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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}}
    389 bytes (45 words) - 23:15, 23 July 2010
  • 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
    1 KB (164 words) - 01:11, 24 July 2010
  • [[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.
    2 KB (324 words) - 00:00, 1 June 2012
  • ...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
    1 KB (167 words) - 04:07, 20 April 2024
  • '''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'
    853 bytes (107 words) - 01:05, 24 July 2010
  • [[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.
    388 bytes (59 words) - 01:37, 8 April 2009
  • [[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.
    611 bytes (88 words) - 06:31, 30 June 2009
  • '''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
    582 bytes (73 words) - 17:26, 9 October 2011
  • ...' (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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  • [[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.
    697 bytes (108 words) - 11:13, 8 February 2014
  • [[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 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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  • '''''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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  • ...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.
    860 bytes (130 words) - 01:02, 24 July 2010
  • [[Image:Clarion.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''The Clarion''']] '''The Clarion''' is a publication by Megan Plunkett, published by [[Oso Press]].
    313 bytes (42 words) - 20:58, 1 June 2015
  • [[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 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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  • '''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 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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  • '''The Outhouse''' (1996-?) was a South Australian [[punk]] / [[hardcore]] [[zine] *[http://meltingpot.fortunecity.com/dakota/462/8/zine.html Review of ''The Outhouse'']
    454 bytes (53 words) - 01:04, 24 July 2010
  • [[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
    831 bytes (119 words) - 22:53, 28 April 2013
  • '''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
    624 bytes (89 words) - 21:16, 20 October 2012
  • [[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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  • [[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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  • [[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]].
    1 KB (161 words) - 03:56, 12 December 2011
  • ...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:Companions1_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Companions'''<br/>Issue 1 June 1986]] '''The Companions''' was a media science fiction [[fanzine]] published by Karen
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  • ...lano, Texas. The premise of the magazine is simple: each story begins with the same first line. ...20 pages and carried 14-16 stories. ''The First Line'' stayed zineish for the first three years, and contributors were paid two issues for their stories.
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  • [[Image:Nekromantikon_1950spr_v1_n1-1_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Nekromantikon'''<br/> Issue One 1950 <br/>cover by [[Manly Banister]]]] '''The Nekromantikon''' was an amateur press periodical released by [[Manly Banist
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  • [[Image:Comet1-s_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Comet'''<br/>Issue 1 May 1930]] '''The Comet''' is a fanzine that was published in 1930 in the U.S.A. by Raymond Palmer and Walter Dennis.
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  • [[Image:Mutant.jpg|right|frame|'''The Mutant'''<br/> Issue 2.2 May 1948 <br/> Cover art by Norman Kussuth]] '''The Mutant''' was a science fiction fanzine published in the late 1940s by Ben Singer in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
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  • '''The Dragomen''' was a [[One-shot|one off]] [[comic]] [[zine]]. It was written a ...they wished. The cover had a two colour screenprint of artwork inside and the zine was bound together by laces.
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Word]]
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  • [[Image:The_Talisman_copy.jpg|right|frame|'''The Talisman'''<br/>Issue 2 Summer 1950]] '''The Talisman''' was a science fiction fanzine by Roy W. Loan, Jr.
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  • [[Image:BTS.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Behind The Stove #13]] '''Behind The Stove''' is an official publication of The Easy Bake Coven.
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  • '''The Alarm''' is a political zine started in 2005, out of Houston, Texas. '''The Alarm #1''' Released on March 20th 2005, this [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste
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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 Aftermath''' is an amateur press publication by Edith Miniter. ...''The Aftermath'' is dedicated to him in specific, in chapter headings, as well as "to all readers".
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  • [[Image:Little_corpuscle_1951-52_n2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Little Corpuscle'''<br/>Issue 2 Winter 1951/1952<br/>Cover art by Ronald Cl '''The Little Corpuscle''' was a science fiction fanzine by Lynne Hickman, later j
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  • ...English gun-runner and supposed husband murderer, and Savid, propietor of THE underground gambling establishment. The First 200 copies of The Red Fez were hand made by the author, the first 50 are numbered.
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  • '''The Collective Zine''' is a fanzine published by Belfry Press/The Collective Writers Group, and edited by Lucidscreamer. ...ve Zine'' were published in the U.S.A. between 1995 and 1999. The focus of the zine was on writing fiction and fan fiction. it also included articles, ess
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  • [[Image:The_Space_Wastrel_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Space Wastrel'''<br/>Issue 5]] '''The Space Wastrel''' was a science-fiction [[fanzine]] edited by Mark Loney, Mi
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  • '''Looking out the window''' (September, 2003) is a small zine by [[Gracia Haby]], [[Louise J
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  • [[Image:Tkk-copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Knarley Knews'''<br/>Issue 53 September 1995]] '''The Knarley Knews''' is a science fiction fanzine edited by Henry L. Welch, and
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  • ...er.jpg|thumb|Issue #1 cover artwork by [[Cristy Road]]]]'''Pressed Between the Pages''' (ISSN 1934-3973) is a [[perzine]] by [[Alan Lastufka]]. Only 100 copies were ever printed of Pressed Between the Pages #1, and those were printed, in color, by [[Bravest Lil Jenn Publishin
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  • ...in-black, beret wearing, coffee drinking, couple that are always pondering the deeper meanings of life - sort of. ...e mid-1990s through 2002 or so, and the authors frequently participated in the Alternative Press Expo.
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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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  • [[Image:TheDamnedThing_2_.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Damn Thing''' <br/> Issue Two 1940 <br/> Cover Art by Ray Bradbury ]] '''The Damn Thing''' was a science fiction fandom fanzine by T. Bruce Yerke publis
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  • ...Loop to Oak Park. Copies of The Skeleton can be found at [[Myopic Books]], The Empty Bottle, and other places around Chicago. ...ling Tales of Bi-Polar Adventures, Sports, Paper on Paper, Comics & Games, The Future
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  • '''The Damage is Done''' was a [[zine]] from Meath, Ireland. ...together by three lads from Meath in 1996 and lasted for only two issues. The zine featured alternative independent music reviews and zine reviews along
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  • [[Image:The_Central_Ganglion.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Central Ganglion''' <br/>Issue 7 May 1983]] '''The Central Ganglion''' was a science fiction fanzine published by David Gordon
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  • [[Image:Ballard_chroniclescovr_small_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Ballard Chronicles'''<br/>Issue 3 April 1960<br/> Cover art by [[Bjo Trimbl ...ard Chronicles''' was a science fiction fanzine by Lee Jacobs published in the U.S.A.
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  • '''The Millionaires Club''' is a annual 3-day Comics, Posters, and Graphics festiv *[http://themillionairesclub.tumblr.com/ The Millionaires Club, Leipzig]
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Arts Pneumonia]]
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  • '''Beating Around the Bush''' was a zine about sex, sexualities and sexual health, edited by Puss ...nipple hair, breast reduction surgery, breastfeeding and breast cancer, as well as a tutorial on how to bind your breasts.
