Marzani & Munsell

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Founded1954
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationNew York City, New York, US
Marzani & Munsell
Founded1954
FoundersCarl Marzani
Angus Cameron (publisher)
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationNew York City, New York, US
Publication typesBooks

Marzani & Munsell (1955–1967) was an American book publisher of the mid-20th Century, based in Manhattan, which published liberal and leftist books, starting with False Witness by Harvey Matusow.[1]

Alleged espionage

After release from prison in 1951, Carl Marzani joined Cameron Associates and partnered with Angus Cameron to run Liberty Book Club. Marzani & Munsell formed as a book club (in an unclear relationship with Alexander Ector Orr Munsell, "that unusual combination of a practicing Christian and a practicing Marxist" per Carl Marzani,[2] and son and heir of Albert Henry Munsell) and also operated what had become the Library-Prometheus Book Club. Together, the two book clubs, with some 8,000 members, published and distributed many books following their progressive ideology.[3]

In a later interview, Marzani described his publishing house:

We also had a very distinguished list – we had the first book on the Rosenbergs, the first book on FBI informers,a the first book on black armed self-defense,b and so on. We also had an outlet for the blacklisted writers – we published novels and other writings by Ring Lardner Jr.,c Alvah Bessie, Abe Polonsky, Albert Maltz. We also did an enormous amount of pamphlets, four or five every year – on the Bay of Pigs, on Vietnam, the Warren Report – there wasn't a major issue we didn't put out something on. We were a major influence among two or three others – the National Guardian, Monthly Review – during the years I call the American resistance to McCarthyism.[4]

In 1959 when Cameron left for at job at Knopf, Marzani became president.[1] Marzani and Munsell publishing house "was destroyed in a mysterious fire" in 1966, ending the run of books, pamphlets, broadsheets and reprints.[1][3] Marzani later described the loss: "It destroyed our stock, our lists, everything, and we had no insurance."[4]

According to allegations made in 1994 by Oleg Kalugin, a retired KGB officer, Marzani was a contact for the Soviet secret police agency, the KGB, while running Marzani & Munsell, and the KGB subsidized his publishing house in the 1960s.[5] Allegedly, the amounts were $15,000 in 1960, then a two-year grant in 1961 of $55,000.[3]

Legacy

Titles

Marzani & Munsell published first USA translation of Antonio Gramsci's writings
Marzani & Munsell published Robert F. Williams's Negroes with Guns.
  • 1955:
  • 1957:
    • The open Marxism of Antonio Gramsci[10]
  • 1959:
    • A visit to Soviet science[11]
    • World without war[12]
    • The doctor business[13]
    • Comrade Venka[14]
  • 1960:
  • 1961:
    • The new Germany and the old Nazis[22]
    • Cuba: prophetic island[23]
    • War and peace, and the problem of Berlin[24]
    • The road from Sharpeville[25]
    • Dollars and Sense of Disarmament (1961)[26]
    • Cuba versus CIA[27]
  • 1962:
  • 1963:
    • War and Peace in Vietnam[36]
    • A quarter-century of un-Americana: a tragico-comical memorabilia of HUAC[37]
    • Heusinger of the Fourth Reich[38]
    • The golden fleece: selling the good life to Americans[39]
    • People with strength in Monroe, North Carolina[40]
    • Dragon pink on old white[41]
  • 1964:
    • The mood of the nation (November 22–29, 1963)[42]
    • Oswald: assassin or fall guy?[43]
    • Bitter end in Southeast Asia[44]
    • The Yahoos[45]
    • Goldwater-ism[46]
    • The Goldwater coloring book[47]
    • The Black Anglo-Saxons[48]
    • Soul of the Republic: The Negro Today[49]
  • 1965:
  • 1966:
    • The gaps in the Warren report[59]
    • Critical reactions to the Warren report[60]
    • Concentration camps USA[61]
    • Harlem stirs[62]
    • German Hand on the Nuclear Trigger[63]
    • The Silent Slaughter[64]
    • Johnson's War[65]

Notable people

Marzani & Munsell published Cuba: Prophetic Island by Waldo Frank
Marzani & Munsell published A visit to Soviet science by Stefan Heym

Officers

Authors

Translators

See also

Notes

References

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