ZenoPress

ZenoPress

ZenoPress

ZenoPress is a London based, independent press founded and edited by Christian Patracchini.

The catalogue consists of poetry, experimental writing, art, sound, performance art and essays and is dedicated to work of interdisciplinary reach, inquiring critically but especially creatively into ideas. Our topics and themes range from the everyday to the virtual, to the philosophical and the political.

Possible paradigms are many: déjà vu’, memory of the present; time and history, gesture, taking form, incipiency; reality of the virtual and spacing. This list will inevitably grow, expand and change, yet there will be a common aim: to embrace new thought and experience at a creative intersection.

We publish books and anthologies where artists, writers, performers and various professionals from different walks of life are to contribute to each volume, providing routes to a multiplicity of voices and perspectives, defining a significant theme or tendency, addressing it not only to a professional audience but to all interested readers.

Website: christianpatracchini.com/books
Instagram: @zeno_press
Twitter: @zeno_press


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Arachne Press

Arachne Press

Arachne Press

Arachne Press is based in London and was setup by Cherry Potts and specialises in short form fiction across the genres.

Their latest publication, ‘This Poem Here’ is a personal poetic response to the Covid crisis from Rob Walton.

Arachne Press are represented in the trade by Inpress Books. For enquires please contact rebecca@inpressbooks.co.uk

Website: www.arachnepress.com
Shop: www.arachnepress.com/shop
Facebook: @ArachnePress
Instagram: @arachnepress
Twitter: @ArachnePress

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

Arachne Press has been spinning stories since 2012.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

Sheer rage! I fell out with my publisher (breach of contract, money, sigh) and took back my books, but didn’t want to just self publish, and with a second redundancy in 5 years looming, I decided to take the plunge and publish other people too.

Arachne Press aims to be inclusive in the way we commission and to ensure writers from marginalised communities have the opportunity to get their work published. We have a particular affinity for disabled writers and writers from the LGBT community.

What genres do you specialise in?

Arachne specialises in short form; mainly publishing anthologies and collections of short stories and poetry, but we also publish fantasy fiction, young adult fiction and have even produced a photographic portrait book. We are open to most things except romance, erotica and horror.

Where are you based?

Arachne Press is based in London, UK.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We have regular calls for submissions to poetry and short story anthologies. We are currently seeking submissions of poetry and short stories from deaf or hearing impaired writers and from UK writers with BAME heritage, for two new anthologies. The submission window for these closes on 14th April.

Submissions are also open for our annual Solstice Shorts Festival. The theme for this year is ‘Climate Crisis: time is running out’ and submissions are open to everyone until 21st June.

What is your submission procedure?

All relevant details for how to submit to Arachne can be found at https://arachnepress.submittable.com/submit. We also share news of all our submission calls on the Arachne Press blog.

Who are you?

I am Cherry Potts – owner and founder. I run Arachne Press with occasional help from other creatives from across the publishing industry. I often collaborate with guest editors too, which ensures a range of voices are represented in our anthologies.

What was your background in the book industry before this venture?

I worked in a bookshop for a year straight from school – Christopher Foss in Baker Street, and for a couple of years, for Lewisham Libraries. Then I got my first publication as a writer, and did what we would now call ‘work experience’ with the publisher ½ day a week, which ought to have put me off, but somehow didn’t; and for a while I was on their advisory board.

Having been published several times, and with this broad understanding of what happens to books after they are published I thought I knew what I was doing! Joining the IPG was a big help in disabusing me of that, but everyone I have been in contact with from printers to distributors to other publishers have been wonderful. I feel quite grown up now, after eight years. Actually that’s about right isn’t it – traditional apprenticeships were seven years – there must be something it that!

Talk about some of your books if possible, upcoming, favourite?

