An interesting page on who owns who in publishing:
https://stevelaube.com/who-owns-whom-in-publishing/
Pretty sure Kregel Academic is working with Tyndale (Comfort's resources), from 2013.
An interesting page on who owns who in publishing: https://stevelaube.com/who-owns-whom-in-publishing/ Pretty sure Kregel Academic is working with Tyndale (Comfort's resources), from 2013.
The divisions of Baker were a surprise to me. Never knew they owned the other publishers.
Interesting.
Missing from that list are:
Lexham and Faithlife (we know who owns those imprints)
T&T Clark, Sheffield Academic Press, and Trinity Press International, all three of which were acquired by Continuum, which in turn was acquired by Bloomsbury.
Wipf and Stock, with its imprints Cascade, Pickwick Publications, Slant, etc.
SPCK (Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge), which purchased Lion Hudson, and has a fiction imprint, Marylebone House. In 2015, SPCK merged with the UK-based Inter-Varsity Press (not to be confused with InterVarsity Press, the subsidiary of US-based InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, which is mentioned in that article).
Paulist Press, the publishing arm of the Paulist Fathers
Christian Focus, including its imprints Christian Heritage and Mentor
Hodder & Stoughton, now owned by Hachette
Ignatius Press
Paternoster Press, acquired in 2009 by Australian company Koorong, which itself was acquired in 2015 by Bible Society Australia.
Liturgical Press, operated by Saint John's Abbey, a Benedictine abbey in Minnesota
Langham (Langham Partnership, founded as Langham Trust by John Stott)
Day One, publishing arm of Day One Christian Ministries, formerly called Lord's Day Observance Society (LDOS)
Northwestern Publishing House, official publishing house of the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod
Founders Press (Founders Ministries, previously Southern Baptist Founders Conference)
Evangelical Press (UK)
Those are just the publishers from which I have 100+ books in my Logos library. It doesn't include the various university presses that publish some Christian materials (e.g., Cambridge, Yale), magazine publishers (e.g., The Gospel Coalition), Children's book imprints, and other minor players.
Those are just the publishers from which I have 100+ books in my Logos library.
Nor does it cover the important presses I wish I had 100+ books from in my Verbum library:
a rather pathetic list ... no need to even bother with who bought whom when.
Which 'pathetic' list are y'all referring to?
"For a comprehensive list, check out The Christian Writers Market Guide."
He's just tracking his own interests over the years.
mine being pathetic compared to Rosie's on the basis of number of resources ...
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