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  • [[Image:Toronto_the_Ghood_by_TaralWayne.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Toronto the Ghood'''<br/>1988<br/>Cover art by [[Taral Wayne]]]] '''Toronto the Ghood''' was a one issue only anthology of writing from Toronto fanzines ed
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  • [[Image:Standing1_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Standing Stone'''<br/>Issue 3 October 1991<br/>Cover art by [[Marge B. Simo '''The Standing Stone''' was a small press publication edited by Gordon R. Menzies
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  • '''THE2NDHAND''' is a free [[zine]] published quarterly and featuring the work of one [[writer]] per issue. Past issues have featured the work of [[Emerson Dameron]] and [[Joe Meno]]. Their online magazine updates
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  • '''The Spiral Breaks''' was a zine created by Dann Kriss in 1996. ...nd inform people of other "truths" in the world which might not fit within the Judeo-Christian-Islamic consensus view. Kriss was inspired to create a zine
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  • '''The Ken Chronicles''' is a [[perzine]] by East Meadow, New York, U.S.A. residen While most [[zine]]s are written by younger people, ''The Ken Chronicles'' is notable for being written by a retiree. Ken shares sto
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  • '''The Opera Glass''' is a [[zine]] about opera, published by [[Iris J. Arneson]] [[Category: Zine|Opera Glass]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • '''The Traveling Poet''' is an ezine publishing youth poets, art, photography, an The zine was founded in August 2013, publishing solely on, and accepting submis
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  • '''Off the Map''' is a [[one shot|one-off]] zine made by Hibickina and Kika about trav ...hinc organization got a hold of a copy and eventually made a bound book of the zine.
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  • [[Image:Donny the punk.jpg|frame|Donny the Punk]] ...born Robert Anthony Martin, Jr., was better known by the nickname '''Donny the Punk'''. He was a [[zine]] writer, [[punk]] personality, and political [[ac
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  • '''The Filth Zine''' is a literary zine by [[Karley Bayer]]. ...is a 20+, full-sized, black and white publication. The binding is sewn by the Filth’s creator, editor and short story contributor Karley Bayer.
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  • '''Pound The Pavement''' is a street-art [[zine]] edited by [[Josh Macphee]]. ...ften features photographs of street art and graffitti from across the U.S. The tenth issue, published in 2007, was a compilation of images mocking Preside
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  • '''Olly the Octopus''' was a one-off poetry zine created in March 2010 by [[Tim Train]] ...us porn industry but was hampered by the fact that he had only seven legs. The zine was put together in a style parodying children's picture books. Illust
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  • ...kend''''' was an [[apazine]] edited by [[Steve Green]] and distributed via the [[Nameless APA]]. [[Category:Zine]][[Category:Zines from the UK]][[Category:1990's publications]][[Category:Apazine]][[Category:Apazine]
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  • '''The Machine Media''' is a [[Chicago]]-based print magazine and website. ...hine Media hosts regular [[zine]] readings and DJing events in Chicago and the surrounding areas.
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  • [[Image:Frozen_Frog_art_by_Philippe_Labelle_logo_Ian_Gunn.jpg|right|frame|'''The Frozen Frog'''<br/>Issue 6 March 1993<br/>Cover art by Philippe Labelle<br/ '''The Frozen Frog''' was a science fiction fanzine published by Benoit Girard.
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  • ...ho-based zine published by [[Mark Hanford]]. He published 3 issues during the years 1983 and 1984. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • '''The Time Traveller''' was a science fiction [[ fanzine]] edited by Allen Glasse ...d using a mimeograph machine but the fanzine proved such a success that by the third issue it was being printed as a typeset magazine.
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  • '''The Urban Hermitt''' is a zine by [[Urban Hermitt]]. ...a [[perzine]], and within its pages Urban Hermitt documents his travels to the Pacific Northwest, Northern California and Hawaii.
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  • [[Image:Adventures3D.jpg‎|200px|thumb|right|'''Adventures into the Unknown'''<br/> 2010]] ...ers) which is only completed as a cover with date, number and signature by the author.
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  • [[Image:TheBedTimeZine.jpg|frame|'''The Bed Time Zine''' #1]] '''The Bedtime Zine''' was created by Jimmy out of Anchorage, Alaska, U.S.A.
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  • [[Image:cotl.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''Colouring Outside The Lines''']] '''Colouring Outside The Lines''' is a UK zine published by [[Melanie Maddison]] featuring interview
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  • [[Image:462px-The_Kingsboro_Press_Issue_6.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Kingsboro Press''']] '''The Kingsboro Press''' is a zine based in Brooklyn, NY., U.S.A.
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  • '''The Middle Earthworm''' was a news and letter zine devoted to the works of J.R.R. Tolkien, published by Archie Mercer and [[Beryl Mercer]]. ...S. ''The Middle Earthworm'' was a newsletter connecting British members to the group. Published first in Bristol, UK, and then in Cornwall, England, 29 is
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  • '''The Salivation Army''' is a film by [[Scott Treleaven]]. ...resents an overview of Scott's experiences during the time he was creating the zine.
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  • '''The Proper Boskonian''' is a science fiction fanzine published by the New England Science Fiction Association. ...d October 31, 1967. Cory Panshin edited four more issues before she passed the reins onto Richard Harter, who co-edited with Marsha Elkin, with Mike Symes
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  • [[Image:F-Bomb-1.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''The F-Bomb'''<br/> Issue #1, 2009]] Since early 2009 '''The F-Bomb''' has been a compilation zine based out of Tacoma, Washington, U.S.
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  • '''The Arts Pneumonia''' is an independently published arts journal/[[zine]] which ...owing London based publication featuring up and coming artists from around the UK.
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  • [[Image:Voices1_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Voices From The Edge'''<br/>Issue 12<br/>Cover art by Robert Baldwin and [[Cathy Buburuz]]] '''Voices From The Edge''' was a fanzine by Angie Underwood.
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  • [[Image:Heart-star-zine.jpg|frame|The Heart Star]] ...nd illustrated by [[Christoph Meyer]] of Ohio. Meyer wrote and illustrated the story in one day (on January 31st, 2003).
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  • '''The Daily Odessey''' is a minicomic series by [[Brett Muller]] that collects hi
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  • [[Image:Fanatical.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fanatical Fanactivist'''<br/> Issue 4 2011<br/>Cover by [[Taral Wayne]]]] '''The Fanatical Fantactivist''' is a science fiction fanzine by R. Graeme Cameron
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  • [[China Martens]] started her [[zine]], '''The Future Generation: a zine for subculture parents, kids, friends, and others ...ternative parents?" China wrote in retrospect (in the zine about zines for the ''[[Art in Zine]]'' Exhibition at [[ABC No Rio Zine Library|ABC No Rio]], 2
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  • '''The Cheap Vegan''' was a monthly [[zine]] written by [[Stephanie Scarborough]] ...but is now also out of print. A book that contains all 19 issues is now in the works.
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  • [[Image:VillageIdiot3_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Village Idiot'''<br/>Issue 3<br/>Cover art by [[Margaret Dominick (DEA)]]]] '''The Village Idiot''' was a science fiction fanzine published by Paul Shingleton
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  • [[Image:JRissue2.jpg‎|200px|right|frame|Issue 2,''The Jaded Reviews Guide to Hippie Watching In North America'']] ...e Jaded Review''' is a sarcastic and satirical review [[zine]] focusing on the underground dance music, hippie, and new age culture.
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  • [[Image:Collinsport_Call_17.jpg|right|frame|'''The Collinsport Call'''<br/>Issue 17 Summer 1981]] '''The Collinsport Call''' was a fanzine devoted to the television series ''Dark Shadows''.
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  • [[Image:PanicButton6.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Panic Button'''<br/>Issue 6 Fall 1961<br/>Cover art by [[Arthur Thomson|Art '''The Panic Button''' was a science fiction fandom fanzine by Les Nirenberg publi
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  • [[Image:CrookedRascal.jpg|frame|'''The Crooked Rascal''' Zine]] '''The Crooked Rascal''' was a half sheet, 22 page [[zine]] created by Marie Craig
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  • ...wordplay and little snippets from everyday happenings, and photocopies of the author' detailed penciled drawings and collages.
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  • [[Image:Songmakers_Almanac_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Songmakers Alamanac'''<br/>Vol. IV, No. 7 July 1965]] '''The Songmakers Almanac''' was a fanzine devoted to folk music edited by Bill Wo
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  • '''The fall of because''' (1999-) is a goth [[fanzine]] from Tasmania, Australia. The first issue was released in 1999. February of 2007 saw the release of the eighth issue of this long-running zine.