I’m very proud of This Poem Here a poetry collection we have just published by Rob Walton (25 March 2021). At the start of lockdown, Rob was responding to the anxieties and absurdities of the Corona Virus crisis by writing poetry. He published a lot of these poems on social media, as real-time responses to the latest news. Watching and enjoying them from afar, I approached Rob to publish them as a book. We were in conversation about this project when Rob’s dad sadly died from Covid. The poems in the collection then took a radical turn, delving into rage, sorrow and grief. The result is a collection that leaps from laughter, to tears, to biting political commentary. I can’t imagine a more appropriate collection to have published in this ‘you-couldn’t-make-it-up’ era.


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Muswell Press

Muswell Press

Muswell Press

Muswell Press is a proudly independent publisher of compelling books, publishing an eclectic mixture of excellent writing with the emphasis on contemporary fiction, crime, biography and travel. The Queer Classics list, curated by Matt Bates, republishes forgotten classics as well as new fiction.

Muswell Press has been Shortlisted IPG Best Newcomer 2019 & 2020 and Regional Finalist British Book Awards 2021 and 2022. Titles have been shortlisted for awards including the Fortnum & Mason Food and Drink Award 2018 & 2022 and the Polari Prize 2021 &2022.

Sarah and Kate Beal bought Muswell Press in 2017 and published their first list in 2018. With over 50 years’ experience between, at board level, in some of the UK’s largest publishing companies, including Bloomsbury, Faber, Harpercollins and Oneworld, they combine big company perspective, ambition and knowledge with small company versatility and focus.

Website: muswell-press.co.uk
Email: info@muswell-press.co.uk
Twitter: @muswellpress
Instagram: @muswellpress
Facebook: facebook.com/MuswellPress


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Bad Betty Press

When I saw the images that I had been emailed for this feature of the beautiful chapbooks and pamphlets that Amy and Jake produce through Bad Betty Press I had an immediate feeling of desire for them. A well produced pamphlet is always a thing of beauty and it looks as though various award judges agree with that.

MICHAEL MARKS PUBLISHERS’ AWARD, Shortlisted, 2018
SABOTEUR AWARDS: Most Innovative Publisher, Shortlisted, 2018
SABOTEUR AWARDS: Best Pamphlet, Solomon’s World – Jake Wild Hall, Longlisted, 2018
LONDON’S BIG READ: The Dizziness of Freedom, Shortlisted, 2019

I now have another pile of goodies added to my ongoing wish list for birthday and other occasions.

Website: badbettypress.com
Facebook: @badbettypress
Instagram: @badbettypress
Twitter: @badbettypress

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

We published our first book of poems in July 2017.

What made you want to start publishing?

We’re both poets who perform but also love the page. We have a big network of artist friends and peers writing excellent work, and loved the idea of creating a platform to help their work reach more readers. We felt that there was space in the world of poetry publishing for some more exciting, fresh and diverse voices.

What do you specialise in?

Poetry. We mostly put out pamphlets / chapbooks (short collections of around 10-20 poems), but also publish full-length collections, anthologies, and a series of mini-pamphlets called Bad Betty Shots.

Where are you based?

Tottenham, north London.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

October – January for pamphlet / collection manuscripts, Feb – April for anthology poems.

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

Amy Acre and Jake Wild Hall. Writers and parents, we set up Bad Betty the year our daughter was born.

Background in the book industry?

Amy came from the world of copywriting, so had a background in editing, art direction and creative production. We’ve both written and performed poetry for over 10 years, working with indie publishers and picking up what we could about the process along the way, as well as running and promoting events.

Talk about some of your books if possible?

Our mental health anthology, The Dizziness of Freedom (2018), was shortlisted for a couple of awards, and is our bestseller to date.

While I Yet Live by Gboyega Odubanjo is our bestselling pamphlet.

She Too Is a Sailor by Antonia Jade King and Raft by Anne Gill are two of our most recent books, respectively exploring womanhood and trauma with delicacy and wit.

The Death of a Clown by Tom Bland and TIGER by Rebecca Tamás were both featured on the ‘Poetry School Books of 2018’ longlist.


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Velocity Press

Velocity PressVelocity Press publishes electronic music and club culture non-fiction and fiction. We aim to create a catalogue that feels like a trusted record label in its integrity and vision and deliver exciting stories to serious electronic music fans who enjoy good literature.

