Pushkin Press

Pushkin Press

Pushkin Press

Founded in 1997, our list encompasses novels, non-fiction, crime, children’s books – everything from timeless classics to the urgent and contemporary. We publish some of the twentieth century’s most widely acclaimed and brilliant authors, including Stefan Zweig, Antal Szerb and Gaito Gazdanov, as well as award-winning current writers like the Dorthe Nors, Benjamín Labatut, Ayelet Gundar-Goshen and Perumal Murugan. Our authors have been shortlisted for the Booker Prize, the International Booker Prize, and even won the Nobel Prize.

Pushkin Press, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 1LA

Website: pushkinpress.com
YouTube: youtube.com/channel/UCEfXNMAaf0fHHYmRAdenW3w
TikTok: @pushkinpress
Twitter: @pushkinpress
Instagram: @pushkin_press


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Sloth & Envy Press

Sloth & Envy Press

Sloth & Envy Press

Our main motivation for Sloth & Envy Press is to work with writers from start to finish to bring professional caliber products to market, including developmental editing, line editing, formatting, design, and publishing. We’re a small press, but we’re also writers, so we’re passionate about helping independent writers succeed and profit from their work.

We’ve decided to take on this independent publishing adventure with a focus on profitability for fellow creatives, but we’re starting with baby-steps. Through lots of careful (and lazy) planning, we’ve mapped out three upcoming projects as well as combined our efforts on a fun zine called Toad Shade Zine.

Website: slothandenvy.com
Email: editor@slothandenvy.com
Bluesky: @slothandenvy.com
Instagram: @slothandenvypress
Facebook: facebook.com/profile.php?id=61564679584201


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Hadean Press

Hadean Press

Hadean Press

Established in 2008 at the beginning of the solar year, Hadean Press Limited is a UK based small press producing some of the most exciting titles in modern occultism, publishing academic and independent scholarship in the areas of folklore, folk magic, and spellbooks.

Never oblivious to rising talent, in the years since its founding Hadean has introduced up and coming international authors to a discerning public, as well as bringing new offerings from more established but non-establishment authors, including Jake Stratton-Kent, David Rankine, Dr Alexander Cummins, and many more.

Website: hadean.press
Email: info@hadeanpress.com
Facebook: facebook.com/hadeanpress
Instagram: @hadeanpress
YouTube: youtube.com/c/HadeanPress
Tumblr: hadeans.tumblr.com


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Granta

Granta

Granta

Granta Books now publishes around thirty new titles a year, providing authors with the intimacy of a small, passionate and creative team while consistently punching above its weight in review coverage, prizes, cultural impact and sales.

Granta magazine and the Granta Poetry imprint are owned by Granta Trust, a charity set up in 2019 to promote new and emerging writing. Sigrid Rausing chairs the Trust’s board. Her fellow trustees are the writers George Prochnik and Rana Dasgupta. Granta relies on the support of philanthropic donations from organisations and individuals. If you enjoy the magazine and would like to support the writing please consider making a donation.

Granta is most celebrated for its ‘Best of Young’ issues, which introduce the most important voices of each generation – in Britain, America, Brazil and Spain – defining the contours of the literary landscape.

Granta has published thirty-one Nobel Prize laureates.

Website: granta.com
Telephone: +44(0)20 7605 1360
Bluesky: @grantamag.bsky.social
Instagram: @granta_magazine
Facebook: facebook.com/grantamag
Twitter: @GrantaMag


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Mudfog Press

Mudfog Press

Mudfog Press

Mudfog Press works to promote new writers and writing from the Tees Valley and surrounding area. The Press is run by a voluntary editorial board and is non-profit-making. We currently have financial support from Middlesbrough Council and Arts Council England.

We mostly publish poetry and short fiction, but will consider submissions in other genres. We put particular emphasis on the production of short pamphlets, which give writers a first opportunity of individual publication. In selecting work for publication, we aim to include a wide variety of voices and styles.

We require work to be of a quality that readers in the Tees Valley and elsewhere will enjoy reading and will want to purchase. We offer strong editorial support for our authors, however inexperienced or experienced, who submit work which we decide to publish and promote.

Mudfog Press was established in 1993 and has to date published over 40 pamphlets and six full length books. Several Mudfog authors have gone on to be published more widely and to establish their reputations regionally and nationally.

Current Mudfog publications are available for purchase in several local bookshops, libraries and cultural centres. They can also be safely ordered on-line in the Mudfog Shop through the PayPal system.

Website: mudfog.co.uk
Facebook: facebook.com/groups/100138526984802


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Northodox Press

Northodox Press

Northodox Press

Northodox Press is an independent publisher established in 2020, based in Sheffield and Manchester. Our mission is to elevate northern voices and represent the diversity of writing from Northern England.

As of 2023, we cater to readers of general fiction and genre fiction. If you’re exhausted by a book market oversaturated with stories of a London-centric Britain or the cozy Cotswolds, look no further.

In the digital age, we’re no longer confined by the traditional borders of publishing. Northern voices deserve to be heard, our stories need to be present.

We offer end-to-end publishing and creative support for our authors in both print and digital formats. Our team of industry experts will manage the editorial, cover design, and production processes, while you focus on the writing. Once published, our publicity and marketing teams will make sure the audience is waiting.

Website: northodox.co.uk
Email: admin@northodox.co.uk
Email: submissions@northodox.co.uk
Bluesky: @northodoxpress.bsky.social
Instagram: @northodoxpressofficial
Facebook: facebook.com/northodoxpress
Twitter: @northodoxpress


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Glagoslav

Glasgolav

Glagoslav

In 2011, a group of like-minded people with a shared appreciation of the important place Slavic literature holds within world culture – as well as collective expertise covering the fields of publishing, multimedia, marketing, and law – came together to found Glagoslav Publications, with offices in the United Kingdom and The Netherlands. Later Glagoslav publications went beyond Slavic, and authors and books from countries that are historically or borderally related to the Slavs were added.

The name Glagoslav is formed from the roots of two Slavic words: Glagolitsa (Глаго́лица) or Glagolitic – the first Slavic alphabet, and Slavyanye (Славя́не) or Slavs – the largest ethnolinguistic group in Europe. The name Glagoslav is an expression of our mission – not just to bring translations to the English- and Dutch-reading public, but to offer works that are uniquely Slavic and beyond in nature and facilitate a dialogue between East and West.

Glagoslav publishes contemporary fiction and non-fiction by authors from these three countries, and also republishes valuable works from the past that, despite their enduring relevance, are currently unavailable in English and Dutch. Our books are produced in soft- and hardcover, as well as in the most popular electronic formats for English and Dutch readers, both adult and children. The target audience we have in mind when we select our books is extremely diverse and is spread all across the planet. What its members have in common is an interest in the literature, culture, and history of Eastern Europe and an appreciation of high quality writing. To ensure that the quality of the translation matches that of the original, we work with experienced translators who have demonstrated the necessary expertise and literary gifts appropriate to each project.

Website: glagoslav.com
Email: contact@glasgoslav.com
Telephone: + 44 20 32 86 99 82
Instagram: @glagoslav
Facebook: facebook.com/glagoslav
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/glagoslav
Twitter: @glagoslav
YouTube: @glagoslav


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Book Works

Book Works

Book Works

Studio: The Book Works Studio offers a specialist bespoke service for range of clients, from artists, designers, galleries, and businesses. We provide binding solutions, develop prototypes and specialise in unique book artworks, boxes, and portfolios. We have an extensive archive, and offer tailored educational events, and bookbinding courses. The Studio generates income from clients and is self-sufficient.