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  • [[Image:Theocean.jpg|frame|The cover]] '''The Ocean Roars''' is mainly a [[perzine]] based in Berlin, Germany and made by
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  • [[Image:Ultimate_unknown_1999win_n14_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Ultimate Unknown'''<br/>Issue 14 Winter 1999<br/>Cover art by Christopher F '''The Ultimate Unknown''' was a small press publication edited by David D. Combs
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  • ...e Girl in the Golden Atom'', the first issue appeared on October 20, 1939. The first ten issues, published from 1939 till 1943, were in letter-sized mimeo ...y the most valuable repository of new research and reference on SF" during the time it was initially published.
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  • [[Image:YR cover.jpg|frame|The Yellow Rake]] ''The Yellow Rake'' is a small-run print zine based in Denver, Colorado, U.S.A.
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  • [[Image:Heiskell_Holler_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Heiskell Holler'''<br/>Issue 8 June 1964]] '''The Heiskell Holler''' was a science fiction fanzine by Janie Lamb.
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  • '''The Treasure Fleet''' is a Berlin based collective, founded in late summer 2010 Aim of the project was to create and develop better channels for the distribution of creator-published comic books or [[minicomics]].
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  • ...n amalgamation of writings on the driving forces in the [[music scene]] of the Rhondda Valleys (South Wales). The [[zine]] has been on sale from the 6th September 2014 and is available for purchase on http://inthepit.bigcart
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  • '''The Residence Gallery''' is an art space located in Victoria Park Village, Lond The gallery shop sells artist multiples, [[zine]]s, limited edition publication
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  • '''The Sixth Minky''' is a [[perzine]] created by Maaike Davidson. Her words, her artwork and her way to distribute information about the debilitating effects of depression.
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  • [[Image:The_Mystery_fancier_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Mystery Fancier'''<br/>Volume 2, No. 2 March 1978<br/>Cover art by Franklyn '''The Mystery Fancier''' was a fanzine published by Guy M. Townsend.
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  • [[Image: The shittest unicorn - visual companion.JPG |300px|thumb|right|''The shittest unicorn : visual companion'']] '''The shittiest unicorn : visual companion''' (2008-) is an one-off photographic
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  • [[Image:Tecup.jpg|300px|thumb|right|The Teacup Symposium Press Logo]] '''The Teacup Symposium Press''' was a small press and [[distro]] based in the UK, which stocks zines, chapbooks and other self-published works.
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  • '''The Big Takeover''' is a music [[zine]] published in New York by [[Jack Rabid]] ...pied publication, it is now printed, and has been publishing for 25 years. The 60th issue was released in 2007.
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  • [[Image:AntiCommon.jpeg|frame|'''The Anti-Common'''#4]] ...comics, and show reviews. A lot of the content in the zine was focused on the local music scene in Anchorage.
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  • Vagina is a zine for the ladies by the ladies. to share their creative work with the public. The zine features a variety
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  • The eclectic zine, '''Envy the Dead''', had a run of four issues between 1992 and 1994. ...ensive social critique, including extensive analyses of nanotechnology and the implications of nuclearism by editor [[David Mac]]. One review summed it u
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  • '''Kill The Robot''' was a zine by Jason, published in Maryland, U.S.A. ...ine]] in which Jason wrote about personal issues such as being bisexual in the [[punk]] scene, his sister's suicide and, later on, his lapse from his prev
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  • #REDIRECT [[Spilling The Ink :indie zines & mail art distro:]]
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  • '''For The Clerisy''' is a [[zine]] by American [[Brant Kresovich]] who has moved to R ...nki, answers questions about Latvia, ex. "Is there a Latvian equivalent to the cola wars between Coke and Pepsi?" (yes there is), and Auntie Clockwise doe
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  • [[Image:Brooklyn_Reporter_3.jpg|right|frame|'''The Brooklyn Reporter'''<br/> Issue 3 April 1935<br/> Cover art by George Gordo '''The Brooklyn Reporter''' was a science fiction fanzine edited by George Gordon
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  • ...m the shadows-01.jpeg|thumb|right|The cover of the first issue of Out From the Shadows]] ...from Ohio with a strong focus on [[Anarchism|anarcho-primitivism]]. It was the continuation of a discontinued zine named [[Encuentro]].
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  • [[Image:Bosses-Songbook1_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Bosses' Songbook''' <br/> 1959 <br/>Cover art by Vince Hickey ]] '''The Bosses' Songbook''' was a satirical one shot zine created by Dave Van Ronk
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  • [[Image: The new pollution.JPG|200px|thumb|right|The new pollution]] ...al of the cut and paste aesthetic compared to desktop publishing. However, the bulk of this pubilcation is is devoted to an a-z anthology of current Austr
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  • [[Image:The_Thing_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The (Unspeakable} Thing''' <br/>Issue 2 1946 <br/>Cover by T. Soyunki ]] '''The (Unspeakable) Thing''' was a science fiction fanzine by Helen Vivartlas Wes
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  • [[Image:The anonymous voice.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Cover of ''The anonymous voice'']] '''The anonymous voice''' (2008) is an A4 [[zine]] published anonymously in Melbou
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  • ...ne features pencil and text drawings with letraset and textual wordplay on the theme of trash.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Envy the Dead]]
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  • '''The Coolest Retard''' was a [[zine]] from Chicago, IL., U.S.A. that was put tog ...so featured record and live shows reviews, news items and editorials about the state of music.
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  • ...The same author published the zine [[Being Real and Getting Clean]] around the same time. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...ter the Nineties''' is a 36 page photocopied [[zine]] about the history of the New York art/punk squat ABC No Rio. ...matinees], which became a safe alternative to the weekly gang violence of the CBGB's shows by barring bands that promoted sexism, racism, or homophobia.
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  • [[Image:Purplehours.jpg‎ |right|frame|'''The Purple Hours'''<br/> 1974 <br/>Cover designed by [[Harry Turner]]]] '''The Purple Hours''' was a one-issue-only poetry zine edited by Lisa Conesa and
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  • '''The Rum Rebellion''' (1981-?) was a ''Star Trek'' [[fanzine]] published by the U.S.S. Bounty in Sydney, NSW. ...Rum Rebellion''' is included in the Susan Smith-Clarke Zine Collection at The National Library of Australia.
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  • '''The Ugly Aardvark''' is a free [[zine]] made by [[Laura-Marie Taylor]] during h ...d to publish. In University, she released poetry zine [[Pocket Trick]]. In the 2000's, she began to publish [[Erik and Laura-Marie Magazine]] and [[Functi
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  • [[Image:Jdmbibliophile15.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The JMD Bibliophile'''<br/>Issue 15 1971]] '''The JDM Bibliophile''' was a fanzine by Len and June Moffatt, and later Ed Hirs
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  • Madeleine writes the '''The Rusty Anchor''', a [[perzine]], published in the 2000s. ...but calls more to the soul. It’s about growing up and hating everything at the same time.
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  • ...ered a collection of modified, appropriated and copied books from all over the world. ...tarting point for talks and work groups around the concept of originality, the notion of authorship and politics of copyright.
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  • ...Elizabeth Ladd]]. The first [[zine]], Superpak Vol. 1 was printed in 2000. The second zine, Golden Greats, was printed in 2004. These zines bring together ...s on plastic surgery, doll collecting, wacky fan experiences, Cher comics, the Cher Convention, fan cook-offs, impersonator stories, and an advice column
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  • '''The Rebus Quarterly''' is a [[zine]] that was published from 1992-1995 in West ...time they are being scanned to pdf files so they can still be distributed. The information is not time sensitive and can be read by all.
