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Archival Collections Portal > Rare Book & Manuscript Library Collections > Finding Aid: Sol Stein
Papers
Sol Stein
Papers,
1943-2004
[Bulk Dates: 1950-2004].
Preferred Citation
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Sol Stein Papers; Box and Folder;
Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
COinS Metadata
available (e.g., for Zotero).
Summary Information
Abstract
The Sol Stein Papers chart the literary life of author, editor and publisher,
Sol Stein, who in addition to his own career as novelist and playwright, founded the
publishing house Stein and Day. His papers contain correspondence with important
literary figures; multiple drafts of his plays, novels and non-fiction writing; and
correspondence which closely documents the editing process. The papers also include
some material relating to Stein’s political activities as Executive Director of The
American Committee for Cultural Freedom and as Ideological Analyst and writer for
The Voice of America.
At a Glance
| Bib ID: | 5540444MS#1437 View CLIO record |
| Creator(s): | Stein, Sol. |
| Title: | Sol Stein
Papers,
1943-2004
[Bulk Dates: 1950-2004].
|
| Physical description: | 24.56 linear ft. (58.5 document boxes)
|
| Language(s): | Collection is predominantly in English, with some German.
|
| Access: |
This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least two
business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library
reading room. This collection has no restrictions.
More information » |
Arrangement
Arrangement
This collection is arranged in five series.
Return to top Description
Scope and Content
This collection holds the papers of author, editor and publisher, Sol Stein. The bulk
of the papers chart Stein's development as a writer and include multiple drafts of
his published novels, plays, poems and non-fiction work, with notes and suggestions
from Stein and other readers. The collection also contains drafts of currently
unpublished materials, including screenplay and theatrical versions of his novels
and other projects. Other materials pertain to Stein's work as an editor and include
correspondence charting the publication of James Baldwin's
Notes of a Native Son,
drafts of two Elia Kazan novels on which he
worked and multiple student projects he supervised as a writing instructor. This
collection also contains Stein's professional and personal correspondence with
notable literary figures including Edward Albee, Saul Bellow, Jacques Barzun, Eric
Bentley, Elia Kazan, Arthur Miller, Lionel Trilling and Bertram Wolfe.
Stein's public activities in the 1950s as a writer for
Voice
of America
and as Executive Director of The American Committee for
Cultural Freedom are also represented, to a lesser extent, in these papers.
Return to top Using the Collection
Offsite
Access Restrictions
This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least two
business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library
reading room. This collection has no restrictions.
More information and link to off-site request form
Restrictions on Use
Permission to publish materials must also be obtained in writing from the Director of
the Rare Books and Manuscripts Library.
Preferred Citation
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Sol Stein Papers; Box and Folder;
Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
Finding aid in repository; folder level control.
Related Material
The Stein and Day Papers (MS#1197)
The American
Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, Tamiment 023
Tamiment
Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives Elmer Holmes Bobst Library 70
Washington Square South New York, NY 10012, New York University Libraries.
Return to top About the Finding Aid / Processing Information
Columbia University Libraries. Rare Book and
Manuscript Library; machine readable finding aid created by Columbia University
Libraries Digital Library Program Division
Processing Information
Papers processed 7/2008 by Darragh Martin (GSAS 2011)
Finding aid written 7/2008 by Darragh Martin (GSAS 2011)
Machine readable finding aid generated from MARC-AMC source via XSLT
conversion March 5, 2009
Finding aid written in English.
2009-04-17
xml document instance created by Carrie Hintz
Return to top Subject Headings
The subject headings listed below are found in this collection. Links below allow searches at Columbia University through the Archival Collections Portal and through CLIO, the catalog for Columbia University Libraries, as well as ArchiveGRID, a catalog that allows users to search the holdings of multiple research libraries and archives. All links open new windows.
