Winter 2022 Supporting Diverse Voices Book Proposal Grants January 31, 2022 Applications open February 7 for the Winter 2022 Humanities cycle of our Supporting Diverse Voices Book Proposal Grants. Read More
Congratulations to PROSE Award winners and finalists January 26, 2022 Fourteen Princeton University Press books are winners or finalists for 2022 PROSE Awards. Read More
Jews and Their Roman Rivals wins National Jewish Book Award in Scholarship January 20, 2022 Jews and Their Roman Rivals: Pagan Rome’s Challenge to Israel by Katell Berthelot has won the National Jewish Book Award in Scholarship. Read More
Announcing the Spring 2022 Princeton Audio lineup January 18, 2022 We’re thrilled to share the Spring 2022 Princeton Audio list. Read More
Announcing EvenUP January 11, 2022 Princeton University Press is honored to be one of seventeen university presses participating in the newly launched EvenUP initiative. Read More
Princeton University Press Publishing Fellowship applications open January 7 January 03, 2022 Applications for the second cycle of the Princeton University Press (PUP) Publishing Fellowship open January 7. Read More
A winter break for PUP offices December 21, 2021 Princeton University Press’s US and UK offices will be closed December 24 – January 2 for a winter break. Read More
Princeton University Press’s European office moves to Banbury Road in Oxford November 18, 2021 Princeton University Press’s European office has moved to a new location, in Oxford, with increased capacity for a growing number of UK-based staff. The move comes as the Press celebrates twenty-two years in Europe. Read More
Director Christie Henry on global supply chain challenges November 15, 2021 A note from Director Christie Henry on remaining adaptive, collaborative, and resilient in the face of global supply challenges. Read More
Announcing a new publishing partnership with Princeton University Art Museum October 21, 2021 Princeton University Press and the Princeton University Art Museum are excited to announce a new exclusive publishing partnership. Read More
PUP acquires World English rights to Claudia de Rham’s The Beauty of Falling October 18, 2021 PUP has acquired World English rights, including audio, to The Beauty of Falling by theoretical physicist Claudia de Rham. From Newton’s notion of gravitational force to Einstein’s theory of relativity, to the speculative frontiers of contemporary physics, The Beauty of Falling paints a vivid portrait of what we know and still do not know about gravity. Read More
Publishing for the future of the planet October 15, 2021 Taking direct action against the climate crisis is imperative for us all. Through engagement with a number of new initiatives targeting at supply chain sustainability, PUP is committed to printing and publishing for the future of our planet. Read More
Joshua D. Angrist and David Card are co-winners of the 2021 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel October 11, 2021 Princeton University Press authors Joshua D. Angrist and David Card are co-winners of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2021. According to The Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences, Dr. Angrist has been jointly awarded one half of the prize, with Guido W. Imbens, “for their methodological contributions to the analysis of causal relationships.” Dr. Card has been awarded one half of the prize “for his empirical contributions to labour economics.” Read More
PUP acquires Barbara Chase‑Riboud’s I Always Knew October 07, 2021 Princeton University Press is honored to announce that we have acquired World English rights to I Always Knew: A Memoir, a collection of letters written by internationally renowned author and artist Barbara Chase-Riboud. The book will be co-published with the Pulitzer Foundation. Read More
Syukuro Manabe is co‑winner of the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics October 05, 2021 Princeton University Press author Syukuro Manabe is a co-winner of the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics, awarded by The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Professor Manabe was awarded one-half of the Prize, jointly with Klaus Hasselmann, “for the physical modelling of Earth’s climate, quantifying variability and reliably predicting global warming.” Read More