$155.00
Fall 2025 Subscription
Be the first to have hot-of-the-press titles from Coffee House Press
With our subscription series you don’t need to look for new books—we’ll ship them right to your door, or to the recipient of your gift. Not only will you have fresh reading material, but you’ll support our entire community of readers.
The Fall 2025 subscription features seven Coffee House Press books published between September 2025 and January 2026. Each title is shipped individually a week before its publication date. Free domestic shipping.
If you’re purchasing this subscription as a gift, please include the gift recipient’s shipping address. Special instructions for gifting may be made at checkout.
Please note that this product is only available domestically. For international shipping inquiries, please contact info@coffeehousepress.org.
Subscription Includes
Helen of Nowhere by Makenna Goodman: Philosophically and formally adventurous, at once intimate and cosmic in scope, an electrifying novel about the delights and dangers of starting over.
The Mind Reels by Fredrik deBoer: In his debut novel, inveterate polemicist Fredrik deBoer shines a merciless light on our pervasive need to romanticize debilitating mental illnesses into dainty, loveable quirks.
Analog Days by Damion Searls: Acclaimed translator Damion Searls's exuberant debut novella navigates the bittersweet tug-of-war between nostalgia and living life meaningfully in a world buzzing with information overload.
Terry Dactyl by Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore: From iconic author and activist Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore comes a breathless search for intimacy and connection, from club culture to the art world, from the AIDS crisis to COVID-19.
Very Collected Poems by Ron Padgett: Over sixty years of poems celebrating one of the most dynamic careers in twentieth and twenty-first century American poetry.
The Aquatics by Osvalde Lewat, trans. by Maren Baudet-Lackner: Mixing compassion with clear-eyed fury and a keen sense of the absurd, The Aquatics confronts one of contemporary Africa’s most entrenched societal issues in a story as immersive and inevitable as a quickly rising tide.
Hyper by Agri Ismaïl: A cutting, hypermodern saga of money, family, and survival for fans of Zadie Smith, Patricia Lockwood, and Mohsin Hamid.