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Revision as of 10:58, 6 October 2018

Marion Boyars
Born
Marion Asmus

(1927-10-26)26 October 1927
Died1 February 1999(1999-02-01) (aged 71)
EducationKeele University
OccupationPublisher
SpouseMichael Berkeley

Marion Ursula Boyars, née Asmus (26 October 1927 – 1 February 1999), was a British book publisher.

Biography

She was born Marion Asmus in New York, daughter of German publisher Johannes Asmus.[1][2] She attended school in New York and Switzerland, living with her mother and sister, before going on to Keele University to read for a degree in politics, philosophy and economics. After graduating, she married George Lobbenberg and had two daughters. The marriage ended in divorce, and she was subsequently married for a second time to Arthur Boyars.

In 1960 she answered an advertisement in The Bookseller that led to her buying a 50 per cent stake in the small independent publishing company run by John Calder in London. The resultant publishing house, Calder and Boyars, published books by authors including Samuel Beckett, Marguerite Duras, Henry Miller, Eugene Ionesco and William S. Burroughs, until the firm split in 1975, when Boyars formed Marion Boyars Publishers, building up an eclectic list of translated fiction (by such authors as Julio Cortazar, Latife Tekin, Vasily Shukshin and Witold Gombrowicz), as well as books on music and cinema.[3][4]

She died of pancreatic cancer in 1999, aged 71.[2]

References