Deutsch was born on 15 November 1917 in
Budapest, Hungary, the son of a Jewish dentist. He attended school in Budapest and in
Vienna, Austria. The
Anschluss led to him fleeing Austria, and in 1939, he settled in Britain, where he worked as floor manager at the
Grosvenor House Hotel in London. After having learned the business of publishing while working for Francis Aldor (Aldor Publications, London), with whom he had been
interned on the Isle of Man and who had introduced him to the industry, Deutsch left Aldor's employment after a few months to continue his burgeoning publishing career with the firm of Nicholson & Watson. His small but influential publishing house was active until the 1990s, and included books by
Jack Kerouac,
Wole Soyinka,
Earl Lovelace,
Norman Mailer,
George Mikes,
V. S. Naipaul,
Ogden Nash,
Eric Williams,
Andrew Robinson,
Philip Roth,
Art Spiegelman,
John Updike,
Margaret Atwood,
Charles Gidley Wheeler,
Helene Hanff,
Peter Benchley,
Leon Uris,
Molly Keane,
Michael Rosen,
Quentin Blake,
Mary Melwood,
John Cunliffe, and
Ludwig Bemelmans. Deutsch employed dedicated editor
Diana Athill, who in 1952 was a founding director of the publishing company that was given his name (and who in her memoir
Stet described him as "possibly the most difficult man in London"). A number of book series were established including The Language Library, Grafton Books (works on librarianship, bibliography and book collecting) and the Introduces guides. In the
1989 Queen's Birthday Honours, Deutsch was appointed a
CBE. Deutsch died in London on 11 April 2000, aged 82. ==In popular culture==