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  • [[Image: The reality cadenza -1.JPG|300px|thumb|right|The reality cadenza #1]] '''The reality cadenza''' (2006-) is a [[compilation zine|compilation]] literary z
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  • [[Image:Burning Times.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''The Burning Times''' - Issue Six (cover by [[G.B. Jones]])]] '''The Burning Times''' (February 1995-?) was a queer [[punk]] [[zine]] published
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  • [[Image:Blue_lady_donna_taylor_burgess_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Blue Lady'''<br/> Issue 3 <br/> Cover art by Erik Wilson]] '''The Blue Lady''' is a small press publication devoted to horror and weird ficti
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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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  • [[Image:Whostorian.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Whostorian Quintessentially''']] ...e Whostorian Quarterly''' is a media science fiction fanzine published by the As Yet Unnamed Doctor Who Fan Club of Newfoundland (AYUDWFCON) from St. Joh
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  • [[Image:The_Fantasy_Fan.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fantasy Fan'''<br/> October 1934]] '''The Fantasy Fan''' was a fanzine by Charles D. Hornig published in the 1930s in Elizabeth, New Jersey, U.S.A.
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  • ...three issues and featured poetry and stories, with music reviews. Some of the writers featured were Sparrow, Hal Sirowitz, Darryl Smyers, Thad Rutkowski, ...ular culture called "Shit From Old Notebooks", after The Minutemen song of the same name.
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  • ...ry of a popsicle who is left on the counter and begins to melt. Herbie did the story. ...egory:Ohio Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Category: Zine|Molly the Popsicle]] [[Category:Minicomics]]
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  • '''The Original Universe''' is a [[zine]] about [[comic]] books printed in Montrea ''The Original Universe'' was created in 2007. It has currently had 12 issues: on
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  • '''The McCoy Tapes''' was a media science fiction [[newsletter]] published by Deco ...was an Australian DeForest Kelley / Leonard "Bones" McCoy fan club, and ''The McCoy Tapes'' was their official bi-monthly newsletter. A total of 73 issue
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  • ...[zine]] written by Appalachian writers and edited by [[Elliott Stewart]]. The zine has a half-size computerized layout. Rhododendron Reader was a litera [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...South Wales [[Hardcore]] made by McKee, Bryony, Cer, Alex B and others in the South Wales scene. ...s a diagram of how to find his record shop Damaged which was in Cardiff at the time.
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  • ...rom Michigan creates when he isnt taking his concerta (A.D.D. medication). The editor says, "Its about what ever comes to mind... And what ever." Each issue is in the quarter format and contains at least one ongoing [[comic]]. Issue one conta
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  • [[Image:HauntedJournal1.jpg|right|frame|'''The Haunted Journal''' <br/> Issue 1 1986-87 <br/> Cover art by Stacey Alexande '''The Haunted Journal''' was the official publication of Dracula and Company. It was edited by Sharida Rizzu
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  • [[Image:Black_lily_1997win_n5_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Black Lily'''<br/>Issue 5 Winter 1997<br/>Cover art by [[Cathy Buburuz]]]] '''The Black Lily''' was a literary zine edited by Vincent Kuklewski (d. November
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  • ...ver art by Stephanie Jones]]'''The Bitchin' Kitsch''' (2010-present) or '''The B'K''' is a [[compzine]] edited and published by [[Chris Talbot-Heindl]] an ...reativity, and seeks to be an outlet for people who may not otherwise have the opportunity to show their work.
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  • '''The Nearsighted Revolution''' was written by [[Christie Gorman Shaw]] from 1994 The zine had charming, funny and touching stories from people who are nearsight
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  • '''The F-Word''' has been published since Spring of 2006 by Melody Berger from Phi The zine is a feminist publication, featuring interviews, frank and open discus
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  • '''The Damned Patrol''' was a science fiction fanzine devoted to aviation. The editors were Joe Gibson, Terry Jeeves, John Berry and [[Beryl Mercer]]. ...fth in January 1967. The first and fifth issues were edited by Joe Gibson, the second by Terry Jeeves, third by John Berry, and fourth by Beryl Mercer.
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  • [[Image:SterlingWeb1.jpg‎|right|frame|'''''The Sterling Web'''''<br/> Issue #1, Spring 1989 <br/>Cover Art by Amy K. Mann] '''The Sterling Web''' was a genre zine edited by Ann Kennedy (now Ann VanderMeer)
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  • '''The Bionic rabbit''' (1979-1981) was a science fiction [[fanzine]] published by *[http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn2977994 ''The Bionic rabbit''], [http://www.nla.gov.au National Library of Australia], ca
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  • '''The Dissonant Accost''' was a [[perzine]] created by [[Lakisha]] of New York, N ...ably published in 1992, based on a statement in #11 from January 1996 that the zine was nearly four years old. Lakisha, an African-American woman, attende
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  • [[Image:StarRover.jpg‎ |right|frame|'''The Star Rover'''<br/>1946<br/> Cover Art by Arthur A. McCourt]] '''The Star Rover''' was a science fiction fanzine by Van H. Splawn, Fritz Hoffman
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  • ...]] edited by [[Robert Wringham]]. It focuses upon solutions to the 'escape the rat race' problem and features critical items, essays, interviews and artwo The magazine's website describes the magazine thusly:
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  • '''Pardon the Typos''' was an art zine from 2000 edited by Gregory Scaff. ...in Burlington, Vermont, U.S.A. in 2000 under the label of Bite Me! Press. The zine was guerrilla circulated in bookstores,libraries and coffee shops.
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  • '''Take Back the Knit''' is a [[zine]] by [[Jae Steele]] of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. ...atterns, while Issue #2 features "summery" ones. A third issue has been in the works since 2005.
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  • '''The Green Dome''' was a media science fiction fanzine by Diana Folch-Pi and Bet ...s ''The Prisoner''. It was published in New York City, New York, U.S.A. in the 1980s.
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  • '''The Horror Zine''' is a monthly ezine and publisher of anthology books speciali ...rs are struggling, however. The Horror Zine has published such "masters of the macabre" as Ramsey Campbell, Graham Masterton, Bentley Little, Joe R. Lansd
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  • '''THE RIDDLER''' is a great big yellow piece of paper that’s folded up origami-style so that it’ll fit in the pocket of your
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  • '''Stephan the STfan''' was a science fiction fanzine by [[Myrtle Douglas (Morojo)|Myrtle Released in 1939 in the U.S.A. for the occasion of the first World Science Fiction Convention, this was a small pamphlet of approx
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  • '''The Fat Zine''' is a [[zine]] from the UK. ...d, there have been 3 issues of '''The Fat Zine''' published in the 2020's. The zine features art, essays, interviews and more by fat creators.
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  • ...t|frame|'''Fuck The Tories''' <br/>Issue 4 <br/>(the top left corner where the title would be has been hidden by owner for display on online auction)]] '''Fuck The Tories''' was a science fiction fanzine by [[Valma Brown]], Leigh Edmonds,
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  • ...[Ianto Ware]], describes as being: "the actual tour diaries of the Last of the Great Adelaide Mid-Nineties Indie Bands, namely No Through Road. Ianto Ware also produces the zines [[Westside Angst]] and [[Das Papierkrieg]].
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  • '''The Constant Rider''' is a [[zine]] written by Portland, Oregon, U.S.A. residen ...nsists of anecdotes from Kate's experiences riding trains and buses around the Portland area and beyond. Frequent topics have included dealing with aggra
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  • '''The Banana King''' is a Chicago, IL., U.S.A. based [[zine]] published by [[A.B. ...e virtue and purity of being the 'Banana King,' the guy who sells bananas. The zine is known for being a outlet for local writers and contributors have in
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  • [[Image:issue-4.jpg|frame]]'''The Absinthe Faery''' was created in September of 2006 by a high school freshma ...was assigned in eighth grade, though it has been shortened and not all of the thirty page paper has been included.
