#US Press & Publishing
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canon-in-too-deep · 3 months ago
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50 Free Typesets
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New achievement unlocked! I now have 50 public domain books/typesets available for FREE in my library! 🥳 Above is a collage of all 50 title pages.
What does this mean? It means that these classic books have been typeset (typographic, book design, layout work done), and are ready as pdfs that can be used to read, print out, book bind, or burn at your pleasure! (Just keep it to personal use only!)
The full list (with page sizes now noted) of all 50 books available can be found here on my tumblrary directory/masterlist (which will update as I add more), and below the break of this post!
Please please feel free to request access to my library (aka, yee good ol' googly drive). I usually respond within 24 hours, and they are indeed free! Just leave credit if you use, and consider liking/reblogging!
Also, if you find any errors in the files, let me know! I made these in Affinity, not with an AI program, and typos are natural spawns XD
From Frankenstein to Pride and Prejudice, to Sherlock Holmes to a dude that wakes up as a bug, I've been honored to be able to typeset these books and share them with all of you.
A part of me wants to ramble on about the behind the scenes and my continuing personal journey of amateur typesetting...but I think the most important thing I can say is simply thank you! to everyone that's stopped by! So thank you all! (And should I try for 100? 🤔 Hmmm...)
Warning! Wall of text below the break!
All 50 typesets available (some have alternate versions in library):
Persuasion by Jane Austen (Letter Folio)
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson (Letter Quarto)
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (Letter Folio)
The Merry Adventures of Robinhood by Howard Pyle (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie (Letter Folio)
Dracula by Bram Stoker (Letter Folio)
The Call of Cthulhu by H. P. Lovecraft (Letter Quarto)
The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde (Letter Folio)
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
The Invisible Man by H. G. Wells (Letter Folio)
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Letter Folio)
The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare (Letter Folio)
The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (Letter Folio)
The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
The Odyssey by Homer (Letter Folio)
Tales of Space and Time by H. G. Wells (Letter Folio)
The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton (Letter Folio)
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
The Book of Dragons by E. Nesbit (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare (Letter Folio)
Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky (Letter Folio)
Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne (Letter Folio)
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
Leave it to Psmith by P. G. Wodehouse (Letter Folio)
Lord Peter views the body by Dorothy L. Sayers (Letter Folio)
The Room in the Tower by E. F. Benson (Letter Folio)
Right Ho, Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse (Letter Folio)
The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (Letter Folio)
Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka (Letter Quarto)
Poirot Investigates by Agatha Christie (Letter Folio)
Grimms' Fairy Tales by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm (Letter Folio)
The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux (Letter Folio)
Andersen's Fairy Tales by Hans Christian Andersen (Letter Folio)
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving (Letter Quarto)
Shakespeare's Sonnets by William Shakespeare (Letter Folio)
The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe (Illustrated) (Letter Octavo)
Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery (Letter Folio)
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne (Letter Folio)
Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen (Letter Folio)
Notre-Dame de Paris by Victor Hugo (Letter Folio)
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë (Letter Folio)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum (Letter Folio)
The Blue Fairy Book (Font Sampler Edition) edited by Andrew Lang (Letter Folio)
A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Letter Folio)
Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott (Illustrated) (Letter Folio)
The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie (Letter Folio)
Emma by Jane Austen (Letter Folio)
Paradise Lost by John Milton (Letter Folio)
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that-butch-archivist · 9 months ago
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source: That's Ms. Bulldyke to You, Charlie! by Jane Caminos
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marieshyperf1xations · 6 months ago
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Jesus, with the comment sections whenever Lando's radio after he won is mentioned you'd think he kidnapped Jimmy and Sassy or key Max's car or something, just let the man have some fun
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bigcats-birds-and-books · 4 months ago
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Books of 2024: WOODWORM by Layla Martinez.
Up next! Still in my Haunted House Era™: Translated Lit Fic Edition!
The great thing about being on several indie bookstore mailing lists is that you then have Several Indie Booksellers recommending you new releases published by independent presses, which almost assuredly I would not have stumbled across on my own. This one's just a little guy (149 pages), but I've been looking forward to it all year. Will report back on how it goes!
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beeceit · 2 months ago
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I have a mighty desire to make some very impulsive decisions
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prythianpages · 7 months ago
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A Dad Az fic will be posted tomorrow 💚
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hehebread · 9 months ago
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about to throw this fic to the wall!!!!!!!!!!