Publishing: Book Works Publishing is dedicated to commissioning and supporting new work by emerging artists. Our projects are initiated by invitation, open submission, and through guest-curated projects and include publishing, a lecture and seminar programme, exhibitions, the development of an online archive, and artists’ surgeries and workshops.

Our audience is vital to our work. The process of engaging and developing our audience is initiated with our commissioning programme, and driven through all aspects of our activities, particularly our public programme of events, our workshops, artists surgeries and education activities, and through our interest in collaborating with other organisations and libraries. Our programme of commissions is diverse, and reflects our commitment not just to work with cultural workers from all backgrounds, but to invest in networks and programmes that engage, and develop and create new artistic voices.

19 Holywell Row, London, EC2A 4JB

Website: bookworks.org.uk
Studio: +44 (0) 20 7247 2536
Publishing: +44 (0) 20 7247 2203
Instagram: @bookworksuk
Facebook: facebook.com/bookswork
Twitter: @bookswork


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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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The Wee Book Company

The Wee Book Company

The Wee Book Company

The Wee Book Company Ltd wus incorporated in 2018 wi’ the aim o’ producing quality, modern non-fiction Scottish humour an’ children’s fiction. We’re a’ aboot the funny but we underscore wur books wi’ messages o’ love, positivity, confidence an’ resilience. Aye, it’s important tae us tha’ laughter an’ love go haund in haund (jeez-oh, get us!).

Wur authors are largely individuals (nae a’ large individuals) who huv trained in wan therapy or anither, an’ so write wi’ wan eye oan the importance o’ the guid stuff o’ life.

Our Director, Susan Cohen originally hails frae Inverness. She started her wurkin’ life as a lawyer an’ spent a lang time representin’ clients in court in various jurisdictions roond the wurld. Efter huvin’ her twa sons, she went back tae University tae study English – frae there, she nivver looked back. She ended up becomin’ interested in combinin’ elements o’ therapeutic techniques such as meditation, mindfooness an’ hypnosis (Susan’s a qualified clinical hypnotherapist) intae her writin’ an’ this noo feeds the content o’ The Wee Book Company’s books, tae varyin’ degrees.

Thing is, there’s nothing po-faced aboot wur books. There’s none o’ tha’ ‘sit oan top o’ a mountain an’ channel yer inner unicorn’ kind o’ thing. Wur books are written wi’ humour an’ wi’ a mahoosive dollop o’ common sense. No’ wan unicorn tae be seen! The jokes come thick an’ fast, an’ staund alone. C’mon, who’s no’ gaun tae chuckle a’ the description o’ Cludgie Aerobics in The Wee Book o’ Cludgie Banter or Thistle Squats in Big Tam’s Kilted Wurkoots? An’ dinnae get us startit oan the Grannies’ Sayin’s … ‘heid doon, erse up!’ … ‘he’s got a face tha’ only a mither cuid love’ … ‘ye’re rippin’ ma knittin’!’ … sigh … hours o’ endless fun!

We huv tae say here tha’ we huv mair authors lined up than we can shake a stick a’ (no’ tha’ we go in fur stick shakin’ tha’ often), so we’re no’ in a position tae accept unsolicited manuscripts.

Website: theweebookcompany.com
Email: sales@theweebookcompany.com
Facebook: facebook.com/theweebookcompany
Twitter: @theweebookco_
YouTube: The Wee Book Company


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Inspired Quill

Inspired Quill

Inspired Quill

Inspired Quill aims to be the UK’s best small publisher as a traditional press dedicated to quality literature, skills development, and social/environmental causes.

From submission to launch, we collaborate with our authors, rather than operating above them. We diligently focus on setting new standards in ecological, people-oriented publishing that actively develops an author’s skills, by facilitating open involvement in marketing and editing, and encouraging authentic public confidence.

Engaging new writers means we’re able to start removing (the many) roadblocks and misinformation about the publishing industry.

We champion non-tokenistic diversity and representation across all parts of our business (and as much as we can across the sector as a whole, too).

Finally, we provide activities, mentoring and workshops to encourage and inspire transferable, creative skills to primarily (although not exclusively) marginalised individuals, and additionally partner with selected non-profit groups and charity programs.

Website: www.inspired-quill.com
Facebook: facebook.com/InspiredQuill
Twitter: @InspiredQuill
YouTube: @inspiredquill


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Micro Library Books

Micro Library Books

Micro Library Books

Micro Library Books is an independent publishing platform specialising in the design and production of pocket-sized, limited edition books and packaging.

Established in January 2012, we launched the first of our book works at Publish and Be Damned Book Fair, ICA, London. We now exhibit at a range of UK and international events including Bergen Artists Book Fair; East London Comic Arts Festival, Brighton Illustration Fair and Bristol Artists Book Event.

Based in Winchester each of our miniature books is designed by artist Lee Shearman and made by hand.

We regularly collaborate with illustrators, artists, writers and photographers to produce co-created books, zines and comics.

Website: microlibrarybooks.com
Email: mail@microlibrarybooks.com
Facebook: facebook.com/microlibrarybooks
Instagram: @microlibrarybooks
Twitter: @micro_library
Pinterest: pinterest.com/microlibrary
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/micro-library-books


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Verso Books

Verso Books

Verso Books

Verso Books is the largest independent, radical publishing house in the English-speaking world, publishing one hundred books a year.

Verso—the left-hand page—was launched as a paperback imprint at the end of the seventies. Since becoming NLB’s sole imprint, Verso has published landmark books by Tariq Ali, Benedict Anderson, Robin Blackburn, Robert Brenner, Judith Butler, Noam Chomsky, Alexander Cockburn, Mike Davis, Isaac Deutscher, Paul Feyeraband, Norman Finkelstein, David Harvey, Eric Hobsbawm, Fredric Jameson, Edward Said, Rebecca Solnit, Ellen Meiksins Wood, Erik Olin Wright and Slavoj Žižek. New translations have included Jean Baudrillard, Régis Debray, André Gorz, Jürgen Habermas, Rigoberta Menchú, Roberto Schwarz and Paul Virilio.

Website: www.versobooks.com/
Bluesky: @versobooks.bsky.social
Facebook: facebook.com/VersoBks
Instagram: @versobooks
Twitter: @versobooks


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Birlinn Ltd

Birlinn

Birlinn

Birlinn Limited is an independent publishing house based in Edinburgh, Scotland. The company is built on traditions of the written and spoken word and is constantly looking to the future.

Established by Hugh Andrew (2022 recipient of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society Shackleton Medal for leadership and citizenship in publishing) in 1992, Birlinn publishes books under a number of imprints:

Birlinn; Polygon; Arena Sport; BC Books; and John Donald.

The team at Birlinn are proud of the company’s reputation and prominence in Scottish publishing. We constantly challenge ourselves and nurture the talent of our authors and we push the boundaries of the imagination. We never rest in our search for what comes next.

Website: birlinn.co.uk
Email: info@birlinn.co.uk
Twitter: @BirlinnBooks
Instagram: @birlinnbooks
Facebook: facebook.com/birlinnbooks
YouTube: Birlinn Channel

Address:
Birlinn Ltd.
West Newington House
10 Newington Road
Edinburgh EH9 1QS
0131 668 4371


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GOST Books

GOST Books

GOST Books

Founded in 2012, GOST Books is an independent visual arts and photography publisher based in London.

