Greenberg married in 1941. He was in the
U.S. Army from 1942 to 1945 where he attained the rank of
corporal and won five battle stars. After leaving the Army, Greenberg was associated with the small press publisher New Collector's Group founded by Paul Dennis O'Connor and
Hannes Bok. Greenberg and O'Conner clashed about the direction of the press, causing Greenberg to leave, taking the rights to
The Carnelian Cube by
L. Sprague de Camp and
Fletcher Pratt as his buyout fee. In 1948, Greenberg founded
Gnome Press with
David Kyle, a fellow member of the
Hydra Club, a
New York-based science fiction club.
The Carnelian Cube was the first book published by the new press. Greenberg edited a number of themed anthologies for Gnome Press. He was involved in disputes with authors concerning payment, and
Isaac Asimov called him a "crook". Greenberg, with Gnome Press, was the first publisher of Asimov's epic
Foundation Trilogy, but those rights were long ago transferred to
Doubleday. Ultimately, Gnome Press was not successful and it went out of business in 1962. Greenberg went on to work as a mainstream editor for Abelard–Schuman. Later on, he ran an art supply store on
Long Island before retiring. Greenberg died in October 2013 at the age of 95. ==Awards==