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eastsidemags · 10 months ago
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Heartpiercer Signing w/ Rich Douek
Rich Douek is a local legend and an amazing comic writer.
He’s put out some stellar comics for publishers like IDW, Marvel, DC, Source Point Press, BOOM!, Mad Cave, Comixtribe and Aftershock! This guy has put out books with just about everyone in the biz!
Now, his LATEST book for Dark Horse is Hearpiercer:
Atala thought she was saving the world—but hunting the great beasts wound up dooming it. Betrayed by her lord, and left for dead, she awakes in a dark world overrun by nightmares, with a single mission on her mind: revenge.   A thrilling new dark fantasy tale from the minds of Rich Douek and Gavin Smith!
Come by Saturday, 5/25 between 2pm and 5pm and meet Rich, grab a copy of his newest book and maybe check out some of his previous works like Road of Bones (IDW), Gutter Magic (Source Point Press), Ocean Will Take Us (Aftershock) or Edge of Spider-Verse (Marvel).
Join us!
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happywebdesign · 2 years ago
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https://www.condenast.com/
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celestial-narwhal · 1 year ago
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Who does Jing Yuan belong to?
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The merchant hums, swirling the red wine he’s enjoying in his glass with a curious brow raised.
“That’s quite the curious question you’ve given me. Is there a reason why I should know the answer?”
He chuckles, sipping the red wine slowly, letting the liquid whet his tongue, all but teasing the flavor in his mouth.
“Seeing as you were so bold to query me, I suppose I’ll entertain an answer. If it had been anyone else, I’d say he belongs to no one but himself.”
He tilts his head, green eyes catching the low light just enough to give the illusion of them flickering.
“However, that would be a blatantly false statement. The General belongs to the Luofu. Never have I seen a more pitiful being so devout to the shackles that bind him. There is ample reason for me to see him as pitiful. My taunts are never without their truths.”
Setting down the wine glass in hand, not even the slightest clink to be heard, Luocha languidly rests his cheek on a hand, observing you with an amused smile.
“What? Disappointed in my answer? There’s hardly a reason to be. I sure hope you haven’t deluded yourself into believing that what we have is love. Whatever happens between the General and I, is transactional. The currency be it pleasure, intrigue, or information. This is the agreement we have both come to terms with.”
There’s a faint twitch to his fingers, a hint of hesitation, but only the most keen of eyes would notice as he continues politely on.
“I have made it blatantly clear to him I am not to be desired. If he falls despite my warnings, then that will be on his psyche, not mine. I will not deal with such trivial things such as love. Not anymore.”
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duckprintspress · 5 months ago
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Help Us Pick the Theme for Our Next Explicit Anthology!
Ever wondered how Duck Prints Press picks our anthology themes? The answer is…we don’t! Our Patrons do! Any backer on our Patreon, from $3/month on up, gets a say – and the current poll to pick our next theme is running right now!
Our twelfth anthology will be the second erotica collection. Our first, Many Hands: An Anthology of Polyamorous Erotica, crowdfunded over the summer and we will be completing campaign fulfillment within the next week, with the book to become available to the general public in mid-fall.
For this new set of short stories, we first chatted with folks on our private Press Discord, then the Press staff narrowed that down to a few specific ideas, and now we’re at the last step – where everyone who supports us gets a say!
No matter the outcome of the vote, our next anthology will feature…
stories about explicit sex with non-human creatures, monsters, and the like;
fully consensual liaisons;
unconventional genitalia (not required by highly encouraged);
happy endings; and
queerness!
But that’s not narrow enough to make an interesting thematic collection of stories, so that’s where our backers (and, perhaps, you!) come in. What are the choices for specific themes that are being voted on?
cottagecore (but explicit and with monsters!)
courtship and mating rituals (“how to woo your human”)
underwater settings and underwater creatures
your friendly neighborhood cryptid
ye older high fantasy monsterloving (fairytale/folklore/mythology-inspired encouraged!)
Honestly, I’m glad I don’t have to pick, because it’s a damn tough choice – they all sound awesome. But pick we must, and one will become the theme for our next anthology.
Already a backer? Don’t forget to vote! Not yet a backer? Become one today!
