The Man Who Made Books Random
There was a time in the mid 20th century, the literary historian Gayle Feldman reminds us, when the book business was cool. Back then, New York publishing resembled Silicon Valley tech and the Mark Zuckerberg of his day was the Random House founder Bennett Cerf. In her new biography of Cerf, Nothing Random, Feldman tells the story of this celebrity entrepreneur, noting that he helped pioneer the publishing industry’s venture capitalist style business model which enabled hit authors like Ayn Rand or Dr Seuss to finance start-up writers like Cormac McCarthy. Those were the days, a slightly wistful Feldman reminisces. She’s right. If only today’s corporate publishing industry could recapture some of that Cerfian magic. Then books might become cool again.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Episode 2162: Bethanne Patrick on the Hypocrite, Hitler's People and Hum
Episode 2061: Mimi Casteel explains the how to fix America, one sip of wine at a time
Episode 2160: Steve Benen on how the Republicans have become the Orwellian Party of Big Brother
Episode 2159: Richard J. Evans on how leading Nazis were, in some ways, just ordinary middle class Germans
Episode 2158: Robin Bernstein on the Marriage of American Capitalism with the American Prison System
Episode 2157: Lindsey Cormack on How to Raise a Citizen
Episode 2156: James Muldoon exposes the hidden human labor powering the AI revolution
Episode 2155: David Daley Gets Inside the Far Right's 50-Year Plot to Control American Elections
Episode 2154: Shad White on Brett Favre's Mississippi Swindle
Episode 2153: Lola Milholland on Group Living and Other Deliciously Polyamorous Recipes
Episode 2152: Peter Wehner on the Fate of "His" Republican Party
Episode 2151: Edmund Fawcett compares the Futures of Liberalism and Conservatism
Episode 2150: Jonathan Taplin on why American Exceptionalism lies in its Powers of Creativity