IN ASSOCIATION WITH

STUDENT GUIDE 2017

BOOKS

N O R F F E H E N N A Z U S

: O T O H P

A LEAP OF FAITH

It’s been a phenomenal year for new trailblazing indie publisher 404 Ink, with two highly acclaimed books and two issues of their literary magazine

HOW TO GET INTO PUBLISHING

Laura Jones (left) and Heather McDaid

under their belts, backed by a strong community of supporters. Co-founder Heather McDaid tells us more

404 Ink are the ‘nasty women shaking up the book industry’. Laura Jones and I are two twentysomething freelancers working from a spare room in Edinburgh, who decided to set up a publisher as there weren’t any out there that really i tted

what we wanted from a publisher. We wanted someone to be loud on social media, to really use crowdfunding and to build a community around what they were publishing. Instead of waiting any longer, in July 2016 we took the leap ourselves.

Fast forward a year and everything has changed, except for the spare room we cram ourselves into. We’ve published two issues of our literary magazine featuring i ction, non-i ction, poetry and comics, have released our i rst two books, Nasty Women and Hings (see review, page 47), have seen the support of some of our idols Margaret Atwood, Garbage’s Shirley Manson, Amanda Palmer and have sold out events all around the UK. Most importantly, we have a really strong and amazing community of readers around our books. At the core is that we knew from the start what we wanted to do: we wanted to create a publisher that we would be fans of. We wanted to be different. We also

didn’t want to wait around for someone else to do it. Our i rst book, Nasty Women, was an idea spawned the day after Donald Trump was elected President of the United States in November 2016. By December, this essay collection on being a woman in the 21st century had been announced. By January, it was on Kickstarter, ending up 369% funded and raising over £22,000. By February, it was off to print and in March, it was published on International Women’s Day. We work fast and with passion, and people joined us for the ride.

Around the same time, we signed the hilarious Glaswegian short story writer Chris McQueer, and by July his debut collection Hings was published. Though very different books, both have strong and engaged communities around them. We can’t even begin to explain the Photoshop madness that came with Chris’s book!

As for the future, we have a few more books in the pipeline, and the continuation of our literary magazine. Our mantra is to publish less but publish louder, making sure that everything we do can be yelled about loudly. Our other main focus is to keep publishing what we’d be fans of: we took the leap headi rst into the book industry by doing it ourselves, and it really is the coolest, most rewarding, fun thing to do.

SOCIETY OF YOUNG PUBLISHERS The non-proi t dedicated to helping those looking to get into the publishing industry. @SYPScotland, thesyp.org.uk

BOOKY EVENTS Great for getting a feel for what’s going on, celebrating books and meeting new people in the industry.

WORK IN BOOKSHOPS Booksellers know what sells, trends, what designs work it’s a great route in.

DEGREES If you’d like a publishing- specii c course, Stirling and Napier have excellent Masters programmes, and Dundee excels in comics.

DO IT YOURSELF! There are plenty of brilliant resources to help start- ups. Don’t wait around for permission to do something go for it!

1 Sep–31 Oct 2017 THE LIST 121