Cape Breton Post

George Braziller, literary publisher, dead at 101

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George Braziller, an independen­t and self-taught publisher for more than 50 years who supported early novels by Norman Mailer and Arthur Miller and released fiction by Nobel laureates Orhan Pamuk and Claude Simon, has died. He was 101.

A spokesman for his publishing house, George Braziller Inc., told The Associated Press that Braziller died Thursday at the Mary Manning Walsh Home in Manhattan after a brief illness. Braziller had stepped down as publisher at age 95 and turned over the company to his son, Michael Braziller.

A high school dropout endowed with lifelong curiosity, George Braziller was often likened to his good friend and fellow maverick, Barney Rosset. Both were political leftists and champions of books from overseas and both succeeded by breaking rules, although Braziller was never in Rosset’s class as a troublemak­er. While Rosset went to court to fight censorship of “Tropic of Cancer’’ and other works, Braziller concentrat­ed on finding quality literature.

“Take lots and lots of gambles,’’ an industry veteran once advised Braziller, “but small ones.’’

He had been running two book clubs when he decided to become a publisher and, with his wife, Marsha, founded George Braziller Inc. in 1955. His first success was a translatio­n of a memoir about the French conflict with Algeria, Henri Alleg’s “La Question,’’ for which JeanPaul Sartre wrote an introducti­on.

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