HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-05-01 Publishing Giant Leaves His Paperback Empire (Palm Beach Post)Publishing Giant Leaves His Paperback Empire
By MARGO HARAKAS
Post Staff Writer
George T. Delacorte is a living
history of 20th Century publishing in
this country. He started with pulp
magazines back in the '20s, pro-
gressed to paperback books (which
in those days weren't necessarily
viewed as progress), and went on to
put out hardcover books as well.
From an initial investment of $4,-
000, Delacorte' created Dell Publish-
ing Co., an empire snatched up last
year by Doubleday & Co. for a
rumored $35 million in cash.
"I never really sat down and de-
cided to sell," said the small, hawk-
ish -looking fellow, who though in his
80s still plays tennis nearly every
day and looks over at least five
books a week. "There were just so
many conglomerates getting into the
business."
Like the motion picture industry,
individuals in publishing were falling
to the massive corporate powers.
Pocketbooks succumbed to Gulf and
Western, Avon to Warner Communi-
cations, Fawcett to CBS.
"I just figured why should I take
such big chances at this point in my
life," said the man who splits his
time between Lost Tree Village,
New York and Connecticut.
The whole kit and caboodle of pub-
lishing interests may have gone, but
not the memories: the intimate
behind -the -scene glimpses of the
publishing game, the writers who
don't write, the ones who drink too
much, and those who worry whether
the spark has waned.
Grace Metalious was all three.
Flip the pages back to the '50s : Re-
member "Peyton Place"? That
tome was the work of Everyday
Housewife (well, almost) Grace
Metalious.
"Grace's husband was a public
school teacher in New England. She
was also also a housewife. She was a
natural-born storyteller, who, when
she hung out the clothes on the line
would keep her neighbors in stitches
with the stories she told.
"Well, she wrote this book about
all of her neighbors and Dell bought
it (the reprint rights) for practically
nothing, about $5,000, I think," De-
lacorte said. "It became an enor-
mous success, the movie rights were
sold and that too was a hit."
But Metalious apparently was a
lucky -hit writer. She had one book in
her and that was all. Dell, knowing
it had a good thing going, suggested
Metalious write a sequel, "The Re-
turn to Peyton Place." "She couldn't
write the book," Delacorte recalled.
"She tried. But it was a dismal fail-
ure."
Finally Dell got together with the
producers of the film and they came
up with the writers to do the book.
Metalious' name went on the work
of course.
"We brought her to New York, pu
her up at the Plaza where she me
all the literary people in town," De-
lacorte said. "But she was an ig-
norant girl. She never heard of Vic-
tor Hugo, I'm sure. And Shakes-
peare was only a name she probably
heard in school once. She couldn't
write. And she certainly couldn't
spell. She'd spell said `sed' and little
with one `t' ."
But "Return" came out and every-
body, including Metalious, made
money.
"Then she started to drink, begin-
ning with brandy for break-
fast," Delacorte said. "She decided
the problem was she had never slept
with anyone but her husband. The
rumors were she went to bed with
everyone, even the bellboys in the
hotel."
A third book was being kicked
around, again to be ghostwritten,
when Metalious contracted hepatitis
and died shortly thereafter. "She
died from her own success," De-
lacorte said.
"You get fooled," he said. "You
think you have a good writer and
you find out they're either one shot
or they burn out."
Dell had one prolific fellow who
Turn to DELACORTE, C2
George Delacorte's Career Touched by Vonnegut, Disney, Haley
Staff Artwork by Sharon Roberts
C2—Palm Beach Post -Times, Sunday, May 1, 1977
used to turn out a detective story
every three months. Then suddenly,
he dried up. "We hired a ghostwri-
ter and the original author would get
postcards saying how much they en-
joyed his later books. The fellow
eventually drank himself to death."
He got. a good price for his name,
..hough. "He really held us up," De-
acorte laughed. No bitterness there.
`It was his name. He could sell it
>r what he wanted."
Ironically, Delacorte said, your
ggest successes are sometimes
our failures, too. The minute the
'Nixon transcripts were released,
both Dell and. Bantam rushed to
print. Within a week, their books
were on the street.
"It did tremendous for the first
three or four weeks," Delacorte
said. "You couldn't keep them on
the shelves. When the retailer
couldn't get them from his wholesal-
er, he'd go to a broker and a general
distributor, and we wound up with
three orders for the same copies."
The orders came in, the presses
churned, then there was a screech-
ing halt. "It just died. Dead," De-
lacorte said. "Both Bantam and Dell
sold 1.5 million copies each. But we
both lost money because it just sud-
denly died."
There's just no telling which are
going to soar and which are going to
flounder, Delacorte said. Even a
lousy book can make it, he said.
"Look at that one by Joyce Haber.
It's a terrible book. Almost unread-
able. But look how long it's been on
the best-seller list."
