After college Dystel worked on promotions at
Esquire and then as editor on
Coronet magazine.
Bantam Bantam was founded in 1945, aiming to use new technology to produce cheap
paperbacks. The company was a success initially, but by the 1950s the market was flooded and warehouses were filling with inventory. Bantam had not had a president for two years and was failing financially, looking at a years loss of over , when Dystel was engaged in 1954 to manage the line. Although he was informed the company was essentially bankrupt, he demanded a cut of future profits, confident he would turn the company around. One of Dystel's first decisions was to buy the
paperback rights of
Leon Uris' novel
Battle Cry, beating rival
Pocket Books by promising to have marines promote the book to wholesalers. He pursued a strategy of publishing cheap, portable versions of classic books in
paperback form, targeting the school market. Early example included
Dostoyevsky and
John Steinbeck's
East of Eden. He reduced inventory, increased the sales staff, and built a new corporate structure. By the end of the next year, the company was profitable. In 1963 the paperback rights to
J. D. Salinger's
Catcher in the Rye were becoming available. Dystel learned that the thing Salinger desired was to design the new cover, a request Dystel gladly accepted. "We’ll publish it in a brown paper wrapping paper if [Salinger] wants that, just as long as the title is legible", he remarked. The Bantam edition sold a half million copies a year, reaching 46
printings by 1978. Under Dystel, Bantam became known for its rapid book production, known as Bantam Extras. When the
Warren Commission Report on
John F. Kennedy's assassination came out in 1964, Bantam got the complete text into production in 80 hours. The work sold 1.6 million copies for Bantam. Later books in the series
Pope Paul VI's 1965 trip to the United States and the 1969
Moon landing. In total the series spawned 56 titles. Dystel most enjoyed finding new books with the potential to sell millions of copies. He liked stories that were riveting and could be turned into movies. He believed that covers were paramount. His covers started trends multiple times: first red, then white, then raised letters. In 1967 Dystel predicted
Valley of the Dolls by
Jacqueline Susann would sell a million copies. He was wrong – the initial press run of 4 million copies sold out in less than a year and a second run of 4 million was ordered. Dystel bought the rights to
The Exorcist by
William Peter Blatty in 1971 when no one else would. It went on to sell 10 million copies for the company.
Jaws by
Peter Benchley (1974), already a fast seller, set industry sales records by hitting 6 million copies sold in less than two years when
Steven Spielberg's 1975 movie version came out. The book cover, designed by Dystel and his team, was duplicated for the movie poster.
Bertelsmann bought Bantam in 1977 and Dystel retired as chairman in 1980. By that time Bantam was the largest publisher of paperbacks, had over 15% of the market, and exceeded 100 million in yearly sales. The company published 400–1000 titles a year during Dystel's reign. == Personal life ==