James David Landis (born June 30, 1942) is an American author and a former publisher and editor in chief of William Morrow and Company.[1][2]
Early life and career
Landis was born in Springfield, Massachusetts. He is the son of Russian/Polish Jewish parents Eve (Saltman), a teacher, and Edward Landis, a lawyer and amateur banjo player. He was educated in Springfield public schools, where he played football and was captain of the tennis team and won the Williams College Book Prize; and Yale College, from which he graduated in 1964, magna cum laude and a junior-year Phi Beta Kappa and where he wrote for The Yale Record, a humor magazine. While in high school he earned spending money playing the alto saxophone and clarinet in a jazz dance quartet.
Landis became a book editor in New York City in 1966, for one year at Abelard-Schuman and for the next 24 years at William Morrow and Company, where he advanced from Editor to Senior Vice-President, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief. As a book editor, he won the PEN/Roger Klein Award for Editing in 1973 and the Advocate Humanitarian Award in 1977 for his contributions to the advancement of gay writing and publishing. He retired from publishing in 1991.[3]
His books include Lying in Bed, which won the Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Longing, which was a New York Times Notable Book, The Taking, which was published in paperback under the title Artist of the Beautiful, The Last Day, and Dagny: The Life and Death of Dagny Juel as Narrated by Her Lover W. E., which is available only in Polish translation as Dagny, Życie I ŚmierĆ (Dagny: Life and Death). He also published a book of poetry for children, Cars on Mars and 49 Other Poems for Kids on Earth.[4][5][6]
Personal life
J. D. Landis is married to Denise Landis, a longtime recipe tester for The New York Times and the author of multiple cookbooks.[7]