Jeannette Hopkins (1923âÂÂ2011) was notable for a remarkable career in letters when few women worked in the field. In the mid-1940s, she was a reporter for the New Haven Register, the Providence Journal-Bulletin and the Oklahoma City Times. In 1952, she served as senior editor at Beacon Press, Harcourt Brace & World, and Harper & Row. In 1973, she worked as a consulting editor for Harper & Row, McGraw-Hill, MacMillan, Random House, and Yale. In 1980, she was named director and editor-in-chief at Wesleyan University Press.
Praised for her "wide-ranging intellectual curiosity that informed her taste in books combined with a sophisticated sense of language and book structure ... [and] her extraordinary intellectual toughness," Hopkins developed a "stable" of historians, journalists, political scientists, theologians, and scholars, including James MacGregor Burns, Jacques Barzun and Eugene Genovese, Frank Mankiewicz, Edwin Newman, Annie Dillard, and C.S. Lewis. In a letter to the editor of the New York Times Magazine, she noted that "Authors have an afterlife that may be lasting, the life of their books."
Guided by an interest in "public affairs, specifically civil liberties and race relations" and described by PEN America as a "social justice advocate," Hopkins was an elected at-large member of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) National Board, as well as a member of their National Advisory Council. In 1970, Hopkins co-authored A Relevant War Against Poverty with Kenneth B. Clark. Hopkins also authored articles and books on Unitarianism, civil rights, and New Hampshire history. Despite her focus on nonfiction, however, she was credited for providing some editing to BOA Editions Ltd., a not-for-profit literary publisher known for their poetry, poetry-in-translation, and short fiction.
A partial list of Hopkins's authors include: