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Reynal & Hitchcock
Publishing company in New York From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Reynal and Hitchcock was a publishing company in New York City. Founded in 1933 by Eugene Reynal and Curtice Hitchcock, in 1948 it was absorbed by Harcourt, Brace.[1]
Books published
- Mary Poppins by P. L. Travers (1934)
- The Little Prince, a 1943 illustrated classic by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (OCLC: 290302)
- The Autobiography of a Curmudgeon, a 1943 autobiography of New Deal politician Harold L. Ickes (OCLC: 456599)
- Strange Fruit, a 1944 bestselling novel debut by American author Lillian Smith (OCLC: 5280871)
Triangle Books
Triangle Books was an imprint by Reynal & Hitchcock, of hardbound, inexpensive reprint editions published between 1933 and 1949.[2]
In 1939, Reynal & Hitchcock sold Triangle Books to Doubleday.[3]
See also
References
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