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Peter Goodman
Mr. Peter Goodman, Stone Bridge Press publisher and
editor-in-chief, lived in Tokyo for ten years where
he worked as an editor for English-language publishers
Charles E. Tuttle and Kodansha International before
returning to the United States in 1985. He has served
as in-house editor, ghostwriter, translator, and project
manager on nearly 100 Japan and Asia-related titles,
including The Japanese Language, A Japanese
Touch for Your Garden, Manga! Manga! The World
of Japanese Comics, Reading and Writing Chinese,
Japanese Made Easy, New Fashion Japan,
The Craft of the Japanese Sword, Secret
Teachings in the Art of Japanese Gardens, Kanji
Pict-o-Graphix, and many more.
Stone Bridge Press was established in Berkeley, California,
in 1989. The press now has some 40 titles in print, covering
such Japan-related areas as language, business, literature,
manga, design, and culture.
Mr. Goodman and SBP believe that Japan offers tremendous
opportunities for reexamining Western values and for
connecting with an emerging global culture increasingly
centered on the Pacific Rim.
Mr. Goodman feels that what has fascinated so many people
about Japan is its extraordinarily rich coherency, how
tenets of art and spirituality are reflected in work and
daily life. For 1,500 years Japanese culture has been
evolving in a more or less straight line, absorbing
foreign influences but remaining identifiably "Japanese."
He believes it's a culture that breeds both beauty and
arrogance. "It demands patience and erudition. And it gives
the publisher delicious editorial challenges and an
alluring design vocabulary: asymmetry, surface decoration,
white space, boldness, delicacy, a quick splash of color."
Awards received by Stone Bridge Press include the PEN West
award for literature, the Japan-America Friendship Commission
Prize from Columbia University, the HOW International Award,
the International Typographic Design Award, the AIGA award
for design, and the Benjamin Franklin Award for editorial
and design excellence.
Mr. Peter Goodman now lives in Albany, California, (near
Berkeley) with his wife, Catherine, and two sons.
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