Presses de la Cité

Presses de la Cité
Parent company Editis
Founded 1943
Founder Sven Nielsen
Country of origin France
Headquarters location Paris
Distribution Interforum
Imprints Futurama
Futurama Superlights
Official website www.pressesdelacite.com

Presses de la Cité is a French publishing company founded in 1943 by Sven Nielsen, the son and grandson of booksellers, who came to Paris in 1924.[1] Before becoming a publisher, Nielsen specialised in exporting French books.

In 1988, with its merger with Larousse-Nathan, Groupe de La Cité became the second-largest publishing company in France and the tenth-largest in the world.[2] It was acquired by Vivendi Universal Publishing and is now part of Editis.

History

Having first specialised in translating American novels, Presses de la Cité first published home-produced work in 1946 with Je me souviens... by Georges Simenon, which became the first part of his novel Pedigree. At a rate of three or four books a year, Presses de la Cité published 140 of Simenon's novels and collections. Following Simenon's example, other French-language authors signed with the company, including Henri Queffélec, Cécil Saint-Laurent, Maurice Genevoix, René Barjavel, and Konsalik.

Starting in 1958, the company started on a stream of acquisitions:

In 1962, Presses de la Cité started a paperback imprint called Presses-Pocket. The following year, this was merged with Fleuve Noir.

In April 1965, Nielsen bought a majority stake in Union Générale d'Éditions (UGE), founded in 1962, which included the imprints Plon, 10/18, Éditions du Rocher, Éditions Julliard and Jean-Jacques Pauvert, and the distributor Sequana. One of the publishers, Christian Bourgois, founded his own publishing house under the Presses de la Cité umbrella and, in 1968, was nominated director of 10/18. After these acquisitions, the Sven Nielsen group became the second-largest French publisher, after Hachette Livre. It diversified into publishing works on social sciences and for the youth market.[3]

In April 1969, Nielsen and the Bertelsmann group formed a book club on the German model, called France Loisirs, which soon became a success.

In January 1971, the company was reorganised, with distribution by Les Presses de la Cité Diffusion (for Presses de la Cité, G.P. Rouge et Or and Presses-Pocket) and Nouvelle Société Sequana (for Plon, Perrin, Julliard, Solar, 10/18, Bourgois et Le Rocher).

In 1973, the companies Presses de la Cité, Diffusion and Sequana were merged under the name Messageries du Livre[4]

Nielsen died on December 30, 1976, aged 75. His son Claude succeeded him, and sold some parts of the company to the investment bank Générale Occidentale, which provided capital to purchase Garnier and Bordas-Dunod.

In 1986, the company was bought by James Goldsmith, who resold Presses de la Cité to Ambroise Roux's Compagnie Générale d'Electricité. It was thenceforth part of Groupe de la Cité, a holding company under CEP-Communication, led by Christian Brégou and including Havas. With 7 billion French francs of assets, it became, in 1996, the largest publisher in France.

In 2000, Presses de la Cité became part of Vivendi Universal Publishing (VUP), which in 2002 was sold to Hachette Group and then in 2003 passed to Wendel Investissement. Presses de la Cité then became part of Editis. In 2008, Wendel sold Editis to the Spanish Grupo Planeta.

References

  1. Mollier, Jean-Yves; Schuwer, Philippe. Dictionnaire encyclopédique du Livre. T.3. p. 279, 369.
  2. Cloonan, William; Postel, Jean-Paul (6 May 1993). "The Business of Literature: The Novel in 1992". French Review. United States. 66 (6): 861. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  3. Le Nouvel Observateur (PDF). 6 May 1965 http://referentiel.nouvelobs.com/archives_pdf/OBS0025_19650506/OBS0025_19650506_022.pdf. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. "Les Presses de la Cité en quelque dates" (in French).
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