Robert B. Silvers

Robert Benjamin Silvers (December 31, 1929 – March 20, 2017) was an American editor who served as editor of The New York Review of Books from 1963 to 2017.

Robert B. Silvers
Silvers at the National Book Critics Circle Awards in March 2012
Born
Robert Benjamin Silvers

(1929-12-31)December 31, 1929
DiedMarch 20, 2017(2017-03-20) (aged 87)
EducationUniversity of Chicago, 1947
OccupationEditor
Notable work
The New York Review of Books

Raised on Long Island, New York, Silvers graduated from the University of Chicago in 1947 and attended Yale Law School, but he left before graduating and worked as press secretary to Chester Bowles in 1950. He was sent by the U.S. Army to Paris in 1952 as a speechwriter and press aide, while finishing his education at the Sorbonne and Sciences Po. He soon joined The Paris Review as an editor under the guidance of George Plimpton. From 1959 to 1963, he was an associate editor of Harper's Magazine in New York.

Silvers was co-editor of The New York Review of Books with Barbara Epstein for 43 years, until she died in 2006, and was the sole editor of the magazine after that until his own death in 2017. Philip Marino of Liveright Publishing wrote of him: "Like a chemist pairing ingredients to induce a specific reaction, Silvers has built his career matching the right author and subject, in hopes of generating an exciting and illuminating result."[1] Silvers edited or co-edited several essay anthologies. He appeared prominently in the 2014 documentary film about the Review, The 50 Year Argument.

Silvers' awards and honorary degrees include the National Book Foundation's Literarian Award, the American Academy of Arts and Letters' Award for "Distinguished Service to the Arts", the Ivan Sandrof Award for Lifetime Achievement in Publishing and a National Humanities Medal. Among other honors, he was a Chevalier of the French Légion d’honneur and a member of the French Ordre National du Mérite.

Life and career

Silvers (standing), with brother Edwin (l), mother Rose and father James (r), about 1944

Silvers was born in Mineola, New York, and grew up in Farmingdale and then Rockville Centre, New York, the son of James J. Silvers (1892–1986), a salesman, sometime farmer and small business owner, and Rose Roden Silvers (1895–1979), a music and arts columnist for The New York Globe, restaurateur, and one of the first female radio hosts for RCA.[2][3] He had one brother, Edwin D. Silvers (1927–2000), a civil engineer.[4][5] His paternal grandparents were Romanian Jewish immigrants, and his maternal grandparents were Russian Jews.[2][6] Silvers graduated from the University of Chicago with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1947 (at the age of 17) after completing an accelerated two-year program and attended Yale Law School for three semesters.[7][8]

Silvers worked as press secretary to Connecticut Governor Chester Bowles in 1950, who was campaigning for reelection.[9] During the Korean War he served in the U.S. Army, which sent him to the SHAPE Headquarters in Paris in 1952 as a speechwriter and press aide.[10] While in Paris, he attended the Sorbonne and Paris Institute of Political Studies (best known as Sciences Po), eventually receiving its certificate.[11] His official duties left him time to work as an editor of a quarterly magazine published by the World Assembly of Youth and as a commissioning editor representing a small publishing company, Noonday Press.[7][12] In 1954, while working for Noonday, he met and befriended George Plimpton, editor of the new magazine The Paris Review, and after Silvers' discharge from the Army a few months later, Plimpton invited him to become managing editor.[11] Plimpton returned to the US in 1955, leaving Silvers in charge.[12] He later said that Silvers "made The Paris Review what it was".[11][13] Silvers continued his studies at the same time.[5] In 1958, he returned to New York,[9] becoming associate editor of Harper's Magazine, where he remained until 1963.[4] For an issue of the magazine in 1959 focusing on the state of writing in America, he engaged Elizabeth Hardwick to contribute her essay "The Decline of Book Reviewing", which fifty years later he described as "one of the most thrilling pieces I've ever published".[14] It became an inspiration for the founding of The New York Review of Books.[1] In 1960, he edited the book Writing in America and translated La Gangrene, which describes the brutal torture of seven Algerian men by the Paris Security Police in 1958, shortly after Charles de Gaulle came to power.[15][16]

