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  • '''Zines: Where the Action Is: The Very Small Press in America''' ...ed in [[Whole Earth Review]], Fall 1990. Re-published with permission from the author.
    14 KB (2,422 words) - 20:45, 27 April 2007
  • ...ZAP]]. Its contents are based on research done at the QZAP archive during the summer of 2014. It includes work by:
    461 bytes (63 words) - 20:30, 28 November 2015
  • '''The Strange Voyage of the Leona Joyce''' is a zine by [[Robnoxious]], published in Minneapolis, Minne ...res and whacky characters they encountered. The cover is hand silkcreened. The zine is available at [[Microcosm Publishing]].
    557 bytes (83 words) - 12:24, 30 October 2009
  • '''Bite the hand that feeds the poisoned food''' is an [[Anarchism|anarcho]]-[[punk]] [[zine]] from Dublin, ...the Sad People]]). The articles often are of a personal/political nature. The last issue was a split zine with another Irish [[punk]] [[zine]], [[Cotton
    679 bytes (103 words) - 07:22, 18 July 2007
  • ...ement of the hairball goulash''' (Wodonga, Vic.: Miraculous Indulgement of the Hairball Goulash, 1996), a [[zine]] published by Alex Vivian in Australia. {{DEFAULTSORT:miraculous indulgement of the hairball goulash}}
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  • The '''REPORT ON THE MEANING OF THE MOMENT''' or RMM is a monthly studio [[newsletter]] consisting of one A3 sh ''For the collection, relation and disposal of topical developments in understanding.
    613 bytes (92 words) - 22:42, 12 October 2007
  • ...and Into the Libraries''' is a [[one-shot]] [[zine]] published in 2007 by The Bang(a)rang Collective in Lewiston, Maine, U.S.A. ...n and forgotten gay history. The focus is on U.S. and Canadian history of the mid to late 20th century.
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  • '''The cut'n'paste revolution: zines and the Brisbane independent music scene''' [Thesis] (B.A.(Hons.)), 2004, Griffith
    299 bytes (37 words) - 08:45, 30 November 2015
  • ...rom #1 printed in September of 1992 to issue #150. Plus it talks about all the [[chapbooks]], recordings, and other special [[Musea]] projects. ...he first years of an attempted art revolution'. The cover shows a photo of the "Queen of Musea'.
    810 bytes (131 words) - 17:51, 18 September 2006
  • '''The Secret Hand Signals of the DBA''' is a secret handbook that was given to initiated members of Deviant ...ews]]. The publishers claimed "If you have a copy and are not a member of the DBA, they will kill you, so shhhh, keep it a secret."
    685 bytes (114 words) - 13:05, 26 November 2009
  • '''The Hag and the Hungry Goblin''' is a science fiction fanzine by Christine and Derrick Ashb ...nd the Hungry Goblin'' was published in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, in the 1970s and 1980s. At least five issues were released, with #2 appearing in 1
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  • ...o the arts in Dallas, a catalogue, and a news survey of art and artists of the period from 1992-1996. Fifteen copies of the big anthology, with typewriter size pages, were printed in a comb binding o
    747 bytes (125 words) - 22:21, 16 September 2006
  • ...l city with nothing to do but stare out her window and imagine the back of the building next to her looking like hanging tea candles. Always an urban adv :Kaetlin begins her professional career attempting to freelance for the local alternative newspaper, touring open mics in New York City and takes t
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  • [[Image:Flight-of-the-Kangaroo.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Flight of the Kangaroo'''<br/>1976<br/>Cover art by Chris Johnston]] '''The Flight of the Kangaroo''' is a science fiction fanzine by Christine Ashby.
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  • '''The Sacred and the Profane''' is a [[zine]] by [[Kim Riot]] who currently resides in San Diego .... Done in a [[cut-n-paste]] style, it is an art zine about witchcraft and the occult.
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  • '''The Witch and the Chameleon''' was a science fiction fanzine edited by Amanda Bankier. ...which was a double issue, appeared in 1976. It has been credited as being the first feminist science fiction fanzine.
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  • ...is an epic account of an apocalyptic event, and a generational civil war. The zine has traces of post apocalyptic "science fiction", new mythologies, fan The zine was released intially with only 10 copies, and than began to be reprod
    3 KB (485 words) - 20:57, 29 March 2009
  • '''The Assassin and The Whiner''' is [[Carrie McNinch]]'s long-running sporadic [[comic]] [[zine]] Published in California, U.S.A., it's essentially a well-done illustrated [[perzine]]. Carrie often reflects on her struggles with a
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  • '''The Underbelly of the Sun''' was created by Katey Sleeveless in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.A., i ''The Underbelly of the Sun'' tagline is 'correspondence, notes, letters, dreams, ideas." Zines hav
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  • '''It's Not the End of the World''' is a 2008 [[zine]] "about carpal tunnel, tendonitis, and how to ke ...al tunnel syndrome and includes stretching exercises to help manage pain. The emphasis is on self diagnosis and treatment for those who work at manual jo
    945 bytes (144 words) - 22:28, 27 October 2009
  • ...rtheworld.jpg|frame|A Girl's Guide to Taking Over the World: Writings from the Girl Zine Revolution]] '''A Girl's Guide to Taking over the World: Writings from the Girl Zine Revolution''' is an anthology edited by Karen Green and Tristan T
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  • '''The Daily The''' was a [[zine]] written and produced by stepsisters [[Marci Vencil]] and The full-size zine focused on the interests and adventures of Marci and Jaime through [[middle school]] and e
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  • [[Image:thestowaways.jpg|frame|'''The Stowaways'''<br/> Issue 11 2012]] '''The Stowaways''' is a monthly fanzine published in Yorba Linda, California, U.S
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  • [[Image:The_Vagrant_1919_b.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Vagrant'''<br/> Issue Twelve, December 1919]] '''The Vagrant''' was an amateur press publication published and edited by W. Paul
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  • '''The Gulper''' was a [[perzine]] created by [[Shoshanna Cohen]] (aka Shosh) of P {{DEFAULTSORT:Gulper, The}}
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  • '''The Fantasmith''' was a wierd fiction fanzine by Van Splawn. ''The Fantasmith'' was released in May 1953 through the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]]. It was a single issue release.
