1974 Interview with Rudy Maxa of the Washington
Post
Interview Transcript - Part 1
QUIGLEY: "...the year, which would be
to the end of '44, and by that time we were ready to
take over and move them in and so forth. Now, in that
group there were fifty-five who already had Ph.D.s.
You see.”
INTERVIEWER: “Uh, huh.”
QUIGLEY: “So it was a very good group.
The only one I had any trouble with had been a
district attorney in Indiana and a Republican
politician."
INTERVIEWER: "Ha, ha, ha."
QUIGLEY: "And I had trouble with him
over certain things. For example, the civil war in
Spain. I gave him the truth of the civil war in
Spain. I mean, this was not a Communist revolt
against the Catholic Church or something like this,
you see. And that was what this guy was. So, uh,
this is the substance of the book ʻTragedy and Hopeʼ.
Do you see?"
INTERVIEWER: "Did you know while you
were working on this that [it was going to be a book]?
QUIGLEY: “No, no. I was just trying,
uh, you know”
INTERVIEWER: “Keep up.”
QUIGLEY: “Keep a day to day basis.”
INTERVIEWER: “You realized that at the
end of the accumulation, of research and...?”
QUIGLEY: “Well, yes, I knew, uh, I
knew a hell of a lot more about most of this than most
people. Now, I then spent 20 years writing it -- from
ʼ45 to ʼ65. And put it in, do you see, in ʻ65. In the
meantime, I had written a shorter book which fifteen
publishers had rejected. And I had set it aside. I
had, wrote it the first time in the only summer I had
off, which was 1942. In that whole period, I went
twenty years without any time off. No sabbaticals, no
anything. From ʼ42 to, uh, ʼ60, ʼ61, when I took off
and went to England and did research. And then I got
another sabbatical in ʼ71, when I again went to
England on a sabbatical. And I only... So... The only
sabbatical time. Whether I get it or not, I have
asked for a one semester sabbatical before I retire,
that is assuming I get full pay for one semester, you
see, instead of half pay, or whatever it is. I donʼt
know what it is. And I canʼt even look it... I donʼt
have time, time to look it up. But in any case, I,
uh, worked out all of these things. And, my first
book had been rejected by fifteen publishers. I had
written it first in the summer of ʼ34; I then spent
the summer of ʼ42 in Princeton, in Donald Staufferʼs
[office] -- and he died as Eastman Professor of
Literature at Oxford, after climbing the Pyranees,
running up and down the Pyranees -- and, uh, I
re-wrote it in ʼ42. Then, I set that aside and wrote it
a third time -- just dashed it off -- and that is the
book “The Evolution of Civilizationsʼ -- itʼs only
279 pages, but itʼs still the best thing, and there
are a number of books that quoted it as the best thing
on why civilizations rise and fall, and how they do, and
so forth. So itʼs a big thing. Now this, uh,
“World Since 1914” covers seventy years, from 1895 to
1965, and itʼs in that way, but it covers the whole
world, so again itʼs a pretty big thing, because it
goes into science and technology, as you will discover,
if you start reading the paperback, and, uh, economics,
and as you see, I can do more with economics than
economists, economists can.”
INTERVIEWER: “One thing that intrigues
me, more on just that (last night my wife and I were
talking about you), was the title of the
book:ʻTragedy and Hopeʼ”.
QUIGLEY: “ʼ...And Hopeʼ. Yes. Because
I...”
INTERVIEWER: “Such a large title.”
QUIGLEY: “Yes. Now what it means is
this: I think it is absolutely tragic, it is shameful,
it is sinful that Western Civilization is going to go
down the drain. When I wrote that book, which was
less than ten years ago, I had hoped that we could
save Western Civilization. I am extremely skeptical
now that it can be saved. I think weʼre just about
finished. And I just threw a few things out here this
morning in the class. You know, you know, if we are
going to allow a coal strike and if we are gonna
overthrow the Portuguese government. Because as soon
as, all these military dictatorships are not going to
last. So we get rid of a democracy because it wants
to be a little liberal, and we put in a military
dictatorship which then collapses and what happens?
