A Literary Publishing House
Every Voice Deserves
to Be Heard
The first publishing house dedicated to amplifying the literary voices of incarcerated writers
Publishing the Voices That Matter Most
Iron Pen Press is the first publishing house built from the ground up to serve incarcerated writers. We provide professional-grade editing, design, and distribution to people whose stories have been silenced by circumstance — not by lack of talent.
Behind every wall, in every facility across America, there are writers. Poets who find liberation in meter. Memoirists who refuse to let their stories be erased. Parents who write bedtime stories they cannot read aloud. Iron Pen Press exists because these writers deserve the same quality of publishing as anyone else — the same editorial rigor, the same beautiful design, the same access to readers and bookshelves worldwide.
We handle everything: transcription of handwritten manuscripts, developmental editing, professional cover design, ISBN registration, and distribution through Amazon, bookstores, and library systems globally. Our authors earn royalties from every sale. Their work stands on its own merit — because it always could.
We believe that a person's circumstances should never determine whether their voice reaches the world. Talent does not recognize walls. Iron Pen Press exists to prove it.
How It Works
From handwritten pages to bookshelves worldwide — we handle every step so you can focus on what matters: your writing.
Submit
Mail your manuscript to us — handwritten or typed. Include a title page with your name, a brief description, and estimated word count. No fees, no catch.
Transcribe
Our trained team carefully digitizes every handwritten page. We preserve your voice, your cadence, your punctuation — your words, translated faithfully to the page.
Edit
Professional editors provide developmental feedback, copy editing, and proofreading. We strengthen your manuscript while keeping your authentic voice intact.
Design
Our design team creates a professional cover and interior layout that does justice to your work. Every book we publish looks and feels like it belongs on any bookshelf.
Publish
Your book receives an ISBN and becomes available on Amazon, through independent bookstores, and in library cataloging systems worldwide. Real distribution. Real reach.
Earn
You receive royalties from every sale. Your designated representative can manage your account on the outside, or funds can be deposited into your commissary or trust account.
Our Books
Our first titles are currently in development. Be among the writers who launch this movement.
Letters to My Children
Some of the most powerful writing we receive comes from parents. Letters never mailed. Stories whispered through glass. Bedtime books written in cells where the lights go out at 9 p.m.
Letters to My Children is our dedicated imprint for books written by incarcerated parents for their children. These are picture books, chapter books, letters, and love notes — turned into real, physical books that a child can hold, read, and keep forever.
2.7 million children in America have a parent behind bars. Their stories deserve to be told — and their parents deserve to tell them.
Every book in this series includes a personal dedication from the author to their child. Because some distances can be bridged with words.
Learn About Our Children's Book Program
Submit a Manuscript
We accept submissions from incarcerated writers and from family members submitting on their behalf. It costs you nothing.
What We Publish
Iron Pen Press publishes literary work across a wide range of genres. If you have a story to tell, we want to read it.
"It costs you nothing to submit. If your manuscript is accepted, we handle everything — editing, design, printing, distribution, and royalty payments."
Submit on Behalf of Your Loved One
Family members, friends, and advocates can submit manuscripts on behalf of incarcerated writers. You will serve as the primary point of contact throughout the publishing process and can manage royalty payments on the author's behalf.
Include a letter of authorization from the writer along with the manuscript, or contact us at submissions@ironpenpress.co for guidance.
Information for FamiliesHow to Submit
Attn: Submissions
1440 W Taylor St. #2770
Chicago, IL 60607
Supporting Your Loved One's Voice
You play a vital role in helping an incarcerated writer get published. Here is how you can help — and what to expect.
Submitting on Their Behalf
You can submit a manuscript for your loved one by mailing or emailing it to us. Include a letter confirming that the writer authorizes you to act on their behalf. We will work with you as the primary contact throughout the process.
Managing Communication
Because correspondence with incarcerated individuals can be slow, having an outside contact dramatically speeds up the publishing process. You can relay editorial feedback, approve cover designs, and handle time-sensitive decisions.