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  • '''The Fury''' is a [[punk]]/[[hardcore]] [[zine]] based in suburban Chicago and p ...his own attempts to do so. A true humorist and humanist, the creator of ''The Fury'' writes of personal adventures, interviews local bands, reviews book
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  • [[Image:March_1926.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Tryout'''<br/> March 1926]] '''The Tryout''' was an amateur press publication published by Charles W. Smith fr
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  • '''The Scientifictionist''' is a science fiction fanzine edited by Walter Coslet a ...2.2), not listed in Pavlat and Evans' Fanzine Index, is catalogued in both the Bruce Pelz Collection (University of California at Riverside) and Walter Co
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  • ...t Prom was a research [[zine]] published out of Los Angeles, California in the early 90's. ...ional blue-line form only. No finished copies of the William Fuld issue of The Last Prom are known to exist.
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  • ...onymous collection of art contributions from Perth, and Melbourne, Sydney, the UK, and Singapore. Approximately 80 people have contributed to date in six *Edition three (September 2006): 'The firsts edition'
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  • [[Image:Inspiration_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Inspiration''' <br/>April 1917]] ...Inspiration''' was a literary publication edited by Edna von der Heide for the United Amateur Press Association.
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  • ...alternative music, sometimes with a satirical stance. A notable feature is the zine's graphics. The Spark can be bought online and in shops within London.
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  • [[Image:The_Fanscient_l3.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fanscient'''<br/> Issue 13-14 1951]] '''The Fanscient''' was a science fiction fanzine published by Donald B. Day in Po
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  • '''The Wolverine''' was an amateur press publication edited by Horace L. Lawson an ...ned by co-editor Lawson. It appeared in the early 1900s and continued into the 1920s and was published in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
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  • [[Image:inner-swice-cover.jpg|frame|The Inner Swine, Vol. 12 #1]] '''The Inner Swine''' is a humor [[zine]] published by [[Jeff Somers]] since the mid-1990s, in New Jersey, U.S.A.
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  • [[Image:Fractal_1993fal_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fractal'''<br/>Issue 1 Fall 1993<br/>Cover art by Margaret C. Muller]] '''The Fractal''' was a small press publication edited by David Gardner and Sean N
    3 KB (370 words) - 06:44, 1 November 2012
  • '''The Grotesque''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine. ''The Grotesque'' was published in the 1940s. Volume 2, No. 1 was published in Fall 1946.
    641 bytes (85 words) - 07:43, 3 June 2014
  • '''[the path]''' was a [[Freesheet|freesheet]] [[zine]] from Dublin, Ireland. ...red such topics as ccctv, society and Dublin’s former red light district – the Monto.
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  • '''The Urbanite''' was a macabre and weird literature zine published by Mark McLau ...d in Wilmington, North Carolina, U.S.A., the first issue appeared in 1991. The title ran at least until 2001 (issue #12 was dated Spring 2001).
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  • [[Image:the-die-cover.jpg|frame|The D.I.E.]] '''The Die''' is a [[zine]] focused mainly on literature and philosophy.
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  • [[Image:Thementor21_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Mentor''' <br/>Issue 21, October 1971]] '''The Mentor''' (1965-2001) was a science fiction fanzine by Ron Clarke published
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  • [[Image:Gorgon-Oct1948s_s_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Gorgon'''<br/> October 1948 <br/>Cover Art by Roy Hunt ]] '''The Gorgon''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine by Stanley Mullen.
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  • '''The Neighbors''' was a skater zine produced in Omaha, Nebraska, by John Shartra ...993), ''Snow Chicken'' (1994), and ''AJ Rules'' (1997). Whatever the name, the zines covered Omaha's [[punk]] and skateboarding scenes and included band i
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  • ...' (ISBN 978-1-7336919-0-1) is a short horror story by [[Alan Lastufka]]. ''The Fort'' was Alan's first published short story, released on April 28, 2020, ...have their own hideout in the woods. It’s an old reclaimed cabin nicknamed the Fort. And it just grew a new door.
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  • '''The Fetus''' is a prolific [[zinester]] and comic artist and based in Sydney, N *[[Peach Man: in the exciting adventures of Peach Man]]
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  • [[Image:Visitor1.jpg|right|frame|'''The Visitor'''<br/>Issue 1 1983]] '''The Visitor''' was a media science fiction fanzine by Ann O'Neill.
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  • '''The Essence''' was a science fiction fanzine by Jim Shull and Jay Zaremba. ...and reviewed by John D. Berry in ''Amazing''. Four issues were released, the last in June 1973.
