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Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Still Evergreen
Posted by Steve
This past Sunday morning I heard an
NPR interview
with
Barney Rosset
, the former publisher and founder of Grove Press and
Evergreen Review
magazine (cover above by Paul Davis), who aggressively challenged the puritanical mores of 1960s America.
As
Chip McGrath
in the
New York Times
wrote:
"In its heyday during the 1960s, Grove Press was famous for publishing books nobody else would touch. The Grove list included writers like Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, William S. Burroughs, Che Guevara, and Malcolm X (his autobiography), and the books, with their distinctive black and white covers, were reliably ahead of their time and often fascinated by sex.
The same was, and is, true of Grove’s maverick publisher, Barney Rosset, who loved highbrow literature but also brought out a very profitable line of Victorian spanking porn."
When I was 16 years old, I did everything imaginable to get my drawings printed in
Evergreen Review
, which already published
Robert Grossman
,
Brad Holland
,
Tomi Ungerer
,
Edward Sorel
, and others. By the time I was 19, I was briefly its art director (the cover of one of my issues--the one with the lion--is below). I met with Rosset a few times during my tenure, and once was when he told me he lost all the mechanicals for a book I designed for him about the film
Last Tango in Paris
. Fortunately I made photostats of all the layouts and we printed from that (needless to say, the typography was a mess).
Tomorrow Mr. Rosset will receive a lifetime achievement award from the National Book Foundation to honor his groundbreaking legal battles to defy the censors and publish uncensored versions of D.H. Lawrence's
Lady Chatterley's Lover
and Henry Miller's
Tropic of Cancer,
among other important literary events. He is also the subject of a documentary titled
Obscene
.
Mr. Rosset is still editing
Evergreen Review
, this time
online
.
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11/18/2008 2:07:57 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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