The 'Left Book Club', founded in
1936, was a key left-wing institution of the late 1930s and 1940s in the United Kingdom. The club, run by
Victor Gollancz, supplied a book chosen every month by Gollancz and his panel — he,
Harold Laski and
John Strachey — to its members, who by the outbreak of the second world war numbered 57,000, many of whom participated in one or other of the 1,500 or so Left Discussion Groups scattered around the country.
The books and pamphlets with their distinctive yellow (hardback) or orange (paperback) covers sold for 2s 6d to members and more to the general public. The volumes included history, science, reporting and fiction and covered a range of subjects, but all with a left-leaning slant. Among the authors of its 200-plus volumes were
Arthur Koestler,
André Malraux,
George Orwell,
Katharine Burdekin and
Clement Attlee.
Until the
Nazi-Soviet pact of
1939 (and indeed for some time afterwards), the club’s output included many authors who were members of the
Communist Party or close to it, and it avoided any criticism of
Stalin’s
Soviet Union, refusing Orwell’s ''
Homage to Catalonia''. Indeed, it published some extraordinary encomiums to the wonders of Stalinism, among them
Dudley Collard’s ''Soviet Justice and the Trial of Radek and Others'' (a defence of the
show trials),
Pat Sloan’s ''Soviet Democracy'' (a propagandist tract extolling Stalin’s 1936 constitution), a reprint of
Sidney and
Beatrice Webb’s ''Soviet Communism: a new civilisation'',
J. R. Campbell’s ''Soviet Policy and its Critics'' (notable for its virulent assault on Trotsky) and
Hewlett Johnson’s ''The Socialist Sixth of the World''.
By early 1940, however, Gollancz had broken with the CP, a process documented in the articles collected in ''
Betrayal of the Left'' in early 1941, and from then on the club took a strongly democratic socialist line until its demise in 1948.
Gollancz was a notoriously interventionist editor. He published Orwell’s ''
The Road to Wigan Pier'' but insisted on prefacing its account of working-class life in the north of England with an introduction disowning its criticisms of middle-class socialists who had little understanding of working class life and later republished the book leaving out the second part of which he disapproved.
In 2006,
Ed Miliband MP started the Leftbookclubonline as a successor to the original Left Book Club with the aim of stimulating debate around left-wing ideas and texts, but not publishing new work.
A small group of booksellers in the UK are working on bringing back a publishing version of the Left Book Club and established a Limited company of the same name in 2002, their site LeftBookClub.com was launched in 2007, where they are documenting progress.
References and external links
★ Lewis, John. ''The Left Book Club: an historical record''. Gollancz. 1970. ISBN 0-575-00586-6
★ Laity, Paul (ed). ''The Left Book Club Anthology''. Gollancz. 2001. ISBN 0-575-07221-0
★ Edwards, Ruth Dudley. ''Victor Gollancz: a biography''. Gollancz. 1987. ISBN 0-575-03175-1
★ http://www.wcml.org.uk/culture/lbcbooks.htm - List of publications
★ http://www.leftbookclub.com - new publishing project