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  • [[Image: The wanderers -4.JPG|300px|thumb|right|The wanderers#4]] '''The wanderers: street art zine''' (2006-) is a Brisbane [[zine]] and crew focus
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Die]]
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  • ...on is available in-store in a limited run or packed in with the mailorder. THE PAPER #1 was published November 2012. ...d independently published zines, books and other printed goods from around the world and host monthly exhibits of artist projects.
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  • [[Image:111989_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Acolyte''' <br/> Vol. 2, No. 1 Fall 1943 <br/>Cover Illustration by Howard ...Lovecraft]] and his circle, published by Francis Towner Laney (d. 1958) in the 1940s.
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  • '''The Miskatonic''' is a fanzine published by Dr. Dirk W. Mosig in the 1970s. ''The Miskatonic'' is a zine devoted to [[H. P. Lovecraft]], and featured article
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  • [[Image:Cricket_web_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Cricket''']] '''The Cricket''' was a science fiction fanzine edited by Betsy Curtis and publish
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  • ...thers. It was named in honor of Alexander Berkman's anarchist newspaper of the same name, which Berkman published from 1916-1917. ...bore a photo of a woman wielding a hatchet, next to the caption: "Abolish the White Race."
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  • '''''The Register''''' was an irregular [[newsletter]] produced for the Black Lodge, a group of horror fans which met in Birmingham. There were two {{DEFAULTSORT:Register, The}}
    367 bytes (49 words) - 04:33, 3 November 2009
  • <b>The Cobalt</b>
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  • '''The Quirk''' is a for-charity print-only [[lit-zine|literary zine]]. Before it around the world through the sales of the zine itself, as well as merchandise, such as
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  • '''The Skirt''' (May 2007-) is a monthly [[zine]] by Chloe Hughes, a [[zinester]] ...continuous. The perception of an object by an individual is as variable as the perception of an object amongst a group of individuals.”
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  • [[Image:Banshee_Rachel_Fones_1994_n8_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Banshee'''<br/>Issue 8 1994<br/>Cover art by Rob Whitlam]] '''The Banshee''' was a literary [[zine]] published and edited by Rachel Fones.
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  • [[Image:Alchemist_1941v1_n5_St_John_copy.jpg‎ ‎|right|frame|'''The Alchemist''' <br/> Issue 5 February 1941<br/> Cover Art by J. Allen St. Joh '''The Alchemist''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine edited by Charles Fo
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  • [[Image:thegoblin1.jpg|frame|The Goblin issue 1]] ...lifornia in 2004 by [[Goblinko]] and produced by [[Sean "Goblin" Aaberg]]. The zine is a sequel to Sean's zine [[Binocular Rebellious]] and is intended to
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  • '''The Femizine''' was a science fiction fanzine published by The Fannettes. ...Marian Cox, later known as Marian Oaks. ''The Femizine'' was published in the early 1950s.
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  • ...y [[Lee Taylor]] and Nat, two sober vegetarian illustration graduates from the Midlands UK, who now live about 450 miles apart. ...en made thus far, the first in Spring 2009, and the second in Spring 2012. The maiden issue had a strong vegetarian / [[Veganism|vegan]] / [[Straight Edge
    1 KB (159 words) - 00:29, 2 September 2012
  • ...[punk]] [[fanzine]], edited by the musician Franz Bielmeier in Düsseldorf. The first issue appeared in March 1977 with fifty copies and it raised in two y ...wspaper. The first issue features an interview with David Bowie taken from the US-Playboy.
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  • [[Image:Clarion.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''The Clarion''']] '''The Clarion''' is a publication by Megan Plunkett, published by [[Oso Press]].
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  • [[Image:Fantast_194207_copy.jpg‎‎‎|right|frame|'''The Fantast'''<br/> Issue 14 July 1942 <br/>cover by [[Harry Turner]] ]] '''The Fantast''' was a science fiction zine published in the UK from 1939 to 1942.
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  • '''The Fanarchist''' (1970-1971) was a science fiction [[fanzine]] published in fi The first issue appeared December 1970. ''The Fanarchist'' was nominated for a [[Ditmar Award for Best Fanzine]] in 1972.
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  • '''The Notional: interesting stuff about SF in Australia''' was an science fiction ...Australia, ran from April 1985 to September 1988. Issues from No. 16 have the subtitle: 'All you need to know about SF in Australia'.
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  • '''The Ghost''' was an amateur press publication by W. Paul Cook, released in Nort ...k had been an important member of [[H. P. Lovecraft]]'s inner circle and ''The Ghost'' reflects this.
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  • '''The Outlander''' was a science fiction fanzine published by The Outlander Society. ...os Angeles area. Most of the Societies members also belonged to the LASFS, the Los Angeles Science Fiction Society.
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  • '''The Outhouse''' (1996-?) was a South Australian [[punk]] / [[hardcore]] [[zine] *[http://meltingpot.fortunecity.com/dakota/462/8/zine.html Review of ''The Outhouse'']
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  • '''The bird''' (2008-) is an A5 poetry [[zine]] published edited and published by The editor describes the [[zine]] on her MySpace page as follows: “The bird seeks to promote & encourage new young blood poetica within red-neck /
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  • '''The Fence''' is a Toronto-based bisexual women's [[zine]] edited by Cheryl Dobi * [http://thefence.ca/ The Fence website]
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  • [[Image:Timky.gif|frame|''The Last Word'' publisher [[Tim Brown]].]] '''''The Last Word''''' is a strongly worded left-leaning populist [[zine]] that beg
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  • [[Image:Circ1-1.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Curcuit'''<br/>Issue 1 1976]] '''The Curcuit''' was a media science fiction fanzine edited by Lisa Jardon, and
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  • '''The Pleiades''' is a literary/[[perzine]] written by [[Miranda Celeste Hale]] o ...arah Rose]] ([[Tazewells Favorite Eccentric]]) praised the zine as "one of the most consistently interesting, thought provoking zines being produced."