Subjects| Heading | CUL Archives: Portal | CUL Collections: CLIO | Nat'l / Int'l Archives: ArchiveGRID |
|---|
| American Committee for Cultural Freedom. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Anti-communist movements--New York (State)--New
York. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Baldwin, James, 1924-1987. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Barzun, Jacques, 1907- | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Bentley, Eric, 1916- | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Kazan, Elia. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Mid-Century Book Club | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| New Dramatists' Committee. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Stein, Sol. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Trilling, Diana. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Voice of America (Organization) | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
| Wolfe, Bertram David, 1896-1977. | Portal | CLIO | ArchiveGRID |
Return to top History / Biographical Note
Biographical Note
Sol Stein was born in Chicago, Illinois, on October 13,
1926 to Louis (a jewelry designer) and Zelda Stein (later a translator for the
United Nations). Stein attended City College in New York but interrupted his studies
to serve in the United States Army from 1945 to 1947, briefly as an infantry
officer, and then as commandant of the three Occupational Training Schools in the
American Zone of Germany. He was cited by Lt. General Geoffrey Keyes for having
commanded the best educational units in the Third Army Area (American Zone,
Germany). Stein returned to his studies and the States and earned his B.S.S. from
City College, New York in 1948 and an M.A. from Columbia University the following
year. While pursuing a Ph.D. at Columbia from 1949-1951, Stein lectured on social
studies at City College. Despite his academic success, Stein switched gears in the
early 1950s, leaving academia for the arts and joining the Voice of America's (VoA)
Ideological Advisory Staff as a writer and political affairs analyst.
Established in 1942 as part of the Office of War
Information, the VoA's initial mandate was to use radio broadcasts to convey
accurate and balanced news to an audience abroad, eventually in forty-six languages.
Its inaugural broadcast on February 24th 1942 promised that: "The news may be good.
The news may be bad. We shall tell you the truth." After the War, the State
Department took over responsibility for the organization. By the time Stein joined
in 1951, the VoA had carved a new niche for itself as an information agency to
counter and challenge Soviet propaganda in Western Europe, Asia and South America,
which was gaining success in the burgeoning Cold War with the Soviet Union. By the
early 1950s, broadcasts tended to be more subjective in nature and frequently
anti-Communist in tone. Bolstered by the Smith-Mundt Act of 1948, which encouraged
the dissemination abroad of information about the United States through media,
Congress used VoA to promote American foreign policy and democracy. The broadcasts
that Stein wrote from 1951-1953 examined contemporary controversies through an
anti-Communist lens.
This ideological conviction was also apparent in Stein's
involvement with The American Committee for Cultural Freedom (ACCF). A committee of
about three hundred prominent intellectuals and artists, the ACCF was founded as the
American branch of the International Congress for Cultural Freedom and notable
members included W.H. Auden, Elia Kazan, Lionel Trilling, Saul Bellow, Norman
Thomas, George Balanchine, Alexander Calder, and Jackson Pollack. It undertook civil
rights activities as well as the organization of anti-Soviet campaigns and programs,
principally acting in opposition to Senator Joseph McCarthy’s tactics and on behalf
of other civil liberties issues. The organization sponsored a book written jointly
by a Democrat and Republican called McCarthy and the Communists, which was on the
New York Times best-seller list for thirteen weeks and was widely influential. Stein
was appointed Executive Director in 1953 and his involvement with the organization
ranged from organizing discussion panels of prominent intellectuals, frequent
communication with news media, and countering government stupidities like barring
American professors of Soviet history from receiving Russian newspapers. The
committee possibly saved the lives of two men, a Russian sailor who abandoned ship
in New York Harbor and Hasan Muhammad Tiro, who was tried and sentenced to death in
absentia in his native Indonesia while a graduate student at Columbia University and
was rescued by a telephone call from Norman Thomas, a director of the Committee, to
President Eisenhower. Stein resigned in 1956 and the Committee disbanded the
following year.
