Third Man Books

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Kali Durga
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Third Man Books

Post by Kali Durga »

TMR announced last week that Third Man Books (TMB) had signed a deal with Consortium Book Sales & Distribution, and it got a nice write-up today at Publisher's Weekly-- http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-t ... rtium.html
Third Man Books, an imprint created by Grammy Award-winning rock musician Jack White and announced last summer, has quickly gained a foothold in the industry. The book endeavor, which will be overseen by White's business partners Chet Weise and Ben Swank, has just signed a North American distribution deal with Consortium, and is set to publish three books in 2015.

On Third Man's inaugural list is Hidden Water, by the late poet Frank Stanford. The title is a companion volume to Copper Canyon Press’ compilation of Stanford’s poems, What About This? Both titles, which will be published in April, were edited by Michael Wiegers, Copper Canyon's executive editor.

Described by Weise as "a deep cuts kind of compilation," Hidden Water, which is getting a 5,000-copy print run, includes Sanford's unpublished poems, as well as facsimiles of his drafts, letters, and artwork, plus a download of Stanford reading his poem, "The Boathouse.”

The Truth Is We Are Perfect by Janaka Stucky, a former mortician and the 2010 National Haiku Champion, will be published in May, also with 5,000-copy initial print run. Pain: The Board Game by Sampson Starkweather, a collection of poems featuring a board game modeled on the popular 1970s-era board game, Life, will be published this fall with a tentative 2,000-copy initial print run.

Third Man Books hopes, Weise told PW, to produce “at least” five or six books each year, “with a mind to do even more in the future.” An early history of hip hop and a book on baseball are in the early stages of production.

“We’re going to do a lot of different things,” Weise said, explaining that Third Man Books is the extension “both philosophically and literally” of Third Man Records, which was founded in Nashville by White and Swank in 2001. The company has evolved into a hub for the creation and distribution of “any and every form of expression, from music to poetry, fiction to film.”

To that end, Third Man Books was launched to “further explore the music of language,” by publishing contemporary poetry, literary fiction, biography, as well as music and photography books and poetry chapbooks. The company’s motto is, Weise noted, “Third Man Records & Third Man Books/Where Your Turntable’s Not Dead & Where Your Page Still Turns.”

While White is “hands on” and “knows everything we’re doing,” Weise said that he and Swank oversee the daily operations of Third Man Books. The 24 employees at Third Man Records also assist in the new publishing venture.

In August, Third Man Books made its debut with Language Lessons, an anthology with 300 pages of poetry and prose from a variety of writers. Those with pieces in the collection ranged from Nashville locals making their publishing debuts, to Pulitzer and National Book Award finalists C.D. Wright, Adrian Matejka and Dale Ray Phillips. Language Lessons includes two vinyl music LPs, and five broadsides.

“We definitely started with what we know,” Weise said, “We’re an indie label and are doing the DIY thing. We found a kindred spirit in Consortium. It makes sense that we would go together.”

For her part, Consortium president Julie Schaper noted that she’d “often thought that indie music fans overlap with indie fiction fans; Third Man Books is proving that notion true. I look forward to a long, fruitful partnership that generates lots of new ideas and creative collaboration."

Even David Steinberger, president and CEO of the Perseus Books Group, Consortium’s parent company, weighed in with words of welcome to Consortium’s newest client publisher. "We, and the publishing industry, just got a lot hipper with [Third Man Books’] foray into the literary world,” he stated in a release. “I am confident Consortium can offer the best springboard for Third Man to continue to surprise audiences and defy expectations."
Really looking forward to the book about baseball, and may even check out the history of hip-hop. And Pain: The Board Game sounds terribly intriguing.
"And the message is clear: if we want Jack White as our hero, he will entertain, but not pander. We have to accept all his flaws, whims, caprices and manias as a critical, sometimes uncomfortable, part of the contract."
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Jamie
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by Jamie »

Not exactly TMR Books related, but I wonder if Ben will resubmit his White Blood Cells proposal again?

http://333sound.com/2015/06/01/open-cal ... sals-2015/

Or maybe whether it'll eventually see the light of day now that they have the means to self publish.
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Kali Durga
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by Kali Durga »

Dunno about that ^^, but they just announced a new upcoming book-- http://thirdmanbooks.com/book/hidden-wa ... d-archives
"And the message is clear: if we want Jack White as our hero, he will entertain, but not pander. We have to accept all his flaws, whims, caprices and manias as a critical, sometimes uncomfortable, part of the contract."
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by dunedin »

