Graywolf Press's top 10 neighbors span literary magazines, book publishers, literary blogs, and news publishers — a dense cluster of text-oriented media with no single dominant pull.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.96 (Margaret Atwood) down to 0.95 (Penguin Press), a range of less than a full percentage point across all ten neighbors. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the narrow band means no single neighbor stands apart as a structural anchor.
Tallying the subcategories: three neighbors are fellow Book Publishers — Alfred A. Knopf (0.95), Farrar, Straus & Giroux (0.95), and Penguin Press (0.95) — confirming that Graywolf's audience does overlap with its own kind. But the majority of the top 10 are not publishers. Two are literary Blogs — The Millions (0.96) and The Rumpus (0.96) — two are Magazines — Granta (0.96) and POETRY magazine (0.96) — one is a Website — Literary Hub (0.96) — one is a News Publisher — Mother Jones (0.95) — and one is an Author — Margaret Atwood (0.96). The cluster is less "book publisher peers" than a broader literary-media ecosystem: magazines, blogs, and editorial websites that serve the same reading audience.
The flat shape across this mix suggests Graywolf's audience is defined by a consistent literary-media diet rather than loyalty to any single format or outlet.