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Boxfire Press

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boxfire Press
Parent companyBoxfire, LLC[1]
Founded2010 (2010)[2]
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationWashington, D.C.
DistributionWorldwide
Publication typesE-books and books
Fiction genresScience fiction, Superhero, Mystery, Fantasy
Imprintsca.lamito.us
No. of employees3
Official websiteboxfirepress.com[dead link]

Boxfire Press is an American science fiction and fantasy publisher based in Washington, D.C.

From 2009 to early 2012, most of Boxfire's publications were short e-books.[citation needed] One 2010 example was Kuro Crow, an e-book of three short stories by San Diego CityBeat writer Dave Maass.[3]

In May 2012, Boxfire Press announced it would stop selling individual short stories and instead offer them for free download in a shift toward long-form novels and anthologies. Instead, each month, a new short story would be made available to Boxfire Press' Storyed members.[4]

Published works

[edit]
Full-length works
  • McLachlan, Justin (1 March 2012). Star. Boxfire Press. ISBN 978-0983986126.
  • Goldsmith, Kris, ed. (30 November 2011). Red: Several Marvelous, Sensational, Absurd, Visionary, Peculiar, Unthinkable, Wicked and Totally Untrue Stories. Boxfire Press. ISBN 978-0983986102.
  • McLachlan, Justin (8 August 2011). Time Up. Boxfire Press. ISBN 978-0982767511.
  • McLachlan, Justin (23 April 2013). Treknology. Boxfire Press. ISBN 978-1938191022.
  • Lindemoen, Shane (8 August 2013). Artifact (Gold, 2014 Independent Book Awards). Boxfire Press. ISBN 978-1938191053.
  • Gale, Rebecca (10 December 2012). Trying. Box Fire Press. ISBN 978-1938191909.
  • Thomas, Matt (14 March 2013). A Breach In Death. Boxfire Press. ISBN 978-1938191015.
  • McLachlan, Justin (1 February 2013). This Time Around.
  • Milbrodt, Teresa (1 September 2013). The Patron Saint of Unattractive People.
  • McCaffrey, John (10 October 2013). The Book of Ash.
Short works

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Boxfire Press TOS". boxfirepress.com. Archived from the original on 2012-05-09.
  2. ^ "About Boxfire Press". boxfirepress.com.[dead link]
  3. ^ Carone, Angela (29 December 2010). "Local Journalist's Short Stories Published Electronically". KPBS. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
  4. ^ Sparks, Scott (26 May 2012). "Announcing Storyed". boxfirepress.com. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012. Retrieved 16 June 2012.