The Backstory
Once Upon A Time…
When Red Sweater Press owner and author Caitlin Buxbaum first started to think of herself as a writer, there was a red hooded sweatshirt she wore every day — or at least, near enough to every day, that she would become known for it by her friends.
As middle school wore on, and high school came around the bend, the red sweatshirt — affectionately and more conveniently known as the Red Sweater — made fewer and fewer appearances in public, its cuffs having almost completely separated from the arms. Still, it was too big for its owner — she would never be able to fill it.
And so, it came to rest in storage.
But the sweatshirt wasn’t forgotten. It lay safely enshrined in a plastic tote, tucked under old yearbooks and framed photos from years gone by, in a warm, wooden shed.
In its current, more abstract incarnation for Red Sweater Press, the red hooded sweatshirt represents that lingering desire for the past, that holding onto of sentimentality and identity, as well as the cultivation of mystery, and perhaps the sense that somewhere along the line, something dramatic happened.
And the story didn’t end there.
These are the ideas behind Red Sweater Press, which reflect the kind of stories this company aims to publish, in poetry and prose.
Enjoy!
Support small business
Red Sweater Press is a very small, independent publishing company, meaning we only publish what we love and we have no foundations, endowments, or angel investors footing our bills. We make our money from book sales, and books cost money to make and market well. If you believe in us and our mission, please consider clicking the button below to help offset our operational and publishing costs so we can give authors more.
Books by Caitlin M.S. buxbaum
The Birthday Picture: and Other Stories
Interstitials
Stakes
The Compendium of Lost Poems
Uneven Lanes
Ever Unknown, Ever Misunderstood
Songs from the Underground
Wabi-Sabi World: An Artist’s Search
Books we like
Disease of Kings by Anders Carlson-Wee
Night Swim by Joan Kwon Glass
My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry by Fredrik Backman
Room by Emma Donoghue
The Poison Tree by Erin Kelly
Carrie Pilby by Caren Lissner
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
Tweak by Nic Sheff
Pieces of Me: Rescuing My Kidnapped Daughters by Lizbeth Meredith