Giroux started his career with a job with the
Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) in
public relations. After working there for four years, he found his first editing job as a junior editor, at
Harcourt, Brace & Company in 1940. Among the first works he edited was
Edmund Wilson's work on 19th-century socialist thinkers,
To the Finland Station (1940), which was to become a classic. In 1947, Frank Morley left the company and returned to London, and a year later, Giroux was promoted to editor-in-chief, reporting to
Eugene Reynal, an
Ivy League scholar whom Brace had brought in to replace Morley. This development did not turn out amicably for the two. In a 2000 interview with
George Plimpton in
The Paris Review, he called Reynal tactless and a "terrible snob". He soon started looking around and in 1955 he joined Farrar, Straus & Company, run by his fellow Second World War veterans
John C. Farrar and
Roger Straus, as editor-in-chief. Almost twenty of his writers at Harcourt eventually followed him, including Eliot, Lowell, O'Connor, and Malamud. He became company's chairman in 1973. Among the writers Giroux discovered or developed at FSG were
Jack Kerouac,
John Berryman,
Jean Stafford,
Bernard Malamud,
Thomas Merton,
Flannery O'Connor,
Isaac Bashevis Singer,
Carl Sandburg,
Elizabeth Bishop,
Katherine Anne Porter,
Walker Percy,
Donald Barthelme,
Grace Paley,
Derek Walcott and
William Golding. His relationship with Straus was often strained. Giroux, more the literary man, was often at odds with Straus, who was primarily a businessman. Farrar, Straus & Giroux never published his 25th-anniversary anthology, which he also edited, as Straus took offense to his portrayal in Giroux's introduction. Giroux did not complete his memoirs because he said he did not want to write negatively about Straus. For his part, Straus counted Giroux's joining his company as the significant event in its history. Once Giroux suggested to Eliot that editors were mostly failed writers, to which Eliot replied: "so are most writers". From 1975 to 1982, he was president of the
National Board of Review of Motion Pictures, an organization that fights movie censorship. ==Awards and honors==