Stein began to carve a name for himself as a literary
writer in the early 1950s. While writing for
The New
Leader
,
Commentary
,
The New Republic
and
The
Christian Science Monitor
, Stein was also establishing himself as a
playwright. His 1953 play
Napoleon
, staged at the
American National Theatre and Academy, won the Dramatists Alliance Prize for best
full-length play of 1953. Alongside Elia Kazan, Tennessee William sand William Inge,
Stein was one of the founding members of the Playwright's Group at the Actor's
Studio. Stein's other staged works include
A Shadow of My
Enemy
(1957) and
Of Love and Marriage
(1964). Stein also worked in academia and publishing through the 1950s and 1960s,
lecturing on drama at Columbia and working as a general editor for Beacon Press from
1954-1957. At Beacon Press, he invented the book-size paperback which became and
remains the standard form for upscale paperback books. In addition, he published a
series of short hardcover essays dealing with contemporary cultural concerns, such
as Lionel Trilling's
Freud and the Crisis of our
Culture.
As general editor of the Beacon Contemporary Affairs
series, his first eight books were
Three Who Made A
Revolution
by Bertram Wolfe,
Homage to
Catalonia
by George Orwell,
The Century of Total
War
by Raymond Aron,
An End to Innocence
by Leslie Fiedler,
The Need for Roots by Simone Weil,
The Hero in History
by Sidney Hook,
Social Darwinism in American Thought
by Richard
Hofstadter, and
The Invisible Writing
by Arthur
Koestler. As an editor, Stein shepherded his friend James Baldwin's seminal work
Notes of a Native Son
to publication in 1955.
Stein later documented his editing of the book and his friendship with Baldwin in
Native Sons: A Friendship that Created One of the
Greatest Works of the Twentieth Century: Notes of a Native Son.
Stein and Baldwin had been friends since attending DeWitt
Clinton High School and it was Stein who encouraged Baldwin to assemble
Notes of a Native Son.
Baldwin's first novel,
Go Tell It on the Mountain,
was released in 1953 and
established Baldwin as one of the most important writers of his generation and his
later essays and plays cemented his status as a prominent, young African-American
voice. With his wife, Patricia Day, Stein founded the publishing firm Stein and Day
in 1962, which was primarily a trade book publisher of popular and literary fiction,
biographies, and social histories for a quarter of a century. After a mass-market
paperback distributor defaulted on a large payment, Stein and Day sued the
distributor, the judge did nothing for four years, and finally Stein and Day,
despite substantial orders for many of its books, was forced to close by two
competing printers. The publisher’s large and active backlist was sold by creditors
to another publisher who did nothing to create the works. Stein detailed the
corruption of the American bankruptcy process in a much praised nonfiction book
A Feast for Lawyers.
Stein began his career as a novelist with 1969's
The Husband,
which was based on his earlier play
Of Love or Marriage.
His greatest success came two years
later with
The Magician,
a dark tale of high school
violence that depicts justice as illusionary and lawyers as master magicians (Stein
himself is an honorary lifelong member of The International Brotherhood of
Magicians). The law proved a productive theme for Stein, with
The Magician
selling over one million copies. Several of his other
novels have legal settings as well. George Thomassy, the suave and talented defense
attorney introduced in
The Magician
continued to work
his courtroom magic in Stein's
Other People
and
A Touch of Treason.
Stein proved adept at probing
the underbelly of white suburban contentment and almost all of his novels mined this
vein in some fashion. Stein's published works include The
Childkeeper,
A Deniable Man,
The Resort,
Living Room
and
The Best
Revenge: A Novel of Broadway.
Though Stein continued to work on a sequel to
The Magician in the early 1990s, as the decade continued he
became increasingly devoted to teaching writing at Columbia University, City College
of New York, and the University of California, Irvine, and lecturing on writing and
publishing at the University of California, Los Angeles, Radcliffe College and
Northwestern University. Stein produced two manuals for aspiring writers:
Stein on Writing
and
How to Grow
a Novel: The Most Common Mistakes Writers Make and How to Overcome Them,
drawing on his own experience as a writer, editor and writing teacher to give advice
on constructing compelling narratives. Stein seized upon the growing market for
electronic writing manuals and produced and developed software programs for writers
including WritePro and FictionMaster. Stein was also commissioned by the Software
Publishers’ Association to write a manual for its members,
How to Develop a Sound Software Business.
Stein's most recent published
work was the aforementioned
Native Sons: A Friendship that
Created One of the Greatest Works of the Twentieth Century: Notes of a Native
Son,
released in 2004.
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