“Editing is simply the application of the common sense of any good reader. That's why, to be an editor, you have to be a reader. It's the number one qualification. As an editor, I have to be tactful, of course.” —Robert Gottlieb
Born on April 29, 1931, Gottlieb is both an editor AND a writer, but it’s his editorship for which he is best known, having served as editor of The New Yorker for a number of years and editor-in-chief at book giant Simon & Schuster for 30 years.
While
at S&S, he discovered and edited Catch-22 by the then-unknown Joseph
Heller, and during his years there he edited works by almost every major writer
– both of fiction and nonfiction.
Gottlieb said it was his love of reading that led to his fascination with dissecting how books were crafted. “I was the only child, and I know my father had certain thoughts about me. He was a lawyer and extremely literary, but he would have been much happier if I had wanted to be a lawyer, a scientist, an engineer. But what I wanted to do was read.”
For
a time he thought that also might mean that he would become a full-time writer, but he
said it was something he never really wanted to be. “I don't like writing - it's so difficult to
say what you mean,” he said. “It's much
easier to edit other people's writing … and help them say what they mean.”
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