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xtruss · 10 days ago
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Trash Trumpet Isn’t A Narcissist – He’s A Solipsist. And It Means A Few Simple Things
The President Delights in Being Attacked, Since It Keeps the Focus on Him. The Press Should Handle Him Like Parents with an Ornery Child
— John R MacArthur | Saturday February 8, 2025
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‘Covering Trump, Like Bringing up Children, is an Art, Not a Science.’ Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP
Two weeks into the Trump administration, I’m still being asked by foreigners about the new president’s “political vision”.
Some of them, especially the French and the British, might be excused for excessive politeness toward a country that in many respects they still envy and admire. But on most of the news programs and podcasts to which I’ve been invited, I’m still encountering earnest interviewers struggling to understand Trump from a conventional political perspective, no matter how contradictory, irrational, or stupid his statements and actions may be. How can this be and what does it augur?
The investigative psychiatrist Robert J Lifton once explained to me that Trump is a solipsist, as distinct from the narcissist that he’s often accused of being.
A narcissist, while deeply self-infatuated, nevertheless seeks the approval of others and will occasionally attempt seduction to get what he wants (I think of the French president, Emmanuel Macron). For Trump the solipsist, the only point of reference is himself, so he makes no attempt even at faking interest in other people, since he can’t really see them from his self-centered position.
Trump’s absence of external connection is self-evident: his treatment of the “other” – from his own family to his tenants, his political rivals, the victims of the Los Angeles fires or the displaced people of Gaza – displays not only a lack of empathy, but also an emotional blindness. How else could he tease out loud about dating his own daughter, Ivanka? How else could he so cruelly insult former president Biden in his inauguration address, with Biden seated just a short distance away?
Trump’s solipsistic character was on full display on 20 January in the Capitol Rotunda. After stating, absurdly, that houses had burned “tragically” in Los Angeles “without even a token of defense”, the president seemed to turn philosophical and then appeared to ad-lib: “Some of the wealthiest and most powerful individuals in our country … they don’t have a home any longer. That’s interesting.”
“What Could Be Better For A Solipsist Than To Be Criticized Across The Full Spectrum of America’s Limited Ideological Bandwidth?”
I suppose it’s better than his reaction to a 2018 fire in Trump Tower that killed a resident, Todd Brassner. Trump’s tweeted response: “Fire at Trump Tower is out. Very confined (well built building). Firemen (and women) did a great job. THANK YOU!” No condolences for the dead man or his family. That’s also interesting.
None of this is to say that Trump’s policy directives don’t suggest disturbing political predilections that need to be discussed and challenged. He is the president, after all, not just a coldhearted landlord. His firing of 17 inspectors general, attempt to end birthright citizenship and temporary halt of “all federal financial assistance” are certainly causes for concern, and possibly alarm. So, also, are his threats to slap high tariffs on Canada and Mexico, friendly nations that normally are happy to kowtow to their vastly more powerful neighbor no matter who occupies the White House.
But this misses the point of Trump, malevolent though he may be. He delights in being attacked because it keeps him at center stage. What could be better for a solipsist than to be criticized across the full spectrum of America’s limited ideological bandwidth?
In an editorial, the New York Times denounced Trump’s “first assertions of executive power” that “blatantly exceed what is legally granted”. Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal ridiculed an unprovoked “trade war” that “will qualify as one of the dumbest in history”. Already, Trump has changed the script by “pausing” the tariff increases, but he got the Journal worked up enough to pay him a lot of attention. Federal judges blocked Trump’s two most obviously unconstitutional orders, but the Times still got into a dither about his threats to the constitution.
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‘Humor, sarcasm and ridicule can be useful tools, though as we learned from Barack Obama’s famous roast of Trump in 2011, they can also motivate the target to run for president.’ Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA
One can’t just ignore Trump’s blathering, but like parents dealing with an ornery child, editors, reporters and columnists need to temper reprimands and raised voices with self-restraint, calmness and even studied indifference. Humor, sarcasm and ridicule can be useful tools, though as we learned from Barack Obama’s famous roast of Trump in 2011, they can also motivate the target to run for president.
“Covering Trash Trumpet, Like Bringing Up Children, Is An Art, Not A Science.”
Of course, none of Trump’s tariff actions or anti-immigrant edicts will bring factories back from Mexico (the cheap labor and investment protections under our current trade agreement with Mexico and Canada are too good for a rational businessman to pass up). Neither will they quickly raise wages for working-class citizens, since creating a labor shortage through deportations will take much longer to affect pay scales than if Congress simply raised the federal minimum wage, or legalized the “illegals”. Also, ironically, Trump’s tariff threats and military border bluster may backfire and encourage fentanyl production to move to the United States from south of the border.
