Sneha Girap (Editor)

Allen Lane

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Nationality
  
British

Awards
  
Albert Medal (1969)

Education
  
Bristol Grammar School


Name
  
Allen Lane

Occupation
  
Publisher

Children
  
Clare Morpurgo

Allen Lane imagesnpgorguk80080006mw142606jpg

Full Name
  
Allen Lane Williams

Born
  
21 September 1902 (
1902-09-21
)

Known for
  
Founder of Penguin Books

Died
  
July 7, 1970, Northwood, London, United Kingdom

Grandchildren
  
Horatio Morpurgo, Sebastian Morpurgo, Rosalind Morpurgo

Similar People
  
Clare Morpurgo, Noel Carrington, Michael Morpurgo, John Makinson

Allen lane band out in the sticks


Sir Allen Lane (born Allen Lane Williams; 21 September 1902 – 7 July 1970) was a British publisher who together with V. K. Krishna Menon and his brothers Richard and John Lane founded Penguin Books, bringing high-quality paperback fiction and non-fiction to the mass market.

Contents

Udayan mitra publisher allen lane and portfolio


Early life and family

Allen Lane Williams was born in Bristol to Camilla (née Lane) and Samuel Williams, and studied at Bristol Grammar School. In 1919 he joined the publishing company Bodley Head as an apprentice to his uncle and founder of the company John Lane. In the process, he and the rest of his family changed their surname to Lane to retain the childless John Lane's company as a family firm. Lane married Lettice Lucy Orr on 28 June 1941 and had three daughters: Clare, Christine, and Anna. He was knighted in 1962.

Career as a publisher

He rose quickly at Bodley Head becoming managing editor in 1925 following the death of his uncle. After conflict with the board of directors who were wary at first — for fear of being prosecuted — of publishing James Joyce's controversial book Ulysses, Lane, together with his brothers Richard and John, founded Penguin Books in 1935 as part of the Bodley Head.

Penguin Books became a separate company the following year. The legend goes that on a train journey back from visiting Agatha Christie in 1934, Lane found himself on an Exeter station platform with nothing available worth reading. He conceived of paperback editions of literature of proven quality which would be cheap enough to be sold from a vending machine; the first was set up outside Henderson's in Charing Cross Road and dubbed the "Penguincubator". Lane was also well aware of the Hamburg publisher Albatross Books and adopted many of its innovations.

The paperback venture was extremely successful, and he expanded into other areas such as Pelican Books in 1937, Puffin Books in 1940 and the Penguin Classics series in 1945. Lane was responsible for the decision to publish an unexpurgated edition of D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover as a means of testing the Obscene Publications Act 1959.

In 1965, during an attempt by chief editor Tony Godwin and the board of directors to remove him, Lane stole and burnt the entire print run of the French cartoonist Siné's book Massacre, which was reportedly deeply offensive.

Lane fired Godwin, and retained control of Penguin, but was forced to retire shortly afterwards after being diagnosed with bowel cancer. He died in 1970 at Northwood, Middlesex.

References

Allen Lane Wikipedia