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Predecessor | Lancer Books |
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Founded | 1974; 51 years ago (1974) |
Founder |
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Country of origin | United States |
Headquarters location | New York City |
Distribution | Penguin Random House Publisher Services[1] |
Key people |
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Publication types | Books |
Fiction genres | Romance, women's fiction, African American, young adult, nonfiction, true-crime, western, mystery |
Imprints | Zebra Books Pinnacle Books Dafina Urban Soul Citadel Press Lyrical Press |
No. of employees | 85 |
Official website | kensingtonbooks |
Kensington Publishing Corp. is an American, New York–based publishing house founded in 1974 by Walter Zacharius (1923–2011)[2] andRoberta Bender Grossman (1946–1992).[3] Kensington is known as "America's Independent Publisher". It remains a multi-generational family business, with Steven Zacharius succeeding his father as president and CEO, and Adam Zacharius as general manager.
It is the house of manyNew York Times bestselling authors, includingFern Michaels,Lisa Jackson,Joanne Fluke andWilliam W. Johnstone. In addition to the over 500 new titles that the company publishes each year, it has a vast and diverse backlist that includes classics such asThe Minority Report byPhilip K. Dick,Johnny Got His Gun byDalton Trumbo,I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell byTucker Max andBeing and Nothingness byJean-Paul Sartre.
Kensington's imprints includeZebra Books, Pinnacle Books, Dafina, Citadel Press, and Lyrical Press, which provide readers with a range of popular genres such as romance, military thrillers and espionage, women's fiction, African American, young adult and nonfiction, as well astrue-crime, western, and mystery titles.
Kensington Books was founded by Walter Zacharius and Roberta Bender Grossman in 1974 as the successor to the paperback publisherLancer Books, specializing in paperbackromance novels.[2] TheZebra Books and Pinnacle Books imprints debuted in 1975. Rather than bookstores, the company's books were generally sold in railroad stations, airports, bus terminals, and drug stores.[2]
In 2008, Kensington acquired the publishing assets ofHolloway House (publishers ofIceberg Slim andDonald Goines).[4]
Co-founder Walter Zacharius died in 2011. In addition to having run Lancer Books from 1961 to 1973, Zacharius authored theWorld War II novelSongbird, published bySimon & Schuster in 2004 and republished by Kensington Books in 2007 asThe Memories We Keep.[2]
In 2022, Kensington acquired speculative fiction publisher Erewhon Books.[5]
Steven Zacharius, son of founder Walter Zacharius,[2] has been with the company since 1993 and has been president and CEO since 2005. He is also chairman of Kensington. The company's senior vice president, Michael Rosamilia, has been theCFO since 1989. Adam Zacharius, Steven's son, is the Vice President - General Manager and originally started working with Kensington seven years ago. Kensington is believed to be the only publishing company with three generations of family management.
The staff totals over 85 employees and, in addition to its internal sales team, Kensington has a distribution agreement withPenguin Random House Publisher Services’ global sales force.[6]