During the 1962–63 New York City newspaper strike, when The New York Times and six other newspapers suspended publication, Hardwick, her husband Robert Lowell, and Jason and Barbara Epstein, saw an opportunity to introduce the sort of vigorous book review that Hardwick had imagined.[17] Jason Epstein knew that book publishers would advertise their books in the new publication, since they had no other outlet for promoting new books.[18] The group asked Silvers, who was still at Harper's, to edit the issue, and Silvers asked Barbara Epstein to co-edit it with him.[19][20] Silvers and Epstein "became an inseparable double act", editing The New York Review of Books together for the next 43 years, until her death in 2006.[2][21] Silvers continued as sole editor until his death in March 2017.[7][2] In later years, he described his motivation for continuing to edit the Review: "I feel it's a fantastic opportunity – because of the freedom of it, because of the sense that there are marvelous, intensely interesting, important questions that you have a chance to try to deal with in an interesting way. That's an extraordinary opportunity in life. And you'd be crazy not to try and make the most of it."[20] He said on another occasion: "We do what we want and don't try to figure out what the public wants."[16] Asked in 2007 about who might succeed him as editor, Silvers replied: "It's not a question that's posing itself".[22] In 2012, he added, "I can think of several people who would be marvelous editors."[23]

Silvers also edited or co-edited several essay anthologies, including Writing in America (1960); A Middle East Reader: Selected Essays on the Middle East (1991); The First Anthology: Thirty Years of the New York Review (1993); Hidden Histories of Science (1995); India: A Mosaic (2000); Doing It: Five Performing Arts (2001 (a collection of essays on the performing arts)); The Legacy of Isaiah Berlin (2001); Striking Terror (2002); The Company They Kept (vol. 1, 2006; vol. 2, 2011); The Consequences to Come: American Power After Bush (2008); and The New York Review Abroad: Fifty Years of International Reportage (2013).[24] In 2009, he wrote the essay "Dilemmas eines Herausgebers" ("Dilemmas of an editor") appearing in the Austrian journal Transit – Europäische Revue.[25] He also served on the editorial committee of La Rivista dei Libri, the Italian-language edition of the Review,[26] until it closed in 2010.[27]

Silvers never married or had children.[2] He was linked romantically in the 1960s with Lady Caroline Blackwood.[28][29] For more than four decades from 1975 until her death, he lived with Grace, Countess of Dudley (1923–2016), widow of the 3rd Earl of Dudley,[9][30] with whom he shared a passion for opera.[4][20] Silvers commented that Dudley's "fineness of mind and spirit has been the center of my life."[13] A long-time pescetarian, Silvers "was struck by the essays of ... moral philosopher Peter Singer, who has written extensively about animal rights."[9][20]

Silvers died on March 20, 2017, at the age of 87, at his Manhattan home "after a brief illness".[2][31] A memorial service was hosted by the New York Public Library in April 2017.[32]

Reputation

Silvers in New York in 2012

According to John Richardson in a 2007 Vanity Fair article, "Jason Epstein's assessment of Silvers as 'The most brilliant editor of a magazine ever to have worked in this country' has been 'shared by virtually all of us who have been published by Robert Silvers'".[33] The British newspaper The Guardian called Silvers "the greatest literary editor there has ever been",[34] while Library of America remembered him as "an unsurpassed editor who helped define and sustain the literary and intellectual culture of New York and America".[35] The New York Times described him as "the voracious polymath, the obsessive perfectionist, the slightly unknowable bachelor-workaholic with the colossal Rolodexes and faintly British diction",[4] and, in his obituary, stated that "under his editorship [The Review] became one of the premier intellectual journals in the United States, a showcase for extended, thoughtful essays on literature and politics by eminent writers."[7] Author Louis Begley wrote, "the ideal editor of my – and I would guess every writer’s – dreams is ... Robert B. Silvers, the editor, brain, and heart of the NYRB. When I write a piece for his magazine, of course I have the immeasurable good luck to be edited by him. There is no experience quite like it. Bob knows everything that's worth knowing, a consequence of his unflagging curiosity."[36] "Bob's edits are scrupulous, comprehensive, and precise. They are frequently aimed at saving the reviewer's face."[37] Roger Cohen wrote, after Silvers' death, "No eye for imprecise thought was ever more discerning; no edit a sharper yet gentler distillation than his. ... He was a stickler for accuracy. The pencil in his hand went to the heart of the matter."[38]

