Boston Sunday Globe

Michael Denneny, a dean of gay publishing, 80

- By Harrison Smith

Michael Denneny, an affable dean of gay New York publishing, liked to say that he had two separate careers.

In one, he spent three decades — primarily at St. Martin’s Press, working out of a cluttered office in the Flatiron Building — acquiring and editing works of fiction and nonfiction, including Buckminste­r Fuller’s “Critical Path,” Judith Thurman’s awardwinni­ng biography “Isak Dinesen,” and a book version of Ntozake Shange’s theater piece “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf.”

In the other, Mr. Denneny was a feisty linchpin of the gay literary scene. He nurtured upand-coming talent while working as an editor of Christophe­r Street magazine, which he cofounded in 1976 and promoted as a gay version of The New Yorker, and at St. Martin’s ran Stonewall Inn Editions, which he launched in 1987 as the first gay imprint at a major publishing house.

Mr. Denneny, who sought “to normalize the publishing of gay books,” released canonical titles by Allen Barnett, David Carter, Larry Kramer, Paul Monette, Edmund White, and the journalist Randy Shilts, including “And the Band Played On,” Shilts’s bestsellin­g 1987 chronicle of the AIDS epidemic.

In the book’s acknowledg­ments, Shilts wrote that his “reporting would never have been transforme­d into a book if it were not for the faith of” Mr. Denneny, who “believed in this project when most in publishing doubted that the epidemic would ever prove serious enough to warrant a major book.”

Mr. Denneny, who was often described as the first openly gay editor at a major publishing house, was 80 when he was found dead April 15 at his home in Manhattan. He was believed to have died about three days earlier of “a cardiac event, likely a heart attack,” said his brother Joe Denneny.

He died weeks after the publicatio­n of his book “On Christophe­r Street,” which explored the gay community’s evolution since the 1969 Stonewall uprising and featured some of his earlier writing.

“It’s probably too much to say that without Michael there would be no gay literature,” said Keith Kahla, an executive editor at St. Martin’s and a former assistant to Mr. Denneny, “but it would be a very different landscape, because once he started to publish and show it was possible to write about these lives, writers and other editors were inspired and emboldened.”

When Mr. Denneny created Stonewall Inn Editions, there were only a few independen­t gay and lesbian publishing companies. His imprint helped bring gay books to a mass audience while offering a sense of coherence and permanence for its titles, beginning with “Buddies” by Ethan Mordden, “Joseph and the Old Man” by Christophe­r Davis, “Blackbird” by Larry Duplechan, and “Gay Priest” by the Episcopal minister Malcolm Boyd.

Through the imprint and St. Martin’s as a whole, Mr. Denneny

went on to champion the work of gay writers chroniclin­g the AIDS epidemic. He published one of the earliest books on the disease — “The AIDS Epidemic” (1983), edited by Kevin Cahill — and signed up dozens more, with The New York Times reporting in 1987 that he “may have published more books on AIDS than any other editor at a commercial house.”

A number of those works were by friends of Mr. Denneny’s who died of complicati­ons of AIDS, including Barnett, who died at 36; Monette, at 49; John Preston, at 48; and Shilts, at 42. Such writers “became our first responders,” the veteran editor Ira Silverberg wrote on Instagram after Mr. Denneny’s death. “They captured pain, lust, fear, empathy, and rage for us. Some of us were so numb and traumatize­d that we couldn’t access our own.”

While Mr. Denneny edited gay writers for his entire career, he also was known for supporting authors across the literary spectrum. He collaborat­ed with the essayist Renata Adler and the memoirist Lars Eighner, edited autobiogra­phies by the Watergate conspirato­r G. Gordon Liddy and the action star Mr. T, and worked on award-winning mystery novels by Linda Barnes and Eliot Pattison.

Many of his first-time writers, including Thurman, were young and relatively untested. In a phone interview, she said that Mr. Denneny contacted her after reading a Ms. magazine article she wrote about Dinesen and suggested that she write a fulllength biography of the renowned Danish author, whose real name was Karen Blixen.

Her Dinesen book, subtitled “The Life of a Storytelle­r,” received a National Book Award and partly inspired the 1985 movie “Out of Africa,” with Robert Redford and Meryl Streep.

The oldest of three sons, Michael Leo Denneny was born in Providence on March 2, 1943. He grew up in nearby Pawtucket, where his mother was a mill worker and his father handled mail. “It could be so gloomy at times that Michael got seriously into reading,” said his brother Joe, Mr. Denneny’s only immediate survivor.

Mr. Denneny graduated from the University of Chicago in 1964 with a bachelor’s degree in history. He stayed on to do graduate work with the school’s Committee on Social Thought, where he studied under the philosophe­r Hannah Arendt and received a master’s degree in 1970.

A self-described “hippie intellectu­al,” he protested the Vietnam War, worked part-time at the University of Chicago Press, and increasing­ly identified as gay in the years after Stonewall. “Most people just thought it was my latest political enthusiasm,” he said in a 1996 interview. “So, in essence, I moved to N.Y.C. to try out being gay. It worked!”

“I was never worried about educating straight people,” he told New York’s Gay City News in 2004, looking back on his literary work in the years after Stonewall. “All of us were selfhating. We needed to reformulat­e gay imaginatio­ns, reimagine sex and relationsh­ips.

“The way you do that,” he continued, “is with books.”

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