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  • [[Image: In the MEANtime -2.JPG|200px|thumb|right|In the MEANtime #2]] '''In the MEANtime''' (2003-2005?) was an A5 Australian [[zine]] 'dedicated to suppor
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  • '''''The Amazing Cynicalman''''' was a [[minicomic]] by [[Matt Feazell]]. ...Not Available Press''. Cynicalman was a stick figure character starring in the mini comic named for him. Feazall has continued drawing this character thr
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  • #REDIRECT [[Pressed Between the Pages]]
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  • [[Image:Dragon_Slayers.jpg‎|150px|thumb|right|'''The Dragon Slayers'''<br/> 2012]] ...-shot zine by Theodor Forsbeck, Bartholomäus Kaszubowski and George Popov. The zine was published by [[TFGC Publishing]] in 2012.
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  • [[Image:Parallel_times.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Parallel Times'''<br/>Issue 5 Spring 1984]] '''The Parallel Times''' was a fanzine published by Josette and Patrick Garrison a
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  • '''For the Birds''' is a NYC-based [[feminist]] [[collective]] working to combat socia
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  • '''The Southern Star''' is a science fiction fanzine published in Columbia, South The first four issues of ''The Southern Star'' appeared in 1941. A fifth issue was released four years lat
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  • '''The Sisyphean Task''' is a [[perzine]] by [[Mike Faris]] of Corvallis, Oregon. Mike Faris is also the editor of [[Sacred Obligations]].
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  • '''The Silver Frog''' is a [[Punk]] [[zine]] from the early 1990's mostly printed in Grenoble France. ...so released a compilation tape of bands of both US and French origins with the third issue.
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  • '''The Kumquat Popsicle''' was a [[One shot |one-off zine]] published in New York [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • [[Image:The_Music_Box_6_John_Peskey_cover_copy_2.jpg|right|frame|'''The Music Box'''<br/>Issue 6 1993<br/>Cover art by John Peskey]] '''The Music Box''' was a fanzine published by the Oregon Dark Shadows Society.
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  • [[Image:The_Drink_Tank_154.jpg|frame|'''The Drink Tank''' <br/> Issue 154 2007<br/> Cover designed by Mo Starkey]] ...po on a form filing trademark on the name for a film production company in the mid-1990s.
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  • '''The ATom Anthology''' was a special [[one shot]] publication of [[Arthur Thomso ''The ATom Anthology'' was produced by [[Ella Parker]] and published in May 1961.
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  • '''The Boomerang Press''' Indie Press ...ds]], as well as a number of novels and chapbooks. The Boomerang Press is the personal project of [[zinester]], [[Durand J. Compton]].
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  • [[Image:PoeticKnight1.jpg|right|frame|'''The Poetic Knight''' <br/> Issue 1 Spring 1991 <br/> Cover art by Chuck Bordell '''The Poetic Knight''' was "a fantasy romance magazine" edited by Michael and Kri
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  • [[Image:Bookbinderysmall.jpg|frame|The Book Bindery]] '''The Book Bindery''' was a [[one-shot]] [[zine]] written by Sarah Royal out of [
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  • [[Image:The_Twilight_Garden_1.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Twilight Garden'''<br/>Issue 1 Fall 1998<br/>Cover art by [[Cathy Buburuz]] '''The Twilight Garden''' was a literary zine edited and published by Shane Ryan S
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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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  • [[Image: The bubbles pop.JPG|200px|thumb|right|The bubbles pop]] '''The bubbles pop''' (Sydney, NSW: Astro Press, Winter 2006) is an A5, black and
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  • [[Image:TRS.jpg|200px|thumb|right|The Red Sky (original 2 pg. Preview)]] '''The Red Sky''' was an offshoot [[minicomic]] created by the same authors as [[Aorta VI]].
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  • [[Image:Space_in_Between2.jpg‎|200px|thumb|right| '''The Space in Between'''<br/> 2010]] '''The Space in Between''' is a zine created by [[Julia Bünnagel]] in 2010.
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  • [[Image:Spill the zines flyer printable.jpg|200px|thumb|right]] ...tures the voices of British zinesters and zine enthusiasts who write about the aspects of zine culture that they're passionate about.
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  • '''The Cambridge Scene''' was a science fiction fanzine by Larry Stark and [[Jean Published in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.A. in the 1960s, two issues of ''The Cambridge Scene'' appeared.
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  • '''Define the Meaning''' is a [[zine]] created for fans of [[hardcore]] and hardcore-rela ...otten what it means to be hardcore. This fanzine will be a vessel to share the opinions of bands and fans to provoke thought and conciousness of why hardc
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  • '''The Hell Times''' is a newsletter type [[zine]] for the Hellarity squat in Oakland CA U.S.A. ...ed through the doors over the years--a small number of them contributed to the newsletter, including [[Samiya Bird]], [[Robert Eggplant]], and [[Heather W
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  • ...paper, but 1st person narratives, poetry, and photo essays are frequent as well. The Red Pill prints between 1200-2000 hard copies.
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  • '''The Spanish Inquisition''' is a science fiction fanzine by [[Suzanne Tompkins]] ''The Spanish Inquisition'' was edited and published in the 1970s in New York City, New York, U.S.A. Ten issues were released.
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  • [[Image:SilentPlanet1.jpg|right|frame|'''The Silent Planet''' <br/> Issue 1 October 1973]] '''The Silent Planet''' was a poemzine edited by Mike O'Dell, Mark Rich, and Tobin
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  • ...ed Sweet Spot, Future Transmission, Kinetoscope and other zines throughout the 1990s and mid-2000s. He currently posts nearly every day on two blogs: Cin ...6 is archived at the [[Denver Zine Library]]. Other issues can be found at The Zine Archive and Publishing Project (ZAPP) at Richard Hugo House in Seattle
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  • '''''The White Notebooks''''' is a paper [[perzine]] edited by [[Pete Young]]. ...arterly schedule. Mailings include the supplemental single-sheet fanzine [[The Thai Literary Supplement]], collecting reviews of genre and non-genre books
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  • [[Image:LSR-27_copy.jpg‎|Right|frame|'''The Little Sandy Review''' Cover photograph of Koerner, Ray and Glover by Paul '''The Little Sandy Review''' was a [[fanzine]] devoted to folk music published by
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  • [[Image:Under_the_Ozone_Hole.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Under The Ozone Hole'''<br/>Issue 1 August 1992<br/>Cover art by Dwight Lockhart]] '''Under The Ozone Hole''' was a science fiction fanzine published by John W. Herbert an
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  • ...es had a low circulation run and back issues are almost impossible to get. The writing was top notch, mostly small pieces written about Liam's life. Occas Liam continues to put out the zine sporadically. It was reported in his last issue that he was living und
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  • [[Image:New_hieroglyph.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The New Hieroglyph''']] '''The New Hieroglyph''' was published in Forest Hills, N.Y., U.S.A. by [[Donald
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  • [[Image:Floating_bear4.jpg‎‎|200px|thumb|right|'''The Floating Bear'''<br/>Issue 4 1961]] '''The Floating Bear''' was a [[newsletter]] that ran from 1961 to 1971, edited in
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  • '''The Lindsay Report''' was a [[One shot|one time only]] fanzine by [[Ethel Linds ..., which made it possible for British science fiction fans to visit fans in the U.S. and vice versa.
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  • [[Image:Pb2.jpg|frame|the pine box #2]] '''the pine box''' is a cut-and-paste [[zine]] by [[Karen]] of St. Paul, MN. It co
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  • '''The Zine Dump''' is a review fanzine by Guy H. Lillian III. ....A. Some issues are on-line and some are available only in print format. ''The Zine Dump'' focuses primarily on science fiction fanzines, but does include
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  • #REDIRECT [[Out From The Shadows]]
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  • '''The Best of Fandom 1957''' was a science fiction anthology edited and published ...t they considered the best writing that appeared in their fanzine in 1957. The introduction was written by Robert Bloch.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Taking back the Night]]
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  • [[Trying to Fuck The Furniture]] was a one-shot by [[SaBean MoreL]] that dealt with her long-ter ...few weeks later, coupled with MoreL's increasing habit, led her to shelve the project until 2001.