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  • '''The Orifice''' is a zine from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and San Francisco, Ca ...hiladelphia but had moved to San Francisco by it's second issue in 2008. ''The Orifice'' had a wild array of content including humor, Queer sexuality and
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  • '''The Miscellany''' was a science fiction fanzine by [[Gertrude Kuslan]] and Loui ''The Miscellany'' was a [[one shot]] fanzine released in January 1940. It was a
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  • [[Image:The_Zed_by_Anderson_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Zed''' issue 302 1963]] '''The Zed''' was a science fiction fanzine by [[Karen Anderson]] produced in Orin
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  • [[Image:Thematch93.JPG|frame|The Match issue #93]] '''The Match''' is an anti-authoritarian [[Anarchism|Anarchist]] Journal by [[Fred
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  • =The Deadbeats= [[File:Deadbeats_zine.png|200px|thumb|right|The Deadbeats: Issue 1 (2015) by Squimoo]]
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  • [[Image:The_Fantasite_Bronson_cover_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fantasite'''<br/> Issue 4 1941 <br/>Cover Art by Phil Bronson]] ...ience fiction fanzine by Phil Bronson, published as the "Official Organ of the Minneapolis Fantasy Society".
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  • [[Image:Continental2.jpg|frame|The Continental issue #2]] '''The Continental''' is a music [[zine]] published by Sean Berry out of Bellingha
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  • ...[[Gregory K. H. Bryant]] and published by the [[zine]] [[Musea]]. It tells the story of a mule, tired of reaching for a carrot, turns to philosophy. 23 copies were printed on June 20, 1996. On the cover the mule is carrying a sandwich board that reads,
    609 bytes (97 words) - 05:59, 4 March 2007
  • [[Image:Phantagraph_193511-12_copy.jpg‎|Right|frame|'''The Phantagraph'''<br/> November-December 1935]] '''The Phantagraph''' was an amateur magazine from the 1930s and 1940s published by Wollheim and Shepherd in New York, U.S.A. and
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  • [[Image:Pendulum_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Pendulum'''<br/>Issue 4 March 1953<br/>Cover art by Richard Bergeron]] '''The Pendulum''' is a science fiction fanzine by Bill Venable.
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  • [[Image:Timebinder_EEEvans_1945_Vol1No2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Timebinder'''<br/>Volume 1, No. 2 1945]] '''The Timebinder''' was a mimeographed science fiction fanzine edited and publish
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  • '''The Epitome''' is a [[punk]] [[zine]] from Northern California, U.S.A. in the early 1990's. ...g topics of local interest. Later issues were made only by Jessica Hunter. The zine is a cut and paste production with punk and feminist perspective.
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  • [[Image:Nucleus_193807_v1_n1_copy.jpg‎‎|right|frame|'''The Nucleus''' <br/>Vol.1 No. 1 1938 <br/> Cover art by James V. Taurasi ]] '''The Nucleus''' is a science fiction fanzine by [[Gertrude Kuslan]] and Louis Ku
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  • '''The Burning''' zine was written by Durand J. Compton and released by [[The Boomerang Press]]. ...s, art and reporting on Omaha's underground scene. It went defunct due to the writer's wartime service.
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Machine Media]]
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  • ...Diversifier''' is a fanzine published by A.B. Clingan and C.C. Clingan in the 1970s. ...al, that featured new work by contemporary authors and reprints of work by well know writers in these genres. 27 issues were released, beginning in June 19
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  • [[Image:Brooklynite_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Brooklynite''' <br/>Volume 15 No. 4 October 1925]] '''The Brooklynite''' was an amateur press publication edited by Hazel Pratt Adams
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  • [[Image:The_Lovecraftsman_issue_3.JPG‎|right|frame|'''The Lovecraftsman'''<br/> Issue 3 1964]] ...fanzine devoted to [[H. P. Lovecraft]] that was published by Redd Boggs in the U.S.A.
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  • ...paper's ultimate goal is to be entertaining and informative, while testing the creative bounderies of journalism. ...shed by Paul McLeod, Mike Landry, and Keegan Lam in the Fall of 2002 while the three were students at Dartmouth High School in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia.
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  • [[Image:Explorer.jpg|right|frame|'''The Explorer'''<br/> Issue 2.6 November 1951 <br/> Cover art by [[Lee Hoffman]] ...s a science fiction fanzine published in the late 1940s and early 1950s by The International Science Fiction Correspondence Club (ISFCC).
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  • ...e]] run by "talking songs" artist and [[writer]] [[Adam Gnade]], author of the book <I>Hymn California</I>. Focusing on essays and adventure stories, it w [[Category:Zine|Word]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:1990's publications|Word]] [[Category:Literary Zines|Wo
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  • ...ia] on 12 April 2007. It was part of the program of events associated with the exhibition [http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/programs/exhibitions/kmg/2007/artist_ ...), Robert Heather (MC for the night) is Manager, Events and Exhibitions at the State Library of Victoria.
