Everything about Penguin Books totally explained
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Penguin Books is a
British publisher founded in 1935 by
Allen Lane and
V. K. Krishna Menon(first high comm to Uk from India). Lane's idea was to provide quality writing cheaply, for the same price as a pack of cigarettes. He also wanted them to be sold not only in bookshops but in railway stations, general stores and corner shops. Its most emblematic products are its
paperbacks. The first Penguin paperbacks were published in 1935, but at first only as an
imprint of
Bodley Head with the books originally distributed from a church
crypt.
Today Penguin Books is a division of the world-wide
Penguin Group and is owned by
Pearson PLC. Its counterpart in the
United States is
Penguin Group (USA). Penguin is the lead publisher for the
United Kingdom,
New Zealand,
Australia and
India.
History
The publication of literature in paperback, then associated mainly with poor quality, lurid fiction, didn't appear viable to Bodley Head and the deliberately cheap price of 6
d. made profitability seem unlikely. This helped Allen Lane purchase
publication rights cheaply for some works, from other publishers convinced of the short term prospects of the business. The purchase of 63,000 books by
Woolworth paid for the project outright, confirmed its worth and allowed Lane to establish Penguin as a separate business in 1936. By March 1936, ten months after the company's launch on
30 July 1935, one million Penguin books had been printed.
From the outset, design was essential to the success of the Penguin brand. Eschewing the illustrated gaudiness of other paperback publishers, Penguin opted for the simple appearance of three horizontal bands, the upper and lower of which were colour coded according to which series the title belonged to; this is sometimes referred to as the horizontal grid. In the central white panel, the author and title were printed in
Eric Gill's
sans serif and in the upper band was a
cartouche with the legend "Penguin Books". The initial design was created by the then twenty-one-year-old office junior
Edward Young, who also drew the first version of the Penguin
logo.
The colour schemes included: orange and white for general fiction, green and white for crime fiction, red and white for travel and adventure, blue and white for biographies; and the rarer purple and white for
essays and
belles lettres and grey and white for world affairs. Lane actively resisted the introduction of cover images for several years. Some recent publications of literature from that time have duplicated the original look.
Lane expanded the business in 1937 with the publication of
George Bernard Shaw's
The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism under the
Pelican Books imprint, an imprint designed to educate the reading public rather than entertain. The war years continued the company's success with healthy sales of titles, meaning that Penguin suffered less from the
paper rationing which afflicted other publishers.
Aircraft Recognition by Saville-Sneath, RA, was a best seller. In 1940, the children's imprint
Puffin Books began with a series of non-fiction picture books; the first work of children's fiction published under the imprint was
Barbara Euphan Todd's
Worzel Gummidge the following year. In 1945 Penguin began what would become one of its most important branches, the
Penguin Classics, with a translation of
Homer's
Odyssey by
E. V. Rieu. Between 1947 and 1949, the Swiss typographer
Jan Tschichold redesigned 500 Penguin books, and left Penguin with a set of influential rules of design principles brought together as the
Penguin Composition Rules, a four page booklet of typographic instructions for editors and compositors. Tschichold's work included the woodcut illustrated covers of the classics series (also known as the medallion series), and with
Hans Schmoller, his eventual successor at Penguin, the vertical grid covers that became the standard for Penguin fiction throughout the 1950s. By this time the paperback industry in the UK had begun to grow, and Penguin found itself in competition with then fledgling
Pan Books.
By 1960, a number of forces were to shape the direction of the company, the publication list and its graphic design. On
20 April 1961, Penguin became a publicly listed company on the London Stock Exchange; consequently, Allen Lane had a diminished role at the firm though he was to continue as Managing Director. New techniques such as
phototypesetting and
offset-litho printing were to replace
hot metal and
letterpress printing, dramatically reducing cost and permitting the printing of images and text on the same paper stock, thus paving the way for the introduction of photography and novel approaches to graphic design on paperback covers. In May 1960,
Tony Godwin was appointed as editorial advisor, rapidly rising to Chief Editor from which position he sought to broaden the range of Penguin's list and keep up with new developments in graphic design. To this end, he hired
Germano Facetti in January 1961, who was to decisively alter the appearance of the Penguin brand. Beginning with the crime series, Facetti canvassed the opinion of a number of designers including
Romek Marber for a new look to the Penguin cover. It was Marber's suggestion of what came to be called the
Marber grid along with the retention of traditional Penguin colour coding that was to replace the previous three horizontal bars design and set the pattern for the design of the company's paperbacks for the next twenty years. Facetti rolled out the new treatment across the Penguin line starting with crime, the orange fiction series, then
Pelicans, Penguin Modern Classics, Penguin Specials, and Penguin Classics, giving an overall visual unity to the company's list. A somewhat different approach was taken to the Peregrine, Penguin Poets, Penguin Modern Poets, and Penguin Plays series. There were over a hundred different series published in total.
