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Venerable Beacon Press Shines on Social Issues
December 19, 2005
Boston-based
Beacon Press, a nonprofit independent book publisher founded in 1854 as the
Press of the American Unitarian Association, has long been known as a house
devoted to providing the public with thought-provoking, sometimes controversial,
works focusing on social issues. Renamed Beacon Press in 1902, it remains a
branch of the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA), often referred to as
the Unitarian Church, although its titles are nondenominational.
"We
see the role of the independent press as a very important one," Beacon's
director, Helene Atwan, recently told BTW. "That there are so few
independent presses, and so many publishing conglomerates, influences so deeply
what is published. We also pride ourselves on being forward looking -- to consider
what issues Americans are going to be facing next.
"Back in 1999, we published a major book
on gay marriage [What is Marriage For? by E.J. Graff]. It is frequently
cited in what is now the national gay marriage debate. We are publishing a book
about the big box stores [by Stacy Mitchell of the Institute for Local
Self-Reliance] that the commercial houses didn't
want to do. We're looking ahead to concerns for the rights of immigrants and
have several books in the works."
The
press was founded with the mission of publishing works that promulgate "the
right of conscience and the use of the democratic process in society."
That mandate has inspired Beacon to publish the work of dozens of prominent,
notorious writers -- including historians and philosophers. Making history in
1971, Beacon published the top secret U.S. Department of Defense history of
the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, known as "The Pentagon Papers,"
after 35 publishers declined to publish it and despite President Richard Nixon's
direct intervention.
More recently, in the fall of 2001, Beacon
Press found itself attacked by some for the publication of Fugitive Days
by Bill Ayers, a former member of the Weather Underground, a '60s-era radical
group whose protest actions included bombings. Ayers' book tour, in the aftermath
of the September 11 terrorist attacks, provoked some strong reactions. A. David
Schwartz, the late owner of the Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops in Milwaukee, who
refused to cancel Ayers' appearance, received threats he termed "hysterically
ugly." Refusing to bow to these threats, he and the other booksellers on
the tour refused to cancel Ayers' visit.
With
500 titles to its credit and 35 to 40 new books published each year, in addition
to reprints, Beacon continually strives to produce books on "matters of
importance to society," said associate publisher, and former independent bookseller,
Tom Hallock. "Beacon has always published books on a variety of social justice issues,
from abolition to nonviolence, McCarthyism, and same sex marriage."
During its 10 years under Atwan's directorship,
Beacon has expanded its publication of fiction. "[In publishing] original
fiction, we are extremely selective. [We ask,] Does it represents important
issues and values and is it of distinctive quality," Atwan said. "Our
first book [of original fiction], The Healing by Gayl Jones, was a National
Book Award Finalist, so we've set the bar very high."
Original fiction through Beacon's Bluestreak
series of works by women of all colors claims a small but significant new niche,
and poetry has long been a staple of the house. Beacon Press counts numerous
books of poetry by Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winner Mary Oliver
among its titles.
In her first-ever bookstore tour this past
fall, the Book Sense-bestselling Oliver read to packed crowds at independents
across the country. Oliver plans to tour bookstores again in late 2006 to promote
her compact disc recording of 40 of her favorite poems, At Blackwater Pond.
The recording, to be released in April to coincide with National Poetry Month,
is a first for Beacon Press and Oliver.
The CD, in a clothbound case, will include an insert with an original essay, photos of the
author, and a full listing of the poems and their sources.
Beacon Press was a charter Book Sense Publisher
Partner, and Hallock pointed to Oliver's appearance on the Book Sense Picks
and Bestseller lists as a prime example of how well the Book Sense program dovetails
with Beacon's list. "Independent bookstores have been among our strongest
supporters," said Hallock. "We're really indebted to the independents,
they are a perfect match for us." --Nomi
Schwartz
Topics: Book Sense, News - Vendors,
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