In a 2012 profile of Silvers, The New York Times noted: "His greatest pleasure ... is simply good writing, which he talks about as others talk about fine wine or good food. Speaking about writers he likes, he sometimes flushes with enthusiasm. 'I admire great writers, people with marvelous and beautiful minds, and always hope they will do something special and revealing for us.'"[23] Philip Marino, in The University of Chicago Magazine, commented: "Like a chemist pairing ingredients to induce a specific reaction, Silvers has built his career matching the right author and subject, in hopes of generating an exciting and illuminating result. ... 'he puts a writer together with material that even the writer might not have thought was appropriate,' says Daniel Mendelsohn".[1] Glen Weldon, writing for NPR, concurred: "He encouraged writers to craft each review as a vigorous intellectual argument, and delighted in pairing reviewers with books that challenged their personal or political worldview."[31] Professor Peter Brown wrote: "Reviewing for Bob Silvers was like playing in the sprinkling rain of a mighty fountain ... to be doused in the sheer, bubbling delight of Bob’s own unquenchable enthusiasm and alert, discerning curiosity. It widened the heart".[39] In The Nation, Harvard professor Stanley Hoffmann observed that, in publishing some of the earliest criticisms of the Vietnam and Iraq wars, Silvers realized what other commentators missed: "In both instances, Bob Silvers was, in effect, whether deliberately or not, compensating for the weaknesses of the more established media. ... It was important that a journal which has the authority of the Review in a sense took up the slack and presented viewpoints which were extremely hard to get into the established media."[40] The Nation added, during the Iraq war:

One suspects [the editors of the Review] yearn for the day when they can return to their normal publishing routine – that gentlemanly pastiche of philosophy, art, classical music, photography, German and Russian history, East European politics, literary fiction – unencumbered by political duties of a confrontational or oppositional nature. That day has not yet arrived. If and when it does, let it be said that the editors met the challenges of the post-9/11 era in a way that most other leading American publications did not, and that The New York Review of Books ... was there when we needed it most.[40]

Silvers said: "The great political issues of power and its abuses have always been natural questions for us".[23] His obituary in The New York Times commented that "Silvers made human rights and the need to check excessive state power his preoccupations, rising at times to the level of a crusade. ... [Silvers said], 'skepticism about government ... is a crucial point of view we have had from the first'."[7] In his 1974 book The American Intellectual Elite, Columbia University sociologist Charles Kadushin interviewed "the seventy most prestigious" American intellectuals of the late 1960s, including Silvers. The Time magazine review of the book expressed surprise at Silvers' position near the top of the list: "Robert Silvers, the editor of the New York Review of Books, the magazine that [Kadushin] indicates is favored by intellectuals who want to reach other intellectuals ... is an able editor but an infrequent writer; it must be assumed that his ranking at the top ... is due to a power not unlike that of the maitre d' of an exclusive restaurant."[41]

Silvers had a reputation for hiring and developing assistants who later became prominent in journalism, academia and literature. In 2010, New York magazine featured several of these, including Jean Strouse, Deborah Eisenberg, Mark Danner and A. O. Scott.[42] Two of his former assistants, Gabriel Winslow-Yost and Emily Greenhouse, were appointed co-editors of the Review in February 2019.[43] In February 2011, Oliver Sacks identified Silvers as his "favorite New Yorker, living or dead, real or fictional", saying that the Review is "one of the great institutions of intellectual life here or anywhere."[44] Timothy Noah at Politico concluded that Silvers "made the New York Review the country’s best and most influential literary journal".[45]

