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St. Martin's Press is a book publisher headquartered in Manhattan in New York City.It is headquartered in the Equitable Building.St. Martin's Press is considered one of the largest English-language publishers, [3] bringing to the public some 700 titles a year under six imprints.
Pages in category "St. Martin's Press books" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 230 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
St. Martin's Press books (3 C, 232 P) F. Forge Books books (1 C, 40 P) Pages in category "St. Martin's Press" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Thomas Dunne Books was an imprint of St. Martin's Press, which is a division of Macmillan Publishers. From 1986 until April 2020, it published popular trade fiction and nonfiction. From 1986 until April 2020, it published popular trade fiction and nonfiction.
Tor Books was sold to St. Martin's Press in 1987. Along with St. Martin's Press; Henry Holt; and Farrar, Straus and Giroux, it became part of the Holtzbrinck group, now part of Macmillan in the US. [5] In June 2019, Tor and other Macmillan imprints moved from the Flatiron Building, to larger offices in the Equitable Building. [6] [7]
The manuscript was once reputed to have belonged to St. Patrick and, at least in part, to be a product of his hand. Research has determined, however, that the earliest part of the manuscript was the work of a scribe named Ferdomnach of Armagh (died 845 or 846).
The company was founded in 1981 by Charles Christensen and Joan Feinberg as Bedford Books, an imprint of St. Martin's Press.. Among others works, Bedford/St. Martin's has published The Bedford Handbook and A Writer's Reference by Diana Hacker, Patterns for College Writing, The Bedford Reader, The American Promise, Ways of the World and Writer's Help.
Liber Scintillarum (literally "Book of Sparks") is a late seventh or early eighth-century florilegium of biblical and patristic sayings in Latin.It was compiled by Defensor, a monk who in the preface identifies himself as a member of St Martin's Abbey at Ligugé, near Poitiers, and who wrote the work at the behest of his teacher Ursinus, the abbot of St Martin's.