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Paths to Publication: Small Presses and University Presses

Image shows three roads to choose from.

It surprises me, and makes me a little sad, when I hear writers say they have given up on a book manuscript. Either they have an agent who has exhausted the traditional Big Five publishing houses (Hachette, HarperCollins, Macmillan, Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster), or they were unable to secure an agent in the first place, so never got into the running.

Sometimes their stories are like my own. Little, Brown and Company (owned by Hachette) published my first novel, Addled, but the book did not sell well enough for a second contract. And the Big Five are all about big sales.

But they are not the only path to publication. I discovered that the literary landscape is vast and deep, populated with editors focused on finding the next best book, rather than chasing the next best seller. I am talking about small presses and university presses.

It’s true: there is little money to be made on these paths. There are rarely advances and marketing is often spotty. But many writers need publishing for academic careers. For others, it is their art, not their income, that drives them — they just want to get their work out into the world. For writers like these, who are not focused on publishing purely for monetary gain, small presses could be ideal.

Small presses broaden this world by taking risks on innovative, quirky, or controversial material, and they often seek out under-represented or marginalized authors. Some presses even favor experimental forms, while others publish only poetry, novellas, or short fiction collections, all of which the Big Five consider unprofitable.

While the money may not be big, small presses and university presses have numerous advantages.

If a press charges an author for production costs, then that is hybrid or self-publishing. There are many legitimate hybrid and self-publishers, but be careful as there are scams out there.

Here’s the thing: read all guidelines closely.

Pay careful attention to what they publish, because each press has a particular vision. Many are non-profit and mission based.

Other small presses have magazines, and that is often where they find their authors. Press 53 has Prime Number Magazine. Ecotone, associated with the University of North Carolina, is a place-based lit mag with a publishing arm, Lookout Books, known for Binocular Vision, the award-winning story collection by Edith Pearlman.  

Some presses have a regional flavor like Hub City, which concentrates on the American South.

University Presses in particular help to preserve local culture by producing regional literature. They have always been important publishers of poetry as well, such as the University of Pittsburgh Press, but more and more they are accepting literary fiction and memoir.

What’s that, you say? You write true crime and no university press is going to publish that? I am here to tell you they do.

My recent book, Stamford ’76, A True Story of Murder, Corruption, Race, and Feminism in the 1970s, was recently published by the University of Iowa Press, and mine is not the only one on their list.

Do you do translations? Many university presses consider it part of their mission, such as Open Letter Books, the University of Rochester’s literary translation press. Other presses that publish translations are Autumn Hill Books and Black Lawrence Press. Dalkey Archive Press does both translations and reprints, maintaining the availability of culturally important books. One of my favorite novels is Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead, by Barbara Comyns, a book from the 50s reissued by Dorothy, a publishing project. Their list also has contemporary women writers, who they find through open reading periods.

Large presses publish hundreds of titles a year. A small press might put out fewer than ten, though a few manage to do more, such as Graywolf which puts out 30–35 books a year. Individually the numbers are small, but added together they are a powerhouse.

There are hundreds of small and university presses out there, each with its own specific tastes and criteria, one of which may well fit yours. Start a search at Poets & Writers,  Entropy, or Duotrope. Get to know the presses. Read their books, follow their authors, and expose yourself to some of the most engaging, timely, and edgy literature out there. Be part of the broader literary conversation.

 


JoeAnn Hart (WNBA-Boston) is the author of Stamford ’76: A True Story of Murder, Corruption, Race, and Feminism in the 1970s (University of Iowa Press, April, 2019), a crime memoir that weaves together the personal and public threads of a friend’s 1976 bow-and-arrow death. Her novels are Float (Ashland Creek Press, 2013), a dark comedy about plastics in the ocean, and Addled (Little, Brown, 2007), a social satire that intertwines animal rights with the politics of food. Her work, which also includes short fiction, articles, essays, and drama, often explores the relationship between humans and their environments, natural, or otherwise. 
 
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