We pride ourselves on an uncategorisable output of diverse subject matter and design: from a chronicle of seven men claiming to be the Messiah; a study of Turkish soap operas; art works inspired by the largest breeding grounds for flamingos in the Southern Hemisphere; archive photographs from the Mexico City police department; to portraits of winners of state-run competitions in Belarus.

GOST aims to not only provide a platform for the work of emerging artists but contribute to print legacies of masters in the medium.

Website: gostbooks.com
Email: info@gostbooks.com
Instagram: @gost_books
Facebook: facebook.com/GostBooks/


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the87press

the87press

the87press

Established in 2018, the87press is an Asian, LGBTQIA+, and neurodiverse led publishing collective and events curator in South London. We prioritize modernism, anti-colonialism, anti-racism, and environmentalism in our print publications of poetry, fiction, and essays. Additionally, we offer educational and creative workshops, industry leading live events, and regular commissioned work with online journal of culture theHythe. Committed to equity, all authors receive fair contracts regardless of their background. As part of Arts Council England’s National Portfolio, we contribute to the Let’s Create project and look forward to fostering inclusive learning spaces as the only NPO in the London Borough of Sutton.

Website: www.the87press.co.uk/
Bluesky: @the87press.bsky.social
Instagram: @the87press
Facebook: facebook.com/the87press
Twitter: @the87press
YouTube: youtube.com/the87press


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33⅓ Sound

Widely acclaimed by fans, musicians and scholars alike, the 33 ⅓ series dives deep into your favorite artists, albums and genres.

In October 2003 we published our first ever batch of 33 ⅓ books, each one focusing on a popular LP. Since then we’ve covered many artists and albums, from Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures to Celine Dion’s Let’s Talk About Love, Duran Duran’s Rio to Kraftwerk’s Computer World, and Madvillain’s Madvillainy to Britney Spears’s Blackout. Each album covered in the series occupies such a specific place in music history, so each book-length treatment is different.

Since the formation of the original 33 ⅓ series, we’ve partnered with Spotify on the 33 ⅓ Podcast, hosted by renowned record producer and DJ, Prince Paul. We’ve launched 33 ⅓ Brazil, 33 ⅓ Japan, 33 ⅓ Oceania, 33 ⅓ Europe, and in 2024, will be launching 33 ⅓ South Asia. Most recently we released Genre: A 33 ⅓ Series, which guides readers through musical sub-genres that have intrigued, perplexed, or provoked listeners.

20 years, 6 spin-off series, and over 200 books later, we’re still going strong!

Website: 333sound.com
Instagram: @331.3books
Facebook: @33.3books
Twitter: @333books


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Pariah Press

Pariah Press

Pariah Press

Est. 2014, Manchester UK.

PARIAH PRESS is an independent contemporary art publisher and research-led design studio. Specialising in innovative literature and photography, we co-create mass-market paperbacks, photobooks, exhibition catalogues, pamphlets, zines and ebooks.

Our published works attempt to engage in critical dialogues with and explore notions of: exile, the underdog, mental wellbeing and censorship.

See the website for an in depth dive and a blog! Order directly from us, there’s lots of discounts. Socials: we’ve scaled back our use of Facebook and Twitter, and exist now mainly on Insta. We urge everyone to shift to Mastodon!

Pariah Press can be found at:
Website: https://pariahpress.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pariah_press
Mastodon: https://mas.to/@pariahpress
Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/pariahpress.bsky.social
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pariahpress
Twitter: https://twitter.com/pariahpress

When did you start publishing?

Pariah Press were established in 2014 by Jonny Walsh and Jamie Lee in Night & Day Cafe, Manchester.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

Jamie’s band, Money, used a practice room in the basement of Night & Day, I was running the ents. side of the venue at the time.

We spent endless hours bemoaning the lack of stimulating literature being published in that moment. And, being full of the piss & vinegar of youth, imagined we could offer something more exciting.

What genres do you specialise in?

We began with ‘outsider literature’ — broad as that is: historically pertinent, challenging yet not inaccessible. There’s a notion that we’re seeking to be edgy or obscure or Cool. Quite the opposite. We’re basically misfits, as are often the authors we work with. We want to be popular, but that needn’t mean compromising on quality at any stage. I prefer a pulpy type of style, brash and anti-tasteful—for want of a better phrase. Jamie’s more refined. Hopefully we land somewhere in-between. Never truly retro, never fully in the now.

Fiction, non-fiction, poetry, novels, short stories. Probably to our detriment we didn’t stay in one place for very long. I realised that, quite unintentionally, all of the initial publications had a strong visual element… The Myth of Brilliant Summers (photographs), A Collection of Nineteenth Century Broadside Ballads… (facsimiles of original newsprint broadside ballads), Obscenity & the Arts (photographs), Passing Time (map). Around the turn of the 2020s I began to explore photobook publishing and the idea of working with visual artists as authors. I enjoy working with archives, which has since taken us in some exciting directions.

Where are you based?

Manchester and London. Though more precisely Prestwich and Bow. Although, that’s about to change due to these tricky, intemperate times in this decrepit country. We did have an office under an art gallery and studios on the Salford/Manchester border, but it was knocked down suddenly, in its place now a glass skyscraper full of empty box flats, who would’ve thought?

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

As a rule we don’t accept submissions, but, predictably, that can be broken — the window and the rule.

What is your submission procedure?

If you would like to chance your arm then email us. But, don’t send the full work and do tell us about its contents: thematic and structural… and also what you’re about too.

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

Jonny mainly and Jamie. Adam Griffiths is excellent to bounce ideas around with and has contributed some amazing designs so far. All the authors and designers we’ve worked with have helped build things. Publishing’s ultimately collaborative.

Who's Who In PARIAH

Who’s Who In PARIAH

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

I worked in book retail for a few years… Borders (RIP), Chorlton Bookshop (shout out). Jamie’s got a masters degree in poetics, or thereabouts.

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

We’ve just published a second tome by former APN and Gay Times photographer Stuart Linden Rhodes, it’s a large-format photobook, glossy and brash: LINDEN ARCHIVES. We’ve been wanting to scale up for a while. Although I think I marginally prefer the smaller, neater first book we did with him: Out & About with Linden. No real reason, just personal preference. Stuart’s great to work with. Melissa Lee-Houghton’s latest, Exposure / Ideal Palace is also similarly oversize. It is physically awkward, which fits with the subject matter and difficulty of the text itself.

Linden Archives

Linden Archives

Picking a favourite’s difficult. We’re happy with all the books. Form has followed content with each project, so the trick has been retaining branding and keeping the quality high while offering vastly different products. In terms of whole project experience, Passing Time is a favourite. A lockdown book, a lot of hard yakka re-editing and working well with Cath Annabel, who came on board as a guest editor.

Obscenity & the Arts also was a fulfilling experience. A privilege to be the first publishing house to edit and release work from the International Anthony Burgess Archive. Contacting and receiving emails and testimony from lots of Burgess’s old friends was a wonderful process. Andrew Biswell was instrumental in letting that book happen and he’s someone we always enjoy talking to.

Forthcoming we’ve got a ten year anniversary catalogue almost ready, entitled “A Dog on a Cross: Ten Years of Pariah Press”

We’ve a number of archives and artists we’re looking to work with including Ciarán Wood and Ella Skinner.


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Moist

Absolutely loved all the covers I’ve seen from Moist and love the sound of the words that they are getting out to the world and I like their ethos.

MOIST is a socialist enterprise. This means that our contracts are as generous as they can afford to be; that we channel the majority of our profits into funding new MOIST ventures; and that our beautifully designed, sometimes coordinating, paperbacks are printed in places other than China. We believe that language is always political, that language is always physical, and that language generates meaning. Our language is grimy and MOIST.

