
Connect with Coffee House Press |
|
|
|
|

Coffee House Press 79 Thirteenth Avenue NE, Suite 110
Minneapolis, MN 55413 Phone: 612.338.0125 Fax: 612.338.4004 Click
here to contact us
|
|
|
Where
Good Books Are Brewing |
|
Coffee
House Press is an award-winning, nonprofit literary
publisher. We produce books that present the dreams
and ambitions of people who have been underrepresented
in published literature, books that shape our national
consciousness while strengthening a larger sense of
community.
|
Forthcoming from Coffee House Press |
New books from Adrian Castro, Laird Hunt, Mark McMorris, Sarah O'Brien, Edward Sanders, Sam Savage, and Gilbert Sorrentino.

|
Fresh from Coffee House Press - Spring/Summer 2009 |
Click the links below for excerpts, book reviews, author information, and purchasing details.
|
German for Travelers, Novel by Norah Labiner
A family saga redolent of the Old World, layered with consequence, and frosted with Technicolor. |
| |
The Hebrew Tutor of Bel Air, Novel by Allan Appel
A full-throttle joyride on the highway of love, adolescence, and enlightenment. |
| |
Fugue State, Stories by Brian Evenson, Art by Zak Sally
Nineteen chilling tales of the terror that lurks within. |
| |
All Fall Down, Stories by Mary Caponegro
Enthralling stories of desire and dissolution from “one of our great national literary treasures.”—George Saunders |
| |
Beats at Naropa, Anthology edited by Anne Waldman and Laura Wright
Never-before-collected essays, talks, and interviews with the luminaries of Beat literature. |
| |
Coal Mountain Elementary, Poems by Mark Nowak, with photographs by Ian Teh
“A tribute to miners and working people everywhere.”—Howard Zinn
|
| |
Portrait and Dream: New and Selected Poems, by Bill Berkson
The major work from “a serene master . . . transforming the mundane into the marvelous.” (Publishers Weekly)
|
| |
The Spoils, Poems by Ted Mathys
Deeply lyric meditations on power, ecology, and political engagement.
|
| |
A Toast in the House of Friends, Poems by Akilah Oliver
“A Toast in the House of Friends brings us back to life via the world of death and dream . . . An extraordinary gift for everyone.”—Alice Notley
|
|
|
|
|
|