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  • '''The Porch Beers Mix''' is a literary compzine created by [[Elliott Stewart]]. ...in West Virginia, U.S.A., each issue has a loose theme that writers across the globe can choose to use as inspiration.
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  • '''Witness to the Bizarre''' was a literary horror and supernatural fanzine edited by Melinda Published in New York, U.S.A., in the 1980s, ''Witness to the Bizarre'' is 48 pages, with a stiff stapled cover, approx 5 1/2 by 8 1/2. A
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  • '''Domble In The Works''' was a science fiction fanzine by Lesley Ward. ''Domble In The Works'' was published in the UK in the 1980s. Three issues were released.
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  • ...(1997-?) was an Australian literary and arts review [[zine]] published by The Interactive Gallery, 254 Hindley St West, Adelaide.
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  • [[Image:Land_of_Conch.jpg|frame|The Land of Conch cover]] [[The Land of Conch]] was a [[zine]] published by [[Joshua Peck]] of Tulsa, Oklah
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  • '''The Eclectic Screening Room''' (or, ESR for short) is a zine about film, publis ...ut of various types of movies (largely anything but what currently runs at the multiplex), but mainly focuses on reviews and articles of cult films and in
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  • ...[[Pete Young]]. It is sent out along with copies of Young's [[perzine]] [[The White Notebooks]]. ...2558 in the Thai calendar) and is projected to have a quarterly schedule. The zine collects reviews of genre and non-genre books about Thailand by Thai a
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  • '''Droog In The Dock''' was a Clockwork Orange Skinhead [[zine|Zine]]. Published in the late 80's, ''Droog In The Dock'' ran to 7 issues.
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  • ...various members of the ''The new scum'', as well as from other members of the Melbourne fringe arts scene. ...r seeing the show ''The new scum'' and the accompanying [[zine]] ''Scum on the wall''.
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  • ...y''' <br /> Volume 1, Issue 3, July 2014<br />The Energy Fair issue]]'''On the 7th Day''' (2014-2015) was a [[zine]] edited and published by Chris and Dan On the 7th Day is a zine that explores what happens off the clock. When most of our waking hours are spent working for others, we’d l
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  • [[Image:Maple_Leaf_Rag_15_by_TaralWayne_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Maple Leaf Rag'''<br/> Issue 15 <br/>Cover art by [[Taral Wayne]]]] '''The Maple Leaf Rag''' was a science fiction fanzine by Garth Spencer.
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  • [[Image:Guilty Cover.jpg‎|200px|thumb|right|'''Justice Traps the Guilty''' (Zine)<br/> 2005]] '''Justice Traps the Guilty''' is a publication by [[Patrick Rieve]], released in Hamburg, 2005.
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  • [[Image:The_Best_of_Fandom_1958.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Best of Fandom 1958''' <br/>Cover art by [[Arthur Thomson|ATom]] ]] '''The Best of Fandom 1958''' was a science fiction fandom fanzine, edited and pub
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  • [[Image:Cover5.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Sins of the Flesh''' <br/> Issue 5]] '''Sins of the Flesh''' is a Goth, Horror and Dark Fantasy fanzine edited by Rayne.
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  • '''The banality of evil''' (2007-) is an Australian art [[zine]] by [[zinester]] M ...a balaclava undertaking every-day activities, e.g. riding a bike, washing the dishes.
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  • '''The Book of Harmonies''' is a 2004 zine created by [[Joe Galván]]. ...ance pieces to be performed in front of an audience. 3 stories appeared in the Canadian zine [[Stationaery]] in 2004 and 2005. This was Galván's first fo
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  • '''Not The Job Hunter''' was a free Coventry Agit Zine from 1981 published by [[Advent ...with a national TV documentary before the magazine ceased publication once the money ran out and it could no longer be given away free to its unemployed,
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  • [[Image:The_Salivation_Army_cover_resized.JPG|frame|'''This Is The Salivation Army''' - Issue X]] '''This Is The Salivation Army''' is a [[zine]] from Toronto, Ontario, Canada, created by
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  • [[File:twilight-of-the-idols.jpg|200px|thumb|right]] '''Twilight of the Idols''' (TOTI) was a [[punk]] literary zine published between 1991 and 199
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  • ...s Again''' is a film made by science fiction fans and fanzine editors from the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society. ...ersion of science fiction fan Wrai Ballard. Wrai Ballard, at the time, was the official editor of SAPS.
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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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  • '''Chaos Runs The Family''' or '''CRTF''' is a [[zine]] that was first published by Zeke Pand ...h the exception of the first zine being made with a friend in order to use the copy machine that his dad had.
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  • ...y''' <br /> Volume 1, Issue 3, July 2014<br />The Energy Fair issue]]'''On the 7th Day''' (2014-present) is a [[compzine]] edited and published by [[Chris On the 7th Day is a zine that explores what happens off the clock. When most of our waking hours are spent working for others, we’d l
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  • ..., dog, you didn't see Bach, you didn't even see him live, tearing it up on the harpsichord. DEATH TO FAKE METAL!!!" Maybe it would be great if someone did *Cheer the Eff Up #1
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  • [[Image:Texas_SF_Inquirer.JPG|right|frame|'''The Texas SF Inquirer'''<br/>1993<br/>Cover art by Brad Foster]] '''The Texas SF Inquirer''' is a science fiction fanzine published by the Fandom Association of Central Texas (F.A.C.T.).
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  • [[Image: Found in the ruins.JPG|200px|thumb|right|Found in the ruins]] ...he ruins''' is by Australian [[zinester]] Sunil. The [[zine]] is named for the Minor Threat song ''Guilty of (not) being white''.
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  • [[Image:Bobthesuperdog.jpg|frame|''Bob the super dog'']] ...he cat Milk Whiskers who is wanted for questioning by the police following the robbery of milk.
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  • '''The Moffatt House Abroad''' is a science fiction fanzine by Len Moffatt and Jun ...won the Trans-Atlantic Fan Fund for a trip from the U.S.A. to Europe and ''The Moffatt House Abroad'' is an account of their trip. It was published in 197
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  • '''The Gospel of Screenprinting''' is an [[DIY]] [[zine]] written by [[Brad Wenner An illustrated guide to creating screenprints on posters and shirts, the zine covers screen construction and techniques for high quality results. I
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  • '''Faces of the Goddess''' is a long running [[zine]] by [[Sharon Niman]] from Crows Landin ...Wang Mu, goddess in the Chinese pantheon, Keltic Fairies, and Children of the Fey. Also it includes some notable pen and ink illustrations.
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  • ...s it is the high-rolling excitement of night-time gambling, at times it is the mundane monotony of full-time employment. Good work zine!
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  • '''''Closer to the Edge''''' was a [[review zine]] edited by [[Steve Green]]. [[Category:Zine]][[Category:Zines from the UK]][[Category:1970's publications]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Bird in the hand]]
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  • [[Image:THe_Fantasy_Collector_issue_1.JPG‎|right||frame|'''The Fantasy Collector'''<br/>Issue 1 December 1988]] '''The Fantasy Collector''' was a science fiction, fantasy and pulp fanzine by Cam
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  • '''Eye of the Kudzu''' was a [[zine]] created in the early '90s by Priscilla, a student at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. ...red interviews, music and zine reviews, poetry and articles. "Religion of the Month," was a regular feature.
