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1946
Penguin Classics debuts with
The Odyssey,
which promptly sells three million copies. Suddenly, classics are no longer for the privileged few.
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1950s
Rieu, now series editor, turns to professional writers for the best modern, readable translations, including Dorothy L. Sayers's
Inferno
and Robert Graves's unexpurgated
Twelve Caesars
.
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1960s
The Classics are given the distinctive black covers that have remained a constant throughout the life of the series. Rieu retires in 1964, hailing the Penguin Classics list as “the greatest educative force of the twentieth century.”
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1970s
A new generation of translators swells the Penguin Classics ranks, introducing readers of English to classics of world literature from more than twenty languages. The list grows to encompass more history, philosophy, science, religion, and politics.
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1980s
The Penguin American Library launches with titles such as
Uncle Tom's Cabin
and joins forces with Penguin Classics to provide the most comprehensive library of world literature available from any paperback publisher.
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1990s
The launch of Penguin Audiobooks brings the classics to a listening audience for the first time, and in 1999 the worldwide launch of the Penguin Classics Web site extends their reach to the global online community.
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The 21st Century
Penguin Classics are completely redesigned for the first time in nearly twenty years. This world-famous series now consists of more than 1,300 titles, making the widest range of the best books ever written available to millionsâand constantly redefining what makes a “classic.”
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The Odyssey continues . . .
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The best books ever written
PENGUIN
CLASSICS
SINCE 1946