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Small Press

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  Messages 24-22 deleted by topic administrator between 06-25-2008 02:27 AM and 05-15-2010 02:01 AM
21
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20
Deleted by topic administrator 05-15-2010 02:01 AM
19
BookninjaPerson was signed in when posted
06-22-2005
06:56 AM ET (US)
University presses: in no danger

University presses are publishing plenty of books and doing well-enough by sticking to their niche guns.


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18
BookninjaPerson was signed in when posted
06-07-2005
06:45 AM ET (US)
DIY

Book-binding made easy, with photo blog. (From BoingBoing)


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17
BookninjaPerson was signed in when posted
06-06-2005
01:04 PM ET (US)
Real Chicklit

None of this how many boys can I slew with one come hither look books. Chicklit by real chicks, I mean. Are we destined for small press?

"People don't sell us rights without having tried the big houses first. So most of these books have been turned down by quite a few editors before they come to us," he said.

"The big publishers are cutting back on the number of titles they publish. They are counting more and more on big books that their marketing people think can sell a shedload of copies. They've become more conservative, which is good news for us."

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Edited 06-06-2005 01:05 PM
16
BookninjaPerson was signed in when posted
05-26-2005
07:17 AM ET (US)
Chapbook press article

What a strange little article in what looks like an alt weekly from SF. Still nice to see it. (From Bookslut)


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15
BookninjaPerson was signed in when posted
05-13-2005
06:57 AM ET (US)
Nifty zine show

BoingBoing points us to a zine show in an art gallery. The hanging room is hot.


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14
BookninjaPerson was signed in when posted
05-03-2005
06:59 AM ET (US)
The state of the chapbook

Very interesting piece on the importance of chapbooks. Lady Ninja has the only other interesting essay on this subject that I've ever read. When it's finally published in some musty sociology journal, I'll see if she'll let me reprint it here. Let me rephrase that: I'll beg her to let me reprint it here. (From Moby)


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13
BookninjaPerson was signed in when posted
04-10-2005
10:49 PM ET (US)
Small presses, big business

Apparently everything we've ever learned about small presses was wrong. They're lighting their stogies with c-notes, baby.

Abraham said that traditional studies released by the study group, the Association of American Publishers and others assume that the solid majority of book sales comes from the larger organizations, with the top 50 making at least $20 billion out of a $28 billion market. Wednesday's report, titled "Under the Radar," asserts that the industry is both larger and less concentrated than previously believed.


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12
DJWPerson was signed in when posted
04-08-2005
01:27 AM ET (US)
I'd subscribe to that one (though by placing a standing order, at a 40% discount, one might be able to contribute a bit more and get some pretty damned good books in the bargain. I've done so for a couple years, and have regretted nary a dime). Losing PQ will be catastrophic: they publish the best literart fiction in the country, and are one of the few presses willing to publish books of Canadian literary criticism. This, in some ways, is an even more important contribution. And CNQ is one of the few sane outposts in the Atwoodian wilderness. Compare their backlist over the last 20 years to any other press: Ray & Russell Smith, Heighton, Lyon, Winter, Ormsby, Starnino, Helwig, Adderson, English, Norman Levine, Blaise, Page, Rooke, Griggs. Metcalf, obviously. And we're just scratching the surface.
11
Deleted by author 03-31-2005 02:13 PM
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