Status: | Active |
Founded: | 1991 |
Founder: | Errol Sharpe |
Country: | Canada |
Headquarters: | Nova Scotia |
Distribution: | Brunswick Books |
Keypeople: | Errol Sharpe, Wayne Antony, Beverley Rach |
Publications: | Books |
Topics: | politics, public policy, social sciences, aboriginal issues |
Imprints: | Fernwood (non-fiction), Roseway (fiction) |
Numemployees: | 7 |
Fernwood Publishing is an independent Canadian publisher that publishes non-fiction books dealing with social justice and issues of social, political and economic importance.
Fernwood was founded in 1991 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, publishing its first books in the spring of 1992. The Halifax office was moved to Black Point, Nova Scotia and, in 1994, a second office was opened in Winnipeg, Manitoba.[1] In eighteen seasons, Fernwood has published over 300 titles.[2] In 2006, Fernwood acquired Roseway Publishing, which is now their fiction imprint.
Fernwood offers an alternative Canadian perspective on issues that many major book publishers do not.[3] Founder and co-publisher Errol Sharpe has been quoted as saying, "In an era when the restructuring of capitalism seems to be threatening to erase many of the gains that have been made by the oppressed in society, we think that our books have a part to play in bucking the trend."[3]
In 2018, Fernwood Publishing released There’s Something in the Water by Ingrid Waldron. In 2020, It inspired a documentary that premiered in Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) and eventually in Netflix.[4]