about kamini press

kaminioffice400Kamini Press was started in 2007, named after a small village on Hydra island. The editor has had his summer house there for 12 years and the name is in homage to some former “neigbours” in the village. In 1939 Henry Miller arrived together with Katsimbalis (the Colossus himself) to visit the artist Ghikas in his mansion overlooking the Kamini harbour. Miller describes this in “The Colossus of Maroussi”. The ruins of Ghikas’ house are still there. The poet, author and singer Leonard Cohen’s house is also close by in the Kamini village. It was there that he wrote many of his songs and books. The beautiful photograph on the back cover of “Songs From a Room” was taken in his Kamini house.

Kamini Press publishes fine poetry in handmade, self assembled chapbooks, usually together with original cover art. Most books also come in limited editions with watercolors. All our books are handmade: individually printed, cut and assembled. We work with Swedish paper, from Svenskt Papper.

No rush jobs, one book per year was the idea, but this is flexible and we try to keep up the tempo.

henryWe like to present the poetry in a good way, to respect the writers. We agree with the great publisher William Packard of the New York Quarterly, who said he wanted to present the printed poem in the best possible way; he thought that “bad printing and mediocre book design inevitably militate against a fair reading of a poem”. He even found different typeface for each poem in his magazine. We don’t do that, but we agree on his thoughts.

We do not take submissions at this time, as we have plans already for the next two years.


  1. Water Row Books 11.17.07 / 8pm

    Thanks, Hank -
    The Coopers arrived today..
    A fantastic book…Fine poetry..Gorgeous design and print job..
    I hope you sell out soon…
    Jeffrey

  2. John Yamrus 11.19.07 / 8pm

    I’ve tried to order via paypal as well, and it’s not working for me, either…maybe i’ll try ordering directly from Cooper as i’ve known him and his work (denander’s as well) for several years now. i’m really looking forward to reading this and seeing denander’s always interesting artwork.
    john yamrus

  3. kaminipress 11.19.07 / 9pm

    Hi John, thanks for your order, the PayPal buttons at http://www.kaminipress.com are working, please give them a try again.
    Best/Henry

  4. Adrian Manning 11.26.07 / 9pm

    Congratulations on the first Kamini Press publication. The chapbook itself is beautiful – a top class publication, and the poetry from Glenn Cooper is fantastic. I recommend it to anyone.

  5. David Barker 12.20.07 / 6pm

    I highly recommend Glenn Cooper’s SOME NATURAL THINGS. A light touch, deep resonance. He writes about rain better than anyone I’ve ever read. As if rain was his dead sister. A beautifully designed little book that reads like a big book.

  6. kaminipress 02.01.08 / 3pm

    stevenallenmay from Plan B Press wrote a nice review of SOME NATURAL THINGS, read it all here:
    http://planbchaps.blogspot.com/2008/01/some-natural-things-glenn-w.html
    It’s a nice blog with many other interesting books as well.

  7. kaminipress 09.21.08 / 3am

    There’s a very good review of Glenn Cooper’s SOME NATURAL THINGS over at http://www.outsiderwriters.org/content/view/748/44/. “Highly recommended” says Christopher Robin.

  8. Mark Terrill 01.21.09 / 11am

    Henry!

    New Year’s greetings to you as well. Ronald Baatz’s WATCHING SPARROWS is a great poem, made all that much better by the exquisite Kamini Press production. Hats off to another job well done and I’m greatly looking forward to your next project. Keep up the good work! Go Kamini go!

    Cheers,
    Mark Terrill

  9. Hugh Fox 01.13.10 / 5pm

    Review for SMALL PRESS REVIEW.
    Would love to see you do a mini-book of my stuff….
    Love,
    Hugh

    Two Torch Singers.
    By Gerald Locklin
    2010; 12 pp; Pa; Kamini
    Press, Ringvägen8, 4th floor,
    SE-117 26 Stockholm, Sweden.
    No Price given.

    I just received this as a “New Year’s Greeting from Kamini Press, 1010,” and only 125 copies have been printed, but….it’s a tiny masterpiece that shouldn’t be overlooked. A water-color cover by Henry Denander of two overblown beauties, Julie London and Polly Bergen, impressionistic portraits of the torch singers in the poems themselves. The poetry is Locklin at his most direct, no-nonsense best: “In high school, when I was discovering/That music could be sexy,/There were two torch singers….whose albums I played until the vinyl wore thin/And the needles went blunt. “ (p.7). Followed by bio-data about Julie, primarily a singer, and Polly, both singer and actress, ending with a little tearful goodbye to them (and their times): “Polly was a woman worth growing up for./Polly/Was whatever a man or boy needed her to be./And God could she sing! There wasn’t any role/That woman couldn’t fill: Perfectly.” (p.9).
    Reading Two Torch Singers you can see why Bukowski saw Locklin as an ignored treasure– straightforeward, to the point, emotionally on track,one hundred percent able to relate to.

  10. rob mclennan 02.15.10 / 4pm

    i can’t find a single place to email you folk; wondering about potential review copies, & a contact for tom kryss; im working an interview series, & cd wright recommended both him & his new work; thanks

  11. Hugh Fox 03.08.10 / 5pm

    Review by Hugh Fox — for SMALL PRESS REVIEW.
    So do you want to see one of my poetry books too?
    Best.
    HF

    The Poet Tree.
    By T. Kilgore Splake
    2010; 46pp; Kamini Press,
    Ringvägen 8, 4th floor,
    SE-117 26 Stockhom, Sweden.
    order@kaminipress.com
    $9.00.

    Splake is Señor Minimalist Surrealist. Tiny little graphic word-specks thrown at you, you’re activated, and then comes suprise specks number two, three….seldom beyond fourteen, somehow fitting into a unified, Daliesque overview. Here’s the title poem: “denander drawings/liliput poems/tibetan prayer flag colors/suffering autumn storms/ vanishing in winter blizzards/burried until spring/to be born again.” (“poet tree,” p.9).
    The minimalism really works! And at times a real-world picture vividly emerges, much more effectively than maximalism because there’s no unrelated static: “first dawn/streaking gray horizon/cold steady drizzz/crossing brautigan creek/moving toward summit/early moring silence/out of body/dream dance/flating above trees/existential wholeness/ delicious poet’s / joie de vivre.” (“Cliffs,” p.24).
    The philosophy behind all this captivation is very uplifting too. Negate the negative, flow into the positive, a kind of get-you-between-the-eyes buddhism that you can’t escape from as you allow yourself to fall under Spake’s philosophical-religious spell.

  12. Michael Webster 08.02.10 / 2pm

    Henry,

    We at the E. E. Cummings Society would like to send you our summer newsletter, but when we sent it to henry.denander@pi.se , we received the following disheartening message: “Delivery to the following recipients failed.” Since we would like to enjoy success at least once in awhile, could you send your current e-mail address to Michael Webster at the above e-mail address? Thanks,
    Mike Webster
    P. S. Gerry Locklin told me where to find Kamini Press. I hope the weather in Greece is not too hot.

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