Saqi Books

Saqi Books is an independent publishing house in London, UK, publishing titles that encompass different disciplines from politics, history and gender studies to culture, art and travel.[1] Saqi Books' sister company Dar al-Saqi is based in Beirut, Lebanon.[2]

History

Saqi Books was co-founded in 1984 by author and feminist Mai Ghoussoub[3] to publish academic and general interest books on the Middle East and North Africa.

More recently, Saqi Books launched two imprints: Telegram[4] in 2005 – a list for international fiction by writers including Maggie Gee, Dubravka Ugresic, Alberto Manguel, Eduardo Mendoza, Julio Cortazar, Ferenc Karinthy and Hassan Daoud – and in 2012 the Westbourne Press,[5]a non-fiction imprint that has published titles such as Reza Aslan's Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth,[6] Eric Berkowitz's Sex and Punishment: Four Thousand Years of Judging Desire[7] and Superman is an Arab by Joumana Haddad.[8]

On Saqi's 21st anniversary in 2004, The Independent praised the publisher for "issuing titles that stimulate and challenge - books with 'editorial audacity'."[9]

In 2008 Saqi Books held its 25th anniversary celebration at Kensington Town Hall featuring musician Brian Eno, Turkish author Moris Farhi and British author Maggie Gee.[3]

Saqi Books received the Arab British Culture and Society award and the British Book Industry Award for Diversity in Literature in 2008 and 2009 respectively,[10] and the IPG Diversity Award in 2013.[11]

Recent prominent Saqi titles include A Concise History of the Arabs (2014) by John McHugo and Syria Speaks: Art and Culture from the Frontline, edited by Malu Halasa, Zaher Omareen and Nawara Mahfoud.[12]

The Saqi Bookshop is located in central London on 26 Westbourne Grove.

Notes

External links

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