Website: https://www.moistbooks.com/
Instagram: @coolmoistbooks
Twitter: @coolmoistbooks

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

Our first book, a reissue of the late, great Italian screenwriter Tonino Guerra’s Equilibrium, will be published in September 2020.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

The word ‘alternative’, as used within the British publishing industry, usually refers to works that fit within a very Oxbridge, very Bloomsbury (i.e. upper and upper-middle-class) framework. On the rare occasions that a publisher’s list includes literary fiction by a working or lower-middle-class author that does not conform to the above their book will then be edited and/or marketed in terms of either Bake-Off blandness (or in the publisher’s parlance ‘to appeal to a regional audience’), or as poverty-porn (or distressing subject matter masquerading as ‘inclusivity’ and ‘diversity’ on the publisher’s part). First, this is boring. Second, there are lots of great authors who remain largely unknown precisely because they are not boring (or posh, or produce a posh person’s idea of a ‘common’ person’s writing). The rest is, as they should say, the future…

What genres do you specialise in?

Literary and experimental fiction and creative non-fiction, often with a link to the visual arts.

Where are you based?

Nottingham.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We only publish three books a year, which means that our list for the next two-plus years is already full. However, all going well we hope to re-open for submissions at some point in 2021.

What is your submission procedure?

We like to receive the whole book as a word document and a brief blurb as the author imagines that it would appear on the back of the dustjacket. We don’t care whether or not an author has an agent, or about their publication history, and we actively encourage submissions from those with educational backgrounds that other publishers might consider ‘unconventional’.

>Who are you (team photo if possible)?

Officially Paul and Sarah with occasional, unofficial, help from Susie and Tom.

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

We have no background in the book industry – which we consider to be our great advantage! Our backgrounds are in academia and advertising.

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

Our first season, ‘A Trilogy of Alienation,’ consists of the aforementioned Equilibrium, which has already received a glowing endorsement from the Academy Award winning actress Samantha Morton; My Other Spruce and Maple Self the next novel from Susan Finlay, whose current one, Objektophilia, is receiving rave reviews at present; and Florilegia by the artist and illustrator Annabel Dover, a fictionalised account of early photographer and amateur botanist Anna Atkins’ life. Stylistically each of these books is very different, but they all centre on somewhat disenfranchised figures, are heavily influenced by film and photography, and feature beautiful coordinating covers. We hope that this, as well as the obvious quality of the writing, will make our readers especially keen to acquire the whole set!


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Handheld Press

Unfortunately Handheld Press will cease to trade in June 2025

Handheld Press sells remarkable and wonderful stories from the past and the present. We publish the novels that you won’t want to put down, and the stories you’ll want to give as presents. Handheld Press books are beautiful objects, designed with care, a pleasure to read.

Handheld Classics present forgotten fiction and authors who need to be rediscovered, with introductions by experts and astonishingly useful notes.

Handheld Research tells stories from scholarly research, in plain English.

Handheld Modern brings you excellent modern fiction and non-fiction from living authors.

Based in Bath, Handheld Press can be contacted at:

Website: www.handheldpress.co.uk
Instagram: @handheldpress
Twitter: @KateHandheld
Email: enquiries [at] handheldpress.co.uk

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

Technically it was March 2017, when a research colleague told me I should set up a publishing company, and I realised that this was so darn obvious I could not understand why I had needed someone else to point me in the right direction. Officially it was June 2017 when we incorporated as a company.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

I’d been an editor and a researcher of 20thC Eng lit all my working life, and the two career paths coalesced. I spent most of my teaching and research career finding wonderful stories and telling people about them. I also had increasingly strong views about what should and should not be republished, so Handheld Classics was always going to be our core business. But I was also concerned that too much scholarly research was disappearing into the maw of expensive academic editions that no ordinary person would ever see, or could afford, so I wanted to find a way to bring the results of publicly funded academic reseach into trade publishing, hence Handheld Research. Handheld Modern indulges my secret desire to bring more modern feminist science fiction to the world, when we find some.

What genres do you specialise in?

Classics, forgotten fiction; women’s lives; science fiction / fantasy

Where are you based?

Bath, in SW England

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We’re always open to submissions; but please read our Authors page for the guidelines, and the proposal forms. We do want prospective authors to pitch using the form. It helps them, and us.

What is your submission procedure?

For the Classics: tell us why this forgotten work is so good, and what you’d like to write about in the introduction. Is it in copyright? Who owns this? Send us a sample chapter.

For Handheld Research: give us an outline of your book’s scope, why nothing like this has been published before, and a breakdown of the chapter contents. Which are your competing books? Who is your readership? Send a sample chapter.

Who are you?

80% is Kate Macdonald, energy source, commissioning editor, picture researcher, production manager and writer of all copy. 10% is David Marsh, in charge of numbers and logic patrol. We also use a network of stupendous freelancers for web, data, design, publicity, media and marketing.

What’s your background in the book industry?

Kate trained as an editor in civil service and technical publishing, and was a freelance editor for 14 years. She also researches, publishes on and teaches publishing history and book history, most recently on the history of W H Smith.

Talk about some of your books if possible

Our most recent Classic (30 May) is Blitz Writing by Inez Holden, consisting of a novella (Night Shift) and a memoir (It Was Different At The Time) of the Second World War. Inez was/is a forgotten journalist and novelist who hung out and worked with George Orwell, Stevie Smith, Cyril Connolly and many others in 1930s literary London. H G Wells was her landlord. The stories in Blitz Writing are tremendous portraits of the industrial home front in the Blitz.

The book we published before that (26 March) has been our smash hit so far. Rose Macaulay’s What Not is a forgotten dystopian portrait of a world where the government enforces eugenics on a population determined never to allow war to happen again, and aero buses transport commuters to work in London. Aldous Huxley borrowed her key ideas for Brave New World. Kate’s research recovered not only this novel, but the missing suppressed pages that had it withdrawn as soon as it was published.

and any future projects/dreams if you can

Oooh, we have lots! In August we publish the first English translation of a Dutch classic about 1920s China, Adrift in the Middle Kingdom. In September we republish the funniest Edwardian feminist novel, Elizabeth von Arnim’s The Caravaners. And in October we republish Vonda N McIntyre’s first novel, The Exile Waiting, a science fiction classic from 1975, and a collection of Weird fiction by women, called, appropriately, Women’s Weird. In 2020 we’re bringing out two more Rose Macaulay novels, more short fantasy stories by Sylvia Townsend Warner, and a marvellous forgotten novel about Selfridges in the 1930s, a collection of letters from the First World War by a Quaker conscientious objector, and two more collections of Weird fiction.


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UCLAN Publishing


Welcome to UCLan Publishing and a very different approach to publishing books! We are a trade, independent publisher based in Preston, Lancashire. We have big ambitions and a big heart. Continually striving to produce the best children’s books in every genre from Early Years to YA. We’re 100% dedicated to putting Northern Publishing on the map, and our events team work closely with Lancashire Libraries, local schools and other Publishers to create truly unique events. The Northern YA Literary Festival being one of them!

Our staff our highly experienced and professional book publishers with many years in the trade behind them, many at the highest level including, Penguin Random House, Bloomsbury and Macmillan. Therefore, our books are superb quality and our noses are commercial.

Based in Preston, Lancashire, UCLAN Publishing can be contacted at:

c/o Greenbank Hub,
Greenbank Building,
University of Central Lancashire,
Preston, Lancashire,
PR1 2HE

Website: www.uclanpublishing.com
Facebook: @publishinguclan
Instagram: @uclan_publishing
Twitter: @uclanpublishing

In their own words

When did you start publishing?

