Former ceo and chairman of Doubleday &
Company--as well as life trustee of the New York Public Library, long-time
trustee of the New York Zoological Society and board member of the American
Academy of Rome--John Turner Sargent, Sr., 87, died peacefully at his home in
Manhattan on February 5. He "had been in frail condition in recent years
after suffering a stroke."
In partnership with Nelson Doubleday,
Sargent led Doubleday's expansion as a "communications conglomerate"
and vertically-integrated publishing enterprise that included book
manufacturing, the Literary Guild and Doubleday book clubs, the acquisition of
book exporter Feffer & Simons, the 26 Doubleday book shops and more,
including radio stations and film production. (One notable movie was 1974'2 The
Parallax View, starring Warren Beatty and based Loren Singer's Doubleday
bestseller.)
His family, which includes his son John
Sargent, Jr., currently ceo of Macmillan, writes: "One of the most
affable, suave, and erudite of publishers in the heyday of the New York
publishing scene, Mr. Sargent instilled a close working relationship with a
bevy of Doubleday’s powerhouse authors--old and new--from Daphne du Maurier,
Victoria Holt, Irving Stone, Dwight Eisenhower, Leon Uris, Arthur Hailey, Theodore
Roethke, Alex Haley, Stephen King, Gay Talese, and Peter Benchley, along with
the agents and executors of the industry's most envied list of backlist
authors. Mr. Sargent was a longtime friend of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and
encouraged her to join the firm as an editor in 1978 after she left Viking
Press."
The WSJ
writes: "Well-read and urbane, Mr. Sargent was close to many Doubleday
authors and threw lavish dinners. Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Theodore Roethke
was a particular friend, and sometimes slept in Mr. Sargent's bathtub at the
conclusion of a bibulous evening." Sargent recalls his father's annual
"singles only" Christmas Eve parties--co-hosted with Joan
Fontaine--for the AP:
"A Salvation Army band would play at midnight and everybody would sing
Christmas carols. And you had to be single. There was no flexibility in that
rule." More importantly, he tells Doubleday colleagues that "the
company was in his heart for over 60 years. The Doubleday anniversary
paperweight was still on his desk the day he died."
There will be a private service in Boston
on Friday and a memorial celebration honoring Mr. Sargent's life at a date to
be determined in March in New York City.
The family asks that those wishing to make
contributions in Mr. Sargent's memory direct them to the New York Public
Library or the Food Pantry and Shelter ministry administered by St. Bart's
church.
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