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...creation of Marian and Hanna Kister, the Roj (Beehive) Publishers was the biggest fiction publishing house in pre-Nazi Poland. Started after World War I with a cheap edition of Jack London, it grew by virtue of its translations (Proust, Sigrid Undset, Pearl Buck, Galsworthy) to 1 80 volumes a year. In Manhattan last week the Beehive Publishers (transliterated to Roy for the U.S. trade) were again as busy as bees. In between was a story of terror and struggle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Polish Publishers | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

When Poland was invaded, Hanna Kister was alone at the office. She discovered that World War II had begun when she tried to cash a check, found the bank closed. Then the telephone stopped working. The lights went out. Police and firemen disappeared. A few intellectuals appeared at the office, quickly left. "Writers are always nervous," says Mrs. Kister...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Polish Publishers | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

...first the Gestapo paid no attention to publishing; it was too busy with the banks. Then the House of Roy, along with other Polish publishers, received an order to turn in all their anti-Nazi books. (They published anti-Nazi Hermann Rauschning.) Through the winter Mrs. Kister carted 70,000 volumes to the Gestapo headquarters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Polish Publishers | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

Early in the winter of 1939 - Mrs. Kister cannot remember the date exactly, but it had already snowed - a Pole took a pushcart loaded with unbanned Roy books out on the streets of Warsaw to see if the Germans would permit them to be sold. They were sold. At the end of the eight months that Mrs. Kister and her daughter were in occupied Warsaw, 200 pushcart book peddlers, most of them women, sold Roy books on the streets of Warsaw. Bestsellers: history, dictionaries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Polish Publishers | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

Later the Kisters got to New York City. At first Hanna Kister got a job teaching school in Brooklyn. Her husband could find nothing to do. They began publishing shamefacedly, thinking they should find work in defense factories. They printed two books of poetry by modern Polish poets, in editions of 1,000 each, sold them to Polish-Americans, including Polish speaking steelworkers in Pittsburgh. The Roy Publishers' first book was The Mermaid and the Mcsserschmitt (TIME, Dec. 28, 1942). It sold a respectable 5,000 copies, with Mrs. Kister traveling through the Middle West to persuade bookstores...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Polish Publishers | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

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