2018

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

We’ve grown from the MA in Publishing course at the University of Central Lancashire. As part of the student experience they have to produce a real book. That’s where Cold Bath Street by A.J. Harltey came from. Things have spiralled from there, the trade took notice and we’re currently busy building our list.

What genres do you specialise in?

Children’s & YA

Where are you based?

Preston, Lancashire

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We are currently open to submissions fo our commercial list as well as student projects – https://uclanpublishing.com/submissions/

What is your submission procedure?

Link to submissions procedure https://uclanpublishing.com/submissions/

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

Debbie Williams is the Director and oversees both commercial and course publishing. Hazel Holmes is the Publisher & Toni Murtagh our Publishing Assistant. We freelance our design work to Becky Chilcott & Amy Cooper. Photo attached of us winning the IPG award.

Background in the book industry?

We have over 20 years experience from buying for head office at Waterstones, library supply and publishing.

Talk about some of your books if possible?

We have some very exciting titles coming this year, including Blast Off to the Moon! Our YA debut The Harm Tree, and the sequel to our bestselling Cold Bath Street, Written Stone Lane.

and future projects/dreams if you can?

Publishing is very London focused. We’re aiming to add a bit of cultural and regional diversity to our business by proving you don’t have to be based in London to make great books!


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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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3TimesRebel Press

3TimeRebel Press

3TimeRebel Press

We are born with the ambition of spreading voices and topics silenced by what is dominant. We translate female authors who write in minority languages.

Only women. Only minority languages. This is our choice.

We know that we only win if we all win, that´s why we are proud to be fair trade publishers. And we are committed to supporting organisations in the UK that help women to live freely and with dignity.

We are 3TimesRebel.

216 1/1 Brook Street Broughty Ferry , Dundee DD5 2AH

Email: info@3timesrebel.com
Website: 3timesrebel.com
Twitter: @3timesrebel
Instagram: @3timesrebel


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Henningham Family Press

Henningham Family Press

Henningham Family Press

David and Ping co-founded Henningham Family Press in 2006 making handmade artists’ books that are collected by some of the world’s most prestigious libraries and museums. Since 2018 our studio has had global distribution through Inpress Books and Ingram, placing our paperbacks in high street bookshops. Our novels have been shortlisted for The Goldsmith’s Prize, Republic of Consciousness Prize, British Book Awards and longlisted for The Walter Scott Prize.

I recently met David at Fruitmarket’s Artists’ Book Market 2024 (February) in Edinburgh, and it is always a great pleasure to meet up with the people that make the books I love so much.


Website: henninghamfamilypress.com
Telephone: +44 (0)797 684 3290
Email: david [at] henninghamfamilypress.co.uk
Email: ping [at] henninghamfamilypress.co.uk
Twitter: @HenninghamPress
Instagram: @henninghampress
Facebook: facebook.com/HenninghamPress


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Spondylux Press

Spondylux Press

Spondylux Press

Spondylux Press is an award-winning independent neurodivergent publisher run by actually autistic professionals to support neurodivergent authors and promote inclusion, creativity, sustainable living and future technology, and social change.

Based in London, with over 60 years combined publishing, design and media experience, we also offer personalised industry guidance, full editing and book design services to underrepresented/disabled writers.

Website: www.spondyluxpress.com
Email: editor@spondyluxpress.com
Twitter: @spondyluxpress
Instagram: @spondyluxpress
Facebook: facebook.com/SpondyluxPress


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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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Deixis Press

Deixis Press

Deixis Press

Deixis Press was founded in 2021 by Angel Belsey. Angel began her publishing career in 2016, working both as an editor and as a literary agent. She believes some books just need to be read. She is based in London.

Angel runs a newsletter about the day-to-day operation of the press.

Website: deixis.press
Bluesky: @deixispress.bsky.social
Twitter: @DeixisPress
Instagram: @deixispress
Facebook: facebook.com/DeixisPress
YouTube: YouTube Channel

 

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

I started Deixis Press in April 2021 and published my first two books in September and October of that year. I now have books 9 and 10 coming out this autumn.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

I started working as a literary agent just a few months before Covid happened, and in that strange time throughout 2020 I found it tricky to build relationships with acquiring editors: people were furloughed, they lost momentum, nobody liked meeting people on Zoom then, and so on. I stopped agenting because, in combination with the pressures of lockdown and homeschooling, I found that I was not capable of giving my clients the service they deserved–but I also very much wanted their books to be in the world. Then I realized I didn’t need anyone else’s permission to make that happen, so I started my own press and did exactly what I wanted to do.

What genres do you specialise in?

I have one criterion for any book I publish: It has to tell a fucking great story. Genre is irrelevant. My list has everything from historical fiction to technothrillers to food-based feminist short stories.

Where are you based?

London, UK

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

Right now my list is small and full, with a handful of previous viable submissions still pending. I thought I might open submissions again this autumn, but now I probably will not until Spring 2024.

What is your submission procedure?

I like to look at the first 10k words, then call in the full MS. I’m just one person so it does take me a while to give every manuscript the attention it deserves before making a decision. I have deeply enjoyed all of the submissions I’ve received, and it is so gutting not to be able to take on every single book I enjoy. But any book I do take on has to be something I genuinely love. I can’t afford to take on every book that is simply very good. I wish I could; my list would be enormous!

Angel Belsey

Angel Belsey

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

I’m Angel Belsey. My team photo is a selfie.

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

I had a previous career in IT (including in the Civil Service) that ended in 2016 when my maternity leave was grossly mishandled by someone who now handily serves as the villain in my own draft MS (hi Lisa!). At that point I did a work experience stint at a major publisher, which led to freelance editorial work at various places including several large publishers and an editorial consultancy, for whom I also manage a yearly novel prize. As I mentioned before, I also worked as an agent briefly. So I had experienced publishing from a number of viewpoints without ever really being in the thick of the action. But I am now also doing a maternity cover role for a commissioning editor at the same large publisher where I started 7 years ago with that work experience piece.

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

The first book I published is called SOME RISE BY SIN by an author called Sion Scott-Wilson. It’s about a pair of Regency graverobbers who are good men in bad jobs. They want to leave the business, but they get wind of a project that’s potentially too lucrative to pass up: they need to acquire a very special, very particular newly-dead body. And, as happens with all of these kinds of schemes, a lot goes wrong when they decide to take this one last chance. It’s beyond incredible; Alan Moore read it and said that Sion is a storyteller after his own heart (he has blurbed for the sequel, too, as well as for one of my other historical fiction books). But because it was my first book, it also suffered from all of my mistakes as a fledgling publisher. I want everyone to read this book! There’s even an audiobook for it–I can’t afford to do those all the time, but I experimented with this and one other.

I’ve got two upcoming books this autumn: both horror, but in two different ways. On Halloween we’ve got Richard Gadz’s new supernatural horror, THE BURN STREET HAUNTING, set in a grimy 1970s London from which there is literally no escape. A small-time crook is on the run from not only the law but also a horror that has chased him since childhood, one that has emerged out of his mind and into reality. And in November we have Marc Joan’s second book, THE CARTOON LIFE AND LOVES OF A STUPID MAN, about an independent comic book store owner/heir to a pharmaceutical fortune, whose struggles with mental illness mean that he relies on his wife, an outwardly successful surgeon who has her own haunting secrets. Their fragile world begins to crumble when an anonymous comic strip begins arriving at his store, featuring a character with an eerie resemblance to him…


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Open Space Books

We are a small, quixotic indie book publisher, and you find us at the beginning of our journey.

