Kayelle Press
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Status | Active |
---|---|
Founded | 2010 |
Country of origin | Australia |
Headquarters location | Blue Mountains, NSW |
Distribution | Worldwide |
Fiction genres | Speculative Fiction |
Official website | KayellePress.com |
Kayelle Press, founded in September 2010, was an independent publisher of speculative fiction (fantasy, science fiction, and horror) for younger readers (aged between 9 and 12 years), young adults and adults.[1] Currently (July 2015), its webpage says that the press is "closed," and it thanks both readers and writers for having supported it.
It was located in the Blue Mountains, New South Wales, Australia.[2]
Titles
[edit]2010
[edit]- Cat's Eyes (Land of Miu, #1) by Karen Lee Field (ISBN 978-0-9808642-0-5 (pbk.)[3] and ISBN 978-0-9808642-1-2 (eBook)) — 10 December 2010.[4]
2011
[edit]- Hope: An anthology of speculative fiction to help raise suicide awareness edited by Sasha Beattie (ISBN 978-0-9808642-2-9 (pbk.)[5] and ISBN 978-0-9808642-3-6 (eBook)) — 7 October 2011.[6]
- The Land of Miu (Land of Miu, #1) — originally published with the title of "Cat's Eyes" in Dec 2010 (ISBN 978-0-9808642-7-4 (pbk.) and ISBN 978-0-9808642-4-3 (ebook)) — 25 Nov 2011.[7][8]
2012
[edit]- The King's Riddle (Land of Miu, #2) by Karen Lee Field (ISBN 978-0-9808642-5-0 (pbk.) [9] and ISBN 978-0-9808642-6-7 (eBook) — 25 January 2012[10]
- Night Terrors Anthology edited by Karen Henderson (ISBN 978-0-9808642-8-1 (pbk.) and ISBN 978-0-9808642-9-8 (ebook)) — 13 April 2012[11]
2013
[edit]- Speculative Realms: An Anthology edited by Sasha Beattie (ISBN 978-1-4523-0501-1 (3rd ed. ebook)) — 6 January 2013[12]
- Tomorrow: Apocalyptic short stories edited by Karen Henderson (ISBN 978-0-9875657-0-9 (pbk.) and ISBN 978-0-9875657-1-6 (ebook)) — 22 June 2013[13]
Upcoming
[edit]- 2013 — The Obelisk Trap by Margaret Pearce (Book 1 in the Awesome Aussie Tales series)
- 2014 — Hope Vol. 2 (anthology) edited by Karen Henderson
- TBA — The Lion Gods (Land of Miu, #3) by Karen Lee Field
Authors
[edit]- Joanne Anderton
- Jason Andrew
- Reece A. A. Barnard
- Warren Bartik
- Alan Baxter
- Sasha Beattie
- Mike Brooks
- Jodi Cleghorn
- Janette Dalgliesh
- Rowena Cory Daniells
- Lorne Dixon
- Chris Donahue
- Robert Essig
- Ryan Neil Falcone
- Karen Lee Field
- Pamela Freeman
- Lindsey Goddard
- Paul Haines
- Carole Hall
- JC Hemphill
- Lyall Henderson
- Joshua S Hill
- Craig Hull
- Davin Ireland
- Tim Jeffreys
- Calvin D. Jim
- C. I. Kemp
- Lancer Kind
- Robin Kirk
- Lisamarie Lamb
- Andrew J McKiernan
- Dr Myfanwy Maple
- Susan May
- David Meadows
- Robert J. Mendenhall
- Jeff Parish
- Stephen Patrick
- Margaret Pearce
- Sherry D. Ramsey
- Rob Rosen
- Jonathan Shipley
- Steve Simpson
- Benjamin Solah
- Graham Storrs
- Aric Sundquist
- Joseph S. Walker
- Sabrina West
- Ian Whates
- Sean Williams
- TW Williams
- Suzanne J. Willis
- William R.D. Wood
Editors
[edit]- Sasha Beattie
- Karen Henderson
Awards
[edit]Finalist
[edit]- 2011 Aurealis Award, Science Fiction Short Story: “Flowers in the Shadow of the Garden” by Joanne Anderton[14]
- 2012 WSFA Small Press Award: “Flowers in the Shadow of the Garden” by Joanne Anderton[15]
References
[edit]- ^ Kayelle Press home page
- ^ Kayelle Press Press Release dated 23 September 2011
- ^ Trove National Library of Australia
- ^ Cat's Eyes — official webpage
- ^ Trove National Library of Australia
- ^ Hope Anthology — official webpage
- ^ Publisher's official announcement
- ^ The Land of Miu — official webpage
- ^ WorldCat
- ^ The King's Riddle — official webpage
- ^ Night Terrors Anthology — official webpage
- ^ Speculative Realms Announcement
- ^ Tomorrow — official webpage
- ^ 2011 Aurealis Awards Shortlists
- ^ WSFA Small Press Award - 2012 Winner and Finalists
External links
[edit]- Kayelle Press — Official Site