Work habits and editorial approach

Jonathan Miller said of Silvers' work habits: "He isn't just conscientious beyond the call of duty. He defines what duty is. You will often find him working until two in the morning in the office, with his little assistants from Harvard around him. He never stops. He's always meeting people, and talking".[11] Claire Messud wrote in 2012 that she was impressed, when submitting reviews for novels to the Review, that Silvers had "read the novel at hand, and sometimes with more sensitivity than I had ... he pointed out, delicately, that I'd attributed a quotation to the wrong character, and upon another occasion, that I'd summarized an event in a misleading way ... [but] Bob is unfailingly generous and kind, someone who carefully suggests rather than commands alteration. He is an extraordinary editor in part because he is always respectful, of even the least of his contributors, or the least contribution."[46] Charles Rosen elaborated:

Bob [has not] sunk his personality into his profession; rather... he has found a means of transforming his profession into a fundamental way of being human. Extracting reviews from writers is not, in his case, a métier, or even a way of life, but a genuine form of self-expression, and he exercises it with dignity, tact and what sometimes feels like excessive sympathy. He has made writers feel that producing articles for him is not a business transaction or even process of communication, but simply a reciprocal act of friendship.[11]

A Financial Times interviewer, Emily Stokes, wrote in 2013 that Silvers viewed editing as "an instinct. You must choose writers carefully, having read all of their work, rather than being swayed by 'reputations that are, shall we say, overpromoted', and then anticipate their needs, sending them books and news articles" while seeking greater clarity, comprehensiveness and freshness in the writing.[9] Stokes commented that Silvers "radiates a genial warmth [but told her that] it is part of the editor's role ... not to be swayed by friendships with authors but to let reviewers express their genuine views."[9] Silvers described some of the diplomatic aspects of the job: "The act of reviewing can have a deep emotional effect. People get hurt and upset. You have to be aware of that, but you can't flinch. [You must also reject reviews] sometimes. You say, 'No, I'm terribly sorry, I can't visualise that in the paper. I don't think it's adequate to the subject.'"[5] James Atlas wrote of a typical day for Silvers: "In the late afternoon, he'd rush out to a lecture at the Council on Foreign Relations, show up at a dinner party, and then head back to the office to deal with the next breaking crisis."[47] Timothy Noah wrote: "Silvers edited three successive galleys for every piece, sharpening the argument, requesting additional evidence, removing pompous jargon and infelicitous phrases."[45] His New York Times obituary noted: "Silvers brought to [the Review] a self-effacing, almost priestly sense of devotion. ... [He was] loath to grant interviews. ... He arrived at the office early and left late, if at all, to the kind of heavyweight cocktail party that was, for him, a happy hunting ground for writers and ideas."[7]

Legacy

At the time of his death, Silvers left the Review with a circulation of more than 130,000[48] its book publishing operations, and a reputation as "the country’s best and most influential literary journal. ... It's hard to imagine that Hardwick ... would complain today that book reviewing is too polite."[49] The 50 Year Argument, a 2014 documentary film about the Review co-directed by Martin Scorsese,[50] is "'[a]nchored by the old-world charm' of its editor, Robert Silvers".[51][52]

In 2019, Silvers' estate created the Robert B. Silvers Foundation to support writers of in-depth political, social, economic, and scientific commentary, long-form arts and literary criticism, and intellectual essays. Daniel Mendelsohn is the foundation's director, and Rea Hederman is its president. It plans to award annual prizes, called the Silvers-Dudley Prizes, recognizing outstanding writing, including the Robert B. Silvers Prize for Journalism; the Robert B. Silvers Prize for Criticism; and the Grace Dudley Prize for Writing on European Culture. Prizes will be in the amounts of $30,000 each for writers over 40, and $15,000 each for those under 40.[53]

Besides serving as a trustee of the New York Public Library, Silvers was "personally, and very discreetly, involved in the struggle to keep neighbourhood libraries open in the poorest precincts of New York."[2] The annual Robert B. Silvers lectures at the New York Public Library were established by Max Palevsky in 2002 and are given by experts in the fields of "literature, the arts, politics, economics, history, and the sciences."[54][55] The lectures have been given by Joan Didion, J. M. Coetzee, Ian Buruma, Michael Kimmelman, Daniel Mendelsohn, Nicholas Kristof, Zadie Smith, Oliver Sacks, Derek Walcott, Mary Beard, Darryl Pinckney,[54] Lorrie Moore,[56] Joyce Carol Oates,[57] Helen Vendler,[58] and Paul Krugman.[59]

