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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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  • ...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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  • '''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 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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  • '''''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}}
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  • <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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  • [[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
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  • ...[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: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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  • [[Image:Clarion.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''The Clarion''']] '''The Clarion''' is a publication by Megan Plunkett, published by [[Oso Press]].
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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 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 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 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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  • [[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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  • =The Deadbeats= [[File:Deadbeats_zine.png|200px|thumb|right|The Deadbeats: Issue 1 (2015) by Squimoo]]
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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: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,
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  • [[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: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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  • [[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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  • #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: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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  • [[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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  • ...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

  • Anthony Rayson also runs the distro [[South Chicago Anarchist Black Cross Zine Distro]]. ...ine features contributions of writing and art from prisoners and others in the underground.
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  • ...n in 1953, and he began doing book reviews for the zine. By the late 1950s the name had been changed to ''Yandro'', derived from an old folk song in a Man ...n Garde]]), Randy Scott, Reg Smith, Mike Symes, [[Arthur Thomson|ATom]] ([[The ATom Anthology]]).
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  • ...Bend, Arizona, but had moved to Los Angeles and become an early member of the LASFS. In a LASFS member profile in the official organ, [[Imagination!]], Pogo was described as, "Sensitive, moody,
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  • ...re released in 1978, and the last issue, #7, was published in Summer 1979. The fanzine featured club news, convention reports, short fiction, poetry, art ...writing included [[Ruth Berman]] ([[Inside Star Trek]], [[T-Negative]], [[The Star Trek Songbook]]), Cassiopeia, Roxanne Deslongchamps, Jeremy Edward, Be
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  • ...Kari Tervo]]. It was published in California, U.S.A. in April, 2015. It is the sequel to [[Finnglish: Life, Finnish-American Style|Finnglish: Life, Finnis ...and shop when in Finnish-American country, learn how to joke and talk with the natives, and more.
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  • ...at was edited by [[Ethan Clark]], with an introduction by [[John Gerken]]. The book description says: ...vation of writing and artwork, but also as an attempt to aid in rebuilding the city that inspired and shaped this body of work. Proceeds from Stories Care
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  • Kim Riot published '''Goat Farm''' for the [[24 Hour Zine Thing]], as an one-off [[zine]], but plans to do more issues ...] [[Category:Perzine]] [[Category:California Zines]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:24 Hour Zine]] [[Category:Metal]]
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  • Jen describes the zine as a "light-hearted political zine" with [[anarchism|anarchist]] theme
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  • ...f ''Macabre'' was released in December 1939 by 19 year old Rathbone. It is the first science fiction fanzine to emerge from Scotland. ''Macabre'' was a carbon zine, made of carbon copies straight from the typewriter. As a result very few copies were created.
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  • ...n all. In the ad for ''Orb'' printed in [[Wastebasket]], it called itself "the avant garde fanzine". Joe Green wrote in the first issue of [[Confusion]], "ORB was the finest fanzine these palsied palms have ever clasped."
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  • ...(in two different styles), which makes six articles all together. We call the zine, Six-Shooter, of course." ...gy '87]], compiled by Richard Brandt. It has come to be regarded as one of the seminal texts in feminist science fiction writing.
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  • Five issues of ''Skinned Alive'' were published in the early 1990s, before the fanzine was relaunched as [[Skintomb]] in 1995.
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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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  • ...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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  • ...]]. As well, he was a semi-regular participant on [[alt.zines]] as well as the punk-list e-mail list. He worked for the United States Postal Service for seven years, both as a data entry clerk an
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  • ...t contained fiction by Lionel Dilbeck and a poem by J. Harvey Haggard, and well as Frome's own writing. Each issue was entirely different with covers and i ...uggested by Lovecraft. Frome printed all of these contributions. This was the last issue of ''Supramundane Stories''.
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  • The idea behind it is that a letter of an alphabet can be so much more than jus ...n create stories out of anything – Haich inspires me..." says E J Zyla, on the introduction contact page for ''Haich''.
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  • ...and many artifacts and ephemera from the early years of [[punk]]. Many of the contributors are [[mail art]]ists, and have sent Maxi Boyd mail art for thi
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  • ...s published in 1990 by Robert Lichtman ([[Trap Door]])and Jerry Kaufman ([[The Spanish Inquisition]]). ...er]], Dan Steffan ([[Boonfark]]), Steve Stiles, [[Arthur Thomson|ATom]] ([[The ATom Anthology]]), and [[Bjo Trimble]] ([[Shangri L'Affaires]]).
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  • ...ubtitled "Poems of Extraordinary Dislocation", and was devoted to poems of the macabre. It was published in Arcata, California, U.S.A. Issue #1 was releas The cover and interior artwork was by H.E. Fassl.
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  • ...chat Wehrmann'' ([[Patrick Rieve]], Malte Urbschat & Mark Wehrmann) he was the co-editor of [[Bone Response]].
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  • '''The Collinsport Record''' was a fanzine published by The Friends of Dark Shadows and Baker Street Productions. ...etairie, Louisiana, U.S.A. in the early 1980s. Eight issues were released, the last one in 1987.
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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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  • ...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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  • The '''Poetry After Dark [[Zine]] Fair''' is held as part of the Poetry After Dark Festival - an event where artists can 'showcase their wor
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  • ...e-based [[zinester]] and manager of the [[distro]] and zine shop [[Bird in the hand]]. * [[Birds 2]] (2009) with [[The Fetus]] and [[Catman]]
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  • ...nophobia'' contained interviews, comics, and personal anecdotes focused on the subject of peoples' fears, rational and irrational. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Missouri Zines]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[Cat
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  • ...Esprit'''<br/>Volume 2, No. 1 August 1960<br/> Caption: "…the magazine for the enquiring mind."]] ...ation in the [[Offtrails Magazine Publishers Association]] (OMPA) but with the 13th issue in 1960 she decided to make it generally available. Daphne Buckm
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  • ...gust 1962 on the occasion of the 25th anniversary and the 100th mailing of the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]], science fiction's longest running [[ ...; "Mutation Or Death", [[John B. Michel]]'s tract for The Futurians; and [[The Acolyte]] editor F. Towner Laney's "Oh! Sweet Idiocy!".
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  • '''Charles Wells''' is a fanzine publisher and fan artist from the U.S.A. ....]] (the period is part of the title) in the 1960's. He also guest edited the last issue of [[Quandry]].
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  • ...photozine has 24 pages, printed in black and white on a light grey paper. The photographs have a ''noise'' effect on them. * [http://bookletlibrary.org/s/saguer-pere// Booklet Library] scans from the inside.
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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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  • ...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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  • ..., 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
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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • 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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