The Communists come in. This is what happened in
Portugal. Salazar was there since 1927. You see? All
right, now they suddenly try to establish some kind of a
non-military dictatorship -- he wasnʼt military, he
was a college professor, but he was supported by, uh,
the reactionary groups. And now they want to do
something about that. And the same thing could happen
in Greece. Theyʼre now gonna, probably, in Greece try
these generals who established the military
dictatorship because we got them to do it. You see.
And, this gives the Communists -- and it could well be
-- now this is whatʼs worrying Kissinger, he thinks
the whole Mediterranean now is going to go Communist.
So weʼre going to go to war to prevent this? Oh, I
mean, itʼs sick.”
INTERVIEWER: “Now, let me go back.”
QUIGLEY: “Yeah. Now...”
INTERVIEWER: “When did you find a
publisher for your book?”
QUIGLEY: “I found a publisher
instantly, because the first book, the first book --
Iʼm a, Iʼm in Current History, an editor, and I
wrote, used to write, a good deal for them. (And
thatʼs who called me up on Monday and wants me to
write about Spain to-day. Whatʼs gonna happen in Spain
and I said, I, it would take too much time, I donʼt want
to do it). So the people at Current History said to
me, in 1960. I, uh, just mentioned that I had this
book. (I have many books, I have a whole lot of
books, half written and almost totally written, you
see). And they said, ʻHave you ever given, asked
Peter Ritner?ʼ And I said, ʻI never heard of him. Who
is he?ʼ They said, ʻCall him up, at Macmillanʼ. So I
went right to the ʻphone -- I was at the American
Historical Association in New York, the meeting of 1960
-- and I went to the ʻphone and called Macmillan and
asked for Peter Ritner and he came on, and I said ʻI
have a book and I have somebody here whoʼs the editor
of Current History who says that you would like it.ʼ And
so forth. He says ʻSend it to me.” A week later I got
a letter from him: ʻItʼs a marvelous bookʼ”.
INTERVIEWER: “How many pages did you
send him?”
QUIGLEY: “I sent him the whole thing.”
INTERVIEWER: “Which was?”
QUIGLEY: “And, well...”
INTERVIEWER: “In fact.”
QUIGLEY: “Yeah. Just about...”
INTERVIEWER: “In fact!”
QUIGLEY: “It came out as a book of 279
pages. He accepted it within a week.”
INTERVIEWER: “Which book is this now?”
QUIGLEY: “This is the first book.”
INTERVIEWER: “The first book. O.K.”
QUIGLEY: “Right.”
INTERVIEWER: “Right”
QUIGLEY: “This is in 1961. Youʼll find
all of this in Whoʼs Who? You see. The dates. You see.”
INTERVIEWER: “All right.”
QUIGLEY: “That is how I got my first
book published. Now when I signed the contract for
that, 1961,”
INTERVIEWER: “Uh Huh”
QUIGLEY: “They, uh, made me agree I
would give them my next book.”
INTERVIEWER: “Sure.”
QUIGLEY: “You see. So in a couple of
years I said to Peter Ritner that I want the next
book to be ʻThe World Since 1914ʼ and he said ʻO.K.,
letʼs sign a contact.ʼ”
INTERVIEWER: “Did he say anything like
ʻThatʼs a rather large subjectʼ?”
QUIGLEY: “Uh, Peter Ritner thinks I am
the greatest writer ever around.”
INTERVIEWER: “O.K. Is he an editor?”
QUIGLEY: “Heʼs a scholar. Thatʼs who.
You see. Now hereʼs what happened. And I donʼt
know whether you want to get this on tape or not. But
Iʼll put it on tape. But look. Youʼve gotta be
discrete.”
INTERVIEWER: “Sure”
QUIGLEY: “You know, you have to protect
my future.”
