Introducing our first chapbook: Awaken by Jade Driscoll

I’m so pleased to share that Awaken by Jade Driscoll is And Then Publishing’s first-ever book project!

This poetry chapbook is dreamlike and playful, yet harrowing and devastatingly sincere. Grief, anxiety, and depression appear as various characters that haunt the speaker even in dreams. Though the speaker is often disembodied by trauma, wonderment and imagination manage to peek through like sun through clouds to transform her. If learning to build a house is to first learn how to tear one down, our speaker applies the same concept to the self—Driscoll writes “maybe I could find myself / by tearing myself apart.” Just before all hope is lost, the self is reclaimed and righteously declared. This is a chapbook readers will tear through but not soon forget. 

Awaken will be available for purchase via the soon-to-be-opened And Then Shop on June 28, 2023. Mark your calendars!

Jade Driscoll (she/her) is a Michigan poet with a master’s degree in creative writing from Central Michigan University. Her work has previously appeared in Ponder Review, Plainsongs, Remington Review, Livina Press, Atlas and Alice, The Elevation Review, and others, and she has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, the Best of the Net Awards, and the AWP Intro Awards. Many of her poems focus on destigmatizing conversations surrounding mental health and/or sharing her personal experiences with mental illness. When she’s not writing, Jade enjoys reading, listening to music, learning Korean, and walking in local parks. You can find her online @thepoetjade.

& please enjoy an exclusive first look at the chapbook’s cover image:

"Awaken" cover image. Features a goldfish being held by tail fin by the pointer finger and thumb of a left hand with STAY tattooed on the wrist. Goldfish is dangling over an open mouth with an open eye inside the mouth. Designed and drawn via Procreate by Isabella Gross, signed bg '23.

xoxo,
&tp

On publishing & choosing the name of this press

This micro press was dreamt up in the MFA workshop I had my first year with fantastic poet, performer, and professor cris cheek. They asked our workshop to make little books for our end-of-semester assessment. I remember thinking at first why I would want to make a book of my own work, how it was any different than turning in the standard portfolio at the end of workshop. A bunch of my work through the semester printed on paper, stapled, and handed in, right?

Once I got started on the project, I may not have immediately recognized that I wanted to start my own press, but I knew I had definitely found a new passion that I wanted to invest time and energy into. cris let us borrow a handy book template of theirs, and god was it challenging! I didn’t realize that I’d be folding the pages into quarters, and in order to do that some of your text needed to be upside down—the margins are so finicky, where do you put the page numbers, do I use page numbers? I had so many font choices! And then, I had to think about the cover art and how to make twelve of the little things… it was the most fun I had that semester. I bought a little bookmaking set online and sat on my bedroom floor using a book spine and a bone folder to get perfect creases. Poked holes in the crease with an awl and sewed it with wax string. I knew none of this stuff, had none of these skills a few weeks prior. The cherry on top was designing a cover—it turned out to be one of the first pieces of realistic digital art that I was really proud of.

As all creative writers know, titling stuff really sucks. I went with “Frog Songs” because a good handful of the poems in the book referenced frogs and I thought it sounded cute. Some of my peers thought I was channeling Mary Oliver’s “Dog Songs,” which I was not, but I don’t mind that they share the same headspace for some people. And at the end of all this, I handed out my copies to my peers and in return received copies of their little books—now I have a collection of work from the poets I worked with my first year of my MFA at Miami University, and I thought that was really, really cool.

Isabella Gross with her first handmade book, titled Frog Songs, seated in a courtyard in spring.
Me & my first “baby,” a little collection called “Frog Songs.”

In undergrad, I figured that I could break into that vague and daunting world of “publishing” with my English degree if I wanted to, if an handful of other things didn’t go my way. When you’re a curious and loud-mouthed English student like I was, you ask a lot of questions to your professors and visiting writers about publishing, like does publishing mean the writing part, editing part, the bookmaking part, or the marketing part? Do you get to pick what you do when you work in publishing and change it if you get bored? Do writers get to decide how they want the book to look? Do you have to live in New York City? To be honest, the answers were also fairly vague, which I guess contributes to that shroud of mystery that surrounds the publishing industry. From what I gathered, publishing is a profession with a high burnout rate; you mostly work in one department doing one thing and even though you could potentially move from one department to another, you’re still doing one thing at a time, be it editing, designing, or marketing; that writers don’t get hardly any say in how their books look, when they’re published, and what they get out of the deal; that all of this is more difficult considering my specialization is poetry; and that yeah, if you don’t want to work from your couch every day, New York is sort of the place to be. My general reaction to all of this was, um, that’s not exactly what I was hoping you’d say.

I started making books as a kid, like so many of us do. It’s all too easy to forget how easy and fun it is to write and draw and staple or tie the pages together and put it on the shelf, show it to your grandma. cris explained to us that they had started a press at nineteen publishing their friends’ work, and I was shocked. You mean, you can just publish people? Whatever work you like? By yourself? Turns out that the short answer is yes, you can do that. What I’m doing here is more complicated than making a book out of crayons and tape, but honestly, it’s even more fun.

And then, I asked a few more questions, did a little bit of internet research—& friends, here we are. Before you can make a website and an Instagram and put out a book, though, you gotta have a name. I had a nice little list going, but one stood out easily above the others:

The creative process, a series of ideas connected by, “And then I could try…”

Our best secrets and stories go, “And then…” 

A poet and an artist, and then she tried making a little book.

Maybe it also speaks to the question I’m asking myself now, when the press is just getting going. A lifetime in school—a degree in English and then an MFA, and then what?

And then this. This and then more things.

— &ap

Introducing: And Then Publishing

Welcome to And Then Publishing! We are a micro press based in Leelanau County, Michigan. We release handmade books and are primarily interested in publishing first chapbooks & books of new and emerging poets and writers, especially those from the Great Lakes region. 

Please stay tuned for updates about our first publication to be released June 28, 2023!

Follow our blog and Instagram for exclusive content including author interviews, behind-the-scenes bookmaking videos, publication updates, and more!

Thank you so much for being here and talk to you soon! ❤

All our love, And Then