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In 1969, a group of writers and editors
working for the Georgia Straight published the first of several
literary supplements inserted into the weekly Straight. The Georgia
Straight Writing Supplement featured work by writers such as Straight
editor/publisher Dan MacLeod, Stan Persky, Milton Acorn, Gerry
Gilbert, Jack Spicer, George Stanley, Robin Blaser, Maria Hindmarch,
Jim Herndon, Dennis Wheeler, and Colin Stuart.
Within a year, the informal group of
writers and editors behind the GSWS began publishing books under the
name Georgia Straight Writing Series (GSWS). Early work by bill
bissett, Judith Copithorne, Fred Wah, Brian Fawcett, George Bowering,
and Daphne Marlatt featured in this series. Within another year,
internal schisms within the Georgia Straight resulted in an exodus of
many of the writers/editors connected to the GSWS from the weekly
paper. As the “York street commune”, the book publishing project
continued under a new imprint, Vancouver Community Press.
By 1974, the make-up of the collective
had shifted, and so too had the press’s editorial focus, which
began to emphasize non-fiction titles about current affairs and
politics. One of these books, Two Roads by Jack Scott, a largely
positive account of the People’s Republic of China (Scott was one
of the first westerners to visit, and write an account of, the China
of Mao Zedong and the Cultural Revolution) inspired another name
change, to New Star Books, marking a the shift in editorial emphasis
away from literary work and toward series non-fiction about politics.
By 1978, the York Street commune was no
more, and Lanny Beckman, who had joined the press in 1974, became
publisher, a position he held until 1990, when Rolf Maurer assumed
the role. This last change coincided with a return to the press’s
literary roots: while New Star continues to publish books about
politics and social issues, it also resumed publishing poetry, as
well as prose fiction and non-fiction. As well, books on local
history and culture became an important component of New Star’s
list.
In 1998, New Star moved across town to
its current location, at 18th and Commercial Street in Vancouver’s
East End. Today, New Star Books publishes six to ten new titles per
year.

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council
for the Arts which last year invested $17.1 million in the arts in
British Columbia.
Nous remercions de son soutien le Conseil des Arts du Canada, qui a investi 17,1 millions de dollars l'an dernier dans les arts en Colombie-Britannique.
 We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada
through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).  We acknowledge the support of the British Columbia Arts Council.
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