Q&A: PETER HUBBARD, EXECUTIVE EDITOR
AT WILLIAM MORROW
�Yes, I am saying that Peter Levenda stole
my book�
What are some upcoming trends?
Hopefully we�ll see more blurring of defined
genres. I get inspired when I see publishers taking a risk to break a book out
of its obvious box. It�s a great antidote to stale publishing, particularly at
a time when the industry is being taken over by platform-based books
(celebrities, bloggers, etc.). Science fiction has been leading this charge, as
it always seems to�I�m thinking of a book like The Martian. Fifty
Shades achieved this, making a romance novel �safe� (i.e., cool, or at
least not embarrassing) for a mass audience. It could have gone the other way,
but Vintage clearly had a vision with what they wanted to achieve with a book
that traditionally would fall far outside what they�re known for.
It�s not earth-shattering stuff, but when I
first published American Sniper, I wanted to package it as a
blockbuster thriller with some of the conventions of upmarket nonfiction, like
deckled edges and printed endpapers�anything to get people to approach it
fresh, without the preconceived idea of what conventional �military history�
should look like. Warner Bros. took this to a whole different level with their
marketing of the film, particularly in the way they were able to broaden the
appeal to women.
I just bought Lenny Dykstra�s memoir, and
though it may sound silly, I�ve been pitching it almost as a Shakespearean
tale, not just an ordinary baseball memoir. This summer, I have a memoir by a
Forest Service smokejumper that I want to have a more quiet presence that
captures something of an individual�s relation to the power of nature as
opposed to a rah-rah macho look that might ordinarily be imposed on it. Of
course, all this only works if the books deliver. I have no doubt we�ll
collectively beat this into the ground until publishing something as �genre� is
considered a wild idea, so enjoy it while it lasts. For the time being, I think
there�s some mileage left.
What book/genre/topic would you like to see
cross your transom?
I�m fascinated by photojournalists,
particularly combat photographers. They�ve probably experienced more war zones,
more of the extremity of the modern world than anyone else alive. And they do
so as outsiders without obvious skin in the game, and really as artists. I
think at least one of them will write a great book.
What topic don�t you ever want to see again?
If I never see a precious pair of empty shoes
on a cover again, I�ll leave bookstores happy for the rest of my days.
What is unique about your corner of the
industry?
What I like about William Morrow is that
there�s freedom to do anything�high or low�and know it�ll be supported by a
muscular sales and publicity team, not just treated as a pet project. I
published two Pulitzer Prize winners on my last list, but we�re also doing
great, highly successful commercial fiction. It�s an incredibly smart group of
folks, but the environment is refreshingly free of the pretention that has a
tendency to handcuff the industry.
Executive Editor Peter Hubbard has spent his
entire career at William Morrow/HarperCollins, joining in 2004. He acquires new
nonfiction and oversees key backlist titles by Aldous Huxley, Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn, Robert Pirsig, and the Harper Perennial
Modern Thought line of philosophy classics. A graduate of the University of
Chicago, he grew up in the Washington, D.C., area.
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