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A few days ago, Pushkin Press was awarded the 2022 British Book Award for Independent Publisher of the Year. It was entirely deserved. The award comes as Pushkin Press, under Managing
Editor, India Edwards, and Publisher and Managing Director, Adam Freudenheim, celebrates its 25thanniversary and its most successful year yet. As _The Bookseller _pointed out, “The indie’s
numbers in Nielsen BookScan’s TMT nearly doubled, and adult sales rose faster than any other publisher in the Independent Alliance — powered by a literary rediscovery and a big
prize-winner.” Sales of Ulrich Boschwitz’s thriller, _The Passenger_,_ _set in Nazi Germany just after _ Kristallnacht _ , neared six figures in 2021 and gave the publisher its first _Sunday
Times _bestseller in both hardback and paperback. In addition,_ _David Diop’s _At Night All Blood in Black _won the 2021 International Booker Prize. _ The Passenger _ , in particular,_
_summed up many of the characteristic strengths of Pushkin Press. Since it was founded in 1997 it has championed a number of great central European and Soviet writers including Antal Szerb,
Stefan Zweig, Joseph Roth and Isaac Babel, as well as Boschwitz, who was virtually unknown before Pushkin commissioned Philip Boehm to translate _The Passenger_. Secondly, the stylish cover
by the Spanish illustrator Riki Blanco points to another of Pushkin’s strengths, the quality of their books’ design and covers. My personal favourites are the recent Stefan Zweig covers
(_Journeys_, 2010, and _Encounters and Destinies: A Farewell to Europe_, 2020), both designed by Nathan Burton, and Isaac Babel’s _Odessa Stories _(2016), cover illustration by Joe McLaren,
and Babel’s _Red Cavalry_ (2014), cover illustration by David Pearson. Finally, Pushkin are ambitious. They don’t just translate one book by a neglected author. They translated seven books
by Antal Szerb, three selections of Babel stories, all translated by Boris Dralyuk, and more than twenty books by Stefan Zweig. Pushkin Press is not the only leading independent publisher,
of course. Persephone Books, founded by Nicola Beauman in 1998, has reprinted almost 150 works of fiction and non-fiction, mostly by mid-20th century women writers, again with a distinctive
elegant look and a ‘fabric’ endpaper with matching bookmark. Titles include Helen Thomas’s moving memoir, _As It Was _and_ World Without End_ , Richmal Crompton ’s _Family Roundabout_ and
_Manja _by Anna Gmeyner. In addition, Persephone has commissioned new prefaces by well-known writers like Diana Athill, Nina Bawden, AS Byatt and Lucy Ellmann. Notting Hill Editions was
founded by the late Tom Kremer in 2009 and, again, the books have a stylish, distinctive look with quirky titles like _The Paradoxal Compass: Drake’s Dilemma_, _Brainspotting: Adventures in
Neurology, Frida Kahlo and My Left Leg _and _How Shostakovich Changed My Mind_. The books are short but pack a lot into a few pages. Dennis Marks’s _ Wandering Jew _ , a fascinating essay on
Joseph Roth, is arguably the best short introduction in English to one of the great writers of the 20th century. Carcanet Press, founded by Michael Schmidt and based in Manchester, is now
in its fifth decade. One of Britain’s best poetry publishers (authors include Gillian Clarke, Elaine Feinstein, John Ashbery, Michael Hamburger and Elizabeth Jennings), Carcanet also
publishes fiction and criticism and over the years has championed writers such as Christine Brooke-Rose, Anthony Burgess, Donald Davie, Frederic Raphael and Gabriel Josipovici as well as
classics like Ford Madox Ford. The independent publisher that has taken the world of fiction by storm is Fiztcarraldo Editions with its blue covers. Founded by Jacques Testard (formerly a
commissioning editor at Notting Hill Editions) in 2014, Fitzcarraldo has published a number of prizewinning authors. _Flight _(2018) by Olga Tokarczuk, was awarded the Man Booker
International Prize, and, more recently, _The Book of Jacob_ (2021), set in 18th century Poland, was shortlisted for the 2022 International Booker Prize. She also won the Nobel Prize in
2018. Joshua Cohen’ s novel _ The Netanyahus _ (2021) has just been awarded the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction as well as the 2021 Jewish Book Award. Fitzcarraldo also published _Secondhand
Time: The Last of the Soviets_ (2016), an oral history about the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the emergence of the new Russia, _ _ by Svetlana Alexievich, who was awarded the 2015
Nobel Prize. Founded in 2003, Comma Press specialises in short fiction and fiction in translation and is perhaps best known for _ Refugee Tales _ , edited by David Herd and Anna Pincus,_
_and for the last three years running was shortlisted by The British Book Awards for “Small Press of the Year” (North of England), winning the region in 2020. These independent publishers
have several things in common. They have mostly been founded recently and are small companies with a distinctive look, a passion for neglected writers, and several have hit the jackpot by
championing little-known foreign authors like Boschwitz, Szerb, Tokarczuk and Alexievich, at a time when there seems to be a growing appetite for central and east European writers and
authors from the early and mid-20 th century. The emergence of these small publishers is one of the most exciting developments in contemporary British culture. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We
are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to continue
publishing throughout the pandemic. So please, make a donation._