A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
learn/yeats & co / cabaret vert
Experimental, multi-media and alternative language arts etc since 1974.
Lichen literary journal
Arts & Letters review.
Life Rattle Press
Life Rattle Press publishes and markets on a small-scale, non-profit basis, high quality editions of new writing: collections by single or multiple authors, collections of the stories read at the annual Totally Unknown Writers Festival, and collections of stories published by new publishers.
Liticaphobia
Design Blog.
Littlefishcartpress
A small Canadian Poetry Press.
The Little Green Book of Big savings
This book is unlike any other coupon book you've seen before. It was created to inspire and encourage you to live a sustainable and healthy lifestyle while strengthening our local economy.
Lowlife
A lit zine.
Luna Publications
Luna Publications is an independent publisher based in Toronto, Canada. Our books address the cultural and intellectual attrition of the mainstream information flow, and work to break apart the homogenization and commercialization of our literary experience.
Lyrical Myrical Press
A Toronto small press featuring talented local writers - mostly poets. The books are designed by local artists and hand-made by the publisher.
The Toronto Small Press Group is a non-profit arts organization that has dedicated itself to support reading, encourage publishing and writing and to increase an awareness of the literary community in Toronto and the GTA. Its mandate is to promote very small to medium-sized presses, by holding two Toronto Small Press Book Fairs in the spring and fall of each year, and by a series of literary events held throughout the year.
The Toronto Small Press Group grew out of the “Meet the Presses” events organized by Stuart Ross and Nick Power back in the 80s, which was then a once-a-month gathering featuring five or six small and micro presses displaying, selling, and reading from new work. A much larger gathering, The (first) Toronto Small Press Book Fair, became an annual event in 1987, and a biannual event in the fall of 1990. The fair has become an integral part of the Ontario literary community and is a greatly anticipated part of the literary seasonal calendar.