Velocity Press publisher Colin Steven previously co-promoted jungle club Ruffneck Ting in Bristol during the 90s, set up award-winning magazine Knowledge in 1994 and published Brian Belle-Fortune’s seminal drum & bass book All Crews in 2004.

Website: velocitypress.uk
Email: info@velocitypress.uk
Mastodon: @velocitypress
Twitter: @PressVelocity
Instagram: @velocitypress
Facebook: www.facebook.com/velocitypressbooks

Egostrip Book 1

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

We’ve been publishing since October 2019.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

I previously published an award-winning drum & bass magazine called Knowledge for 20 years. During that time I published a book called All Crews: Journeys Through Jungle Drum & Bass Culture by Brian Belle-Fortune. The internet killed off the physical magazine in 2009 but we soldiered on as a website but the book kept on selling. I missed the physical days and rather than launch another magazine I decided to pivot and start a new book publishing company.

What genres do you specialise in?

We specialise in electronic music and club culture. Most are non-fiction but we have published one fiction title so far and I’d like to do more.

Where are you based?

We’re based in London.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

No, we’re open to submissions the whole year.

What is your submission procedure?

Please send a summary of what you have written, or intend to write to info@velocitypress.uk. A separate breakdown of chapters is useful if you have one.

Who are you?

I run Velocity Press on my own and outsource production like cover design, typesetting proofreading, copyediting, printing, etc. Although he’s a freelancer, I have to pay tribute to Paul Baille-Lance from PBL Publishing as not only does he typeset most of our books, but I also use him for proofing and copy-editing too and he does a great job.

Colin Steven

What was your background in the book industry before this venture?

As mentioned above, I published All Crews: Journeys Through Jungle Drum & Bass Culture by Brian Belle-Fortune in 2004. It went out of print in 2020 so I’m looking to publish it again next year with an update on what’s happening now in drum & bass.

Talk about some of your books if possible, upcoming, favourite?

We’ve been really busy the last few years and have published 18 books as of June 2022 so it’s hard choosing favourites. Our first book Join The Future: Bleep Techno & the Birth Of British Bass Music by Matt Anniss was special, it really put us on the map.

Reissuing Trevor Miller’s Trip City in 2021 is worth mentioning too. Not only is it a great book and our only fiction title but we got to work with acid house legend A Guy Called Gerald as we also reissued his soundtrack on vinyl.

More recently, Harry Harrison’s Dreaming In Yellow: The Story of the DiY Sound System has been selling like hot cakes and is shaping up to be our biggest seller.

Most of our books are paperbacks but we’ve done a few beautiful coffee table books like Junior Tomlin Flyer & Cover Art and Who Say Reload: The Stories Behind the Classic Drum & Bass Records of the 90s and the production values of our next book, Members Only: The Iconic Membership Cards and Passes of the Acid House and Rave Generations, will top the lot.


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3 of Cups Press

On Anxiety

On Anxiety

Founded in 2017, 3 of Cups Press is a small press, focusing on inclusive publishing. We share a vision for a more equal, more peaceful, more inclusive world and we are dedicated to providing a platform for voices otherwise unheard in the mainstream. We are a team of women and non-binary folk, and are disability-led.

Our first project is a series of anthologies, starting with On Anxiety, published in January 2018, and On Bodies, published in October 2018. Our third, On Relationships, is due to publish October 2019. These anthologies provide a platform for writers and artists and a starting point on how to tackle issues such as mental health, our relationships with our bodies, political activism and more.

We believe that art and literature can be activism. In pursuit of a more fair, more equal world, all of our contributors are paid for their work.

Their books are available for purchase in London at Burley Fisher Bookshop, the South London Gallery Bookshop, Pages of Hackney and the London Review Bookshop; in Edinburgh at Lighthouse Bookshop and Golden Hare Bookshop; in Bristol at Hydra Books or in their online shop.

Based in London, they can be contacted through these channels:

Website: 3ofcups.co.uk
Email: hello@3ofcups.co.uk
Twitter: @3OFCUPSPRESS


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