Justin Runge of Blue Hour Press talks about publishing digital-only chapbooks.
Adam Deutsch, editor for Cooper Dillon Books, a small poetry press in San Diego “founded on promoting and maintaining the values which make poems timeless,” offers insights into the world of small press publishing: “Someone who’s passionate will dig through the journals and presses to find what they love. It’s similar to the causal music fan and the DJ: the former is happy with the radio and the hot new release, while the latter will dig through crates and crates at the record stores, just to find a single cut then share it with everyone else. “
Editors from Slash Pine Press on the union of chapbook publishing and pedagogy and poems as spiral galaxies.
A Conversation with Chris Tonelli of poetry publisher Birds, LLC. “Small presses are able to employ guerilla tactics . . . because the only thing we’re trying to do is publish books we want out there and hope that there are enough people like us who will want to read them too.”
Conversation with Ben Spivey, editor for Warm Milk Press, a publisher of handmade chapbooks.
You Say