However, it’s a fair bet that Trump the solipsist doesn’t care if his policies fail to help the ordinary people who voted for him, and we anti-Trumpers should fear his supporters’ rage if they conclude that they’ve been duped by their hero. The backlash is more likely to be felt by liberals than by Trump, who will retreat safely to Mar-a-Lago and resume cheating at golf.
While I do tend to mock, rather than fear, Trump’s sound and light show, I don’t mean to make light of his most reckless impulses. There’s always collateral damage when somebody starts a war.
On the eve of the inauguration, in the Watergate Hotel, I attended the “Coronation Ball”, where “populist” and royalist rightwingers packed the Moretti Grand Ballroom to drink and dine on French champagne and red wine, as well as Gallic cuisine that included amuse-bouches. I was there at the invitation of an open-minded business consultant, an unfanatical Trump partisan who may not have understood that I wanted to cover the event, though he knows the world of journalism
It was indeed amusing to meet a guy wearing a Gen Douglas MacArthur button. So was hearing Steve Bannon’s rip-roaring speech, which flattered the black-tie and evening dress crowd as the “vanguard of a revolutionary movement” that was “just in the top of the first inning”. Bannon warned his rightwing Jacobins not to “flinch” or “question” Trump’s mission of ending “any of these forever wars” and accomplishing “the deportation of all 15 million illegal aliens”.
And when Bannon called for “no mercy, no quarter, no prisoners”, he apparently was including Rupert Murdoch and Fox News: “Murdoch sent a memo: ‘We’re going to make [Trump] a non-person’ … and [Trump] knew it. And he still came back like Cincinnatus from the plough, who saved his country.” (Bannon might have mentioned that the Roman patrician, according to legend, was twice dictator of the Republic, but I quibble.)
It wasn’t all amuse-bouches, however. Later in the evening, when the jazz band took a break, the far-right personality Jack Posobiec launched a diatribe against the cliques surrounding the former presidents Clinton, Obama and Biden, who, he said, would never return to power “because they’ll have to come through us”. Meanwhile, a lot of political prisoners would be freed, and not just the martyrs of January 6. “Derek Chauvin will be freed!” he declaimed.
Two guests in military dress uniforms standing nearby looked at me, laughing with incredulous astonishment. “You’re going to tell us who he is ?” one said. Once I found out from other journalists in the crowd that it was Posobiec – he of “stop the steal” fame and other conspiracy theories dear to Trump and Maga – I could better appreciate the foreign journalists’ difficulty understanding the president. With no political vision, no long-range goals, it’s quite possible that it never occurred to Trump to pardon George Floyd’s murderer. But now that an influential courtier has serviced the monarch with a concrete idea – an idea guaranteed to slake a solipsist’s thirst for attention – we should all be worried about the short-term whims of the king.
— John R MacArthur is President and Publisher of Harper’s Magazine
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martyncrucefix · 2 months ago
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'Muzzle' - a new poem for the New Year
Happy New Year to all. here's anew poem for the New Year
Happy New Year to all of you. We are hoping for the best aren’t we? Come rain, shine or named storm, the poems go on, saying something at least for the individual, the social, for careful consideration of the world out there, the world in here, and the languages we use. I’m posting a poem which has just appeared on New Year’s Day at the excellent Modron Magazine, its strap line is ‘Writing on…
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bigcats-birds-and-books · 2 years ago
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,..,,.,.do we think making an Impulse Purchase this saturday evening will Fix Me
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jtargaryen18 · 5 months ago
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Yes, I'm on TikTok now. If you're over there, let me know. I'll follow back 💕💕💕
PS I have NO IDEA what I'm doing. lol
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thewhumpyprintingpress · 1 year ago
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This is a friendly reminder to never, ever publish your book with a publishing company that charges you to publish with them. That is a vanity press, which makes money by preying on authors. They charge you for editing, formatting, cover art, and more. With most of these companies, you will never seen a cent of any royalties made from sale of your book. A legitimate publishing company only makes money when you make money, they will never charge you to publish with them. If a company approaches you and says "Hey, we'll publish your book, just pay us X amount of money," tell them to go fuck themself and block them.
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