Big Issues at Calder-Oneworld Classics
There’s a lot that could be written about John Calder—both good ad bad. He’s done a lot for world literature, yet has run into issues at various times involving not making royalty payments, going bankrupt, etc. That said, he’s the perfect representative of a classic, old-school publisher who is half-genius and half-crook.
Recently, his list was sold to Oneworld Classics, and the hope was that Oneworld would reissue Calder’s stellar backlist, which would be a great service for readers everywhere.
Well, from this note in the recent is sounds like things aren’t as clean-cut as they may have seemed:
A curious 鈥淎nnouncement鈥 appeared in the August 16 issue of the London Review of Books. It was paid for by the French publishers Editions Gallimard and Les Editions de Minuit, and referred to an advertisement in the July 19 issue of the same journal, in which Oneworld Classics of Richmond, Surrey, offered 鈥淎 New Reading Experience鈥. The experience involved the publication of 鈥渕ainstream and lesser-known European classics鈥, including Canti by Giacomo Leopardi, in a dual-language edition, and the 鈥渦nexpurgated鈥 Lady Chatterley鈥檚 Lover. Next to these were advertised Journey to the End of the Night by Louis-Ferdinand C茅line, Moderato Cantabile by Marguerite Duras, Jealousy by Alain Robbe-Grillet, and multiple works by Samuel Beckett and Eug猫ne Ionesco. These were on offer 鈥渇rom the Calder list鈥.
So after this ad appeared highlighting a number of Gallimard and Minuit authors, the two publishers issued the following statement:
Gallimard and Minuit hereby confirm that they recognize no right whatsoever on the part of Oneworld Classics to these authors.
Which is a pretty big deal for a number of reasons.
The issue is complex, but a source at Gallimard tells us that it involves 鈥淛ohn Calder Publishers Limited (company number 1227392) which, according to our information 鈥 though John Calder did not inform us of this at the time 鈥 went into liquidation in 1991 and was dissolved on August 25, 1992鈥. The name of the liquidator is supplied. According to the source, contracts between Calder and the French publishers 鈥渨ere nontransferable and state that bankruptcy automatically invalidates the contracts鈥. The existing stock 鈥渟hould be pulped or, if allowed to be, sold out鈥, but 鈥渋n no case can the works be reprinted or the rights be sub-licensed or transferred to others, all publication rights having reverted to the Proprietor鈥.
According to the same TLS piece, Gallimard offered Oneworld Classics the opportunity to “offer modest advances and sign new contracts for world-literature masterpieces,” but apparently these offers never arrived.
We asked Oneworld for comment. They forwarded a brief message from John Calder: 鈥淕allimard鈥檚 and Minuit鈥檚 claims are wrong. The rights are still with Calder Publications.鈥

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