Honors and awards

Silvers receives a National Humanities Medal from Barack Obama in 2013

On November 15, 2006, Silvers, together with Epstein, received the National Book Foundation Literarian Award for Outstanding Service to the American Literary Community.[60] With Epstein, he also received in 2006 the Award for "Distinguished Service to the Arts" from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. The National Book Critics Circle honored Silvers with the Ivan Sandrof Award for Lifetime Achievement in Publishing for 2011,[61] and in 2012, he was honored with the Hadada Prize by The Paris Review,[10][62] and a "N.Y.C. Literary Honor" "for contributions to literary life" in New York City.[63] At the N.Y.C. Literary Honors, readings were given, and, "in what may have been the most moving reading, [Silvers] excerpted architecture critic Martin Filler's rhapsodic review of the 9/11 Memorial designed by the young architect Michael Arad, which appeared in the NYRB last year."[64] In 2013, the French-American Foundation honored him with its Vergennes Achievement Award.[65] Also in 2013, he was awarded the 2012 National Humanities Medal by President Barack Obama "for offering critical perspectives on writing. ... [H]e has invigorated our literature with cultural and political commentary and elevated the book review to a literary art form."[66]

Among other honors, Silvers was a member of the executive board of the PEN American Center, the American Ditchley Foundation and the American Academy in Rome; he served as a trustee of the New York Public Library from 1997 and on the Paris Review Foundation. He was also a Chevalier of the French Légion d’honneur and a member of the French Ordre National du Mérite. In 1996, he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[65][67] In 2007, Harvard University awarded him an honorary degree of Doctor of Letters.[68] and in 2013 he was elected an Honorary Fellow of the British Academy.[69] In 2014, he received honorary Doctor of Letters degrees from both the University of Oxford and Columbia University.[70][71]

Silvers was a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Century Association.[65][72]

gollark: Cases won't magically make it invulnerable.
gollark: I do. But I also don't want a phone with zero durabilty.
gollark: It's comparatively durable, often swappable, and looks nice.
gollark: I'd prefer a plastic back, but so few phones still have that.
gollark: Because I don't *want* the back to shatter?