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  • '''Tales from the Rat House''' is a zine from San Francisco, California, U.S.A. ...m Rock 'N' Roll]] and the Gilman St. Project music club, eventually making the Lookout! Records label.
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  • [[Image:Punksurrealistcafe_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Punk-Surrealist Cafe'''<br/> On display at ''Punk Passage: San Francisco Fi '''The Punk-Surrealist Cafe''' is a zine by G. Sutton Breiding.
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  • '''The Offset Printing Journal''' is an independent newspaper and online zine base ...the journal created a good venue for advertisers to reach a niche market. The newspaper was released at printing trade shows across North America and rea
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  • '''Bottles on the Sill''' is a [[zine]] library and [[distro]] run by [[Jessica Bublitz]]. ...rew to become a distro of zines, comics, and handmade crafts, and moved to the Milwaukee, Wisconsin area.
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  • '''''Sounding the Ritual Echo''''' was a 1980s [[fanzine]] edited by [[Steve Green]]. ...fill-in "#2.5" which bore the subtitle ''Atmospheres for Dreaming'' (like the main title, taken from a lyric by Bill Nelson).
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  • [[Image:Startreksongbook1976coversmall_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Star Trek Songbook'''<br/>Edition 3 1976<br/>Cover art by George Barr]] '''The Star Trek Songbook''' was a media science fiction fanzine by [[Ruth Berman]
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  • '''Three Sheets to the Wind''' is a [[zine]] from Austin, TX (1997-1998). This zine was an obvious ...have "crossed the PC line in the sand" for either its vituperation against the french, its ready employment of NAMBLA imagery, its contempt for white tras
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  • [[Image:Sin_and_the_september_issue_cover.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''Sin & The September Issue''' September 2015]] '''Sin & The September Issue''' is a mini art zine (3.6" x 3") published in September, 2
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  • [[Image:Lovecraft_fanzine.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The H.P. Lovecraft Fanzine'''<br/> Issue 4 1977]] '''The H.P. Lovecraft Fanzine''' was edited by Les Thomas and published by 13th Ho
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  • ...002 to September 2003, then posted online from 2003-2005, and published by the [[ULA Press]], [[Underground Literary Alliance]] in 2006. This trade paperback tells the story of a college rock band that, like most bands, is not successful.
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  • ...llective based in numerous cities in the North of the [[UK]]. The focus of the collective is to provide safe and encouraging spaces for queer/feminist DIY ...Cartwheels''' runs its own [[distro]] both online and at all their events. The distro has appeared at events such as [[Bradford Zine Fayre]] and [[Exeter
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  • ...cenities Blog''' is the official website of [[Persephone Pomegranate]] and the [[Reclusive Obscenities]] zine containing zine reviews, updates, news, link
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  • '''The Mad 3 Party''' was a science fiction fanzine by Laurie Mann, Pat Vandenberg ...letter. It was under Leslie's editorship that the ''The Mad 3 Party'' won the [[Hugo Award for Best Fanzine]] in 1990.
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Carbon Based Mistake]]
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  • '''the carbon based mistake''' is zine publishing venture started in 1998 by Marc the carbon based mistake became the official name of the project after a series of his other randomly titled zines that begun in 199
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  • [[Image:Itoh_52_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Inside The Old House'''<br/>Issue 52 July-August 1995<br/>Cover art by Anne Marie Eren '''Inside The Old House''' is a fanzine devoted to the television programme ''Dark Shadows'' published by Old House Publishing and
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  • '''The Routes We Wander''' is a 24 hour zine project made by [[Lee Taylor]]. ...st Midlands, UK. Two issues have been made thus far, one in July 2010, and the second in July 2012. Each 24 page issue contains a collection of location d
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  • [[Image:Park_is_mine.jpg‎|200px|thumb|right|'''The Park is Mine'''<br/> Issue 1 2009]] '''The Park is Mine''' is a zine by [[Julia Bünnagel]] and [[Patrick Rieve]].
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  • [[Image:TNFF834997_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The National Fantasy Fan'''<br/>February 1983]] '''The National Fantasy Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine published by the National Fantasy Fan Federation.
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  • '''Fairytales in the Supermaket''' is a [[zine]] written in 2009 by Sydney, Australia resident [ ...in the Supermarket'' relates the demoralizing truth about working "behind the counter."
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  • [[Image:Dark_Shadows_Chronicle3_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Dark Shadows Chronicles'''<br/>Issue 3 December 1976]] '''The Dark Shadows Chronicle''' was a fanzine by Mike Rupert.
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  • '''The Guinea Pig Journals''' is currently an A5 [[zine]] distributed in many Vete ...Magazines available in the United Kingdom, and perhaps unknowingly invokes the idea that we do not "own" pets - they Own us.
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  • '''The Dark Shadows Quarterly''' was a fanzine published by The International Dark Shadows Society. ...and events, interviews with the actors of ''Dark Shadows'', biographies of the actors, articles, fiction, movie and album reviews, and photos.
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  • ...ines 11375382 831382983602717 830088347 n.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Cover of ''The World Of Zines'']] ...08331 111562212520140 1575147775 n.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Spread from the ''The World Of Zines'']]
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  • [[Image:Pac-Man fever.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''The Pac-Man Fever''']] '''The Pac-Man Fever''' was a [[perzine]] by [[Rascallion]].
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  • '''Out of the Every Day''' is an e[[zine]] for imaginative fiction and art. ...and discuss their work. It exists to encourage and inspire people, both by the work it contains, and by giving people a place to show their work to others
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  • '''The Hanged Men Dance''' was a punk and literary fanzine by Jim Shedden and Sara ...n Scarborough, Ontario, Canada in the 1980s. At least two issues appeared. The second issue was a split zine with [[Black Triangle]], published in 1985.
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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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  • [[Image:Shaver_mystery_1947_n0_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Shaver Mystery Magazine'''<br/>Cover art by Richard Shaver]] '''The Shaver Mystery Magazine''' was a fanzine published by the Shaver Mystery Club in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
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  • [[Image:Reader_and_Collector_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Reader and Collector'''<br/>Vol. III No. 2 June 1943]] '''The Reader and Collector''' was a fantasy and science fiction fanzine published
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  • [[Image:Broadside65may26-ochs_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Broadside of Boston''' <br/> Volume IV, No. 7 May 1865<br/>Cover featuring '''The Broadside of Boston''' was a fanzine devoted to folk music.
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  • '''The Art of Dating''' is a zine written by Madison Borth, under the name Emby, in early 2012. ''The Art of Dating'' chronicles the author's experiences dating using the site OKCupid, and also discusses Borth's struggles with anxiety.
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  • ...cation published in Providence, Rhode Island, U.S.A. under the auspices of the United Amateur Press Association. ...aryetta Lehr, and Rev. J. Clinton Pryor. Maryetta Lehr was not present for the second issue, but they were joined by Philip B. McDonald.
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  • '''The Devil on 45''' is a music [[zine]] from Dublin, Ireland. ...e, and articles on the story of the FBI, and "Louie Louie" and Censorship. The second issue was released in late 2006 and had an interview with Luk Haas,
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  • '''The Yellow Cape Revolution''' was a [[distro]] run by [[zinester]] Sarah Smith. ...ornia, U.S.A., the distro was started "in support of independent media and the need for communication." It was open from February 2001 to June 2002.
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  • '''Cracks in the Concrete''' is a small [[zine]] dedicated to [[anarchist]], atheist, and fe ...s per issue. The last issue of Cracks in the Concrete zine appeared during the fall of 2009. CITC is no longer being produced.
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  • [[Image:Her_Majesty_the_Stamp_1_cover.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''Her Majesty the Stamp''' #1]] ...ajesty The Stamp''' was created in 1988 by [[Wayne Davidson]] to accompany the first TOYTOWN compilation cassette 'Display Ideas For Supermarkets'.