How Royalties Work
Royalties are paid quarterly. As the author's designated representative, you can receive royalties on their behalf to hold in trust, deposit into their commissary account, or manage as they direct. All arrangements are documented in our author agreement.
Questions Families Often Ask
The Team Behind Iron Pen Press
Publishing professionals, advocates, and believers in the power of the written word.
Dr. Amara Justice Reynolds, PhD
Dr. Reynolds is a literary advocate, publishing strategist, and social justice scholar whose career has been defined by a singular conviction: that the most marginalized voices in America produce some of its most vital literature. After more than a decade working at the intersection of criminal justice reform and literary arts, she founded Iron Pen Press to build the infrastructure that incarcerated writers have always deserved. She holds a PhD in American Literature and Cultural Studies and has been recognized nationally for her work expanding access to literary publishing.
Isaiah Benjamin Cole
Celeste Naomi Hartwell
Evelyn Monroe Bennett
Dominic Rafael Vega
Advisory Board
Partners & Impact
Partnering with organizations that believe in the power of the written word.
Authors supported includes solo authors, anthology contributors, and writers served through editorial, transcription, and correspondence assistance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Anyone who is currently incarcerated in a federal, state, or local facility in the United States can submit a manuscript. Family members, friends, attorneys, and advocates can also submit on behalf of an incarcerated writer with the writer's authorization. We do not discriminate based on the nature of conviction, sentence length, or facility type.
No. Iron Pen Press never charges submission fees, reading fees, editing fees, or any other cost to the author. We cover all production costs — editing, design, printing, and distribution. If anyone contacts you claiming to represent Iron Pen Press and asks for money, please report it to us immediately.
Mail your manuscript to our mailing address listed in the Submit section. Include a title page with your name, the title of your work, genre, estimated word or page count, a brief description, and your return address. Send photocopies rather than originals when possible. We respond to every submission we receive by mail.
Yes. A family member, friend, or advocate can submit your manuscript on your behalf by mail or email. Please include a brief letter of authorization from the writer — even a handwritten note confirming permission is sufficient. The outside contact will serve as the primary point of communication throughout the publishing process.
We publish memoir, fiction, poetry, short story collections, children's books, nonfiction, graphic novels, and anthologies. Our "Letters to My Children" imprint specifically publishes picture books, chapter books, and personal letters from incarcerated parents to their children. If your work falls outside these categories, submit it anyway — we are always open to compelling writing that stretches boundaries.
From accepted manuscript to published book, the process typically takes six to twelve months. This includes transcription of handwritten manuscripts, two to three rounds of editing, cover and interior design, proofing, printing, and distribution setup. We keep authors and their representatives informed at every stage, and we work to move as efficiently as possible without compromising quality.
Authors receive royalties on every copy sold. Royalties are calculated quarterly and can be paid to the author's commissary or trust account, held in escrow, or paid to a designated representative (such as a family member). All royalty terms are clearly outlined in our author agreement before publication. We believe authors should be fairly compensated for their work — period.
Yes. You retain full copyright ownership of your work. Iron Pen Press licenses the right to publish, distribute, and market your book for a defined term. You can terminate the agreement after the initial period. We do not acquire your copyright, and we do not restrict your ability to create derivative works or pursue other publishing opportunities with the same intellectual property after the license term ends.
Absolutely. Many of the manuscripts we receive are handwritten, and we welcome them. Our professional transcription team carefully digitizes every page, preserving your voice, style, and intent. We work with you to verify that the transcription is accurate before editing begins. Write on whatever paper you have access to — lined, unlined, notebook, legal pad — we will handle the rest.
Not every manuscript will be a fit for our catalog, and that is not a reflection of your talent or your story's worth. If we are unable to publish your work, we will let you know by mail and, when possible, provide brief feedback on why and what you might consider revising. You are welcome to resubmit revised work at any time. We also maintain a list of other organizations and programs that support incarcerated writers, and we are happy to share those resources.