ENC Press

It also published a satire Devil Jazz,[14] by Canadian author Craig Forgrave, as well as two British humor novels: Moon Beaver,[15] by Andrew Hook,[16] and Terror from Beyond Middle England,[17] by Sarah Crabtree, both now available only as e-books.

In 2005, ENC Press added to its catalogue the futuristic sci-fi novel The Amadeus Net,[19] by Canadian author Mark A. Rayner, and three social satires: Mother's Milk[20] by Andrew Thomas Breslin, ExecTV[21] by David A. Brensilver, and Junk,[22] by Christopher Largen.

The June 2012 release, Escape Clause[28] by Jeffrey R. DeRego, a graphic novel in prose, portrayed a behind-the-scenes world of rules and regulations constraining the powers of superheroes.

Much of ENC Press's satire stems from libertarian themes of individuals battling oppressive big business or the extremes of political correctness.

For example, Olga Gardner Galvin's The Alphabet Challenge[30] is described as a story that involves a bureaucracy "whose members work their fingers to the bone to make caring, compassion, and lowest-common-denominator equality a federal law."