An author with a personality can
do a lot to boost sales, primarily via
the tube. "I remember the first diet
book we put out by Dr. Stillman,"
he laughed. Delacorte didn't think
too much of the diet, and it was
highly controversial. "But we sold 7
million."
The biggest thing they had going
for them was Stillman himself. "He
wasn't an interesting person, but he
was a character," Delacorte said.
"He performed well on television, so
he kept being asked to appear on the
talk shows."
He apparently had a great lip. The
more he talked, the more his books
sold.
One of the best books Delacorte
ever ran across was one that never
happened. It was the love letters of
Eldridge Cleaver. "We published
'Soul On Ice'," Delacorte said. "It
made over a million dollars."
The book was an angry, screaming
indictment of whites, written as De-
lacorte puts it, "with hate and ven-
om."
Well, it just so happened that a
Jewish female attorney met Cleaver
when she was visiting the jail one
day. Intrigued by him, she became a
frequent visitor. "She fell in love
with him and worked like hell for
his release," Delacorte said.
Love letters passed between the
two. "They were divine," he said
"like the letters of Abelard and He-
loise."
The Black Panther leader —
preacher of violence — was a ten-
der, sensitive verbal lover. De- big
lacorte wanted to print the letters, De
but Cleaver wouldn't give his per- Ku
mission — for a very good reason. clas
In his book, Delacorte said, Cleav- lac
er was particularly vociferous an
against popular black figures who Vo
marry white women. "Eldridge de- we
cided, therefore, he couldn't marry
this Jewish woman. He left her and ers
we never did get his permission to he
publish the letters. To show he was to
Delacorte
so desperately in love with a white
woman would nullify all he had said
and written."
Ironically, three of the letters
were published in "Soul On Ice." In
the chapter headed "Prelude to
Love — Three Letters," the woman
is identified as Beverly Axelrod,
now a San Francisco attorney. No
mention is made that Mrs. Axelrod
is either Jewish or white. The let-
ters were sent in 1965 while Cleaver
was in Folsom Prison.
Out of the business now, Delacorte
skims maybe five books a week,
reading one thoroughly. But he reads
them like a producer or playwright
viewing another's play. "I read the
first chapter, I dig around here and
there. I analyze whether it will sell
or not, and why. It's habit. You be-
come a perfectionist about the art."
The business is not the same, he
said. "I think the ability to go into
the publishing business the way I did
is a thing of the past."
Back then, it was a business that
didn't require too much capital.
"You hired a printer, bought some
paper, got a few articles together,
and if you had the gift of gab, you
could manage to get credit."
Delacorte, whose parents both
were attorneys, was in his 20s when
he started out with a thing called,
"Sweetheart Stories," which he edit-
ed himself. These were romantic
English tales "translated into the
American language," which meant
the postmistress who lived in the vil-
lage and married the duke's son be-
came the stenographer in the city
who married the boss' son.
When the public appetite for pulp
romance and adventure became sat-
ed, the presses began spewing out
movie magazines, crossword puz-
zles and comic books. Woody Wood-
pecker, Donald Duck, Porky Pig —
all stars in the Dell stable.
At one time, Dell was the largest
publisher of this kind of juvenile
fare. Over 300 million a year before
TV killed it all with its animated
cartoon capers.
"We published all the Disney
characters," Delacorte said. "Dur-
ing the hard times, we kept him
(Disney) in business. We paid him
$10,000 a month in royalties."
Then in the '40s, Delacorte struck
off on a new adventure. A frequent
visitor to Europe, he was fascinated
by the low-priced, paperbound
books. "Most books in Europe were
published first in paperback," he
said. "If you liked it, you then had it
bound."
The problem in the States was dis-
tribution. Book sellers didn't want to
handle these bastardized magazine -
books. But because Delacorte was a
big magazine publisher, he nudged
his wholesalers to add the new publi-
cations to their stock.
They popped up in drug stores, su-
permarkets, and the biggest outlet
of all — train terminals. Within 10
years, the breakthough came. A few
years later, Delacorte branched out
again, this time in hardcover publi-
cations.
It was he who signed some of the
gest names ever published by
11 — Irwin Shaw, James Baldwin,
rt Vonnegut. Vonnegut's icono-
tic attitude appealed to De-
orte. He is an unusual writer and
equally unusual man. The first
nnegut title published by Dell
nt over the top.
He had worked for other publish -
before us," Delacorte said, "but
was never successful till he came
Dell. He was able to buy himself
,_
a house, which he did — next door to
our office so he could watch his
money come in."
To be sure, there were lots of mis-
takes along the way. "Some cost
millions," Delacorte said.
He admittedly blew "The Godfa-
ther" project. Dell had the reprint
rights sewn up. But when, as part of
the deal, the hardback publisher
tried to push on Dell a second book
Delacorte thought stunk, he told
From Cl
them "what they could do with it."
