I
met Emma at the University of Birmingham when she was holding a guest lecture
for one of my creative writing modules this spring. I’d come to Birmingham for
a year abroad, away from my main literary studies in Germany, hoping to develop
as a writer and maybe gain some in sight into the publishing world I knew I
wanted to be part of one day. One hour into Emma’s lecture, I knew I’d gotten
it all wrong: I wasn’t looking for a titan publisher in the bustling hubs of
London, where you’re more likely lose yourself than find your way in. What I
needed was a small press like Emma’s, warm and welcoming, tucked in the calm
streets at the Jewellery Quarter, and brimming with originality and
innovativeness that excited my inner creative.
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I
helped compile anthologies, read new submissions and wrote reader’s reports. I
helped out with publicity plans for different titles, interviewed authors and
was lucky even to have met one of them, the wonderful and inspiring Rūta Briede, Latvian artist and author of Queen of Seagulls,
at one of her crafting workshops where we painted puplaks, little painted
sea-wood dolls she invented herself.
I
discovered what it means to sit on the receiving end of submissions and deal
with the weight of recommendation (or not) in my reports. I learned how press
releases are written, how they change from title to title, and then wrote one
myself for In Transit. I discovered a new joy in writing
blurbs, how to navigate through Indonesian texts still in translation to
capture the sense of the fledgling book. I glimpsed into the hard work and long
hours of research that go into when looking for homes for new publications, or
even when scouring for children’s books waiting to be brought to British
readers across Europe.
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The
Emma Press and its team taught me to value and cherish creativity and fun in publishing in a way I’d have
never imagined and more, to nurture the small dreams however far-reaching. I’ll
be missing helping out and see incredible works become reality, and hope one
day to experience the heartwarming magic of the Emma Press once again.
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