Answer - Yes. It took me some time to research it. My first clue was the Wikipedia disambiguation page for Gramercy, listing as part of Random House (which if followed, displays the redirect at the top of the Random House page). I've since edited the Wikipedia page for Random House based upon the information I found.
While Surfing Random House, Inc.'s website, I came across their Copyright & Permissions webpage, and it was here I found the final confirmation:
Go to the main Random House website. At the very, very top of the page is displayed "Random House Inc. | More Sites +" Click on the plus-box for More Sites, and select "See all here" from under the heading Our Publishers.
You have now switched from Random House Inc.'s .com to their .biz site, and can find Gramercy Books is listed under Random House Value Publishing.
Random House Publishing is not a publicly traded company, so it does not have a ticker symbol. It is a subsidiary of Penguin Random House, which is owned by the German media conglomerate Bertelsmann.
Prestel Verlag is owned by the publishing group Random House, which is part of the broader Bertelsmann media conglomerate. Established in 1924, Prestel is known for its art books, exhibition catalogs, and illustrated publications. The imprint operates under the umbrella of Penguin Random House, which consolidates various publishing brands and imprints.
Some of the major ownership chains in the book industry include Penguin Random House (owned by Bertelsmann and Pearson), HarperCollins (owned by News Corp), Hachette Livre (a subsidiary of Lagardère Group), and Simon & Schuster (owned by ViacomCBS). These large publishing houses dominate the industry and have significant control over book publishing.
Browns House of Music is the publishing house owned by my grandmother Beatrice Brown. Her gospel song" Jesus Is Real To Me" was published by her publishing house.
Doubleday Book Club is headquartered in New York City. It is part of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group which is owned by one of America's largest publishing houses, Random House.
The local furniture store is individually owned, but is part of a buying syndicate. (Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.)
The rights for Bobbs-Merrill Co are currently controlled by Random House, a division of Penguin Random House. Bobbs-Merrill Co was acquired by Macmillan in 1985, which was later merged into what is now Penguin Random House.
The complete predicate is "owned a house" and the verb is "owned."
Yes. it is Johnson Publications.
Welcome to the age of the super conglomerate! Media moguls have united! (Information, after all is a commodity.) Bantam Books is owned by Random House, which is a subdivision of Dell Publishing which is owned by Berterlsmann, which is a German owned multi-national corporation. If you google Bertelsmann, you'll get a sense of the world under super conglomerates. In a super conglomerate world, your question has no meaning. "We are always where you are" is their scary answer. Scarier yet is the fact that their claim is accurate. Assuming you want to know how to contact Bantam Books, a subsidiary of all of the above, you could try the following: http://www.randomhouse.com/about/faq/
The intellectual copyright is owned by Kazuki Takahishi, The manga publishing rights is owned by Shueisha, The anime production rights is owned by Toei, The card and video game rights are owned by Konami.
Its not really Magnum's house. He just stays there. It is owned by Robin Masters