|
The origins of Kluger’s love affair with the written word
have always been obscure to him. No one else in his family showed any
interest in literature or had any special gift for writing. And the only
books in his home were boys’ adventure novels and Albert Payson Terhune’s
anthropomorphic books about dogs, creatures of limited interest to a city
lad. But he devoured all print matter he could get his hands on at a modest
cost – newspapers ( AT While a “Prince” reporter, Kluger tried to obtain an
interview with |
|
Dear Mr.
Kluger: This answer to
your letter of September 16th is not for publication for I have
already expressed my opinion publicly. As long as a
person has not violated the “social contract” nobody has a right to inquire
about his or her personal convictions. If this principle is not strictly
followed free intellectual development is not possible and a state of
uneasiness and hypocrisy unavoidable. You can observe this easily in our
country at the present time. Sincerely yours |
|
A year later, Kluger did manage to obtain an interview with the director of the Institute for Advanced Study, where Einstein did his work – Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer. The only condition of the interview was that Oppenheimer, then known as “the father of the atomic bomb,” would not discuss with Kluger the recent withdrawal of his security clearance by the Atomic Energy Commission for failing to report efforts by known communists to get him to divulge military secrets for transmission to the Soviet state. But Oppenheimer did predict, in the course of his interview, imminent widespread use of atomic energy as fuel to meet the world’s need for peacetime power. When Einstein died in April of 1955, Kluger heard the news on his way to an 8:40 morning lecture, turned around, and headed straight for the “Prince” office, where by noon his staff managed to produce a one-page “extra” reporting on the world figure’s demise. In the regular edition of the paper the following day, Kluger wrote an editorial tribute to the scientist whose theories were instrumental in ushering in the age of nuclear physics but with it, the specter of atomic holocaust. It read in part: |
|
Dr. Albert
Einstein lived in our midst – right down the street, quite literally – yet
lived a life so dramatic, so intense, so utterly inscrutable to most of us
that his proper home was not Princeton, but the universe…. The peoples of the
world must now move through Dr. Einstein’s time and space without the aid of
his gigantic mind. We can venture but a guess as to the meaning of that mind;
we can venture but a guess as to the consequences – for either progressive
good or abysmally destructive evil – of his life’s work. |
|
As chief editor of The Daily Princetonian, Kluger gave it a more literary bent, turning its editorial page over to a rotating panel of gifted young columnists, including satirical commentary from the conservative side by classmate Charles A. Fried, later to serve as U.S. Solicitor General under Ronald Reagan. Kluger himself contributed a (somewhat self-indulgent) humor column, “Paws and Ivy,” and gave its editorials a liberal tinge, hardly the preferred political shading among his fellow undergraduates of the day. J-SCHOOL DROPOUT. Over summers during
his last two years at college Kluger began working professionally in
journalism as a reporter in 1955 at the Paterson
Evening News and in 1956 at the brightly written In the two years between those jobs, Kluger and his wife
operated – on the proverbial shoestring – a new weekly newspaper, The Clarkstown Citizen, in New City,
Rockland County, probably the only county seat within 200 miles of New York that
did not already have a paper of its own. After getting it off the ground,
Kluger raised $25,000 from several dozen residents in the community who
appreciated having an independent newspaper to cover its civic, social, and
cultural affairs. After pushing the Citizen’s
circulation over 5,000 copies a week, the Klugers ran out of money and
backers and sold their weekly to a radio station across the After reporting on the grainy side of city life for two
years on the Post, he turned his
efforts to writing about the movers and shakers of corporate He switched from writing about money and industry to
dealing with the literary world when an opportunity arose for him to join the
Sunday staff of the New York Herald Tribune, which under
imaginative new editorial direction and a multimillionaire owner was creating
a sensation by reconfiguring the daily American newspaper. Kluger’s job was
to run Book Week, the Trib’s Sunday
literary supplement, which was syndicated as well to the |
|
INTO BOOK PUBLISHING. After four years, Kluger, by then more an editor than a writer (though he contributed occasional reviews to Book Week), left the Herald Tribune shortly before its demise to enter the book-publishing world. He joined the lively firm of Simon and Schuster, perhaps the most eclectic house in the trade, as a senior editor and member of the editorial board, specializing in nonfiction works. Among the books he brought to S&S were Richard Schickel’s biography, The Disney Version; Robert Caro’s The Power Broker, the life and times of Robert Moses (eventually issued by Knopf); The Case Against Congress by ace muckrakers Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson; From Those Wonderful Folks Who Gave You Pearl Harbor by zany advertising executive Jerry della Femina; Crime in America by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark; The Inner City Mother Goose, devastating social satire in verse by Eve Merriam, and Lawrence and Oppenheimer by Nuel Pharr Davis. After advancing to managing editor and then executive
editor at S&S, Kluger was offered the post of editor-in-chief at Atheneum
Publishers, a smaller but more literary house that produced books of handsome
design. At Atheneum he published such works as Kennedy Justice by Victor Navasky; Richard Rhodes’s first book, The Inland Ground; The Red Hot Vacuum
by astute literary critic Theodore Solotaroff; Down the Rabbit Hole, insightful essays on children’s literature,
and Who Pushed Humpty Dumpty? by
Donald Barr, headmaster of New York’s prestigious Dalton School. In 1970, the
Klugers and their two small sons, Matthew and Ted, moved from After a dispute with Atheneum’s owners over what Kluger felt was their failure to promote and market the house’s books vigorously, he was enlisted by the David McKay Co. to start his own imprint, Charterhouse Books. Two years into the effort and despite its promising start, he had to resign because of a retinal disease that hampered his vision and slowed his reading ability, a serious handicap, given his occupation. It was then that Kluger turned to writing fulltime.
