Any especially high and/or low points in the company’s history?
Meg Storey: We have been discouraged that our short-story collections have not sold as well as hoped, especially given Tin House magazine’s strong history of championing short fiction. It is also disappointing when a book receives great press but that doesn’t translate to great sales. But our high points have outnumbered the low ones, including the success of our reprint of the 1970s DIY classic Possum Living; having When I Forgot on the front cover of the New York Times Book Review; the selection of Bright Before Us and The Listeners for Powell’s Books’ Indiespensible subscription; and Christopher R. Beha’s conversation about faith with Terry Gross on Fresh Air, following the publication of his first novel, What Happened to Sophie Wilder.