Category Archives: We Are Cardiff Press

The 42b book launch party!

So, last night, we had a launch party for the first book to be released on the We Are Cardiff Press: The 42b!

The party was held at one of our favourite Cardiff drinking haunts, Porter’s, and we would like to thank our acts (Winter Coat and Waves of Newport), as well as Sam Bees and Rachael Helena Walsh for doing readings, AND Ernie Sparkles Hoop Troupe who brought some glitter and dazzle to the evening!

We Are Cardiff Press Book Boss Hana addressing the crowd …

We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party

Shots from around the party

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We Are Cardiff present its first book, Porter pub thursday 5 november 2015, an evening through readings, live music and the most creative mind within the Welsh capital through an art joruney into the heart of creative cardiff.
We Are Cardiff present its first book, Porter pub thursday 5 november 2015, an evening through readings, live music and the most creative mind within the Welsh capital through an art joruney into the heart of creative cardiff.

We Are Cardiff present its first book, Porter pub thursday 5 november 2015, an evening through readings, live music and the most creative mind within the Welsh capital through an art joruney into the heart of creative cardiff.

Waves of Newport – this was their first gig after ten years of playing together!

We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party

We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party

We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party

This was Winter Coat – they have an EP out now!

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Then we got some SPARKLES IN THE BUILDING!!

We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party

We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party

MORE PARTY!

We Are Cardiff Press 42b launch party

We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party We Are CArdiff Press 42b launch party

Thanks to everyone who came along. You can also buy the book from the We Are Cardiff Press site, OR come along to The Boneyard where we have our office (look for the orange container!) tomorrow (Saturday 7 November) where we’re having an OPEN HOUSE! We do Open Houses on the first Saturday of every month, between 11am – 2pm (along with our neighbour, The Printhaus!

Open House event Facebook event 7 November

If we didn’t see you last night, see you tomorrow, or on Womanby Street at 2am for some mid-Swn dancing and merriment!

Peas

We Are Cardiff and We Are Cardiff Press
xx

Also big thanks to photographers Lorna Cabble and Peppe Iovino for their lovely photos of the night!

***

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Launch party details unveiled for ‘The 42b’, We Are Cardiff Press debut book!

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Following the news of our first publication, ‘The 42b’, we’re happy to announce we’ll be holding the launch party at the fabulous PORTER’S! It’s one of our favourite night time haunts in the city, and we’re over the moon to be launching our FIRST BOOK there!

PARTY DETAILS:
19.30 – 21.30, Thursday 5 November, Porter’s, Cardiff –  part of the Swn Festival fringe.
Entry is FREE but please register on Eventbrite so we have an idea of numbers (the first 50 people will get a free drink, so make sure you’re prompt!).

There will be readings from the book, some live music, and hula hoop performances!

A special treat – see the online chapter!

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The wonderful James O’Brien and Matt Harris have been beavering away putting together this AWESOME online chapter to give you a sneak preview of the book.

We don’t want to go on about this too much, but it’s one of the greatest things we’ve ever seen and we hope you like it too!
The 42b: Dark journeys in Cardiff – online chapter preview

Pre-order the book – one day left!

We Are Cardiff Press has been crowdfunding this first book, and we’ve actually hit our target of £2,000! This means that although there are no more spaces for your name to be printed in the book, you can still pre-order it through Indiegogo until midnight on Thursday 22nd.  

After that, you’ll be able to buy the book on our website (a new site will be going live at wearecardiffpress.co.uk soon), at the launch party and from us in person at our container office open house days, on the first Saturday of each month.

Why on earth would you set up a publishing company?

Director Hana explains why she set up We Are Cardiff Press:

“There’s an opportunity for small presses to take risks on alternative, challenging literature that the larger publishers don’t consider marketable … By publishing the very best work we discover in printed form, the slow-burn of old fashioned books spreads slower, but lasts longer.”

Read Hana’s full post here: Why I set up We Are Cardiff Press

Why I set up the We Are Cardiff Press

Today Hana Johnson – the director of our sister project, the We Are Cardiff Press – tells us why she decided to get into publishing. The Press’s debut book, The 42b, is available for pre-order now, and its official launch party is on 5 November.

You can read a preview chapter from the book online here.

Our Hana
Hana

On Friday, I did an interview for a WalesOnline story about the launch of the We Are Cardiff Press and our debut book.

The reporter asked me why I decided to set up the Press, and I began to describe the hundred reasons why I wanted to get into a dying industry.

