among other issues, a New York state court found Pocket did not have an exclusive right to the pocket-sized format. (Both Pocket and Avon published paperback editions of Leslie Charteris's ''The Saint'' mystery series, among others.)
Pocket is still known for publishing works of popular fiction based on movies or TV series, such as the ''Star Trek'' franchise and formerly, ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer''. The author credited for one of the Buffy products is "Gertrude Pocket", a reference to the company's kangaroo logo. (The Buffy novels are now published by Simon Spotlight Entertainment, another division of Simon & Schuster.) Since first obtaining the ''Star Trek'' licence from Bantam Books in 1980 (with a publication of the novelization of ''), Pocket has published hundreds of original and adapted works based upon the franchise.
| Contents |
| Imprints |
| External links |
Imprints
★ Downtown Press - chick lit
★ G-Unit Books
★ MTV / VH1 Books
★ Pocket Star Books - media tie in
★ Threshold Editions - conservative titles
★ WWE Books
★ Timescape (defunct) - science fiction
★ Wanderer Books (defunct) - former publisher of The Hardy Boys stories.
External links
★ Pocket Books
★ A history of the paperback
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