Publications
- Percutio (Annual; 2006 (pilot), 2007 (N° 1), 2008 (N° 2)), 2009 (Performance, N° 3), 2010 (Necessity), 2011 (Collaboration), 2012 (Ah ! l'Europe !) ISSN 1953-1427. Literary periodical.
- The Second Location, stories by Bronwyn Lloyd, 2011.
- Feeding the Gods, poems by Scott Hamilton with ten photographs by Kendrick Smithyman, 2011.
- Private Bestiary, Selected Unpublished Poems, Kendrick Smithyman, 2010.
- Kingdom of Alt, short stories by Jack Ross, 2010.
- The Constant Losers, novel by Alex Wild, 2010.
- Travesty, graphic SF novel, Mike Johnson, 2010.
- Wall, Art book, Ellen Portch (Artist), 2010.
- On the Eve of Never Departing, poetry, Richard von Sturmer, 2009.
- Free Fall, short passages of prose writing (called "microfictions"), Rogelio Guedea (translated from the Spanish by Peter Broad and Sandra Delgado Merill (USA)), 2009.
- Skin Hunger, poetry, David Lyndon Brown, 2009.
- Writers in Residence and Other Captive Fauna, poetry, Ted Jenner, 2009.
- bad appendix, poetry, Jen Crawford, 2008.
- Enclosures, novel, William Direen, 2008.
- EMO, novel, Jack Ross, 2008.
- Marked Men, novel, David Lyndon Brown, 2007.
- Luce Cannon, poetry, Will Christie, 2007.
- Conversation With a Stone, poetry, Richard Taylor, 2007.
- To the Moon in Seven Easy Steps', poetry & prose, Scott Hamilton, 2007.
- Song of the Brakeman, science fiction novel, Bill Direen, 2006.
- The Imaginary Museum of Atlantis, novel, Jack Ross, 2006.
- Vertical Harp: selected poems of Li He, free versions from the Chinese, Mike Johnson (writer)|Mike Johnson, 2006.
- Love in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, poetry, Olivia Macassey, 2005.
- New Sea Land, long poem, Bill Direen, 2005.
- Either Side the Horizon poetry by Stephen Oliver, 2005.
- Curriculum Vitae, short novel Olwyn Stewart, 2005.
- Trouble In Mind, short novel, Jack Ross, 2005.
- Coma, short novel and two short stories, Bill Direen, 2005.
Read more about this topic: Titus Books (publisher)
Famous quotes containing the word publications:
“Dr. Calder [a Unitarian minister] said of Dr. [Samuel] Johnson on the publications of Boswell and Mrs. Piozzi, that he was like Actaeon, torn to pieces by his own pack.”
—Horace Walpole (17171797)