References

  1. Marino, Philip. "Book Smart", The University of Chicago Magazine, University of Chicago, May–June 2012, accessed June 25, 2014.
  2. "Robert Silvers – Wry, philosophical and unapologetically intellectual editor of The New York Review of Books for more than half a century", The Times March 29, 2017, p. 43
  3. Violino, Bob. "Rose Silvers Columnist, 83", New York Newsday, August 10, 1979, p. 47
  4. Scott, Janny. "Ideas: One Mind, But What A Mind; Defining the Passions Of the Liberal Elite For Over 2 Decades", The New York Times, November 1, 1997.
  5. Cooke, Rachel. "Robert Silvers interview: 'Someone told me Martin Scorsese might be interested in making a film about us. And he was'", The Observer, June 7, 2014.
  6. "Robert B Silvers", Family Search, accessed March 20, 2017; and Prager, Dennis and Joseph Telushkin (2007). Why the Jews?: The Reason for Antisemitism, p. 50, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 1416591230.
  7. Grimes, William. "Robert Silvers, a Founding Editor of New York Review of Books, Dies at 87", The New York Times, March 20, 2017
  8. Danner, Mark. "Editing the New York Review of Books: A Conversation with Robert B. Silvers", April 28, 1999. Interview at U.C. Berkeley; and "Robert Silvers on The Company They Kept", The Book Show, September 20, 2006, accessed April 20, 2009.
  9. Stokes, Emily. "Lunch with the FT: Robert B Silvers", Financial Times, January 25, 2013.
  10. Gevisser, Mark. "Robert Silvers on the Paris and New York Reviews" Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine, The Paris Review, March 20, 2012.
  11. Brown, Andrew. "The Writer's Editor", The Guardian, January 24, 2004.
  12. Aldrich, Nelson W. (ed.) George, Being George: George Plimpton's Life as Told, Admired, Deplored, and Envied by 200 Friends, Relatives, Lovers, Acquaintances, Rivals, Random House Publishing (2008) pp. 120–123 and passim. ISBN 1588367525
  13. Silvers, Robert. "The Revel: 8, rue Garancière". Remarks made on April 3, 2012, at The Paris Review, printed May 7, 2012
  14. Adams, Phillip."Remembering Bob Silvers", Australian Broadcasting Company, 22 March 2017, 1 minute 10 seconds onwards
  15. Church, Christopher. "Testament to Torture: The Gangrene Affair", Journal of Undergraduate Research, Vol. 8, Issue 3, January/February 2007.
  16. Haffner, Peter. "We Do What We Want" Archived 2014-08-02 at the Wayback Machine, 032c, Issue #23, Winter 2012/2013, accessed July 21, 2014.
  17. Jason Epstein recounts the story of the initial meeting of the Epsteins, Hardwick and Lowell in "A Strike and a Start: Founding The New York Review", NYR Blog, The New York Review of Books, March 16, 2013
  18. Harvey, Matt. "Brawls and books: Skepticism lives on as New York Review of Books ages but thrives", The Villager, vol. 78, no. 24, November 12–18, 2008, reprinted in Downtown Express, Vol. 21, No. 28, November 21, 2008.
  19. Fassler, Joe. "A 50-Year Protest for Good Writing", The Atlantic, October 1, 2014; and Brown, Andrew. "The writer's editor", The Guardian, January 24, 2004
  20. Kolhatkar, Sheelah. "Robert Silvers", The New York Observer, December 19, 2005, p. 30
  21. McGrath, Charles. "Barbara Epstein, Editor and Literary Arbiter, Dies at 77", The New York Times, June 17, 2006, accessed April 20, 2009; and Atlas, James. "The Ma and Pa of the Intelligentsia", New York Magazine, September 25, 2006, accessed April 6, 2017
  22. Neyfakh, Leon. What's New at The New York Review of Books?" The New York Observer, December 13, 2007, accessed October 15, 2017
  23. McGrath, Charles. "Editor Not Ready to Write an Ending", The New York Times, March 16, 2012
  24. Books published by the NY Review; and "The New York Review Abroad: Fifty Years of International Reportage", Publishers Weekly, February 4, 2013.
  25. "Charismatic megafauna". Eurozine, January 13, 2010 review of articles including "Dilemmas of an Editor" in Transit – Europäische Revue, vol. 38 (2009).
  26. Freedlander, David. "Bloomberg Names Winners of Inaugural NYC Literary Awards", Politicker.com, April 26, 2012.
  27. Erbani, Francesco. "la Rivista dei Libri ha Deciso di Chiudere ma Torna Alfabeta", la Repubblica, May 12, 2010, accessed February 5, 2013 (in Italian).
  28. Brubach, Holly. "Their Better Half". The New York Times, August 17, 2010.
  29. Gaines, Steven. "Ivana Lowell, Sober Guinness Heiress Raised by Poet, Says What Happened". New Yorker magazine, September 19, 2010
  30. Death notice: Countess of Dudley, The New York Times, December 31, 2016; and Lundy, Darryl, ed. "Grace Maria Kolin". ThePeerage.com, September 28, 2010.
