Permanent Press
Founded1978
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationSag Harbor, New York
Fiction genresFiction, non-fiction
Official websitethepermanentpress.com

Permanent Press is an American independent book publisher. The press was founded by Judith and Martin Shepard in 1978 and is based in Sag Harbor, New York.[1] It also published through the Second Chance imprint, which releases books previously out of print.[1]

The press first brought the work of Nobel laureate Halldor Laxness to the United States. Its books and authors have won the American Book Award, Hammett Prize and Small Press Book Award, and have been finalists for the National Book Award, Edgar Award and Chautauqua Prize.

Among the publisher's best known books is The Hoax, Clifford Irving's account of his fraudulent interviews with Howard Hughes.[2]

Published authors include Mitch Cullin, Sandra Scofield, Chris Knopf, Jess Gregg, Marian Thurm, Berry Fleming, Richard Lortz Richard Lortz, William Herrick, and Joseph Stanley Pennell.

References

  1. 1 2 Beller, Peter C. "On a Shoestring, Turning Out Literary Gems," The New York Times. February 6, 2005.
  2. Nudd, Tim. Years Later, a Hoax Finally Pays Off. Adweek. Jan 19, 2007


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