Founded | 1997 |
---|---|
Founder | Johnny Temple |
Country of origin | United States |
Headquarters location | Brooklyn, New York City |
Distribution | Consortium Book Sales & Distribution (US)[1] Turnaround Publisher Services (UK)[2] |
Publication types | Books |
Official website | www |
Akashic Books is a Brooklyn-based independent publisher, formed in 1997. It was started by Johnny Temple,[3] bassist of Girls Against Boys and mid-'80s Dischord band Soulside,[4] with the mission "to make literature more part of popular culture, not just a part of elitist culture."[5]
Akashic Books' collection began with Arthur Nersesian's The Fuck Up[6] in 1997, and has since expanded to include Dennis Cooper's Little House on the Bowery series,[7] Chris Abani's Black Goat poetry series,[8] and the internationally successful Noir series,[9][10] originating with Brooklyn Noir,[11] since expanding to international titles such as Delhi Noir and Havana Noir.
Akashic Books authors include T Cooper, Ron Kovic, Derek McCormack, Melvin Van Peebles, Ryan Adams, Lydia Lunch, Richard Hell, Nina Revoyr, Les Claypool, Pete Hamill, Carlos Pintado, Lawrence Block,[12] Travis Jeppesen, James Greer, Joe Meno, Elizabeth Nunez, Adam Mansbach, and Greg Prato.[13]
In June 2011, Akashic published the widely successful Go the Fuck to Sleep by Adam Mansbach. Go the Fuck to Sleep was subject to an unintended viral marketing campaign after PDF copies of the book, presumably from advance copies sent to booksellers, were distributed via email. While the book was originally scheduled for release in October 2011, by the end of April the book had hit #2 on Amazon.com's bestseller list, and by May 12 the book was #1. In the meantime, the publishing date was moved up to June, and Akashic increased its first printing to 150,000 copies. Akashic, which acknowledged the importance of social media in popularizing the book ("it's a miracle from the heavens for us"), is trying to prevent unauthorized copying of the book.
The publishing house is currently run out of the (OA) Can Factory in Brooklyn.[14]