It all began atop a drugstore in Princeton, New Jersey, in
November 1905. From its modest beginnings, Princeton University
Press was to become one of the world's most important scholarly
publishers, embracing a wealth of disciplines that have enriched
our cultural, academic, and scientific landscape.
Both as a tribute to our authors and to celebrate our centenary,
Princeton University Press here presents "A Century in Books." This
beautifully designed volume highlights 100 of the nearly 8,000
books we have published. Necessarily winnowed from a much larger
list, these books best typify what has been most lasting, most
defining, and most distinctive about our publishing history--from
Einstein's "The Meaning of Relativity" (1922) to the numerous
mathematical and other works that marked the Press's watershed
decade of the 1940s, including von Neumann and Morgenstern's
"Theory of Games and Economic Behavior"; from milestones of
literary criticism by Erich Auerbach and Northop Frye to George
Kennan's Pulitzer Prize-winning book on Soviet-American relations;
from Milton Friedman and Anna Jacobson Schwartz's "A Monetary
History of the United States, 1867-1960" to more recent landmarks
such as L. Luca Cavalli-Sforza, Paolo Menozzi, and Alberto Piazza's
"The History and Geography of Human Genes" and Robert Shiller's
"Irrational Exuberance."
ln addition to succinct descriptions of the 100 titles and a
short introduction on the history of the Press, the book features
five essays by prominent scholars and writers: Michael Wood
discusses the impact on Princeton University Press of intellectuals
who fled Nazi Germany and authored many influential books. Anthony
Grafton recounts our rich publishing tradition in history,
politics, and culture. Sylvia Nasar traces our evolution into a
leading voice in economics publishing. Daniel Kevles reflects on
Einstein, a figure of special importance to Princeton. And Lord
Robert May writes on our long-standing tradition of publishing in
mathematics and science.
"A Century in Books" is more than a celebration of 100 years of
publishing at Princeton University Press--it is a treasure trove of
100 years of books that have added to the richness of
twentieth-century intellectual life.