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THE
EARLY YEARS
The Do-Not Press first
stuttered into life in October 1994 with a 192-page offering called Rock
Talk. The brain-child of music promoter and journalist Jim Driver, The
Do-Not Press was conceived as a variation on the theme of 'record label'.
In this case - because he didn˙t particularly want to get involved in
the record biz racket - the variation on this particular theme was that
the end product would not be albums, singles or CDs, but books.
Rock
Talk - which was a kind of 'compilation album' containing some rather
fine and interesting writing from the likes of Roy Harper, Tom Robinson,
Jon Ronson, Vince Power (owner of the Mean Fiddler empire), Miles Hunt,
Laura Lee Davies and Daevid Allen - was transcribed, edited, laid-out,
designed and proofed on a trusty Apple Mac LCIII in the Driver bedroom
(see picture). The 'biography' in Rock Talk reads:
Jim Driver was born in Yorkshire in 1954, and has spent most of his
life successfully avoiding a 9-5 routine. He is a publisher, writes regularly
for Time Out Magazine and has been working on his debut novel for
approximately twenty-three years. It is expected to appear soon (or shortly
thereafter). He lives in south London with a large number of books, a
television set and a stutter.
Funny Talk, a similar
enterprise featuring eminent comedy types including Michael Palin, Mark
Lamarr, Max Bygraves (!) and Paul Whitehouse, followed six months later
and the publishing industry recoiled with indifference. Again it was assembled
on the trusty LCIII and sold and distributed from the bedroom warehouse.
One minor niggle was that the words 'Rock Talk', appeared in the header
of every page. Driver attempted to get round this problem by insisting
that it was a subliminal advertisement for the previous volume. Few believed
him.
It was clear from
those first dry runs that The Do-Not Press needed professional distribution
and sales (both were eventually found) and that more had to be done than
just publish contributions from famous people in a series of Talks. Where
would it end? Farm Talk? Pub Talk? Builder & Decorator Talk? -
and so Jim Driver searched around for complete books written by other
people to publish.
He takes up the story:
I have always been interested in crime - especially of the Elmore Leonard/James
Ellroy/Eugene Izzy/Arthur Lyons type, so it seemed a good idea to try
and saunter down those mean streets. And I already knew a crime writer.
I
first met John B Spencer in my days as agent and promoter. Apart from
being a noted singer/songwriter, record producer and illustrator's agent,
Spencer was a write,r with a couple of crime books published in the 1970s
by Fontana. I asked him to write another Charlie Case adventure for The
Do-Not Press. He agreed and 'Quake City' with one of the best covers
of its time, designed by Time Out Art Director, Kirk Teasdale was
scheduled for publication in April 1996.
'A
conversation with Maxim Jakubowski of London's Murder One bookshop came
up with two more titles, including a volume of his own Źdangerous and
erotic˙ short stories, 'Life in the World of Women', which was marked
up for publication in April '96. Scheduled for the same date was the 'Fresh
Blood' anthology he and Mike Ripley had been working on for a couple of
years. Intended as a showcase for the new British school of crime-writing,
it came with the slogan 'Move over Agatha Christie and tell Sherlock the
news...'. Between them they managed to rope in writers of the calibre
of Mike Phillips (writing as Joe Canzius), Mark Timlin, John Harvey, Ian
Rankin, Chaz Brenchley, Stella Duffy and Derek Raymond (a posthumous,
unpublished extract). Each author wrote an introduction defining their
view on crime writing in modern Britain and Mike Ripley provided a definitive
five page foreword.
The
search for an imprint name was easier than I thought it would be. BLOODLINES
was on my first list of possible names, scribbled on the back of a beer-mat
during a brain-storming session at the local pub. I couldn't believe it
wasn˙t taken, but it didn't seem to be and so I nabbed it. Like The Do-Not
Press before it, Bloodlines had just the right ring to it and success
seemed just around the corner.
Next
on my list was a reissue of my Time Out colleague Brian Case's brilliant
dark-satire from 1968, 'The Users'. All four titles were published as
planned in April 1996 and received far more press than we expected, including
an amazing boost around the British crime-writing boom. Sales didn't quite
live up to expectations, and so retirement had to be postponed.
Over the next few
years The Do-Not Press published an eclectic
variety of books: a charity collection for NCH Action For Children ('For
The Children' edited by Susan Penhaligon), a contentious history of the
madcap group who invented bungee-jumping ('The Strange Adventures of the
Dangerous Sports Club' by Martin Lyster) and a collection of Ray Lowry's
work over the preceding 30 years ('Ink').
We
took on new and exciting young authors and published first novels or short
story collections Christopher Kenworthy, Conrad Williams, Simon
Skinner and Frank Downes among them. The Do-Not Press also published a
book called 'Cunt' that got us into hot water (not totally unexpectedly)
and took on Jenny Fabian's notorious 1960s roman à clef, 'A Chemical
Romance'. We are very proud to have been associated with Miles Gibson
since 1998.
But
most of all The Do-Not Press is known for its strong contemporary crime
list. Aside from a strong showing from the now sadly departed John B Spencer,
we are the UK publisher for a virtual who's-who of British crime writers:
Ken Bruen, Bill James, Paul Charles and Russell James among them. Then
there's the articulation imprint, launched in 2002 to publish high quality
photographic books. But that hardly counts as 'the early years'
August
2002
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