Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Editor to the stars had 50-year career

- By Hillel Italie Associated Press

NEW YORK Judith Jones, a consummate literary editor who helped revolution­ize American cuisine by publishing Julia Child and other groundbrea­king cookbook authors, worked for decades with John Updike and Anne Tyler and helped introduce Englishlan­guage readers to “The Diary of Anne Frank,” has died at age 93.

Jones, who spent more than 50 years at Alfred A. Knopf before retiring in 2011, died early Wednesday at her summer home in Walden, Vermont. Her stepdaught­er, Bronwyn Dunne, said she died of complicati­ons from Alzheimer’s.

Few better embodied and lived out the ideal of a life in New York publishing than the slender, refined Jones, whom Tyler once praised, both as a person and as an editor, as “very delicate and graceful, almost weightless.” Jones worked at one of the leading publishing houses with some of the world’s most beloved authors. She thrived even as Knopf evolved from a family-run business to part of the internatio­nal conglomera­te Bertelsman­n AG.

Moviegoers would learn about her in “Julie & Julia,” the 2009 film starring Meryl Streep as Child and featuring Erin Dilly as Jones. In the early6`0s, she signed up the then-unknown Child and “Mastering the Art of French Cooking,” a landmark release that caught on again decades later thanks to “Julie & Julia.” Tyler, however, thought the movie “stupid” because of a scene in which Jones backs out of a dinner at an author’s home because it’s raining.

“Judith Jones would go through a blizzard,” Tyler told The Associated Press in 2012. “She’s the most indomitabl­e person.”

Jones was herself an author and gourmet. She collaborat­ed on several cookbooks with her husband Evan Jones, contribute­d to numerous food magazines and wrote the memoir “The Tenth Muse: My Life in Food,” published in 2007. In 2006, she received the James Beard Foundation Lifetime Achievemen­t Award, a fitting prize for Jones, who published Beard and was a close friend.

The daughter of an attorney, Jones was born Judith Bailey in 1924 and grew up in Manhattan. She majored in English at Bennington College, worked as an editorial assistant at Doubleday while still in school and in her early 20s was a reader for Doubleday in Paris. Among her early achievemen­ts was finding a masterpiec­e amid the rejects: “The Diary of Anne Frank.”

“One day my boss said, Oh,` will you get rid of these books and write some letters. He went off to have some lunch with some French publishers,” she explained in a 2001 interview with The Associated Press.

“I curled up with one or two books. I was just curious. I think it was the face on the cover. I looked at that face and I started reading that book and I didn’t stop all afternoon. I was in tears when my boss came back. I said,T`his book is going to New York and has got to be published.’ ”

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