  31. Weldon, Glen. "Robert Silvers, Longtime Editor of The New York Review of Books, Dies at 87", NPR, March 20, 2017
  32. Krementz, Jill. "Jill Krementz Remembers Robert B. Silvers", New York Social Diary, April 28, 2017
  33. Richardson, John. "The Silvers Age", Vanity Fair, June 1, 2007.
  34. Banville, John, "'The greatest literary editor there has ever been' – John Banville remembers Robert Silvers"], The Guardian, March 23, 2017
  35. "LOA Remembers Robert Silvers, 1929–2017", Library of America, March 28, 2017
  36. Begley, Louis. "Robert B. Silvers, Super Nanny, The Paris Review, March 22, 2012.
  37. Banville, John. "The Rescue", The Paris Review Daily, April 2, 2012.
  38. Cohen, Roger. "The Importance of Bob Silvers", the New York Times, April 28, 2017
  39. Brown, Peter. "Remembering Bob Silvers", The New York Review of Books, April 11, 2017
  40. Sherman, Scott. "The Rebirth of the NYRB", The Nation, May 20, 2004, p. 5. Archived April 2, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  41. Sheppard, R. Z. "The American Intellectual Elite by Charles Kadushin". Time magazine, September 2, 1974, accessed June 3, 2010.
  42. "The Amazing Human Launching Pads". "Who Runs New York", New York magazine, September 26, 2010.
  43. Williams, John. "New York Review Names 2 Top Editors 5 Months After Ian Buruma's Departure", The New York Times, February 25, 2019
  44. Salisbury, Vanita. "Oliver Sacks Has Luxuriant Eyelashes". New York magazine, February 9, 2011.
  45. Noah, Timothy. "Robert Silvers: New York’s Presiding Man of Letters", Politico, December 28, 2017
  46. Messud, Claire. "The Wizard of West Fifty-seventh Street", The Paris Review Daily, March 29, 2012.
  47. Atlas, James. "The Ma and Pa of the Intelligentsia", New York Magazine, September 25, 2006, accessed April 6, 2017
  48. "eCirc for Consumer Magazines", Audit Bureau of Circulations, accessed June 30, 2017
  49. Noah, Timothy. "Robert Silvers: New York’s Presiding Man of Letters", Politico, December 28, 2017
  50. Cooke, Rachel. "Robert Silvers interview: 'Someone told me Martin Scorsese might be interested in making a film about us. And he was'", The Observer, The Guardian, June 7, 2014.
  51. Dalton, Stephen. "The 50 Year Argument: Sheffield Review", Hollywood Reporter, June 7, 2014.
  52. Knelman, Martin. "Scorsese takes a break from the Mean Streets in The 50 Year Argument", Toronto Star, January 20, 2015.
  53. Hederman, Rea. "The New York Review of Books announces new editorial lineup and the creation of the Robert B. Silvers Foundation", The New York Review of Books, February 25, 2019
  54. "Past LIVE Programs", New York Public Library, accessed November 21, 2011.
  55. "The Robert B. Silvers Lectures", New York Review of Books, accessed October 28, 2013.
  56. "Lorrie Moore: 'Watching Television'", New York Public Library, accessed October 7, 2013.
  57. "Robert B. Silvers Annual Lecture: Joyce Carol Oates", New York Public Library, accessed August 25, 2014.
  58. Vendler, Helen. "Robert B. Silvers Lecture: Helen Vendler", New York Public Library, December 8, 2015.
  59. "Paul Krugman: Robert B. Silvers Lecture", New York Public Library, December 6, 2016.
  60. "Robert Silvers and ... Barbara Epstein to Be Honored". Press release from The National Book Foundation (2006).
  61. Burke, Jeffrey. "Harvard, Yale Historians, Edith Pearlman Stories Take Book Critics Awards", Bloomberg News, March 10, 2012.
  62. Columbia, David Patrick. "Spring Revel", New York Social Diary, April 4, 2012.
  63. Bosman, Julie. "Week After Pulitzer Controversy, City Gives Writers a New Award", The New York Times, April 25, 2012.
  64. Nazaryan, Alexander. "NYC Literary Honors: Bloomberg lavishes book community with new award", New York Daily News, April 27, 2012.
  65. "Robert B. Silvers", French-American Foundation, accessed June 12, 2013.
  66. "President Obama Awards 2012 National Humanities Medals", National Endowment for the Humanities press release, July 10, 2013.
  67. "Robert B. Silvers, 1929–2017", The New York Review of Books, accessed April 8, 2017
  68. Aaron, Daniel. "Honorary degrees awarded at Commencement’s Morning Exercises", Archived 2008-05-04 at the Wayback Machine Harvard Gazette online, June 7, 2007, accessed April 20, 2009.
  69. "Alcock made fellow of British Academy", Brown University, July 2013.
  70. "The Episcopal Church's Primate honoured by Oxford University", Anglican Communion News Service, February 7, 2014.
  71. "Columbia’s 2014 Honorary Degree Recipients Announced", Columbia News, Columbia University, April 10, 2014
  72. "Committee on Admissions" (Press release). The Century Association. November 1963. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.