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  • [[Image:The_Planeteer_3.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Planeteer''']] '''The Planeteer''' was a science fiction fanzine by James Blish and William H. Mi
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Page text matches

  • ...shed by [[Iggy Scam|Erica Lyle]], is an influential zine first released in the mid 90s. Currently, there are 10 issues published. ...more indepth with politics, including reports on creative protests such as the mission Burrito project, graffiti, and reports from protest events. It also
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  • ...sts, and how this in turn effects her and her own feelings towards art and the making of art. It was first distributed in February of 2007. [[Image:explo [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category: Pennsylvania Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • ..., edited by Leah Baroque and published in Australia, was a continuation of the editor's previous [[zine]] title, [[Bordello]]. ...t was sold in a plastic bag containing a condom. From issue no. 5 onwards, the editor, Leah Bryan, changed her name to Leah Baroque.
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  • '''''Critical Wave''''', later subtitled ''The European Science Fiction & Fantasy Review'', was a British [[fanzine]] edit ...Cullen, Dave Carson, David A. Hardy, Michael Marrak, Dave Mooring ([[Fuck The Tories]]), Russell Morgan, Jim Porter, Sylvia Starshine and Harry Turner.
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  • ...vel stories, squatting (and sneaking), and sticking it to The Man. Most of the zines are copies.
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  • ...im'' discussing issues such as dealing with being a parent and body image. The zine is a collection of her thoughts and feelings, with drawings done by he
    362 bytes (55 words) - 13:55, 30 May 2010
  • ...g small publication, with some issues consisting of just six pages, as was the tradition with many Apazines. ...was short for ''Die Zeitschrift für Vollstandige Unsinn'' translated as ''The Journal for Utter Nonsense''.
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  • [[Image:cerebusthenewsletter1to17.jpg|thumb|right|'''Cerebus the Newsletter'''<br/> Issues 1 - 17 <br/>]] ...Newsletter''' is a [[comic]]s fanzine devoted to the comic book ''Cerebus the Aardvark'' by Dave Sim.
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  • ...g Zine''' (or Girlgangzine) is a publication edited by Kristina and Maren (the gang) from Berlin, Germany. ''Girlgang Zine'' issue 2 is called “the role model issue” and was published in 2010 with contributions by Laura K
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  • ...en 1991-2001. She is also a contributor to [[From the Punked Out Files of the Queer Zine Archive Project]]. ...rm, touching on her own life, queer and bisexual identity, the patriarchy, the queer and DIY zine scene itself and politics.
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  • '''Debbie Rasmussen''', from San Francisco, is the current publisher of ''[[Bitch]] Magazine''.
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  • ...selling issues of magazines, t-shirts, and books produced by Clamor staff, the InfoSHOP also sold other magazines, books, CDs, and radical art. ...itors had frozen its bank account and blocked the transfer of ownership of the InfoSHOP to a third party.
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  • '''The Scaredy-Cat Stalker''' was a [[fanzine]] published by Krista Garcia, from P ...obsessive following of celebrities and real-life people that would, due to the Scaredy-Cat Stalker's shyness, never result in anything more dangerous than
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  • The author introduces the [[zine]] as follows: ...ely. But it's been strangely relieving doing this at the exact time of all the APEC crtaziness, even while it's added another thing to do.
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  • ...lifornia, where he released his next zine, [[Fag School]]. Three issues of the zine have been released to date. During this time he was in a number of pun ...d Hot Ass Sex Bomb with members [[Janelle Hessig]] and Vice Cooler and, as well, he DJs at clubs in San Francisco.
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  • ...od]]. Originally published in a limited edition black and white run of 32, the [[zine]] was subsequently republished with a colour cover.
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  • ...ht Fantasies]] in 1973, followed by [[Old Bones]] in 1976, both devoted to the macabre, weird fiction, [[H. P. Lovecraft]] and Arkham House publications. ...n the Pacific Northwest. Wilum Pugmire has written that “Punk rock gave me the guts to be myself, and for this I shall be eternally grateful.”
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  • ...] include [[PTBH!]] and [[For Crying Out Loud]] which were both written in the late 1990s.
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  • ''The Avalonian'' was a short-lived science fiction zine edited and published by The first and only issue, dated 1952, was a 56-page octavo periodical with a co
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  • The '''Grand Rapids Zine Fest''' began in 2013 and is about to hold its second ''Focused on a community of self-publishing in the mitten ''
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  • ...es with a strong affinity for the gamblers and criminals encountered along the way. ...the wrong freight train; a raft ride down the Sacramento River; crying on the shoulder of a trucker on speed; and a strong disdain for civilization.
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  • ...the entire world. Zines carried include [[Abortive]] and [[Frankly and on the Record]].
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  • '''Jeff Bale''' is a musician, writer and [[zine]] publisher. He was one of the founders of both [[Maximum Rock'n'Roll]] and [[Hit List]] [[fanzine]]s. ...s got to have an anti-establishment attitude.' Well it just isn't true all the time. For a lot of these people, punk is just a style like disco style or n
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  • ...nial tasks and making his living more through his wits than his industry. The ''picaresque novel'' tends to be episodic and structureless." Harmon, W. an
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  • '''Loveseat''' was a [[hardcore]] [[punk]] zine done in the 1980's by Alex Brown. ...Loveseat''' covered the hardcore punk scene in Des Moines and elsewhere in the U.S.A. It was a photocopied, [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]] publication.
