Enforce items at beginning and end of list

You can use sorted with the following key:

sorted(l, key = lambda s: (s!='p', s=='q', s))
['p', 'p', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'f', 'g', 'n', 't', 'z', 'q', 'q']

Explanation

To get a better idea of how this is working, the following list comprehension aims to replicate what is being returned from the lambda function defined in the key argument prior to making comparisons:

t = [(s!='p', s=='q', s) for s in pl]

print(t)
[(True, False, 'f'),
 (True, False, 'g'),
 (False, False, 'p'),
 (True, False, 'a'),
 (False, False, 'p'),
 (True, False, 'c'),
 (True, False, 'b'),
 (True, True, 'q'),
 (True, False, 'z'),
 (True, False, 'n'),
 (True, False, 'd'),
 (True, False, 't'),
 (True, True, 'q')]

This will then be the key to be used to sort the items in the list, as mentioned in the documentation:

The value of the key parameter should be a function that takes a single argument and returns a key to use for sorting purposes.

So taking into account that False = 0 and True = 1, when this list of tuples is sorted the result will be the following:

sorted(t)
[(False, False, 'p'),
 (False, False, 'p'),
 (True, False, 'a'),
 (True, False, 'b'),
 (True, False, 'c'),
 (True, False, 'd'),
 (True, False, 'f'),
 (True, False, 'g'),
 (True, False, 'n'),
 (True, False, 't'),
 (True, False, 'z'),
 (True, True, 'q'),
 (True, True, 'q')]

One idea is to use a priority dictionary with a custom function. This is naturally extendable should you wish to include additional criteria.

L = ['f','g','p','a','p','c','b','q','z','n','d','t','q']

def sort_func(x):
    priority = {'p': 0, 'q': 2}
    return priority.get(x, 1), x

res = sorted(L, key=sort_func)

print(res)

['p', 'p', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'f', 'g', 'n', 't', 'z', 'q', 'q']