We are an independent publisher from the North of England. In 2021 we published ‘Where Lay May Homeward Path,’ selected stories by Edward Thomas, a writer revered for his poetry but forgotten for his fiction. We believed that we had put together a small collection of neglected treasures and set out to champion this slender but sublime body of work. We released a limited edition of hardback books handmade by ourselves in North Yorkshire.

This year (2023), we moved onto the next stage of our indie publishing adventure: a paperback edition that is now available in bookshops such as The Grove in Ilkley and The Stripey Badger, Grassington. Copies are also available now from our online shop, and a Kindle version is available here now, and a Kobo version is available here.

Of course, we are preparing to release new titles soon. Please feel free to return to this website over the next few months to see how things unfurl.

Website: www.openspacebooks.co.uk
Twitter: @OpenSpaceBooks

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

I began during lockdown but with handmade books – this year is the first time we have mass produced paperbacks.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

First of all – and however silly it sounds – I needed an adventure, and this was ideal. It was a chance to publish work that excited me; to search out forgotten authors; to champion new ones and to create a space in which my own work (specialising in pre-cinema history) could be published with complete creative freedom – what could be better than that?!

I’m guided by the spirit of quixotic companies such as the old Olympia Press, the Shakespeare & Co bookshop and Tony Wilson’s Factory Records in Manchester.

Where Lay My Homeward Path

Where Lay My Homeward Path

What genres do you specialise in?

There is no brief, no criteria, no limit to what we will take on.

Our first book was a collection of short stories by Edward Thomas (far better known as a poet); our second is a novel about Eastern European refugees and the third will be my own non-fiction account of inventor, Wordsworth Donisthorpe’s, attempt to finance his final experiments in motion pictures through blackmail.

Where are you based?

We are based in a cottage on a hill in the village of Hebden in North Yorkshire.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We have nothing as organised as that. We have four books being prepared for publication and are simply unable to consider anything else for a while, I’m afraid.

What is your submission procedure?

See above. We don’t take unsolicited manuscripts. There is a real responsibility to authors not to make them wait on tenterhooks unnecessarily, not to raise their hopes etc so we would rather not stray into that area for now.

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

The project is effectively just me – although, as with everything I do, I wouldn’t get anywhere without the help and support of my partner, Tracie. I have researched and written each introduction to our books; put together the text blocks, designed the covers (with blurbs); done all the paperwork etc. It can be difficult keeping all these plates spinning but the upside is the creative freedom it gives you.

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

My background was as a writer and researcher. I co-wrote a feature length documentary released in 2016, and have written for magazines such as Cineaste, History Today and the Times Educational Supplement. There have been a variety of projects and publishing just seemed one more variation that combined a lot of things I had done previously.

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

I’d really like to mention Monica Stirling’s Sigh For A Strange Land at this point. It was first published in 1958 and is about refugees from an unnamed East European country. It is an absolutely lovely book, and with the events in Ukraine unfolding, it also feels incredibly timely. I want to mention Sigh for a couple of very specific reasons: the first is that we will use profits to help support a couple of charities providing humanitarian aid in Ukraine – we were there in 2016 and met with soldiers and charity workers who had been involved in the struggle since 2014 (when eastern parts of the country were first invaded). The second reason is that Monica Stirling was such a wonderful writer that it is criminal that she’s been forgotten. Her life was as dramatic as her work and we hope that by publishing this book, we will encourage a new generation of readers to discover her. We have had some incredible support from Monica’s surviving relatives who are not only excited about a new life for her work, but for the fact it is being put to use for a good cause. There is just a great deal of good feeling around this book and we are nervous and excited to see what becomes of it.


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FCM and Chronos Publishing

Two indies for the price of one, both owned by Taryn Johnston and based in Norwich. FCM Publishing is a non-fiction publisher specialising in non-fiction, whilst Chronos Publishing publishes fiction and life stories.

Website: www.fcmpublishing.co.uk
Website: www.chronospublishing.com
Twitter: @FCMTaryn @ChronosPublish
Instagram: @chronos_publishing
Facebook: @ChronosPublishing

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

I started with FCM Publishing in 2014 and launched Chronos Publishing in 2019

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

I have always written and was actually published when I was 13 with a short story. I was asked if I would edit and proofread a novel and the company grew out of that.

What genres do you specialise in?

FCM Publishing specialises in non-fiction, primarily business books and also offers author services such as editing and formatting, Chronos Publishing is life stories and novels.

Where are you based?

We’re based in Lincoln.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

Not a rigid one, although we don’t take submissions between November and January.

What is your submission procedure?

Chronos is a traditional publisher and therefore it’s a formal process of a printed, completed manuscript with synopsis and covering latter (SAE if you’d like it returned). FCM is less formal, I often chat to authors over email and will accept email submission of sample chapters.

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

I’m the main owner and I work with a team of editors, formatters and designers – all freelance.

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

My background is marketing (I also have a marketing agency and teach at uni) but as I mentioned earlier, I have always written and proofread.

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

I have been really lucky to work with some incredible authors and had some amazing success. Bob Champion MBE, Grand National Jockey and cancer surviving legend would be up there. We launched his autobiography in 2018, at the Grand National in Aintree. Parveen Ashraf, TV Chef from ITVs Parveen’s Indian Kitchen, I helped her create her recipe book in 2017 and it was the book that helped showcase her talent and get her the TV show, aired last year. Her book is now being sold around the world. Both Bob & Parveen’s books helped me establish myself as a reputable indie publisher and as a result, I’ve been able to see titles on the shelves in a number of Waterstones including London, Liverpool & Leeds, as well as our hometown Lincoln. Having a really good relationship with Gardners has been amazing for us.

We have released a number of terrific novels including one which we hope is going to be turned into a movie (although I can’t say which yet!) so exciting times there but the catalogue includes dystopian future, sci fi, horror, thrillers, YA fantasy, family sagas and romcoms! In our business books, Be Useful by Jos Burton was a finalist in the Business Book of the Year 2018 and Rockstar Retirement was our first to be released as an audio book.

This year is looking very busy, I have co-written a business guide/memoire with Tony Robinson OBE and that’s being released this summer, which I’m really thrilled about, we have a couple of autobiographies, another business guide and four novels all due out this year!


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Renard Press

Renard Press

Renard Press

Since receiving this information from Renard Press to include on the website they’ve been steaming ahead publishing brilliant classics in absolutely beautiful covers and are always worth a look.

They are so beautiful I’ve just bought the George Orwell bundle, all I did was have a quick look at their website to check that everything was still OK but a great cover will always get me spending.

Website: https://renardpress.com
Facebook: @therenardpress
Instagram: @renardpress
Twitter: @renardpress

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

Renard Press officially launched in June 2020; our first titles – Phillis Wheatley (poems and a memoir), A Room of One’s Own (Virginia Woolf), Dracula’s Guest (Bram Stoker), Bars Fight (Lucy Terry Prince) and A Letter to a Hindu (Leo Tolstoy) – will be published in October and November, and then we will publish a title a month from January 2021.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

Having worked in independent publishing for the best part of a decade, I’ve been constantly amazed by the resilience of the sector. However, particularly in independent publishing, I think there’s a need for more diverse, more niche lists of books to flesh out the literary canon, and, having learnt or taught myself many of the processes needed in a modern publishing house, I thought it was time I set up Renard.

What genres do you specialise in?

