Imprints Artisan In 1994 Peter Workman founded his second company, Artisan, with the mission to publish subjects that can best be expressed visually, whether through
photography,
illustration, or
graphic design. The company focuses on cooking, design, crafts and hobbies, and expanding the boundaries of general nonfiction. It seeks out authors who are thought-leaders and tastemakers, and works hand-in-hand with them to create physical books that are beautiful in their own right. Artisan's first significant bestseller was
Thomas Keller's
The French Laundry Cookbook, and recent
New York Times bestsellers include
The Noma Guide to Fermentation, Grace Bonney's
In the Company of Women,
John Derian Picture Book,
The Dogist,
The Kinfolk Home, and
The New Health Rules. Other notable authors include Sean Brock,
Cheryl Day,
Joshua McFadden,
Lucinda Scala Quinn, Einat Admony,
David Tanis, and
Naomi Duguid.
Algonquin Algonquin Books was founded in
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in 1983 with a goal of publishing quality fiction and nonfiction by unpublished young writers. Although it started as a small Southern house, over the years it has garnered national attention for a diverse range of renowned authors, including
Julia Alvarez,
Kaye Gibbons,
Chimamanda Adichie,
Robert Morgan,
Lee Smith,
Tayari Jones,
Kaitlyn Greenidge,
Daniel Wallace, and
Amy Stewart, among others. In 1989, Algonquin was acquired by Workman Publishing. Today, it has offices in
New York City and Chapel Hill and its numerous bestsellers and prizewinners include
Water for Elephants,
A Reliable Wife,
Love, Loss, and What I Wore,
Big Fish,
Last Child in the Woods,
The Leavers,
In the Time of the Butterflies,
An American Marriage,
Dan Rather's
What Unites Us, and
The Book of Delights. Algonquin also publishes the
PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction, a biannual prize established by author
Barbara Kingsolver whose winners include
Hillary Jordan's
Mudbound,
Heidi Durrow's
The Girl Who Fell from the Sky,
Lisa Ko’s
The Leavers,
Katharine Seligman's
At the Edge of the Haight, and
Jamila Minnicks Gleason's
Moonrise Over New Jessup.
Algonquin Young Readers Algonquin Young Readers was founded in 2011 by Peter Workman and then Algonquin publisher, Elisabeth Scharlatt, as an imprint of Algonquin Books to publish books of enduring value for young readers, including
narrative fiction and
non-fiction,
picture books, and
graphic novels. In 2017, an Algonquin Young Readers novel,
The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by
Kelly Barnhill, won the
John Newbery Medal for the most distinguished contribution to children's literature in the prior year.
Furia, by
Yamilé Mendez, won the 2021
Pura Belpré Award for the best presentation of the Latin experience in a book for young adults. Algonquin Young Readers titles have also won
Edgar Allan Poe awards for best
YA and juvenile mystery, and have been nominated for the
National Book Award for young people's literature. Algonquin Young Readers authors include
Kelly Barnhill,
Elizabeth C. Bunce (Myrtle Hardcastle Mysteries),
Kelly Jensen (Don’t) Call Me Crazy,
Samantha Mabry (All the Wind in the World),
Amy Timberlake (Skunk and Badger series),
Genzaburo Yoshino (
How Do You Live?), and
April Genevieve Tucholke (
Beatrice Likes the Dark).
Storey Publishing In 1983 John Storey bought Garden Way Publishing from Garden Way and changed the name to Storey Publishing. The company specializes in highly illustrated
do-it-yourself books for adults and children, with a focus on farming, gardening, crafts, cooking, nature appreciation, backyard building, and natural wellness and herbal medicine. Popular titles include
Rosemary Gladstar's ''Medicinal Herbs: A Beginner's Guide
, Fermented Vegetables
, The Backpack Explorer: On the Nature Trail,
Cooking Class,
Ocean Anatomy,
and The Year-Round Vegetable Gardener''. Storey's authors include Julia Rothman,
Maia Toll, Catherine Newman,
Ty Allan Jackson, and the
Xerces Society. Storey is based in
North Adams, Massachusetts.
Timber Timber Press was founded in 1978 and is based in
Portland, Oregon. It was acquired by Workman Publishing in 2006. Timber publishes books for
gardeners, both amateur and professional, nature enthusiasts,
environmentalists, and
popular science readers. It also has a robust regional program. Some of their popular titles include
Bringing Nature Home and ''Nature's Best Hope
by Douglas Tallamy, Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life'' by
Marta McDowell,
Michael Dirr's
Encyclopedia of Trees and Shrubs, and
Teaming with Microbes by
Jeff Lowenfels. == References ==