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  • ...y''', was a music zine published by Kary Cousineau and Samia Aladas during the 1990s out of Quebec, Canada. ...ut and paste]] band names letting the reader know who was featured inside. The contents were almost entirely band interviews, done in a question and answe
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  • ...cation devices that aims to reflect and analyze independent publishing and the means of personal expression related to other activities as [[zines]], inte ...agan, who previously edited fanzines such as [[El Virus Púrpura]], and has the collaboration of a extense group of friends and zinesters.
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  • ...#8, published in 1965. It contained commentary, reviews and opinions from the editors. It was an 8 1/2 X 11 inch fanzine of around 20 pages. ...obs. It featured several other members of the LASFS, such as Ron Ellik, as The Musquite Kid, Charles Burbee, Ingrid Fritsch, Terry Carr, Bruce Pelz, Rober
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  • ...publishing the e-zine ''Champagne Shivers'' yearly. Five issues appeared, the last in 2009. *''Side Show: Tales of the Big Top and the Bizarre'', an anthology edited by Cathy Buburuz, Sam's Dot Publishing, 2003
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  • ...of 48 pages plus cover (on blue paper), xeroxed at the teachers' lounge of the St.-Nikolaus-Stift in Füssenich with a print run of 60 numbered copies. The publication is included in the collection of the [[St. Patrick's Zine Library]].
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  • ...cording to Mark Aguhar’s Axes, prepared by two friends for the ''Dragon is the Frame'' group tribute show in summer 2012. A keepsake, guide, memento, and
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  • ...by [[Calvin Chaos]]. The first issue was created in 2 hours, right before the annual [[Chicago Zine Picnic]] of 2006. [[Category:Zine]][[Category:2000's publications]][[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • The '''San Francisco Zine Fest''' (SFZF) is an annual zine event held in San Fr ...elf ethos by fostering community throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. In the annual weekend-long event, SFZF celebrates and supports independent writers
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  • Eleanor graduated from the Savannah College of Art and Design. Along with [[Drew Weing]], she is one h * [[The Beast Mother]]
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  • '''Smilin' Dan the Ice Cream Man''' is a [[minicomic]] from zinester [[Matt Fagan]] of Chicago ...despite the impairment of ''enormously'' oversized hands. But then, after the zombie apocalypse comes, Dan must re-adjust to his new circumstances.
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  • ...by [[Guy Sterling]], published in over 10 sporadic issues in Sydney, NSW. The [[zine]] was "a collection of random findings, blatant appropriation and co The final issue came with a CD from people who had supported the zine, including:
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  • ...anzinoteca Ambulant''' is a traveling module created to move selections of the archive to schools, events and fairs. ...t points of itinerant consultation and propose parallel relationship about the zine.
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  • '''By the Time You're Twenty-Five''' is a zine made in 2007 by Sydney, Australia zine ...e is borrowed from a Sleater-Kinney song of the same name, off the album ''The Hot Rock''.
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  • [[Image:The_Outsider.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Outsider''' <br/>Cover art by [[H. P. Lovecraft]]]] '''The Outsider''' by R. Alain Everts is a fanzine devoted to [[H. P. Lovecraft]].
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  • ...adows'', ''Doctor Who'', and ''Forever Knight''. 30 issues were published, the last issue appeared in in June 1999. ...Devlin, Pat Dunn, Jenny Gallagher, Nyssa Groenewegen, [[Edwina Harvey]] ([[The Australian Science Fiction Bullsheet]]), Christine Hawkins, George Ivanoff
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  • [[Image:thestowaways.jpg|frame|'''The Stowaways'''<br/> Issue 11 2012]] '''The Stowaways''' is a monthly fanzine published in Yorba Linda, California, U.S
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  • ...d in Bronson, Michigan, U.S.A., three issues of ''Wax Dragon'' appeared in the late 1970s and early 1980s. ...Winnebago Eggshell" by Lawson W. Hill ([[Myrddin]]); and the short story, "The Spirit Duplicator" by Darrell Schweitzer. Contributors of art included Will
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  • ...o appeared as a split issue with [[Fembot]], a zine by [[Gary Fembot]], of the band Sta-Prest. Issue 6 was a [[compzine|compilation]] issue consisting of ...editor [[Joshua Plague]] on vocals. Other bands who released recordings on the label include Team Dresch, which included zinester Donna Dresch; and God Is
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  • ...lled as "Canada's Largest Zine Fair and Festival of Alternative Culture." The event includes over 150 zine booths, panel discussions, film screenings, an
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  • ...Kuslan]], Louis Kuslan, Norman Stanley, R.D. Swisher, and others, called "The Stranger Club", in 1940. ...tting out issues and becoming an important part of fanzine fandom again in the 1980s and 1990s.
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  • ...land. Eight issues were written in 1998. Compared to other Dublin zines at the time, it had a very distinct layout and style of writing. It gave alternati
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  • ...tober 2007-) is a Canberra based [[punk]], rock and [[hardcore]] [[zine]]. The [[zine]] was launched on Thursday, October 18, 2007 at Jamison Inn with per
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  • ...erstanding dad, and collaborations with Cathy Camper and Coleman Lindberg. The inside back cover reproduces a letter Kirby wrote as a youngster to ''Weird [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Minnesota Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]][[Cat
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  • The zine contains [[DIY]] craft instructions including recipes as well as cross stitch and crochet patterns. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:New Jersey Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[C
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  • [[Image:Alchemist_1941v1_n5_St_John_copy.jpg‎ ‎|right|frame|'''The Alchemist''' <br/> Issue 5 February 1941<br/> Cover Art by J. Allen St. Joh '''The Alchemist''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine edited by Charles Fo
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  • '''Ipso Facto''' was a science fiction fanzine published by The International Speculative Organization in London, England. ...s the official organ and the first compilation fanzine of the British apa, The International Publishers Speculative Organisation. It consisted of analytic
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  • '''Moonshine''' was a music [[fanzine]] published by David in Canada in the mid-1990s.