Renard Press publishes classic fiction and non-fiction, theatre and poetry, as well as some contemporary titles.

Where are you based?

Given that the launch is in the middle of a pandemic, we’re currently working from home, but Renard is a London-based press.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We’re open to unsolicited manuscripts.

What is your submission procedure?

We’re currently considering both non-fiction and fiction with a literary bent; we aren’t currently commissioning poetry, as we don’t yet have the right context, but look forward to welcoming poetry submissions in the future. In order to spare a few trees, we do ask that all submissions are sent via email, and we ask that a completed cover letter is sent to tell us what we need to know, and to help us in anonymising submissions.

Who are you (team photo if possible)? and what was your background in the book industry before this venture?

The Press is headed up by Will Dady, who was previously editor and designer at Alma Books, and before that, he worked for the academic press Frontinus, as well as the London-based independent Serif Books.

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

By way of a nod to one of the greatest pioneers in independent publishing – and one of the Publisher’s heroes – we’ll be starting off our classics list with A Room of One’s Own. Since we are launching in October 2020, which is Black History Month, we’re publishing two titles by African-American authors: Bars Fight, a ballad, the first known work by an African-American author, and the poems of Phillis Wheatley, along with a memoir, which includes the first volume of poetry by an African-American author ever published. From there on, we’ve got the next eleven titles picked out, which consist of some lesser-known works by literary giants, as well as some by undeservedly forgotten authors, including Saki, Oscar Wilde, Bram Stoker and Leo Tolstoy, as well as neglected greats, such as Aphra Behn, the Restoration playwright (and spy), who was the first woman to earn a living by her pen. In Aphra’s words, ‘Variety is the soul of pleasure’.


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Fly on the Wall Press

Fly on the Wall Press

Fly on the Wall Press

Fly on the Wall Press first came to my attention after I bought ‘Small Press Publishing: The Do’s and Dont’s’ a great little book on the intricacies of small press publishing.

Based in Manchester they have a great back catalogue to explore, which is always a danger to someone like myself who loves pamphlets and chapbooks.

Website: https://www.flyonthewallpress.co.uk/
Twitter: @fly_press
Facebook: @flyonthewallpress
Instagram: @flyonthewall_poetry

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

Fly on the Wall Press started in 2018 with a mental health anthology, Please Hear What I’m Not Saying, with profits going to UK charity, Mind. From then, we established ourselves as a publisher with a conscience, publishing poetry books, cross-genre anthologies, magazines, and short story collections, all with a socially conscious message. We pride ourselves on working with charities across the UK for our anthologies and publishing international talents.

What genres do you specialise in?

We specialise in poetry, short stories and flash fiction also a political message also shall conscience.

Where are you based?

We are based in Manchester, UK.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We have a submission period in the autumn, usually opening in August to November.

What is your submission procedure?

We look for short story collections and poetry collections with a social conscience and asked the people of bought a book from the past year in our shop. This really helps people understand what we are looking for and also helps to for us as a small press so that we can go on to publish more people every year.

Who are you (team photo if possible)? and what was your background in the book industry before this venture?

Team wise it varies – occasionally I have some interns working behind the scenes, but mostly it is just me and a very supportive family (for example, Sarah Jane Kenyon regularly proofreads our books!)

My background in the book industry before this venture was non-existent, simply because I have never been given the opportunity. That’s why I wrote the non-fiction book Small Press Publishing: The Dos and Don’ts, because I wanted to give people information that they needed to start a small press which I had to work out myself.

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

Anthology Planet in Peril will always have a special place in my heart. It was shortlisted for Best Anthology – Saboteur Awards 2020 and consists of Photography, Art and Poetry. 20% of the profits from this book are donated to The Climate Coalition and WWF.Blurb: When the sciences and the arts begin to work together, a powerful force is created. This anthology was founded upon the belief that words have the power to change. Through poetry, photography and art, creatives across the globe, from the age of 8 to 80, have united to express the urgency of global warming, facing the facts but never losing hope.Foreword by Dr Michelle Cain, Science and Policy Research Associate, Oxford University. Featuring Emily Gellard Photography and a commissioned poem by Helen Mort. In July 2020 we are publishing Louise McStravick’s ‘How To Make Curry Goat’, which is a wonderful celebration of identity as the daughter of a windrush generation – is she English, is she Jamaican, does her accent qualify Brummy? A Slam winner, Louise is no stranger to the stage and I hope that by that point later in the year we will be able to launch her collection in person.


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Heroic Books

Heroic

Heroic

Heroic Books is a publisher of Fantasy fiction, combining great stories with wonderful images. They represent writers and illustrators in a tradition manner and in other innovative ways.

Website: ​www.HeroicBooks.com
Facebook: ​@HeroicBooks
Instagram: @HeroicBooks
Twitter: @HeroicBooks
For any enquiries relating to submissions, please contact ​harriet@heroicbooks.com
For any enquiries relating to sales or marketing, please contact ​elliot@heroicbooks.com

In their own words…

When did you start publishing & what made you want to start an independent publisher?

Heroic Books was founded in 2020 in response to what we perceived to be a lack of opportunity for emerging authors in the genres of fantasy and science fiction. We want to develop the work of our authors beyond the page, harnessing the power of digital media such as film, TV, games and audiobooks, to share our authors’ stories as widely as possible, reach new audiences, and build a global network of Heroic fans and writers.

What genres do you specialise in?

We specialise in fantasy and science fiction, both of which lend themselves really well to our transmedia strategy. Working with illustrators, narrators, and other creatives, we aim to bring exciting new worlds to life through a variety of media, as well as ensuring that every novel we publish reaches its full potential.

Where are you based?

Heroic Books is based in Liverpool, UK, but has staff, board members and stakeholders based across the UK, the US and China.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We have an open call for submissions of fantasy and science fiction novels, and we are currently reading for our 2022 publishing schedule.

We are also currently seeking submissions of short stories for our forthcoming fantasy anthology, ​The Hero’s Journey​, which will feature both emerging authors and established voices from across the fantasy genre. This submissions window is open until Friday 14th May (this is a few years old now).

What is your submission procedure?

For our regular submissions window, details of how to submit can be found at www.heroicbooks.com/manuscript​. For short story submissions for ​The Hero’s Journey anthology, head to ​www.heroicbooks.com/herosjourney​.

Crucially, for each of these submissions windows, authors do not need to be represented by a literary agent to submit their manuscript for consideration.

Who are you?

Heroic Books was co-founded by Helen Blakeman and Chris Arnold, and is run by an experienced team of creatives and publishing professionals from across the country.

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

Helen is a BAFTA and International Emmy award-winning writer and Chair of the BAFTA Children’s Committee, while Chris is an entrepreneur and businessman, having founded Camp Leaders, Smaller Earth and World Merit.

Despite not coming from book publishing backgrounds, Helen and Chris are both passionate about finding new, innovative ways of telling stories and pushing the boundaries of what traditional publishing can achieve.

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

We’ll be making announcements about our forthcoming titles very soon! In the meantime, to be the first to find out any news or announcements, keep an eye on our social channels and subscribe to our mailing list by following the link below: https://heroicbooks.us2.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=2a593e3d49cdd245408be2e60&id=8 1520c41f4


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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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Little Toller

Little Toller

Little Toller

Little Toller Books was born in 2008 as an imprint of the Dovecote Press, a family-run publishing company that has specialised in books about rural life and local history since 1974. Little Toller was started with a singular purpose: to revive forgotten and classic books about nature and rural life in the British Isles.

