Growing up, there’s one in almost every class: a budding bibliophile that breezes through assigned readings while devouring books on their own. Some dream of someday seeing their names on their first published books.
For Patricia Veldstra, it was not so cut and dried.
“I’ve always been a big reader, and I used to do a bit of writing. But I ended up just getting fascinated with the basic creation of books themselves,” she says.
After completing a certificate in publishing from Toronto Metropolitan University through distance learning in Edmonton, she started doing freelance book design work and while working as a project coordinator with the Book Publishers Association of Alberta.
She still dreamed of working in publishing, but she realized that the industry is concentrated in the big centres. And while there are great presses outside of that, including in Alberta, she says, they operate on small margins and therefore the ability to get into the industry is limited.
“Because of how concentrated the industry is, and how difficult it is to get started … lack of diversity in what gets published was and still is a huge problem,” says Veldstra.
She wanted to help change that, so in 2023, Veldstra founded Mythic Roads Press in Edmonton.
It’s a traditional, royalty-based publishing company and one of its main goals is to “publish unique, thought-provoking stories that resonate with people who may not have had the chance to see themselves in mainstream genre fiction… and to ensure that [the stories] can be read and enjoyed by the largest audience possible.”
Starting her own publishing company was the answer to her childhood dream of being surrounded by books — today, she’s involved in all sides of production.
Veldstra opened to submissions in March of 2023 and went through dozens before coming to the manuscript that would become her company’s first published title, Moon Dust in My Hairnet.
Non-binary, Marietta, Georgia-based author JR Creaden (they/them) says they initially struggled to find a publisher that wanted the same things. They wanted to focus on an underdog and her experience as someone adjacent to the fastest and strongest around her. They wanted diverse voices that are often lost in the noise of louder voices around them — and to represent those voices accurately.