Two Lines Press was established in 2013 as the book publishing imprint of the Center for the Art of Translation, which had been operating since 2000. The press grew out of the Two Lines literary journal, which had been publishing international literature in translation since its founding in 1993 by translator Olivia Sears. According to
Publishers Weekly, when Two Lines Press was founded, "the U.S. market for translated literature was fairly narrow," with occasional breakout hits like
Roberto Bolaño,
Karl Ove Knausgård, and
Elena Ferrante, while "everything else was largely ignored." The press was created to address this gap in the American literary market. Publishing Program Two Lines Press publishes approximately eight titles annually. The press's catalog includes titles translated from Arabic, Czech, Finnish, Korean, Macedonian, Portuguese, Swahili, and Thai. The press is distributed by
Publishers Group West and has published 52 titles as of 2023. Two Lines Press operates as part of a nonprofit organization, derives its operating budget from donations, grants, and book sales.In 2020, Two Lines Press launched its Calico Series , which publishes collections of translated writing unified by single themes. Previous editions have focused on speculative Chinese-language fiction and queer Brazilian literature. The series publishes two new books per year and has been described by series editor Sarah Coolidge as "a snapshot of writing in translation that speaks to our current moment." ==Notable publications==