Q&A: Meg Reid Leads Hub City
The new executive director of Hub City Writers Project shares her vision for HCWP, emphasizing values of regionality, accessibility, and transparency.
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The new executive director of Hub City Writers Project shares her vision for HCWP, emphasizing values of regionality, accessibility, and transparency.
Bill Henderson founded Pushcart Press with one goal: to empower overlooked writers to publish their own work. Fifty years later, Pushcart is still elevating independent publishers and authors with its annual prize anthology.
The author of Martha Moody celebrates the creative freedom of small-scale indie publishing.
A teaching press based at High Point University in North Carolina that launched early this year aims to feature experimental poetry, fiction, and translation that “maintains a connection to human experience.”
The New York City press annually publishes six to eight books of fiction and nonfiction “by feminists, for everyone.”
The small press annually publishes four chapbooks of “formally strange or conceptually bizarre” prose.
The New Orleans press publishes four or five poetry titles a year in an eclectic range of styles.
After more than forty years of publishing innovative poetry, Ahsahta Press will shutter in June 2020.
Unnamed Press, an L.A.–based press, aims to publish story-driven books by underrepresented or marginalized voices.
The University of Cincinnati Press imprint publishes books of poetry and fiction that continue the successes of its affiliated literary journal, the Cincinnati Review.