NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Richard Baron, the contrarian publisher of the Dial Press, had boundless audacity when he wanted to prove a point.
Diners at his all-white country club in Purchase, New York, were said to have been mortified when Baron brought James Baldwin as a guest to lunch one day until Baldwin received the imprimatur of a hearty embrace from another prominent club member, publisher Alfred A. Knopf.
Baron defied convention again by prominently displaying an author photo of Frank Yerba, who, like Baldwin, was Black, on the jacket of Yerbas historical novel Foxes of Harrow in 1947. He published other hot-button authors like Thomas Berger (Little Big Man in 1964) and Norman Mailer.
Baron died on May 6 at 98 at his home in Manhattan, his wife, Carole Baron, said.
Ironically, among his biggest bestsellers was a satire that Baron and his editor-in-chief at Dial, E.L. Doctorow, conspired, more or less successfully, to market in 1967 as a secret, suppressed 109-page government study. The purported study leaked, the story went, by someone within the government warned of the dangers of peace and concluded that a state of war, the threat of conflict or some credible substitute, like an attack by aliens from outer space, was vital for governments to maintain power.
The book, Report From Iron Mountain, was conceived by Victor Navasky, Richard Lingeman and Leonard C. Lewin and embraced by Vietnam War-era conspiracy theorists as it leapt onto nonfiction bestseller list in The New York Times.
Richard published it as a protest to the Vietnam War, Baron said in an email.
Despite Lewins confession in The New York Times Book Review in 1972 that the report was a hoax, it was revived decades later by right-wing paramilitary groups as evidence of ongoing government skulduggery.
At Barons 90th birthday party, Doctorow, whose own novels had by then entered the American canon, recalled the tempestuous 1960s as a terrible time but also a wonderful time.
If anyone was the perfect publisher for the 1960s, it was Richard Baron, Doctorow added. He was totally fearless, and he backed us in every crazy thing we wanted to do.
Richard Warren Baron was born on April 4, 1923, in Manhattan to Samuel T. Baron, president of the Royal Paper Corp., and Mabel (Levy) Baron. He attended PS 166 until he punched a student who had pushed him from behind during a fire drill and was shipped by his father to Manlius St. Johns Military Academy in upstate New York, where he graduated in 1940.
He enrolled in the University of North Carolina, enlisted in the Army infantry to fight in World War II and attended Officer Candidate School in Fort Benning, Georgia. He apparently didnt graduate, after being caught gambling across the Chattahoochee River in Alabama.
Baron was sent to North Africa as a lieutenant in 1943, wounded at Anzio in Italy and captured in Germany, where he was held for four months in a prisoner of war camp. There, U.S. troops made an abortive attempt to rescue General George S. Pattons son-in-law, an incident Baron recounted in a book titled Raid (1981), written with Abe Baum and Richard Goldhurst.
When the war ended, he went to Paris, where he ran into Drew Middleton, the Times military correspondent, who informed Barons parents that their son had survived the war. He returned home to join his fathers paper business and developed an interest in publishing when he started a division to sell paper to book companies.
In 1960, he bought into half-ownership of Dial Press, found himself in charge when his partner died and surrounded himself with a talented staff that included editors James Silberman; Charlotte Sheedy, who went on to become a prominent literary agent; and Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, a future senior book critic for the Times.
Baron published Baldwins novel Another Country (1962) after spiriting the author from Manhattan to Barons home in Westchester to spare him from distractions and let him finish writing it there.
And, among other books, he released The Armies of the Night (1968), Mailers Pulitzer Prize-winning, National Book Award-winning nonfiction novel. (The Baron and Mailer families vacationed together for a time in Provincetown, on Cape Cod, where publisher and author were sailing competitors.)
He sold Dial in the late 1960s to Dell, which ended the imprint in 1985. It was revived in 1993 by his wife, Carole Baron, an editor at Knopf whom Baron married in 1975.
Baron started his own imprint, the Richard W. Baron Co., which published, among others, Thomas Berger, Eleanor Craig, Nat Hentoff and Julius Lester. He retired to Shelter Island, off the East End of Long Island, in 1980 to sail and fly his own plane.
His marriages to Pamela Stearns and Virginia Olsen ended in divorce. In addition to his wife, he is survived by his children from his first marriage, Susan Trimpe, Wendy Frank and Vicki Lauterbach; his children from his second marriage, Amy Brourman and Tom Baron; his stepchildren Lee Riffaterre, Jon Park and Geoff Park; 15 grandchildren; and one great-grandson.
Baron was an idiosyncratic boss. Doctorow recalled a wonderful sense of indeterminacy floating through that place, including unbusinesslike 60-hour weeks that included lunchtime chess games with Baron that would extend long past lunch.
People would be waiting outside the door, he told The New York Times Magazine in 1985. There were decisions to be made, and wed be in there, playing the game.
Lehmann-Haupt recalled in The Shelter Island Reporter that when he accepted a job offer from Baron in the 1960s, his former employer warned that hed be working for Captain Bligh.
Unfazed, Lehman-Haupt replied, I dont plan to sail with him.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.