INTERVIEWER: “Sure”
QUIGLEY: “As well as your own.”
INTERVIEWER: “Sure”
QUIGLEY: “ All right. Ah, when ʻTragedy
and Hopeʼ was signed, the contract, and right up to
the last minute, which would be the spring and summer of
ʻ66, they were planning to bring it out in two
volumes, boxed, for $17.50.”
INTERVIEWER: “Uh huh.”
QUIGLEY: “Macmillan had been bought by,
from Harold Macmillan, at Macmillan Company of
England,”
INTERVIEWER: “Uh huh.”
QUIGLEY: “for $5 million. Because he
needed the cash. In the summer of ʻ66, a holding
company, Collier Books, which originally was Morgan,
and they published Collierʼs Magazine. Remember
Collierʼs Weekly? And stuff like? All right.
Collierʼs Books. Now, I donʼt know who controls it now.
And, itʼs one of these holding companies.”
INTERVIEWER: “Uh huh.”
QUIGLEY: “Came in. They bought up the
Free Press, you know, in Illinois. They bought up
Brentano Book Stores. They bought up Macmillan. They
came in and they looked at what theyʼd bought and they
said ʻYouʼre spending money wildly and weʼre not
taking in money. You got to stop it.ʼ”
INTERVIEWER: “The accountants did
that?”
QUIGLEY: “Yeah. So they said ʻNo
advertising on any books that are published for the
next six months. You spent too much on advertising.ʼ
And, the editors like Peter Ritner screamed and said
ʻWeʼre not going to stay if this is how youʼre gonna do
things.ʼ So they said ʻAll right. One ad for each
book.ʼ All right, I got one ad for ʻTragedy and
Hopeʼ, and it was a quarter page in The New York
Times Book Review, I believe. Thatʼs all.”
INTERVIEWER: “How do you spell Ritnerʼs
name?ʼ
QUIGLEY: “R-I-T-N-E-R, Peter Ritner.
He, I imagine heʼs in “Whoʼs Who?ʼ. Uh, he should be.
Anyway, he has since left them. I do not know what he is
doing. He still lives in the same place that I
visited him in, in Riverside Drive, up near the
George Washington Bridge. But he works for some World
Book, uh, thing. Or something.”
INTERVIEWER: “Third World Publishers?”
QUIGLEY: “Eh, Something else. And what
he does I donʼt know, because heʼs never got in touch
with me since he left.”
INTERVIEWER: “And they also did not
come out with the two volumes.”
QUIGLEY: “No. And then, when they saw
it, they said ʻOh, this is gonna cost too much.
Cut it to one volume and cut the price five bucksʼ.
So they, that made it $12.50. But they never sold it
at $12.50. They made it $12.95. So this is what it
was sold. Now, it went out of print, that was ʼ66, it
went out of print in ʼ68. But in ʻ68 Collier Books
got in touch with me, I do not know how or why,
and said, uh, ʻWeʼll bring out the last half of this as
a paperbackʼ, and thatʼs what I gave you. That came
out in ʼ68.”
INTERVIEWER: “Right.”
QUIGLEY: “And that, I think, is still
in print. But I canʼt get an answer. I canʼt get a
straight answer to any question, from them. For
example: They never told me until 1974, when I was
trying to fight the pirate who reprinted ʻTragedy and
Hopeʼ,”
INTERVIEWER: “Right.”
QUIGLEY: “that it had been
out-of-print. Theyʼd told me itʼs out-of-stock and we
will re-publish when we get two thousand [orders].
But they never could get two thousand (I have told you
this, havenʼt I?)”
INTERVIEWER: “Right.”
QUIGLEY: “because they were telling
everyone who wrote in that it is out of print.”
INTERVIEWER: “Now.”
QUIGLEY: They lied to me.”
INTERVIEWER: “Now, when did you realize
there was a pirate edition? How did you find out?”
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