A major part of Kluger’s work at S&S was to dream up nonfiction book ideas and to seek writers to undertake them. In 1968, a year of immense social unrest throughout the nation as the civil rights, antiwar (Vietnam), women’s liberation, environmental, and consumer movements all seemed to converge, Kluger set out to find an author for an account of the landmark school desegregation decision, Brown v. Board of Education, handed down in 1954 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Because the subject involved so many allied subjects – the whole black experience in America till that time, an understanding of U.S. constitutional law and the workings of the highest court in the land, and access to the African-American community, among other things – he had no takers for the idea. Academics didn’t want to undertake all the reporting and legwork in the field, and journalists lacked the historical and legal knowledge for the job. But Kluger, feeling himself distanced from the profound social confrontations of the day, was convinced that an intensely dramatic and revelatory story was there for the telling. Although he was neither a lawyer nor a historian nor a black, he decided to seek a contract to write the book himself, hoping to research it in his spare time for as long as it took and then planning to take a leave of absence from his publishing job to do the actual writing. A visit to the offices of Jack Greenberg, Thurgood Marshall’s
successor as director of the NNACP Legal Defense Fund (LDF), which had
spearheaded black America’s struggle for equal justice under law, led to the
surprising discovery that nobody was at work on a full-dress study of how the
Brown case was carried out and,
still more important, a huge cache of documents related to the case, covering
some 20 years of civil rights litigation, was at the LDF’s office, and though
in somewhat of a jumble, would be available to Kluger if he obtained a
contract form a leading publisher to do the book. Lacking credentials to win
such a contract, Kluger spent his spare time over the next year preparing an
extensive book proposal, which won him contract offers from two leading
houses, one from his editor at Harper & Row, with which he chose to stick
since the house had done his second novel. When his editor there shifted to
Alfred A. Knopf, arguably the best In addition to combing through thousands of documents,
articles, books, and other printed sources, he interviewed hundreds of people
involved in the cases, from three Justices of the Supreme Court (Earl Warren,
William O. Douglas, and Tom Clark) to many of the lawyers, black and white,
who prepared and argued the cases, to the black petitioners who initiated the
cases in five different communities. Kluger was deeply moved by the
acceptance he was granted by many in the black community who, after initial
suspicions toward a white man asking a lot of questions, proved greatly
forthcoming with their reminiscences. The hardest interview of all for him to
obtain was with Thurgood Marshall, the central figure in the LDF’s fight to
abolish Jim Crow practices across the land. Marshall, by then a Supreme Court
Justice himself, repeatedly declined Kluger’s request for an interview,
choosing to remain secluded from all in the media lest he say or unwittingly
reveal anything that might endanger his status as the black man who had risen
to a higher post in U.S. government than any other member of his race before
him. But just before Kluger started writing, he tried one last time and was
summoned to
Granted access to the private records and files of the by-then defunct Herald Tribune by the Whitney family, the paper’s last owners, he approached writing its history as a means of recounting the evolution of U.S. daily journalism in general – for the Trib was unsurpassed as a practitioner of the craft. The New York Times was a more comprehensive and, eventually, far more commercially successful enterprise, but the Herald Tribune was the better written, more tightly edited, and graphically more pleasing effort; the two New York publications were the only truly national newspapers in the nation, covering its main political, social, cultural, and economic developments as well as regional and overseas news. Again, Kluger interviewed hundreds of subjects to enrich his story, and The Paper (1986), like Simple Justice, was widely hailed and a finalist for the National Book Award.
In the early Nineties, after years of abandoned starts, a two-hour “docudrama” adaptation of Simple Justice was aired on public television’s “American Experience” series. The TV version won renewed attention for the book and helped keep it in print, as did a revised edition (with a new last chapter) that Knopf issued in 2004 on the fiftieth anniversary of the Brown decision. The book has remained in print for more than 30 years.
Kluger has been greatly assisted in his nonfiction work by
the research skills of his wife, the former Phyllis Schlain, whom he married
in
|
|
|
NON-FICTION
|
|
|
SIMPLE
JUSTICE (1976)
A History of Brown v. Board of Education & Black America’s Struggle for Equality THE PAPER
(1986)
The Life and Death of the New York Herald Tribune ASHES TO
ASHES (1996)
America’s Hundred-Year Cigarette War, the Public Health, and the Unabashed Triumph of Philip Morris SEIZING
DESTINY (2007)
How America Grew from Sea to Shining Sea THE BITTER WATERS OF MEDICINE
|
|
|
FICTION
|
|
|
WHEN THE BOUGH
BREAKS (1964)
NATIONAL ANTHEM
(1969)
MEMBERS OF THE
TRIBE (1978)
STAR WITNESS
(1979)
UN-AMERICAN
ACTIVITIES (1982)
THE SHERIFF OF NOTTINGHAM
(1992)
|
|
|
CO-AUTHOR
WITH PHYLLIS KLUGER |
|
|
GOOD GOODS (1982)
ROYAL
POINCIANA (1987)
(under pseudonym Thea Coy Douglass) |