Robert Hale and Company early published authors including
Wyndham Lewis.
The Vulgar Streak (1941) contained an explanation by Lewis of
fascism, as he explained in a letter to Hale; it was a commission from 1937, working title
Men at Bay. In the meantime
The Mysterious Mr Bull (Robert Hale, 1938), a satire against the political left, had appeared.
Berthold Brecht's
Threepenny Novel appeared in English translation (by Desmond Vesey) in 1937, published by Robert Hale as
A Penny for the Poor. Vesey denied to Brecht, on behalf of the publisher, that its political content had been toned down.
The Spanish Arena (1938) by William Foss and
Cecil Gerahty had a preface by
Jacobo Fitz-James Stuart, 17th Duke of Alba, then representative in London of
Francisco Franco. Its claims of a "Jewish conspiracy" among journalists opposed to Franco led to legal action by
Reuters. Hale withdrew the book, and an edited edition was published by the
Right Book Club.
Farewell Leicester Square by
Betty Miller was published in 1941. The company went on to publish her three final novels. The firm also published many of the later novels by Eunice Buckley (pseudonym of
Rose Laure Allatini). Robert Hale published in hardback in the UK the first four Harold Robbins titles,
79 Park Avenue,
Never Love a Stranger,
A Stone for Danny Fisher and
Never Leave Me. In 1986 it published Robert Goddard's first novel,
Past Caring. Other authors published in the UK include James Hadley Chase, John D. MacDonald and
Edward Storey. ==Authors==