The success of Little Toller’s Nature Classics has enabled it to grow into an independent publisher, attuned to writers and artists who seek inventive ways to reconnect us with the natural world and to celebrate the places we live in.

Little Toller is based in Dorset, published Dara McAnulty to great acclaim last year, decided to open a bookshop in 2020 (which can be visited at 2 Church St, Beaminster DT8 3AZ) and they can be contacted at:

Website: littletoller.co.uk
Facebook: facebook.com/littletoller
Twitter: @littletoller
Instagram: littletollerdorset
Telephone: 01308 488930

In their own words…

When did you start publishing?

2009, so 2019 marks our tenth anniversary – something we’re hoping to celebrate all year, with independent bookshops.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

Gracie and Adrian Cooper, our founders, moved to Dorset- Gracie grew up in the county and her father is David Burnett, who founded and still runs Dovecote Press, which specialises in Dorset history. When Gracie and Adrian arrived they found that they wanted to read books about Dorset and rural life more generally, but many of the classics were either out of print, or were languishing on other publishers’ backlists, somewhat unloved. So they decided to right this wrong, and began by publishing three books – by Edward Thomas, Adrian Bell and Clare Leighton, with new introductions by contemporary writers and beautiful new jackets, all in the spirit of the early editions. These books formed the basis of our Nature Classics Library and are still the backbone of our list.

What genres do you specialise in?

We specialise in books about nature, landscape, place, rural life and culture. From our nature classics we’ve expanded into publishing books by contemporary authors, on a range of subjects – from Marcus Sedgwick writing about Snow to Tim Dee on gulls, or new writers like Alex Woodcock on becoming a stone-mason.

Where are you based?

We’re based in the tiny hamlet of Toller Fratrum in West Dorset. Our location has been very important to us as a publisher, it helps inform the sort of books we publish.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We publish books all year round, so no. We also publish an online journal for new writing from established and emerging voices, The Clearing.

What is your submission procedure?

We accept manuscripts from authors directly, or through agents.

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

We are Adrian Cooper, who is the publisher and editor in chief, Gracie Cooper, who is co-founder and who specialises in working with artists and designing our books, a vital part of our publishing, Graham Shackleton who lays out all our books and who also looks after our website and does all our photography for it, and Jon Woolcott who looks after sales, marketing and publicity. But as we’re such a small team – and most of us work part-time – we tend to overlap with each other’s jobs.

What’s your background in the book industry?

Adrian and Gracie were new to books when they founded Little Toller, and began the business in the teeth of a terrible recession, with the book business in the doldrums. Jon has had a long career in books, always on the retail side and has held a variety of shops at many levels. Graham was a photographer (albeit one with two degrees in IT) but also worked on the Bridport Book Prize.

Talk about some of your books if possible? and future projects/dreams if you can?

We’re hugely proud of our authors and the books they’ve written for us. We mentioned a few above but we also publish Horatio Clare, who’s recent book for us Something of his Art, about Bach and the long walk he took across Germany in the winter of 1705 was a big success. We’ve published Adam Thorpe and Iain Sinclair previously, as well as the poet Fiona Sampson (writing on limestone country) and John Burnside. We have two anthologies currently – Arboreal, a collection of essays about woodlands, and Cornerstones, based on the Radio Three series. This year, in addition to King of Dust, we have books from Paul Kingsnorth, Sara Maitland, Peter Marren on the stories behind the names of moths and butterflies. Excitingly, next year we’re publishing the first book by the 14-year-old naturalist and environmental campaigner Dara McAnulty (and we all know how that turned out 🙂 )


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b small publishing

b small publishingOur business is 100% LGBT and women owned. We are committed members of Inclusive Minds and have signed up to their charter, EVERYBODY IN! This means that we work hard to make sure our business and our books are as inclusive of diversity as possible. If you think we can do better, get in touch and let us know.

Submissions: “Please note that we create and commission all of our titles in house and as such we are not open to submissions. Thank you for thinking of us!”

Telephone: +44 (0) 20 8892 7937
Email: websales@bsmall.co.uk
Website: b small publishing
Twitter: @bsmallpub
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bsmallpublishing/
Instagram: @bsmallpublishing

In their own words

When did you start publishing?

We first started publishing in the early 1990s, originally producing creative high-quality activity books for the Early Learning Centre, before starting to publish bilingual books focusing on first words in English, French and Spanish.

What made you want to start publishing?

Our founder, Cath Bruzzone, started her career as a French teacher before moving into publishing. Cath worked at Pan creating and marketing, among other things, language learning books and CDs for adults and children, promoting her passion for learning a foreign language. Our publisher, Sam Hutchinson, worked in an after-school club for kids as a student where he saw the positive effect a well-made information book can have on a child. Publishing combines his passion for finding things out with his passion for telling people about them!

What do you specialise in?

We specialise in foreign language learning and creative, hands-on information books for kids.

Where are you based?

We are based in Twickenham.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We create everything in-house and so do not accept submissions.

Who are you?

We are Cath and Sam, (co-directors and owners), Vicky Barker (Art director) and a small team of freelancers, authors and illustrators.

Sam and Cath Doodle

What is your background in the book industry?

Between them, Cath, Sam and Vicky have lots of years of experience and have worked at Pan, HarperCollins and Usborne.

Talk about some of your books if possible?

This past year has been great for us, with some truly wonderful books published and lots of awards!

Our spooky sensation Real- Life Mysteries (by Susan Martineau and Vicky Barker) won the Blue Peter Book award for ‘Best book with facts’, The Histronauts: An Egyptian Adventure (by Frances Durkin and Grace Cooke) won the NSTBA Information book category, and to top it all off, we’ve also published a brand new language learning series, Hello Languages!

Update!!!

Since sending in their information b small publishing have made it into the Regional Shortlist for a Nibbie, in The British Book Awards new category for Small Press of the Year. Congratulations!


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Centre for British Documentary Photography

HumanityAt the Centre for British Documentary Photography our aim is to inspire and inform the viewer, making available quality documentary images through our online galleries and printed media.

From the outset our aim is to showcase the most relevant documentary photographers be they established names or just emerging. We will endeavour to find and promote the overlooked documentary image makers from Britain and give them and their photographs the space they deserve. In the future we hope to open a gallery space and publish select works from the photographers that are able to be a part of the Centre for British Documentary Photography.

Website: www.centreforbritishdocumentaryphotography.co.uk/
Twitter: @CBDP_Images
Instagram: @the_cbdp
Facebook: facebook.com/CentreforBritishDocumentaryPhotography

Humanity Crowdfunder Advert

In their own words

When did you start publishing?

Way back in 1998.

What made you want to start an independent publisher?

There was and is a need, if we are to look beyond the famous names and obvious stories. Initially I was inspired by the early Surf Magazines. Many of these were actually pure reportage and very nicely designed.

What genres do you specialise in?

Today I concentrate on Bouldering Guide Books and more importantly, Humanity, which is a documentary magazine that fuses concerned photojournalism and the written word.

Where are you based?

Gloucestershire, England.

Do you have a submission window, if so when?

We are always open to submissions, but tend to make approaches, and photographers on the CBDP platform make up 75% of the content.

What is your submission procedure?

Send one image via Wetransfer a block of text and website link.

Who are you (team photo if possible)?

I am essentially a one man band.

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

I created and published 4 successful bouldering guide books before the Humanity venture.

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

Issue 1 of Humanity is a favourite as I had to pull everything together from scratch and worked with total strangers, yet somehow it all came together really well and it sold out. Designing a documentary magazine with such important imagery was an honour and ambition realised all in one. Issue 2 is looking even better.


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