Reportage Press was a publishing house specialising in "books on foreign affairs or set in foreign countries, or just books written from a stranger's view.
"[1] In reaction to the lack of quality books on foreign affairs, Reportage Press was established in 2007 by two former journalists: Charlotte Eagar, a foreign correspondent who has covered conflicts such as the Iraq War and Balkan wars; and Rosie Whitehouse, a former BBC journalist.
[3] At the beginning of 2008, Reportage was named as one of the 'New lists to watch' by The Bookseller.
[4] All the titles published have received media coverage, something Eager and Whitehouse put down to "the newsworthy content, and their ability to get books out quickly.
For example, a percentage of profits from Denise Affonço's To The End Of Hell go to the Documentation Centre of Cambodia (DC-Cam), where a scholarship has been set up in the name of Denise Affonço's nine-year-old daughter Jeannie, who starved to death in 1976 under the Khmer Rouge regime.