I was surprised that the New York Times, in this
morning’s edition, devoted as much space as it did to an
insignificant lawsuit filed by a handful of disgruntled authors
against Regnery Publishing, the conservative publisher founded by
my father sixty years ago, and which I headed for eighteen years
before becoming publisher of The American Spectator. From
its earliest days, Regnery Publishing (which was previously known
as the Henry Regnery Company) played a crucial role in helping
hundreds of conservative voices break through the liberal
censorship of the publishing industry and the big media. In earlier
times, virtually every leading conservative thinker and writer was
published by Regnery, and many of today’s most prominent
conservatives gained prominence as our authors, and are now helping
the conservative movement fight its major policy battles of the
day.
Although I no longer run the business, I remain on the board of
Regnery Publishing and keep well versed on what it is doing. The
firm continues to launch the careers of many budding conservative
authors, just as it always did. That was just as true when we
published God and Man at Yale by Bill Buckley and Russell
Kirk’s The Conservative Mind, as it is today with authors
like Ann Coulter, Laura Ingraham, Dinesh D’Souza, and Mark Steyn.
When I was head of the company, we published no fewer than 22
New York Times bestsellers — a tradition that continues:
over the last couple of months, Regnery has added two new
bestsellers to its long list of successes in Ingraham’s Power
to the People and D’Souza’s What’s So Great About
Christianity.
Just as it is doubtful that many of the conservative movement’s
founders would have been published had it not been for Regnery, it
is also probable that several, if not all, of the five authors
suing the company would not have been published had it not been for
us, and it is certain that they wouldn’t have been New York
Times bestsellers — Regnery put four of the five on the
list.
The merits of the lawsuit are hardly worth discussing. To anyone
in the book publishing industry they’re laughable. I’m a lawyer and
know that the contracts they signed are clear and transparent, and
are similar to the contracts used throughout the industry. I also
know that Regnery puts marketing muscle and expertise behind its
books like nobody else in the business — something that each of
the five authors involved benefited from enormously. These
disgruntled authors are, perversely, complaining about that muscle.
But it’s one of the reasons why Regnery has the success it does in
putting conservative books where the New York Times
doesn’t want them — on its bestseller list.