About

The University of Washington Press is the nonprofit book and multimedia publishing arm of the University of Washington. During the 85 years of its existence, the University of Washington Press has played an important role as the major scholarly publisher in the U.S. north of California and west of the Rockies. The Press has published approximately 3,800 books, of which about 1,400 are currently in print. Today we publish about sixty new titles each year.

From the beginning the Press has reflected the University’s major academic strengths. Building on those strengths, the Press has achieved recognition as the leading publisher of scholarly books and distinguished works of regional nonfiction in the Pacific Northwest. Our titles cover a wide variety of academic fields, many of which reflect the strengths of our parent university. The Press has especially distinguished lists in Asian studies, Middle East studies, anthropology, Western history and biography, environmental studies, and natural history. We are recognized as the foremost publisher in the country on the art and culture of the Northwest Coast Indians and Alaskan Eskimos, and as a leader in the publication of materials dealing with the Asian American experience. In recent years, the Press has established copublishing and distribution relationships with a growing list of art museums and other institutions around the world.

For more information on the Western or Environmental history lists or the Weyerhaeuser Series, please contact Marianne Keddington-Lang, Acquisitions Editor, at mkedlang*at*u.washington.edu. Regarding this blog, please contact Rachael Mann, publicist, at remann*at*u.washington.edu (remove asterisks).

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