Robert Hale and Company

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Robert Hale and Company is a London publisher of fiction and non-fiction books, founded in 1936. It is based at Clerkenwell House, Clerkenwell Green.[1][2]

Robert Hale

Robert Hale was born in 1887/8, and worked in publishing from leaving school.[3] He was at John Long Ltd., a London firm taken over by Hutchinson & Co. in 1926, when he had become manager there. After the takeover he was managing director of the subsidiary.[4] He moved to Jarrolds Publishing, working with the accountant S. Fowler Wright, another imprint of Hutchinson & Co.[5] In the later 1920s he was a friend of Margery Allingham, a Jarrolds author, and her husband Philip Carter.[6][7]

Hale left Hutchinson & Co. in 1935, founding a company of his own. It was noted for its prolific list, and tight management.[8][5] His choice of telegraphic address, "Barabbas", reflected publishing industry cynicism.[9] The partners stated in 1939 were: H. Robert Hale, James Eric Heriot, Theodore MacDonald, and Desmond I. Vesey.[10][11] Robert Hale died on 20 August 1956, aged 68.[3]

Early books

Robert Hale and Company early published authors including Wyndham Lewis.[12] The Vulgar Streak (1941) contained an explanation by Lewis of fascism, as he explained in a letter to Hale;[13][14] it was a commission from 1937, working title Men at Bay.[15] In the meantime The Mysterious Mr Bull (Robert Hale, 1938), a satire against the political left, had appeared.[16]

Berthold Brecht's Threepenny Novel appeared in English translation (by Desmond Vesey) in 1937, published by Robert Hale as A Penny for the Poor. Vesey denied to Brecht, on behalf of the publisher, that its political content had been toned down.[17][18] The Spanish Arena (1938) by William Foss and Cecil Gerahty had a preface by Jacobo Fitz-James Stuart, 17th Duke of Alba, then representative in London of Francisco Franco. Its claims of a "Jewish conspiracy" among journalists opposed to Franco led to legal action by Reuters. Hale withdrew the book, and an edited edition was published by the Right Book Club.[19][20]

Farewell Leicester Square by Betty Miller was published in 1941.[21] The company went on to publish her three final novels.[22]

Authors

Robert Hale and Company published all 90 of the novels of Jean Plaidy, the pseudonym of Eleanor Hibbert.[23] The Tivington Nott, a semi-autobiographical novel by Alex Miller, was published by Robert Hale, after the appearance of its sequel Watching the Climbers on the Mountain.[24]

The 1965 translation The White Rose of the 1929 German work by B. Traven was criticised.[25]

Genre fiction

The company is now known in particular as a specialist genre fiction publisher.[26] In the romance novel genre, many Robert Hale authors then moved on to Mills & Boon.[27] Over the period 1968 to 1982, the company produced an extended series of hardback science fiction titles, for the public library market. Most of these works were published in the 1970s; they included editions of prominent American writers, some less-known authors, and a number of pseudonymous works.[28][29]

Premises

In the early days the company address was 102 Great Russell Street.[10] The company moved to 45–7 Clerkenwell Green in 1974–5.[30]

Imprints

NAG Books and J. A. Allen (animal and veterinary, sport and games) are its imprints.[1][31] The latter, founded in 1926 and known for equestrian and hunting titles, was acquired around 1963.[32]

Jill Norman brought her list to Robert Hale in the 1980s, including works by Elizabeth David; but was dismissed from the company in 1984 by John Hale, her name remaining as an imprint. Norman moved on to Dorling Kindersley.[33][34]

See also

Notes

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  3. 3.0 3.1 Obituary in The Times (London, England), Friday, August 24, 1956; page 11; Issue 53618.
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  30. 'Clerkenwell Green', in Survey of London: Volume 46, South and East Clerkenwell, ed. Philip Temple (London, 2008), pp. 86–114 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol46/pp86-114 [accessed 8 July 2015].
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External links