Serpent's Tail  

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-{{Template}}'''Serpent's Tail''' is a [[United Kingdom|British]] independent [[publishing firm]] founded in 1986 by [[Pete Ayrton]]. It is notable for its translated works, particularly European [[crime fiction]], and is the British publisher of [[Elfriede Jelinek]] and [[Lionel Shriver]]. It also published music criticism and cultural criticism by [[David Toop]] and [[Steven Shaviro]]. In January 2007 it was bought out by British publisher [[Profile Books.]]+{{Template}}
 +'''Serpent's Tail''' is a [[United Kingdom|British]] independent [[publishing firm]] founded in 1986 by Pete Ayrton. It is notable for its translated works, particularly European [[crime fiction]], and is the British publisher of [[Elfriede Jelinek]] and [[Lionel Shriver]]. In January 2007 it was bought out by British publisher [[Profile Books]]. As characterised by Boyd Tonkin writing in ''The Independent'' on the imprint's 25th anniversary: "It still issues a list of fiction and non-fiction that – from hard-boiled noir to gems in translation and left-field cultural reportage – often defines the meaning of 'cool'."
-==External links==+The press publishes predominantly fiction, leaning towards edgy, left-of-centre writing. Its non-fiction output tends to focus on popular culture, film and music, and left-field politics. It publishes the current output of authors such as [[Nicholas Royle]] and [[Stella Duffy]] and the back catalogues of [[Derek Raymond]] and [[Kathy Acker]].
-*[http://www.serpentstail.com/ Official site]+ 
 +Prizes won by its authors include the Nobel Prize for Literature ([[Kenzaburō Ōe]], [[Elfriede Jelinek]] and [[Herta Müller]]), the [[Orange Prize]] for Fiction ([[Lionel Shriver]] for ''[[We Need To Talk About Kevin]]'', in 2005) and the [[John Llewellyn Rhys Prize]] ([[Jonathan Trigell]] for ''[[Boy A]]'', in 2004).
 + 
 +In 2001 Serpent's Tail published the collected journalism of the late [[Elizabeth Young (journalist)|Elizabeth Young]], having previously published her study of American "blank generation" fiction in 1992 (''Shopping in Space'').
 + 
 +The imprint is known for publishing debuts - notables include [[Colm Toibin]]'s ''The South'', [[Michel Houellebecq]]'s ''[[Extension du domaine de la lutte|Whatever]]'' and [[David Peace]]'s ''Nineteen Seventy-Four''.
 + 
 +==High Risk Books==
 +From 1993 to 1997, Serpent's Tail had a New York firm called [[High Risk Books]] under [[Ira Silverberg]] and Amy Scholder. The imprint specialized, as its name suggests, in risk-taking progressive and transgressive fiction (such as [[Kathy Acker]] and [[William S. Burroughs]]) and non-fiction (including the collected journalism of [[Cookie Mueller]]).
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Serpent's Tail is a British independent publishing firm founded in 1986 by Pete Ayrton. It is notable for its translated works, particularly European crime fiction, and is the British publisher of Elfriede Jelinek and Lionel Shriver. In January 2007 it was bought out by British publisher Profile Books. As characterised by Boyd Tonkin writing in The Independent on the imprint's 25th anniversary: "It still issues a list of fiction and non-fiction that – from hard-boiled noir to gems in translation and left-field cultural reportage – often defines the meaning of 'cool'."

The press publishes predominantly fiction, leaning towards edgy, left-of-centre writing. Its non-fiction output tends to focus on popular culture, film and music, and left-field politics. It publishes the current output of authors such as Nicholas Royle and Stella Duffy and the back catalogues of Derek Raymond and Kathy Acker.

Prizes won by its authors include the Nobel Prize for Literature (Kenzaburō Ōe, Elfriede Jelinek and Herta Müller), the Orange Prize for Fiction (Lionel Shriver for We Need To Talk About Kevin, in 2005) and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize (Jonathan Trigell for Boy A, in 2004).

In 2001 Serpent's Tail published the collected journalism of the late Elizabeth Young, having previously published her study of American "blank generation" fiction in 1992 (Shopping in Space).

The imprint is known for publishing debuts - notables include Colm Toibin's The South, Michel Houellebecq's Whatever and David Peace's Nineteen Seventy-Four.

High Risk Books

From 1993 to 1997, Serpent's Tail had a New York firm called High Risk Books under Ira Silverberg and Amy Scholder. The imprint specialized, as its name suggests, in risk-taking progressive and transgressive fiction (such as Kathy Acker and William S. Burroughs) and non-fiction (including the collected journalism of Cookie Mueller).




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