Seven Stories Press
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Seven Stories Press is an independent publishing company located in New York City that concentrates on fiction and "timely, informative nonfiction." Considering to be a left-leaning publishing house, the nonfiction of Seven Stories Press often focuses on controversial current events with emphasis on U.S. foreign policy, civil, labor, and human rights, pacifism, feminism, and social justice.
From 1997 to 2005, Seven Stories Press published the "Open Media series," a series of books, pamphlets and treatises cofounded in 1991 by Greg Ruggiero in opposition to the first Gulf War. The series is now published by City Lights Books where Ruggiero works as editor.
[edit] Fiction authors published by Seven Stories
- Nelson Algren
- Kate Braverman
- Octavia Butler
- Harriet Scott Chessman
- Assia Djebar
- Ariel Dorfman
- Martin Duberman
- Alan Dugan
- Annie Ernaux
- Barry Gifford
- Stanley Moss
- Peter Plate
- Charley Rosen
- Ted Solotaroff
- Lee Stringer
- Martin Winckler
- Kurt Vonnegut
[edit] Nonfiction authors and groups published by Seven Stories
- Daw Aung San Suu Kyi
- Eqbal Ahmad
- Tom Athanasiou
- David Barsamian
- Boston Women's Health Book Collective
- Center for Constitutional Rights
- Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting
- Noam Chomsky
- Angela Davis
- Elizabeth Ewen
- Stuart Ewen
- Shere Hite
- Robert McChesney
- Phil Jackson
- Derrick Jensen
- Ralph Nader
- Gary Null
- Benjamin Pogrund
- Project Censored
- Luis J. Rodriguez
- Arundhati Roy
- Barbara Seaman
- Vandana Shiva
- Leora Tanenbaum
- Koigi wa Wamwere
- Gary Webb
- Howard Zinn