By the end of the 1960s, Penguin was in financial trouble. Ultimately, the company was bought out by
Pearson Longman on
21 August 1970, some six weeks after the death of Allen Lane. A new emphasis on profitability emerged and, with the departure of Facetti in 1972, the defining era of Penguin book design came to an end.
Just as Lane well judged the public's appetite for paperbacks in the 1930s, his decision to publish
Lady Chatterley's Lover by
D. H. Lawrence in 1960 boosted Penguin's notoriety. The novel was at the time unpublished in Britain and the predicted
obscenity trial not only marked Penguin as a fearless publisher, it also helped drive the sale of at least 3.5 million copies. Penguin's victory in the case heralded the end to the
censorship of books in Britain, although censorship of the written word was only finally defeated after the
Inside Linda Lovelace trial of 1978. Other controversial titles published by Penguin include
Spycatcher and
The Satanic Verses. In the same tradition of courting controversy, Penguin published
Deborah Lipstadt's book
Denying the Holocaust which accused
David Irving of
Holocaust denial. Irving sued Lipstadt and Penguin for libel in 1998 but lost in a widely publicized
trial.
Recent problems
But in the early part of the millennium, the publisher has encountered several problems, especially in distribution of its books in the UK, when a new computerised system failed to identify the books needed by booksellers. Authors lost on sales of their books and hence of
royalties. They waged a long campaign against the publisher for its incompetence. Most recently, its US associate, Penguin Riverhead has published a fabricated autobiography, known as
Love and Consequences, by the new author
Margaret Seltzer. It was a tale of sex, drugs and gangs in
Los Angeles, but turned out to be a
hoax when the author's sister revealed the extent of the deception. It has been withdrawn as of March 2008, and a book tour cancelled. The
genre is well populated by similar works of deception, and is known as
Misery lit. Penguin failed to check the background of the author, who turned out to be white, affluent and middle-class, and one who attended
creative writing courses.
First titles
The first twenty books published by Penguin under the Bodley Head imprint were:
Penguin Classics
The imprint publishes hundreds of classics from the Greeks and Romans to Victorian Literature to modern classics. Originally, red and yellow marks on the spines of the books determined type. In 2002, Penguin announced it was redesigning its entire catalogue, merging the original Classics list (known in the trade as "Black Classics") with what had been the old Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics list, though the existing silver covers for the latter have so far been retained for most of the titles.
The redesign — featuring a colourful painting on the cover, with black background and orange lettering — was well received. However, the quality of the paperbacks themselves seemed to decrease: the spines were more likely to fold and bend. The paperbacks are also printed on non-acid-free pulp paper which, by some accounts, tends to yellow and brown within a couple of years.
The text page design was also overhauled to follow a more closely prescribed template, allowing for faster copyediting and typesetting, but reducing the options for individual design variations suggested by a text's structure or historical context (for example, in the choice of text
typeface). Prior to 2002 the text page typography of each book in the Classics series had been overseen by a team of in-house designers; this department was closed in 2003 as part of the production costs rationalisation of the Classics list, and any design work is now done by editors and outside suppliers.
Imprints
Penguin Press
Classics and Modern Classics
Allen Lane
ReferencePenguin General
Viking
Hamish Hamilton
Fig Tree
Michael JosephChildren's
Puffin
Ladybird and WarneePenguin
;Rough Guides
Dorling Kindersley
Trademark disputes
Penguin Books has been in some disputes over names and trademarks. In 1986, it pushed Penguin Software to give up its name. More recently, it published a book katie.com which caused problems for the unrelated user of that domain, and then tried to acquire the domain.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Penguin Books'.
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