Peepal Tree Press, based in England, publishes Caribbean, Black British and South Asian fiction, poetry and academic books.
Peepal Tree is a wholly independent company, founded in 1985, and now publishes around 30-40 books a year. Peepal Tree Press has published over 250 titles, and states a commitment to keeping them in print on their website[1]. The list features new writers and established voices. In 2009 the press launched the Caribbean Modern Classics Series, which restores to print important books from the 1950s and 60s[2]. Peepal Tree Press is part-funded by Arts Council England and was included in their 2011 National Portfolio.
Peepal Tree Press is recognised also for Inscribe and Young Inscribe, a writer development project which supports emerging writers of African & Asian descent in the Yorkshire region, which has included writers such as Khadijah Ibrahiim, Seni Seneviratne and Rommi Smith, who has been Writer in Residence for the Houses of Parliament, the BBC during the Commonwealth Games, BBC Music Live, the British Council at California State University in Los Angeles, and Keats House.
Peepal Tree Press' focus is 'on what George Lamming calls the Caribbean nation, wherever it is in the world'[3], though it is also concerned with Black British writing.
The press is based in Leeds in Yorkshire, part of the growing, independent publishing sector outside London. The head office is based at 17 King’s Avenue, in Burley, a rundown, multicultural part of Leeds.
Peepal Tree Press has published, in various forms, such writers as Emmy Award-winner Kwame Dawes, his father Neville Dawes, Aldeburgh Poetry Prize-winner and Forward Poetry Prize-nominee Christian Campbell, Christine Craig, Opal Palmer Adisa, Ishion Hutchinson, Dorothea Smartt, Alecia McKenzie, Courttia Newland, Jackie Kay and Kamau Brathwaite.