colophon
A publisher's imprint or emblem is called a colophon. It typically includes the publisher's logo or symbol, as well as information about the edition, printing history, or other details about the book.
"Bad Kitty" is published by Roaring Brook Press, an imprint of Macmillan Publishers.
If you mean Doubleday as in the publishers, then yes they are in the UK. They are an imprint of Transworld Publishers who, in turn, are part of Random House. In the UK, Doubleday published The Book Thief, Brick Lane, and many others.
When his publishers moved him to their "New Age/Inspirational" imprint.
It's just the emblem of the publisher. The publishers business name is 'Puffin books' - so they chose a symbol of a puffin bird as an easily recognisable emblem.
Yes, HarperCollins acquired Zondervan in 1988. Zondervan continues to operate as an imprint of HarperCollins Christian Publishing, which is a division of HarperCollins Publishers.
The Vampire Stalker was published on November 3, 2011 by Scholastic.
Tears of a Tiger was first published in 1994 by Atheneum. It was also later published in 1996 by Simon Pulse who are an imprint of the publisher Simon & Schuster. An imprint is essentially a trade name and some publishers have various. Simon Pulse is an imprint for children's literature in the Simon & Schuster publishing house.
Bubba changed into a different person his characterists changed , he had an imprint of the emblem on the palm of his hand and he lost his shorts whilst swimming in the water tower.
Publishers sometimes have more than one division. The Penguin Group has Viking. These divisions are called imprints.
The base word for imprint is "print."
Rider - imprint - was created in 1908.