Holland Park Press
Founded2009 (2009)
FounderBernadette Jansen op de Haar
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Headquarters locationLondon, England
Publication typesBooks
Official websitewww.hollandparkpress.co.uk

Holland Park Press is an independent, privately owned, London-based publishing house. It was founded in 2009 by Bernadette Jansen op de Haar.

Holland Park Press has an Anglo-Dutch flavour as its speciality is to publish contemporary Dutch writers in Dutch and English.[1] The company also publishes new works written in English and translations of classic Dutch novels. The Press specialises in fiction and poetry.

Holland Park Press also publishes an online magazine[2] with weekly columns on topical issues.

Books by Holland Park Press

  • Eline Vere by Louis Couperus, completely revised translation of J. T. Grein
  • Angel by Arnold Jansen op de Haar, translated by Bernadette Jansen op de Haar
  • Engel by Arnold Jansen op de Haar
  • Top of the Sixties by David Ayres
  • The Lonely Tree by Yael Politis
  • King of Tuzla by Arnold Jansen op de Haar, translated by Paul Vincent
  • De koning van Tuzla by Arnold Jansen op de Haar
  • Hedwig’s Journey (original title: Van de koele meren des doods) by Frederik van Eeden, updated translation of Margaret Robinson
  • Yugoslav Requiem by Arnold Jansen op de Haar, translated by Paul Vincent
  • Joegoslavisch requiem by Arnold Jansen op de Haar
  • Finding Soutbek by Karen Jennings
  • Everything Must Go by Rosie Garland
  • To Sing Away the Darkest Days by Norbert Hirschhorn
  • Hold Still by Cherry Smyth
  • Where is My Mask of an Honest Man? by Laura Del-Rivo
  • Away from the Dead by Karen Jennings
  • Diaspo/Renga by Marilyn Hacker and Deema K. Shehabi
  • The Stray American by Wendy Brandmark
  • Place Lamartine by Jeroen Blokhuis
  • Lamartine Square by Jeroen Blokhuis
  • 100 Dutch-Language Poems, From the Medieval Period to the Present Day, selected and translated by Paul Vincent and John Irons
  • Winegarden by Anthony Ferner
  • The Island by Karen Jennings – longlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize[3]

References

  1. "About Us", Holland Park Press.
  2. "Magazine", Holland Park Press.
  3. Self, John (5 August 2021). "An Island by Karen Jennings review — the dark horse of Booker 2021". Retrieved 5 August 2021 via www.thetimes.co.uk.
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