[5] The Braziller publishing firm is located at 277 Broadway, Suite 708,[6] in Manhattan, New York City.
When Braziller travelled to Europe in the late 1950s, he was in Paris during the May 1958 crisis in France brought about by the Algerian War of Independence.
[a] Henri Alleg's book La Question, an autobiographical account of imprisonment and torture in Algiers, which Braziller brought back from that trip and published in English-language translation,[7] was his firm's first big success in the United States, with an introduction written by Jean-Paul Sartre.
I remember you'd go to the corner café, and there were artists like Max Ernst, Giacometti, Calder, and then the writers, poets, playwrights, dramatists like Camus, Michaux, Ionesco, Dürrenmatt ... Those were the early years, when you would say "only in America" could you start a book club with only 25 bucks and move it up to 100,000 members and then start a publishing house.In 2011, George Braziller retired at the age of 95.
With a small team they maintain the Braziller tradition with new series and a rich backlist.