Pamphlet Publication in the UK
Pamphlets are becoming increasingly popular, for several reasons
- As objects they can afford to be more innovative than books.
- Some of the traditional book publishers are fading away.
- More people nowadays make a career from teaching writing and need publications for their CV. It can take years to assemble enough poems for a book. Pamphlets can be produced more frequently.
- A pamphlet needn't be padded with fillers like so many books are.
- Some "poetry books" are little more than expensive pamphlets - books by Picador etc can cost 9 pounds and contain 39 pages.
- The book world is dominated by Heaney and co. Pamphlets inhabit an alternative world of prizes and outlets, where commercialism doesn't dominate.
- Prizes now exist for pamphlets. The PBS promote them too
- The WWW offers a way to sell pamphlets. Spineless pamphlets were never popular with bookshops.
Don't think of pamphlets as an easy option, a way to publish sub-standard poems. To take just one example, "Skylight" by Carole Bromley (Smith/Doorstep 2009) has 1st prize winners from the Bridport and Yorkshire Open competitions as well as many other acknowledgements.
So how can you get your pamphlet published? Options include
- Mentoring - Fairly recently some mentoring schemes have started up (supported by Arts Council England) that scout for talent, provide help for a period and then offer the chance of publication. Smiths Knoll seek candidates from people who submit to their magazine. Faber have a network of talent scouts. tall-lighthouse have their pilot project
- Competitions - Templar (deadline May), Flarestack (deadline February), Iota (Ishots, deadline November) and The Poetry Business (Smith/Doorstep, deadline November) are amongst the organisations that run competitions.
- Publishers - Some publishers print pamphlets as well as books. There are some specialist pamphlet publishers. HappenStance's submissions 'window' has just opened. You can read their checklist of what factors they take into account. Some publishers print pamphlets as well as books. HappenStance have links to some poetry presses on their site.
If you live near Cambridge and you like pamphlets, drop into the Amnesty International bookshop on Mill Road. They have a wide selection of pamphlets in a drawer for you to rummage through.
What's clear from all this is that participating in the poetry scene and getting published in magazines helps significantly when you want a pamphlet published. In that respect, like many others, pamphlets are like books.
Read Issue: An Economy of Talents by Paul Maddern for more about UK poetry pamphlets. Carrie Etter has created a useful list of pamphlet publishers.
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