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  • ...ere created in the summer of 2013 while living and working in Wassaic, NY. The content is about a variety of subjects, including but not limited to: trave [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Travel Zines]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...Ryan's sexual exploits was included in [[The Factsheet Five Zine Reader]]. The title was a favorite back-handed putdown of Charles Crumb, brother of [[R. [[Category:Zine|How]][[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Oregon Zines]]
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  • .... After a call for submissions, Elizabeth compiles what she believes to be the best and publishes. ...ra-Marie Taylor]] of [[Erik and Laura-Marie Magazine]], [[Love Drew]] of [[The Evil Eye]], [[Bryan M]]. of [[Wrecking Bar]], and [[Kayley]] of [[Glitter,
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  • ...nts, as well as a small amount of horror or bizarro fiction in each issue. The emphasis is on humor. ...nine were photocopied, with smaller print runs. Freak Tension returned to the newsprint format for issues ten through twelve, again with print runs of 1,
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  • ...ributors, who came from different parts of Arizona. Two issues emerged and the focus was on alternative, [[punk]], grunge and garage music. ...k Cave and the Bad Seeds, Sonic Youth , The Fall and a critical history of the Manson Family.
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  • [[Image: The truth is a virus -4.JPG|125px|thumb|right|The truth is a virus #4]] '''The truth is a virus''' (1997-?) was a 24 page, A5 personal/poetry [[zine]] by
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  • [[Image:Bith_logo.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Logo for bird in the Hand|[[Bird in the Hand]] zine shop]] ...s a zine shop and [[distro]] run by [[Susy Pow]] in Newcastle, Australia. The retail shop is located at 100a King Street, Newcastle.
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  • ...g in the center, and includes a burned CD compilation of bands featured in the zine with many previously unreleased tracks. ...nning with Mongrel Zine #9 the zine and the CD comp started being numbered the same for consistency (ie. Mongrel Zine #9 + Vol. 9 CD, Mongrel Zine #10 + V
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  • The first issue of ''Fan-Fare'' was published in 1950 in North Tonawanda, New Y In the April 2007 issue of [[el]], Mike Deckinger writes about Rog Phillips' fanzi
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  • ...was published in the 1970s in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A. It called itself "the fanzine of objective bias". The first issue was published in July 1972, with issues 2 and 3 appearing the same year. At least eight issues came out, with issues 4, 5, and 6 released
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  • ...k Eye #1 was released in the spring of 2012 and #2 came out in the fall of the same year. Issue 3 is currently in process and accepting submissions. Cont ...des (among other things) a piece by David Combs (of Spoonboy) on sexism in the punk scene and a lot of illustrations and collages. Don’t miss out on thi
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  • ...s were characterised by their innovative use of materials and textures, as well as their focus on topics such as Black public figures, social justice, radi The first zine in the series focused on jazz pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams (pictured), w
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  • ...ace the zine may seem naive and narrow-minded, upon a closer reading I got the impression that No Scene Zine is written by people who are just beginning t ...Maximum Rock 'N' Roll]] over the years, and booked all ages matinees under the name "No Scene Zine Presents."
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  • ...mpson''' was the publisher and editor of [[Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press]], among other zines. She has also published a variety of ...been the zine's editor & publisher ever since. Her writing was featured in the [[Zine Yearbook]], Vol. 5. and Vol. 7.
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  • ...com/lenore_88] was inspired by stories of sideshow freaks that appeared in the pages of ''Weird New Jersey''. ...ce.com/barrysilver] who became co-editor and greatly contributed to making the idea into reality.
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  • ...' [[zine]] published by Julian Davis (aka Chilly-Most), former swagman for the band, Bad Brains. ...of 1989. It ceased publication in the late-1990's. It presented itself as the house organ of "Deviant Bowlers of America".
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  • ...r. Issue two was a large size black and white zine printed on newsprint in the style of a [[freesheet]]; unlike many freesheets however, it was equally di ''Someone Said'' was focused on the [[Underground Culture|underground scene]], including independent music, [[c
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  • ...y:Perzine|Make]][[Category:2000's publications|Make]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.|Make]]
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  • Touching on many topics, the zine included personal stories on surviving abuse, social commentary on wom Issue 9 of ''Wild Honey Pie'' featured an interview with [[Allison Wolfe]] of the band Bratmobile and co-editor of [[Girl Germs]], artsy stuff, and info.
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  • ...anzine]] produced by XMA guitarist Glenn Bradford, and sold at gigs around the Nottinghamshire area, UK. ...*Rock*Tattoos*Life', with content split between these different aspects of the [[punk|punk rock]] lifestyle. It was a printed fanzine that ran for three i
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  • ...n'' was published in 1941 in Los Angeles, California. U.S.A. It was likely the first filk fanzine. ...oquel II and Tigrina: "Joquel asked Ackerman to give him Tigrina to use as the altar for his black mass. Ackie for some reason refused. Most uncooperative
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  • ...eased, the first in 1940, and the last in July 1941. Associate Editors for the fanzine were George Cowin and Borrie Hyman. ...sue also reprinted verses from George Sterling's "A Wine of Wizardry", and the third issue reprinted poems by Goethe.
