About Karl Weber
Karl Weber, president of Karl Weber
Literary, is a writer, editor, and book developer with over twenty years'
experience in the book publishing industry. He is an expert in general-interest
non-fiction publishing, specializing in topics from business and personal
finance to current affairs, history, autobiography, science, self-help, and
personal development.
Weber has advised and assisted authors in a wide range of non-fiction areas,
including, for example, former president Jimmy Carter, author of several New
York Times bestsellers, including An Hour Before Daylight (2000), which
Weber edited; business guru Adrian Slywotzky, vice president of Mercer
Management Consulting and author of How To Grow When Markets Don't (2003)
and How Digital Is Your Business? (2000), both of which Weber
co-authored; executive Jonathan M. Tisch, who wrote The Power of We:
Succeeding Through Partnerships (2004) in collaboration with Weber; former
Representative Richard Gephardt, author of An Even Better Place (2001),
which Weber edited; Abraham H. Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation
League and author of Never Again? The Threat of the New Anti-Semitism
(2003), edited by Weber; and the Honorable Richard Butler, former Executive
Chairman of UNSCOM and author of The Greatest Threat: Iraq, Weapons of Mass
Destructions, and the Crisis of Global Security (2001), also edited by
Weber.
Before founding his company, Weber served as managing director of the Times
Business imprint at Random House (1994-1997), where he helped to launch the most
successful new business book program of the past five years. Among the books he
produced for Times Business are Hope Is Not a Method, a widely-praised
management guide by former U.S. Army Chief of Staff General Gordon Sullivan and
Colonel Michael Harper (later a Broadway Books paperback), and How To Start
and Run an Investment Club by Tom O'Hara and Ken Janke of the National
Association of Investment Clubs (over 200,000 copies in print).
While at Random House, Weber also served as editor of Living Faith
(1996), the spiritual autobiography of Jimmy Carter, which spent eleven weeks on
the New York Times bestseller list (over 270,000 copies sold) as well as
President Carter's Sources of Strength (1997), also a New York Times
bestseller.
Before joining Random House, Weber was senior editor and publisher in the trade
book division of John Wiley & Sons (1986-1994). He developed a series of
successful investment books, helped to conceive and launch Wiley's famous
Portable MBA series of management guides, and produced several highly-praised
books about the worlds of business and finance, including The Big Fix: Inside
the S&L Scandals by James Ring Adams and Brokers, Bagmen, and Moles
by David Greising and Laurie Morse.
When Worth magazine in 1997 selected the fifteen best investment books of the
past 150 years, two were titles edited by Weber: Investment Illusions by
Martin S. Fridson and Investment Psychology Explained by Martin J. Pring.
Prior to serving at Wiley, Weber was an editor at McGraw-Hill and at AMACOM, the
book-publishing division of the American Management Association. Weber is also
an expert on educational testing. He has written seven books for students about
how to earn high scores on standardized tests and appears on a series of
educational video programs published by Video Aided Instruction of Roslyn
Heights, N.Y.
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