Atheneum merged with Charles Scribner's Sons to become The Scribner Book Company in 1978. The acquisition included Rawson Associates. Scribner was acquired by Macmillan in 1984. Macmillan was purchased by Simon & Schuster in 1994.[5] After the merger, the Atheneum adult list was merged into Scribner and the Scribner children's line was merged into Atheneum.[6][7]
^For a detailed description of how Atheneum Publishers came into existence, see Hiram Haydn's memoir: Words & Faces: An Intimate Chronicle of Book and Magazine Publishing (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974), pp. 105–40.
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Jalowitz, Alan (Summer 2006). "Karl, Jean (Edna)"Archived 2012-05-07 at the Wayback Machine. Pennsylvania Center for the Book. Penn State University. Retrieved 2011-10-21.
^"Description [Scribner history]". Simon & Schuster. 2007. Archived from the original on 2009-01-30. Retrieved 2009-02-22. In 1978 Scribner acquired Atheneum, publishers of Edward Albee, Charles Johnson, and Theodore H. White. The Atheneum acquisition also brought with it the Rawson Associates imprint. And in 1984, the Scribner Book Companies, which by then included a great children's division and a distinguished reference division, merged with Macmillan.