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Leviathan Press

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leviathan Press was the name of three different small press publishers — one based in San Francisco, one in Baltimore, and one in London.

Leviathan Press of San Francisco was known for co-publishing (with the Trotskyist publisher Pathfinder Press) Rius' Cuba For Beginners in 1970, a translation of Cuba para principiantes (1960). (The book made no particularly great impact, but eventually became the first title in the For Beginners series of graphic nonfiction books from Richard Appignanesi's Writers and Readers and later Icon Books.)[1][2]

Leviathan Press of Baltimore[3] was a publisher of Jewish-themed books on such topics as Purim, keeping kosher, and how Jewish culture shaped the American comic book superhero. The company operated from at least 1997 to 2014.

Leviathan Press of London, operated by Michael Hulse and David Hartnett, was a publisher of poetry books and the journal Leviathan Quarterly. The UK Leviathan Press operated from 2001 to 2004.[4]

Titles published (selected)

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San Francisco publisher

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  • Rius (1970). Cuba For Beginners. San Francisco: Leviathan Press; New York: Pathfinder Press.

Baltimore publisher

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London publisher

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References

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  1. ^ "The history of Introducing books". introducingbooks.com. Retrieved 2011-01-29.
  2. ^ "Our Story". For Beginners books. Archived from the original on October 16, 2014. Retrieved 2011-01-29.
  3. ^ J. CORRESPONDENT (November 23, 2001). "Ex-L.A. deejay turned rabbi pens a bestseller on parenting". J. The Jewish News of Northern California.
  4. ^ Kronen, Steve (September–October 2005). "Waywiser Press: The Small British Press That Publishes Big American Poets". Poets & Writers Magazine. ...a diminished U.K. poetry market, when other unsubsidized small presses — Michael Hulse's Leviathan Press, Anthony Rudolf's Menard Press, and David Perman's Rockingham Press, to name three — have called it quits.
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