Northwestern University Press publishes a wide range of titles. In 1963, the Press published
Viola Spolin's landmark volume,
Improvisation for the Theater: A Handbook of Teaching and Directing Techniques, which has sold more than 100,000 copies since its publication, and Northwestern's theater list includes works by Tony and Academy Award winners such as
Mary Zimmerman,
Tracy Letts, Bruce Norris, and
Horton Foote, as well as playwrights
David Ives,
Craig Wright, and
Ike Holter. In 2025, the Press began republishing the work of controversial writer
Wendy C. Ortiz.
Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP) SPEP is a series of scholarly monographs and translations founded by
James M. Edie and published by Northwestern University Press since the early 1960s, including works by
Maurice Merleau-Ponty,
Paul Ricoeur, and
Edmund Husserl. The current series editor is
Anthony Steinbock. The series was founded as a collaboration with the
Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, and has been described as "one of the high watermarks in the society’s development."
TriQuarterly Books In 1990, Northwestern University Press established a fiction and poetry imprint under the imprint name
TriQuarterly, the name of an influential literary journal founded at the university in 1958 and operated by the press from 1964 to 2009. Writers such as
Nikky Finney,
Karla F.C. Holloway,
Christine Schutt,
A. E. Stallings,
Patricia Smith,
Bruce Weigl, and
Angela Jackson have published titles in the imprint, including works that have won the
National Book Award,
Whiting Awards, the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award, and the
Hurston/Wright Legacy Award.
Melville In the 1950s, the
Modern Language Association (MLA) established the Center for Editions of American Authors (CEAA), which proposed to organize textual editing and publication projects for major American authors. Melville scholar
Harrison M. Hayford engaged Northwestern University Press to publish definitive editions of Melville's body of work, which would be established through analysis and review of Melville works at the
Newberry Library. The library contained 6,100 items, including at least one copy of every printing of each of Melville's books published in his lifetime, since Melville made textual changes. Completed in 2017, the series includes fifteen volumes.
Studies in Russian Literature and Theory (SRLT) Founded by Slavicist
Gary Saul Morson, Studies in Russian Literature and Theory (SRLT) "provide perspectives on Russian literature from all periods and genres, as well as its place in the broader culture. Authors whose works the series explores include
Pushkin,
Dostoevsky,
Gogol,
Tolstoy,
Zamyatin,
Pasternak, and
Nabokov. More than a hundred monographs have been published in the series since 1989. Awards in the series include Jenny Kaminer's
Women with a Thirst for Destruction: The Bad Mother in Russian Culture winner of the Heldt "Best book in Slavic/Eastern European/Eurasian women's studies" prize.
Curbstone Books In 2010, Northwestern University Press acquired the publisher of international literature and Latin American voices,
Curbstone Press. The imprint includes works by
Luis Rodríguez,
Martín Espada,
Gioconda Belli,
Claribel Alegria,
Salah Al Hamdani,
Ana Castillo,
Wayne Karlin,
E. Ethelbert Miller,
Sergio Ramírez, and
Le Clézio. == Honors ==