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  • ...edited and curated by the photographer Nicolas Santiñaque. Besides having the online version, each number has a limited edition, crafted, numbered and si
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  • ...aw in person including: Chuck Berry, The Doors, James Brown, Led Zeppelin, The Beatles and 30 more. It also includes a section on notable local Dallas act ...f Woody during that era and this quote, "Peace, "V" fingers, and - portest the dean at noon...".
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  • ...rrent and founding editor of the online zine [[Red Fez Publications]], and the real-world [[Underground Uprising Press]]. ...k is not infrequently political and often blends fantastical elements with the mundane.
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  • ...eycake. It lasted for 3 issues and focused on [[Riot Grrrl]] and sexism in the music industry. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the UK]] [[Category:Riot Grrrl]][[Category:Feminism]]
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  • ...s a lifestyle choice comprised of abstinence from intoxicating substances. The critera for what constitutes an intoxications substance varies from person ...emerged from this background and continued to be published as awareness of the straight edge scene grew world wide.
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  • [[Category:Zine]] [[Category: POC Zine]] [[Category: Zines from the Philippines]] [[Category:Perzine]]
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  • ...ton]], was originally entitled ''[[Prolapse]]'' (a full history appears in the original entry). The title changed with issue #13, published February 2009.
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  • '''The Flabby Arms''' was a [[perzine]] begun by Molly Brodak in 1995 in Rochester ...ing" echoed its sarcastic humor and defiant attitude which often ridiculed the self-centered nature of zines. Some features included a crossword puzzle ma
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  • ...um?]] was a one-off spin-off [[fanzine]] published in [[Austin, Texas]] in the mid-1990s by [[Jennifer LaSuprema]] and [[Susan LaInferioria]].
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  • ...ence fiction fanzine published by the Liverpool Science Fiction Society in the UK. Members of The Liverpool Group, as they became known, included Dave Gardner, Don MacKay, R
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  • ...etters. Five Beer. Four strange guests. Three times a year. Two staples in the back. A worldly event. Right? The first edition had a print run of 43 and was created by Max, Menno, Sep, and
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  • ...n zine libraries in Belgium, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, the UK, and the US. ..., punk, and politics. Some of her zines and illustrations have appeared in the books Feminist Media: Participatory Spaces, Networks and Cultural Citizensh
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  • ...rbie Meyer''' is a young boy from Howard, Ohio, who has created zines with the help of his father [[Christoph Meyer]]. ...ristoph. Herbie also collaborated with Christoph on a comic called [[Molly the Popsicle]].
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  • ...ound one or more themes per issue, and the [[one-shot]] [[KOOL Man]] about the infamous [[Robert DuPree]]. ...ines such as [[Sugar Needle]]. His work was featured in the exhibition ''[[The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art]]'' in San Francisco. He is n
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  • ...nd [[Sleepwalk]]. He is also the author of a novel called [[Hairstyles of the Damned]].
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  • ...eight issues of [[Writer's Block]]. The last issue featured a journal from the International Pop Underground convention in Olympia, WA. ...], Appelstein published seven issues of the music zine [[Caught in Flux]], the last of which appeared in March of 1999.
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  • ..., Magic Dirt, Disneyfist, Screamfeeder, and Not From There; and reviews of the Livid Festival, ZZZ Market Day, [[zines]] and music.
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  • ...an Stewart says of ''Ghost Pine'', "Perzines are often too personal...But the writing in ''Ghost Pine'', though rooted in [[Punk|punk rock]] and [[activi ''Ghost Pine'' was one of the zines that was included on the [[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]] zine and artists' book tour across North America.
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  • '''Perkins Press''' was a zine published in Massachusetts, U.S.A. during the 1990s. ...was named after its location: Perkins Ave. in Northampton, Massachusetts. The zine was printed on tabloid newsprint.
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  • ...e 3 appeared in 1960 and #4 in 1961. Some early issues were distributed by the [[Southern Fandom Press Alliance]] APA. ...os]], [[Different (Moskowitz)|Different]], and [[New Fandom]]) by Ed Wood; the story "Independence" by David H. Keller; and "Notes of a Pulp Collector" by
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  • ..., with issue 2 following in January 25, issue 4 in April 25, and 1ssue 10, the last issue to date, was released February 2006. Included are Joyce's memoirs, a fan history of the days of [[ODD]] fanzine, the fans in St. Louis, Missouri and OSFA (Ozark Science Fiction Association).
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  • ..., U.S.A, with a cover by Adrienne Fein. Suzanne Tompkins was co-editor for the first six issues. ...New York, U.S.A. Ten issues were released. ''The Spanish Inquisition'' won the [[FAAn Award for Best Fanzine]] in 1977.
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  • ...or zine published by members of The Gargoyle Club in Sydney, Australia, in the mid-1990s. ...the zine. The zine was co-edited by Antoinette Rydyr, [[Ron Clarke]] of [[The Mentor]] and Don Boyd. Art Director was Steve Carter.
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  • .... Red Fez is divided into a unique, searchable database style and includes the curious Poem Dervish feature. It is updated quarterly.
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  • Defunct zine festival, ran in the early 2000s in Manchester, UK. Venues included URBIS and The Basement.
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  • ...ile scrounging at rummage sales. The print magazine leans more heavily to the graphic arts. ...aguely inspired way, pro-[[Anarchism|anarchistic]] utopian social design. The editor is a mysterious left-handed, red-pen wielding vegetarian librarian n
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