TMB free poetry reading in Seattle on 11 June and launch of Frank Stanford's book

https://instagram.com/p/3wWg9aDhay/
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by dunedin »

Frank Stanford book now available in standard and special editions for pre-order.

http://thirdmanstore.com/miscellaneous/third-man-books
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Kali Durga
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by Kali Durga »

Anyone here familiar with Frank Stanford?
"And the message is clear: if we want Jack White as our hero, he will entertain, but not pander. We have to accept all his flaws, whims, caprices and manias as a critical, sometimes uncomfortable, part of the contract."
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Juanjo
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by Juanjo »

Kali Durga wrote:Anyone here familiar with Frank Stanford?
It is an amazing deal for $15 as per content goes, facsimiles, letters to Ginsberg, unpublished material, photos.

You can find extracts of his most known work, 'The battlefield where the moon says I love you" all over the internet to see if it's of your taste. Like this extract, lines 3001-3199 (the poem is a continuous 15283-line poem) :

http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/180488

His work, as said in the announcement, is difficult to find due to tiny presses and so on. So the special edition, if it's your cup of tea, it's a great deal as it includes "What about this", which was a great effort and compilation about Stanford. Here a review by the NYT about it:

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/07/books ... .html?_r=0

ps: for me here in the UK the price of shipping is actually higher than the price of the special edition. Shame, I guess I will have to wait until it is published then to try to get one around here.
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Kali Durga
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by Kali Durga »

Ah, thanks for the link, that's exactly the sort of thing I was hoping someone could direct me to. That looks at first glance like a pretty dense stream of words, gonna have to find a time when I'm not so distracted so I can digest it and decide whether he's someone I can get into.
"And the message is clear: if we want Jack White as our hero, he will entertain, but not pander. We have to accept all his flaws, whims, caprices and manias as a critical, sometimes uncomfortable, part of the contract."
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Juanjo
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by Juanjo »

Kali Durga wrote:Ah, thanks for the link, that's exactly the sort of thing I was hoping someone could direct me to. That looks at first glance like a pretty dense stream of words, gonna have to find a time when I'm not so distracted so I can digest it and decide whether he's someone I can get into.
Very dense indeed, so yeah, leave it for when you can fully focus on the reading. As I said, it is difficult material to get your hands on this guy, so it is worthy to consider.

That website, poetryfundation, you can use the search to get some more material of this author or any others when in doubt.
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by koala »

I'm thinking of getting Hidden Water for my sister as a gift but I don't know anything about poetry.
What do you think of it? Anybody has any review they'd like to share for a lay(wo)man?
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woodisgood
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by woodisgood »

koala wrote:I'm thinking of getting Hidden Water for my sister as a gift but I don't know anything about poetry.
What do you think of it? Anybody has any review they'd like to share for a lay(wo)man?
Frank Stafford was a fantastic poet, and Hidden Water has much to recommend. But if you're sure you want to give the gift of poetry but unsure of what to give, I would suggest these two amazing collections first. Both are sublime, accessible, uplifting, and IMO modern classics.

http://www.amazon.com/Actual-Air-David- ... 1890447048

http://www.amazon.com/New-Selected-Poem ... thomas+lux
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koala
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by koala »

woodisgood wrote:
koala wrote:I'm thinking of getting Hidden Water for my sister as a gift but I don't know anything about poetry.
What do you think of it? Anybody has any review they'd like to share for a lay(wo)man?
Frank Stafford was a fantastic poet, and Hidden Water has much to recommend. But if you're sure you want to give the gift of poetry but unsure of what to give, I would suggest these two amazing collections first. Both are sublime, accessible, uplifting, and IMO modern classics.

http://www.amazon.com/Actual-Air-David- ... 1890447048

http://www.amazon.com/New-Selected-Poem ... thomas+lux
Thank you so much! Yeah this is exactly what I was looking for. I do want to gift some poetry but I don't have an exact idea of her tastes. Will look into these. Thanks!
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by koala »

David Berman reading Frank Stanford:
http://thirdmanstore.com/thevault/home/ ... k-stanford
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woodisgood
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by woodisgood »

Wonderful timing . . . ;)
"I'd wish you happiness, but I know it'd be detrimental to your art."
koala
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Re: Third Man Books

Post by koala »

woodisgood wrote:Wonderful timing . . . ;)
Exactly what I was thinking. The coincidence :D
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