Here are the five top:

1. I love books

Words have been my closest friend since I was about six years old. I used to get told off for reading in the bath and making the pages go all crinkly, and staying up until 3am reading Point Horror when I had school the next day.

I tasted razor-sharp suspense reading Rebecca for the first time, and fell in love with Edmund Dantès on a 26-hour south American bus journey.

I’ve been on adventures with Graham Greene, Paul Theroux and Alex Garland.

I’ve weed myself laughing at White Teeth and Alexei Sayle. I discovered injustice reading 1984 and The Killing Fields.

I recoiled at Ian McEwan’s The Innocent, and read Roald Dahl’s short stories over and over and over.

My bookshelves strain under the weight of unexpected buys, swaps, gifts and mysterious acquirements.   

My bookshelves are rainbow colour coded. And?
My bookshelves are rainbow colour coded… too far?

I can’t imagine a day when I won’t buy books. My house would be empty, for a start, but I’d have no presents to give people, no more afternoons wandering the damp depths of Troutmark and nothing to accompany me on long journeys.

Many of my friends feel the same, and even though book sales have been plummeting for years, I think there is still a place for beautiful, physical books in our lives.

And so, the idea for our first book was born…

Coincidentally, book sales are actually up this year, so there may be hope for the printed word yet!

2.  I wanted to contribute to a new kind of publishing

I received an offer for a publishing deal for our debut book, The 42b, in 2013. It was yet to be written, the illustrations were undrawn, and we didn’t know whether it would be any good.

The publisher told me that they could ‘turn around’ a 30,000 word book in three days – that meant editing, formatting and designing a cover. The unit price of the printing was suspiciously low, and the contributors would receive a tiny royalty for each copy sold.

It was tempting: easy, fast, on to the next project. But the publisher handed me a copy of a book they had recently launched… and they had spelled the author’s name differently on the cover and the spine. ‘Mistakes happen, it’ll be corrected in the second edition’, they told me.

The cover looked like it had been made on Microsoft Publisher, using Clipart from 1998.

It repulsed me. I hate seeing books with bad design or terrible marketing – the Lousy Book Covers website is almost too much for me – the grammar, the designs, the audacity…

The eleven people who had agreed to write and draw for the book are passionate about writing and art. They spend their free time writing stories, giving feedback to other writers, re-writing their work, attending creative writing classes, and submitting their work to journals and publishers and websites. They know that there’s no big money in writing, but they do it because they love it.

I wanted a publisher that cares about the work as much as we do. Someone that aches over a perfect cover design, proof-reads it a million times, and promotes it with all the intensity with which it was created.

And so I thought, ‘I can do this better’.

The Duracell bunny that is Helia Phoenix set up We Are Cardiff five years ago, with the intention of telling a different story of Cardiff to the one written in the tabloids at the time. She saw all the creative and cultural vibrancy of this city and created an outlet to champion it.

I came home from that meeting with the publisher and told her that I wanted to set up a small press to publish Cardiff’s best writers, artists and photographers, and I wanted to call it the We Are Cardiff Press. She said (as she always does) – ‘YES!! GO FOR IT!!!!!’ (with a hundred more exclamation marks). She also wrote eight blog posts while we had that conversation (or thereabouts).

After throwing the idea around with some incredibly talented and wonderful friends, and after getting inspiration from small presses such as Tiny Hardcore Books, the We Are Cardiff Press was born…

I decided that it would be completely non-profit – all the contributors work for free.

Any profit from the books will go into the Press to fund the next project, and to run writing workshops to help new people contribute to our future books.

We decided that we would only print what people wanted to read. If people didn’t want to buy the books, we wouldn’t print them: that’s why we are running a pre-order campaign to judge the level of interest in the book, and then print the right number of books.

I made a conscious decision to not apply for funding from the Arts Council or Literature Wales. This project takes up a lot of my spare time, and if I had to fit in writing applications and funding evaluations, I wouldn’t have time to write, edit, or promote our books. It also means that we’re free to do whatever we want with our books –  we are not confined by funding restrictions.

3. Writers deserve to have their work showcased and nurtured

Typically, writers aren’t good at self-promotion; they need encouragement and exposure and confidence. Large publishers reject work without telling people what’s wrong with it, so it’s impossible for work to improve without feedback.

Creative writing classes such as Briony Goffin’s are brilliant spaces, where writers feel safe to read their work out loud without the fear of ridicule. The work written in these classes deserves to have a wider audience, if the writers want it.

People write for different reasons: some genuinely aren’t interested in publishing, they do it for themselves. Some want to make a career, and some want to create a legacy that will live in libraries and bookshelves for years to come.

