A multi-imprint publishing house devoted to works that read aloud well, age well, and say something true.
A family name carried forward into the work of making books that last.
Noble Publishing is organized around a simple conviction: the best books have a voice, a vision, and the patience to be read a hundred years from now. We publish authors — not content. We build imprints — not product lines.
The house is structured into six imprints, each with its own editorial standard and visual identity. Across them we span systematic theology, leadership, literary epic, children's catechism, adult fiction, and contemporary non-fiction. What unites them is a standard: no book ships that has not earned the Noble name.
Every manuscript passes through the same craft discipline — attention to voice, to sentence rhythm, to the moment a reader closes the cover and remembers it.
Each imprint carries its own mark, its own typography, and its own editorial voice. Together they make a house.
Leadership, mentorship, and personal development for ministry and marketplace. Frameworks transferable by Monday morning. The voice of a proven leader speaking to emerging ones.
Works that proclaim the eternal Word with clarity, faithfulness, and power. Systematic theology, catechisms, and the Word and Spirit Bible — published in the tradition of the world's great theological houses.
Children's Bibles and the Light in the Darkness library — a forty-five volume prose epic in the literary tradition of Tolkien. Stories that work for the child and the parent at the same time.
Adult fiction, broad popular works, and the pop-culture wisdom series. The Book of Jesus, the Book of Miyagi, the Book of Yoda — reflections drawn from the teachers who have shaped a generation.
The personal imprint. Self-awareness, emotional intelligence, the art of acceptance. Broad-market adult readers. Not overtly religious — these books stand on their own in any bookstore.
The general imprint — books that don't fit the other five lanes but belong in the house. Curated titles, selective acquisitions, and the long-tail works we believe deserve a home.
The Noble name traces through two centuries of American public life — to Noah Noble, the fifth Governor of Indiana, and to James Noble, Indiana's first United States Senator, for whom Noble County is named. The house carries that name forward into the work of making books that endure.