New Release

Featured Releases: October 2025

As October unfolds, it’s time to embrace fresh perspectives and look ahead to the final stretch of the year. Let’s take a look at some of our featured releases this month. Perfecting the U.S. Constitution This book explores the transformative power of the twenty-seven Constitutional Amendments in shaping American history, democracy and social justice. It […]

Publishing Industry News

Talk of the Town: Monthly Publishing Industry News Digest

The academic publishing industry is undergoing significant transformations, influenced by technological advancements, geopolitical shift and evolving cultural dynamics. In this article, we delve into recent developments that are shaping the future of scholarly communication. Peer review in the era of AI: risks, rewards and responsibilities AI tools are increasingly integrated into peer review, aiding manuscript […]

Guest Post

Hands, Music, Life: An Integrated Approach to Creative Health

This is a guest post by Pedro de Alcantara, author of Hands, Wrists, Fingers   My first clear memory of music is hearing my mother play a few sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti at the upright piano in our modest living room. I was five or six, and I remember walking and marching excitedly in response […]

Guest Post

The Paradox of Thom Browne: How One Designer Redefined the Suit for the 21st century

This is a guest post by Benjamin Wild, author of Thom Browne In just over twenty years, Thom Browne has achieved something remarkable: he has made the grey suit revolutionary. The American designer’s distinctive uniform – cropped sleeves ending four inches above the wrist, trousers hemmed high above the ankle and those signature four white […]

Guest Post

Ada, meet Ada: bridging the two cultures

This is a guest post by Mark Seligman, author of AI and Ada: Artificial Translation and Creation of Literature  Artificial intelligence has suddenly become real – or has it? To answer the question, we need a consensus definition of intelligence. We still don’t have one.   In the age of GenAI (ChatGPT and siblings), related […]

Author Interview

The Amendments to the Constitution, a pathway to the American experience

This is an interview with Blaine Kaltman, author of Perfecting the U.S. Constitution: 27 and Counting, The Amendments that Shaped America’s Future  Q. What made you decide to write a book about the Amendments to the U.S. Constitution? Dr. Kaltman: Because it is a very interesting topic that too often is buried in legal jargon. […]

New Release

Featured releases: September 2025

September marks the gentle shift from summer’s warmth to autumn’s calm, a month of balance and reflection. We are celebrating this month with an exciting line-up of new releases. From Louis XIV’s conquests, human ethics, to Byron’s romantic poetic voice, we cover a range of subjects this month. Here’s a sneak peak into some of […]

Guest Post

Byron’s engagement with Eastern European writers: Mickiewicz and Pushkin

This is a guest post by Jonathan Gross, author of The European Byron Mobility, Cosmopolitanism, and Chameleon Although there have been many studies of Byron’s European impact, I consider the Eastern European reach of Byron. Mazepa, a painting by Vernet (‘Mazepa and the Wolves’, 1826), and another study, by a British painter John Frederick Herring, […]

Author Interview

The warlike king who died in his bed

This is an author interview by Dylan Motin, author of How Louis XIV Survived His Hegemonic Bid Q1. Why a book about Louis XIV and not any other king? Louis XIV’s France belonged in a rare category of states. Not only was it a great power but also what international relations scholars like to call […]