There’s an opportunity for small presses to take risks on alternative, challenging literature that the larger publishers don’t consider marketable. We know that some work will have a niche market, but does that mean that it should only exist online?

Online publishing is fantastic, but it can be short-lived.

When we click ‘publish’ on We Are Cardiff, we instantly reach over 35,000 people for the moment that the piece flashes in their inbox, on their Twitter feed or Facebook timeline. But it risks being missed or forgotten.

By publishing the very best work we discover in printed form, the slow-burn of old fashioned books spreads slower, but lasts longer.

We may only sell a few hundred copies of our book, but a copy of it will sit in the British Library, the National Library of Wales, and Scotland and the Bodleian in Oxford. And, after only two weeks and minimal marketing, we’ve already received orders for The 42b from unexpected places – France, the USA and Scotland!

The acclaimed literary critic and writer Peter Finch recently told us that he is ‘so impressed with the way [we] are going about publishing and selling The 42b’. He said that it is ‘the best approach’ that he’s seen ‘in an age’. And he speaks as a former publisher, bookseller and a present day writer!

The best advice I’ve read on starting a small press is:

4. The We Are Cardiff community is capable of amazing things

As soon as I put a Batsignal out that We Are Cardiff wanted writers and illustrators for a new book, I received about 20 pitches for stories in a month.

While setting up the Press, I’ve realised the incredible strength of the We Are Cardiff brand and team. People and organisations want to support and grow the creative community in Cardiff, and it’s exciting.

A few examples:

  • the Cardiff chapter of Urbanistas gave me such valuable feedback, contacts and advice;
  • Dan at Porter’s, where we are holding our launch party on 5 November (more info on Porter’s next week) has bent over backwards to help us arrange our event;
  • Abbey Bookbinding is an amazing Cardiff-based, family-run printer; Darren has spent hours perfecting the print of our detailed cover design, and providing brilliant creative advice; and
  • I also got excellent guidance on the Press’s legal structure and finances from Branwen at the Wales Co-op Centre.

We found performers and musicians to play at the launch within days, and people have volunteered to proofread the book and give advice on stuff like distribution and ISBN numbers. Just look how gorgeous the book is:

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Due to Helia’s incredible marketing skills, James’s design and video ideas, Alice’s events management expertise and Lisa’s proofreading, the book and the Press has come together in people’s spare time.

The writers and illustrators (who alongside the core team include Adam Chard, Paul Hunt, Sam Bees, Robin Wilkinson, Llion Wigley, Georgia Burdett and Emily Jones) have made a bloody amazing book!

I also have to give a shout out to our developer Matt Harris, who made our gorgeous online preview chapter. He’s the only person who doesn’t live in Cardiff, but we figured Bristol is like an honorary Cardiff 😉

5. Our ideas are endless

As soon as we launch our first book, we’ll begin taking submissions for the next one. I have at least a million ideas, but here are a few:

  • a book of portrait photography and personal stories of refugees and asylum seekers in Cardiff – how they got here, what they brought with them, and how they’ve made Cardif their home;
  • a book of recipes from chefs in the city. There has been an explosion in pop-up food in Cardiff, from Hangfire to Lia’s Kitchen, and it would be fantastic to bring together the best dishes that this city has to offer; and
  • a collection of street photography, paired with poetry or a piece of writing.

We can’t wait to get started.

Get involved with the Press by buying The 42b or coming to our launch.

Let’s bring books back!

Han  – hana@wearecardiffpress.co.uk

xx

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We Are Cardiff Press – debut book pre-orders and launch party announced!!

Well, this is so blimmin’ exciting that we’re tempted to write this whole post in CAPITAL LETTERS, but we’ll refrain for the sake of your eyes!

Our long-awaited new venture, the We Are Cardiff Press, is officially launching on Thursday 5 November 2015 , AND AND AND we are taking pre-orders for our very first book, The 42b, which is an anthology of short stories and illustrations based around a fictional Cardiff bus route.

The 42b 012

You can be one of the first people to order the book by heading over to our Indiegogo page – the first 125 people to order will get their name printed in the back cover of the book! Other rewards include limited edition prints, and a place on a We Are Cardiff writing workshop.

Pre-order the book here: http://igg.me/at/wac-press/x/332021

Our launch party on 5th November is going to be part of Sŵn Festival, and will feature some dramatic readings from the book as well as a couple of spangly new Cardiff bands. The 42b Launch party Facebook event is here – make sure you come along for a drink and a dance!

Our debut book

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‘The 42b’ is an anthology of short stories and illustrations based around a fictional Cardiff bus route.