History now tells us "Godfather"
so:1 something like 14 million
copies.
The first to run Xaviera Holland-
er, prostitute -turned -author, Dell
made a nice profit off her first book,
but cooled when she wanted to come
out with a second. Another company
moved in and issued three or four
more money-makers under her
name.
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And then there was TV Guide. "It
was started by the brother of David
Sarnoff, head of RCA," Delacorte
said. "He was head of a window
washing firm. He wanted to sell and
he offered TV Guide to me for $300,-
000. I turned it down. So did Time -
Life. Then a year later Annenburg
1
bought it. Today it sells something
like 21 million copies a week."
It's a big money business today —
publishing. And a lot of it is a gam-
ble. "In the early days of paper-
backs, when they sold for 25 or 35
cents, the amount you paid the ori-
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Delacorte
From C2
ginal publisher was small," De-
lacorte said. Now the figures sound
like the payoff in the state lottery.
It's a huge, expensive game of
high bid. A book is placed on the
auction block with a minimum bid.
("Fifty thou for this one, what do
you offer?") It's all done by phone,
with a week to reply.
Through the bidding process, the
prices gradually shot up from $10,000
to a million. "For a major book, you
may have to put down half -a -million
dollars," Delacorte said. "The
smaller publishers (not like Dell)
were behind the eight ball. They
couldn't compete."
According to Delacorte, Bantam
paid $1.8 million for "Ragtime."
And talk in the industry is that Ban-
tam's going to take a bath. De-
lacorte thinks the company will wind
up losing hundreds of thousands on
that one.
"Even if you're a big publisher,
you buy three or four big ones and
lose half -a -million on each, and
you're out of the business."
A best seller in hardback is 50,000,
Delacorte said. Most don't go over
5,000 or 8,000. The money is in the
reprint rights: motion picture, radio,
TV, foreign language and the big-
gest bonanza of all — paperbacks.
But paperback people have to play a
high numbers game. Sell less than
100,000 and you lose your shirt.
"Rich Man, Poor Man" and
"Roots" paved a new direction for
TV treatment of books. One feeds
upon the other. A book is popular so
it sells to TV. The TV show is aired
and book sales leap upward again.
In the case of "Roots," it seems
to be backfiring. Author Alex Haley
is in the process of suing hardback
publisher Doubleday & Co. Haley
claims he lost out on sales because
Doubleday failed to adequately stock
the bookstores of the nation. He is
asking for $5 million in damages
from Doubleday and that the con-
tract with Dell be canceled.
According to Delacorte, it's not all
that simple. "Fourteen years ago,
Haley went to Doubleday who ad-
vanced him several thousand dollars
on the book. He went through the
money, the book wasn't completed
and Doubleday figured the money
was lost.
"Dell came along and said we'd
like to chip in $6,000 or $7,000. Of
course, Doubleday was glad to get
some of its money back."
In the meantime, Delacorte says,
some guy came along with the idea
for a TV show. He paid Doubleday
several thousand, did a relatively in-
expensive pilot, but no one bit.
"Finally, ABC decided to take a
chance on it," Delacorte said. The
result, of course, was the biggest
success in the history of the medi-
um. And the book sold over 1.5 mil-
lion in hardback, a record for such a
short period of time.
As to the claim that Doubleday
was negligent in not getting out the
books, Delacorte said, "I know it
had two other plants working on the
book, as well. I think it's a cry in
the wilderness. Haley would like to
renegotiate his contract because he
got the lowest rate. But you have to
remember, he was not a famous
writer before `Roots' came out."
It's easy to cast the publisher in
the bad guy role, said Delacorte.
"But there are more publishing
houses taken advantage of by au-
thors. The hardback house that pays
out advances of $2 million a year is
going to lose between $200,000 and
$300,000 on books that are never de-
livered or are so lousy or so libelous
you can't print them."
Retired now, Delacorte is out of
those battles. His energies are di-
rected elsewhere — in tennis, art
and his philanthropies, which he re-
fuses to talk about. But his generosi-
ty is on public display in New York
City and elsewhere.
For instance, he is the prime
benefactor of the Delacorte Theater
in Central Park where Joseph Papp
stages his annual summer Shakes-
peare Festival.
He is the man who commissioned
the bronze grouping of "Alice In
Wonderland" characters rConservatory
at the north
end offthe park's
And he is the man who con-
ceived of and paid for the execution
of that whimsical carousel clock in
the portal to the Park Zoo.
He is a fascinating man, a mar-
velous conversationalist who worries
about his memory fading. His ad-
miring wife Valerie, a former Hun-
garian actress, says, "There is an
utter simplicity to him. It's his car-
ing about human values and not
material things. He has a childlike
approach to life and people, and a
marvelous joy for living."