Creation Books
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Creation Books is a British publishing house. Contributors and authors include Jeremy Reed, Peter Sotos, David Kerekes, David Slater, Romain Slocombe, Kenji Siratori and Jack Sargeant.
[edit] Bibliography
- Killing for Culture: An Illustrated History of Death Film from Mondo to Snuff, by David Kerekes and David Slater, ISBN 1-871592-20-8, paperback, 1996
- Artaud: Blows and Bombs by Stephen Barber
- The Monk (The Modern Classics Series) by A. Artaud and Matthew Lewis, published by Creation Books
- Heliogabalus : Or, The Crowned Anarchist (Creation Modern Classics) by A. Artaud, published by Creation Books
- Ultra-Gash Inferno published by Creation Books. ISBN 1-84068-039-3
- Alan Parker, Vicious. Too Fast To Live... (2004, Creation Books)
- Simon Whitechapel, Flesh Inferno: Atrocities of Torquemada and the Spanish Inquisition (Creation Books, 2003). ISBN 1-84068-105-5
- Tick, 2000 (Creation Books, ISBN 1-84068-048-2)
- Index, 2000 (Creation Books, ISBN 1-84068-010-5)
- Lazy, 2000 (Creation Books, ISBN 1-84068-010-5)
- Proxy: Peter Sotos Pornography 1991-2000, 2005 (Creation Books), a compendium of five of Sotos' works (Tool, *Predicate, 2005 (Creation Books)
- Blood Electric by Kenji Siratori, 2002 (Creation Books, ISBN 1-84068-060-1)
- Acidhuman Poject by Kenji Siratori, 2006 (Creation Books, ISBN 1-84068-117-9)
Founded in England in 1989, Creation Books began by publishing psych-horror-surrealist author James Havoc's Raism, before moving on to publishing non-fiction books, initially on the imprint Annihilation before moving all titles to the Creation Books catalogue. Fiction published by Creation includes works by Oscar Wilde and Bram Stoker, as well as avant garde classics by Artaud.
The first non-fiction titles included Simon Dwyer's Rapid Eye journal. Three volumes were published and included groundbreaking pieces on Genesis P-Orridge and Derek Jarman. Volume 2 was notable for a lengthy essay on Dwyer's journey through the American underground.
In this early period Creation also published avant garde poetry by Aaron Williamson and Geraldine Monk as well as a collection of horror stories: Red Stains. They also published Olivia Gladwell's post feminist analysis of music Catamania and the Mike Philbin novel Red Hedz .
Creation began publishing their film studies series with Killing For Culture, before moving on to publishing Jack Hunter's Inside Terradome and Jack Sargeant's Deathtripping: The Cinema of Transgression. This numbered series would come to include books on topics ranging from erotica and pornography, beatnic film, Japanese pink film, road movies, and cannibal horror movies.
By the mid-nineties Creation's catalogue had grown to include titles by Jack Stevenson, Lydia Lunch, Peter Sotos, and Stephen Barber.
Creation Books also embraced an erotic imprint; Velvet, which published the one-off journal Heat and new translations of works by DAF de Sade, alongside classic surreealist erotica and dominatrix author Terrence Sellers. Velvet also published two Torture Garden volumes edited by David Wood, co-founder of the fetish club of the same name.
Creation expanded into photography books and published two books by French artist Romain Slocombe, as well as a book by underground film maker Peter Whitehead. Slocombe, Havoc and Lunch also featured in Sargeant's book Suture.
Creation Books also published a handful of pulp titles under the Attack imprint, edited by Steve Wells, onetime skinhead poet and an early supporter of Creation. This imprint included books by Mark Manning aka Zodiac Mindwarp. The imprint was discontinued but Manning continued to publish with Creation Books.