Each story follows a different character as they get on and off the number 42b bus. It’s a series of warped kaleidoscopic reflections of the Cardiff that we live in today.

From wrestlers to adulterers, pensioners to murderers, the passengers on the 42b exist in a city of different realities, where everyday life brings the threat of grisly mutation, and citizens are bound by their occupations.

Although self-contained, the plots weave in and out of each other to form one whole piece of fiction: a journey through life, death, epiphanic moments, shopping bags full of intestines, and all the extras that can come with a bus pass.

Eleven writers and illustrators created the book, which is the first publication for We Are Cardiff Press. All books are beautifully designed and made with high quality materials  to ensure that each copy is a piece of art that you’ll want to keep forever. There will also be limited edition prints of the illustrations available.

The Press

We Are Cardiff Press is a small, non-profit collective, publishing literature and art from creators in the city. We’ll be crafting collectable, limited edition runs of beautiful books, from literature to photography, and illustration to personal storytelling.

Each book will be a special, high quality piece that you’ll want to keep and read over and again. We’ll be working with the city’s best writers, photographers and illustrators to tell you the stories that make up Cardiff. These gorgeous publications will be sold online and in local outlets.

Founder of the Press and editor of the book, Hana Johnson, explains her reason for setting up the Press:

“I wanted to create the Press to showcase the city’s incredible creative energy by publishing work as a legacy to the writing and artistic talent of Cardiff.

“There’s a lot of creative talent here – writers, illustrators, photographers, and I want to harness that and make collectible books about Cardiff. It’s an exciting, vibrant place to live, with a long history and diverse population, and we’re looking forward to creating more books to celebrate that.”

We Are Cardiff Press is a non-profit small press, and all profits from sales will be put back into the organisation to fund new books, and run creative writing workshops.

For more info on the Press, get in touch with Hana – hana@wearecardiffpress.co.uk

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We Are … Changing!

We Are Cardiff is five years old. Can you believe it?? In that time, we’ve published over 400 articles, racked up nearly 300,000 views and we have 30,000 followers on social media.

The Guardian chose us as one of the best city blogs in the world. We won the People’s Choice Award at the Wales Blog Awards. We made a film. We made a radio documentary. We’ve had exhibitions and a stage at Swn festival. We even have an official sister site in We Are Chester.

Now, we are changing …

We’ve already mentioned that we’ll soon be launching a small press called We Are Cardiff Press. Based on that, we thought we’d try and refine what we’re doing a bit. So here’s what we’ve decided!

The We Are Cardiff site will be split into four brand new, easy to see categories:

  • The People: featuring the personal stories that we’ve been documenting for five years;
  • The City: historical and documentary posts about the city, and local campaigns;
  • The Arts: reviews, interviews and all the news on music, art, photography, performance and film: and
  • What’s On: ever-popular events listings and previews of upcoming awesome things.

The site will continue to feature factual, ‘people-powered’ blog posts with minimal editorial oversight. We will aim to commission more work, but focused around these four categories. Helia will pretty much be in charge of all of this stuff, and Hana will still be running the Twitter feed.

The We Are Cardiff Press will publish beautiful, collectable books to showcase new creative work from Cardiff, which could be literature, art, photography or personal storytelling. It will have a stronger editorial influence to ensure that the quality of the physical end product is incredibly high. Content from the books will not be available online, only in the limited edition books, bought online or in selected retailers in the city. Hana is running the Press, which will be announcing its first publication very, very soon…

We are so excited about the future, and looking for MORE writers, photographers, historians, artists, campaigners, citizens, musicians, businesses, performers, experts and EVERYONE ELSE to feature on the site or in our books, films and everything! If you want to be featured on the website, get in touch on wearecardiff@gmail.com, and if you have any questions about the Press, contact hello@wearecardiffpress.co.uk.

We can’t wait to fill the next five years with Cardiff stories.

Big love

Helia and Hana xx

Photo by Simon Ayre
The We Are Cardiff joy monkeys, photographed by the wonderful Simon Ayre

We Are Cardiff Press

We have a very exciting announcement over here at We Are Cardiff towers…. we’re launching a small press!

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The We Are Cardiff Press will publish collections of writing and art from creators in our city, from fiction to photography, and illustrations to poetry.

Our first book is something we’ve been working on for a little while, and will be published in early 2015….

We’ll also be taking submissions for future publications very soon! For more information about the Press or the book, contact Hana on hana@wearecardiffpress.co.uk.

Keep your eyes on the website peeled for more updates…