Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Geoffrey Bles

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Died
  
1957

Name
  
Geoffrey Bles


Spouse(s)
  
Evelyn Constance Halse

Occupation
  
Publisher

Education
  
Merton College, Oxford

Geoffrey Bles British Geoffrey Bles Page


Alma mater
  
Merton College, Oxford

David Geoffrey Bles (1886–1957) was a British publisher, with a reputation for spotting new talent, who started his eponymous publishing firm in London in 1923, and published the first five books of C.S. Lewis' Narnia series.

Contents

Geoffrey Bles British Geoffrey Bles Page

Early life

Bles read Greats at Merton College, Oxford, followed by entry to the Indian Civil Service. During the First World War he was commissioned into the Indian Army Reserve of Officers in October 1917 and was attached to the 17th Cavalry, Indian Army, in November 1917. He served in the Political Department in Mesopotamia in 1918 before demobilization in June 1919 and returning to the Indian Civil Service. On 3 January 1920, he married Miss Evelyn Constance Halse.

Publishing career

Bles entered publishing in 1923. Geoffrey Bles Limited were general publishers, but with a specialism in religion and translated works. Among the authors Bles published were C.S. Lewis, J.B. Phillips, Cecil Street, Halliday Sutherland, Vicki Baum, and Maria von Trapp. Baum's Grand Hotel (1930), originally published in German, was a huge commercial success for Bles.

Bles was introduced to C.S. Lewis through his employee Ashley Sampson (1900–1947) who owned the Centenary Press. Bles bought that company and merged it with his own thus acquiring Lewis as an author. Lewis's key religious work, The Problem of Pain, was published jointly by Bles and Centenary Press in 1940, as were his Beyond Personality: The Christian Idea of God (1944) and The Great Divorce: A Dream (1945).

Bles published on his own, Lewis's The Screwtape Letters (1942), The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe (1950) and the next four in the Narnia series up to The Horse and his Boy (1954), but for the last two books in the series Lewis moved to Bodley Head.

William Collins publishers bought the firm of Geoffrey Bles in 1953 and Bles retired within a year or two but books continued to be published under the Bles imprint into the 1970s. The Garnstone Press purchased the Geoffrey Bles name from Collins in 1971.

Following his death, several correspondents commented in The Times on his personal suitability to the genteel world of literary publishing.

Outside publishing

Bles was a member of the board of Charing Cross Hospital for many years.

His great nephew is the writer William Mortimer Moore whose Free France's Lion: The Life of Philippe Leclerc, de Gaulle's Greatest General was published in 2011 and is dedicated to Bles.

References

Geoffrey Bles Wikipedia