Between the Lines Books

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Between the Lines Books
Status Active
Founded 1977
Country of origin Canada
Headquarters location Toronto
Distribution University of Toronto Press, Fernwood Publishing (Canada), Southern California Book Distribution (US), Global Book Marketing (UK). BTL also has co-publishing arrangements with New Internationalist (UK), Pluto Press and South End
Key people Jamie Swift, Ken Epps (co-founders)
Publication types Books
Nonfiction topics politics, public policy, social issues, Canadian and world history, international development, native peoples, gender/sexuality, health, culture, adult and popular education, labour, environment, technology, media
Number of employees 4
Official website www.btlbooks.com

Between the Lines (BTL) is an independent publisher in Canada.

BTL publishes Canadian-authored non-fiction, most of which offers a critical perspective on culture, economics, and society. The BTL catalogue also includes titles on politics, public policy, social issues, Canadian and world history, international development, native peoples, gender/sexuality, health, culture, adult and popular education, labour, environment, technology, and media.

Founded in 1977, BTL has published 218 titles, and maintains over 100 of these in print, including seminal works by American cultural theorists bell hooks and Noam Chomsky.

The press operates on the philosophy that books are more than just commodities; that they should somehow fit into political struggles. BTL function by consensus, with a division of labour, but no boss or individual owner.[1]

BTL is represented in the college and trade markets throughout Canada by Fernwood Publishing. In the United States, the press is represented and distributed by Southern California Book Distribution, and in the U.K., by Global Book Marketing. BTL has co-publishing arrangements with New Internationalist (UK), Pluto Press and South End.

Contents

[edit] Notable awards

  • Franca Iacovetta, Gatekeepers: Reshaping Immigrant Lives in Cold War Canada – Winner of the CHA's 2007 Sir John A. Macdonald Prize (the most prestigious award for a Canadian historian)[2]
  • Tina Lopes & Barb Thomas, Dancing on Live Embers: Challenging Racism in Organizations – Winner of the 2007 Gustavus Myers Center Outstanding Books Award for Advancing Human Rights[3]
  • Bev Burke, Jojo Geronimo, D'Arcy Martin, Barb Thomas & Carol Wall, Education for Changing Unions – Winner of the United Association for Labor Education Best Book in Labor Education, 2002—2007[4]
  • Judith Merril and Emily Pohl-Weary, Better to Have Loved: The Life of Judith Merril – Winner of the 2003 Hugo Award</ref>

[edit] Noted authors

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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