Ten Speed Press

Updated at: Feb. 22, 2011, 11 a.m.

Ten Speed Press is a non-fiction book publisher based in Berkeley, California. In 1971, founder Philip Wood left a senior sales post at Penguin Books to launch the company on the strength of just one title — Anybody’s Bike Book — which became the book that inspired the company’s name and went on to sell more than a million copies. Legend has it that Phil stored the stock of the original edition in his apartment bathtub in downtown Berkeley.

From the bathtub to the bestseller list, Ten Speed has built its reputation on enduring career and business books like Richard Bolles’s What Color Is Your Parachute? (the best-selling job-hunting book in the world), acclaimed cookbooks that range from the upscale (Charlie Trotter’s) to the perennially popular (The Moosewood Cookbook) and the downright quirky (White Trash Cooking). Along the way, the company has also made its mark with a unique list of unclassifiable books, like How to Shit in the Woods, Why Cats Paint, Cannabible, and Furry Logic.

Over the years, the Ten Speed family has grown. In 1983, Ten Speed acquired Celestial Arts, a New Age book publisher, which has since evolved into a widely respected body, mind, and spirit imprint. And in 2002, acquired Crossing Press, a publisher specializing in metaphysics, alternative lifestyles, and healing modalities.


Related Books

The 1994 What Color is Your Parachute?: A Practical Manual for Job-Hunters and Career-Changers