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  • [[Image:Cover3_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''It Goes On The Shelf''' <br/>Issue 3 1987 <br/>Cover art by [[Sheryl Birkhead]] ]] '''It Goes On The Shelf''' is an fanzine by Ned Brooks.
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  • ..., poetry, interviews and other various mediums associated with literature. The Ludlow Garage Project was founded in 2007 by [[FD Harper]], and published i Artists in the first issue include: Geoffrey Woolf, William Comparetto, Justin Edwards, C
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  • '''The East Village Inky''' is entirely hand written and illustrated by [[Ayun Hal ...What started as a chronicle of family life in New York City has evolved as the children have grown older.
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  • ...n''' is an anthology compiled by Lisa Darms, gathered from the archives of The Fales Library of New York University Riot Grrrl Archives. ''The Riot Grrrl Collection'' was released in 2013 and published by The Feminist Press. It includes an introduction by Lisa Darms and an essay by [
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  • ...ays, tarot and philosophy (among other topics). New sections are added all the time, and content contribution is eagerly encouraged. ...HxSTLxSPFD/ tweet us] and we'll get you on the list. We DO send outside of the USA, and offer RTH free to inmates, rehabs, psych wards, libraries, distros
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  • ...he United States and Mexican border. Melissa wrote about volunteering with the Human Rights organization No More Deaths (No Mas Muertes). The 56-page zine is distributed by [[Gigglebot Distro]] and [[Microcosm Publish
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  • [[Image:Boring.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''Boring to the Punchline''']] ...icago. This zine is a companion piece to the series of [[Love]] comics by the same author.
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  • '''Out of the bin''' (2002-) is a personal [[zine]] published by [[Merv Binns]] in Carneg *[http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn623447 ''Out of the bin''], [http://www.nla.gov.au National Library of Australia] catalogue rec
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  • ...[[zine]] by Dave Chaos that emerged at the beginning of the punk scene in the UK. ...dverts, Alternative TV, Generation X, Penetration, Chelsea, The Models and The Unwanted. Contributors include [[Tony D]] of [[Ripped & Torn]] zine.
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  • [http://bloodoftheyoungzine.com/ Blood of the Young] is a [[Toronto]]-based [[photo zine]] and [[DIY collective]] co-foun
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  • [[Image:SnowflakesInTheSun.jpg|right|frame|'''Snowflakes in the Sun'''<br/>1952]] '''Snowflakes in the Sun''' was a one-issue-only poemzine edited by [[W. Paul Ganley]].
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  • ...- the Wentworth star''' (August 1994-December 1997) was the [[fanzine]] of the Official Prisoner Cell Block H Fan Club - Australasia; published bimonthly *[http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn2945612 ''Prisoner - the Wentworth star''], [http://www.nla.gov.au National Library of Australia] ca
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  • [[Image:Factsheetfive_zinereader.jpg|frame|The Factsheet Five Zine Reader]] ...hed. It also helped bring Factsheet Five and a handful of other zines from the underground into national prominence.
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  • '''Phases of the Moon''' is a literary nonfiction perzine by [[Stacey-Marie Piotrowski]]. Si *4 &quot;What Matters Most Is How Well You Walk Through the Fire,&quot; December 2010
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  • ...you have been bored by in the past. Philistines just don't get me. That's the Importance of being Evan."
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  • [[Image:Science_Fiction_Critic_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Science Fiction Critic''' Volume 2, No. 3 July 1938]] '''The Science Fiction Critic''' was a science fiction fanzine by Claire P. Beck.
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  • '''The Invisible Reading Room''' was a library incorporating over 100 contemporary ...15 March – 26 March, for Festival Melbourne 2006, the cultural festival of the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games.
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  • '''The World of Yesterday''' was a [[fanzine]] published by Linda and Ron Downey. ''The World of Yesterday'', was published in Clearwater, Florida, U.S.A. in the 1970s, later from Waynesville, North Carolina. It began in 1976, and was pu
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  • '''Zines of the Zone''' is a mobile library dedicated to self-published photobooks, photozi The project is run by a french collective. The traveling zine-exhibition is intensively touring through Europe since Janua
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  • '''The Bad Lyrics Project''' is a [[zine]] by Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. resident [ ...the songwriters went wrong. Liz (an experienced karaoke singer) describes the zine as a "sociological study of sorts."
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  • [[Image:taking-back-the-night.gif|frame|Taking Back The Night]] ...The Night''' is a [[one shot]] [[zine]] written by [[Webly Bowles]] under the pseudonym ''NH''.
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  • '''The book of love''' is by Perth, WA street artist(s?) and [[zinester]] Lokiland ...re combined with short, witty and cynical views on love. For example, from the zine comes this line: "If love persists, please see your doctor". Lokiland
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  • [[Image:DarkBrotherhood1.jpg|right|frame|'''The Dark Brotherhood Journal''' <br/> Issue 1 June 1971 <br/> Cover art by Deni '''The Dark Brotherhood Journal''' was an [[H. P. Lovecraft]]-oriented zine publis
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  • [[Image:Darkest_of_shadows_2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Darkest of Shadows'''<br>Issue 2 May 1977]] '''The Darkest of Shadows''' was a [[fanzine]] by Margaret Ann Droullard.
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  • '''Reptiles of the Mind''' was a [[zine]] by [[Kat Jaz]] out of Knoxville, TN., U.S.A. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]] [[Category:Tennessee Zines]]
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  • '''The Alchemical Postmodern Theorist''' is a full-size "journal of queer possibil ...lture seeking assimilation in the form of gay marriage and acceptance into the church and military. Issue 1.1 contains an interview with FTM porn star Buc
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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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  • [[Image:Faces_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Faces of Time''' <br/>Issue 3 1983 <br/> Cover art by Connie Faddis]] '''The Faces of Time''' was a media science fiction fanzine edited by Mary D. Bloe
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  • '''The New Millennial Harbinger''' (October 1968-197?) was a science fiction [[fan *[http://nla.gov.au/nla.cat-vn236537 ''The New millennial harbinger''], [http://www.nla.gov.au National Library of Aus
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  • ...der, the zine produced 3 editions during 2000-2001, featuring writing from the undergraduate and graduate student community. ...s from readers. Each issue also featured a note from the current editor on the final page.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Fables from the Postmodern Age]]
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  • [[Image: APU3.jpg|frame|The Apple Pickers' Union #3]] '''The Apple Pickers' Union''' is a queer, poetry [[perzine]] written by [[Curious
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  • ...of the Photocopier''' (February 2008) is a [[zine]] festival organised by the [[Sticky]] Institute to celebrate Australia’s underground [[zine]] cultur '''Festival of the Photocopier''' is supported by the City of Melbourne.
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  • '''Up the Logic Punks!''' is a puzzle [[zine]] by [[Ciara Xyerra]]. ...derground zine scene. Puzzles are arranged in 5 by 5 matrices and require the solver to use given clues to eliminate incorrect possibilities. An answer
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  • #REDIRECT [[Taking back the Night]]
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  • ...packed pages, and basically being one man's point of view about bands and the music scene. Each issue featured editorials, band interviews and lots and l ...[[Jack Rabid]] of [[The Big Takeover]]), and interviews with Pere Ubu and the Flaming Lips.
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  • ...rtist’s pages, etc, contributed mostly by artist friends and associates of the
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  • '''Lilly On The Beach''' is a [[zine]] by [[Fran McMillian]].
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  • '''Out of the Blue''' was a bimonthly review [[zine]] by [[Larned Justin]] of House Sprin [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Review zines]]
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  • '''My Heart the Doormat''' was written by Courtney B. who also writes the zine [[Muse]].
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  • ...' in Lithuanian) is a science fiction and fantasy [[fanzine]] published by the Vilnius science fiction club Dorado. ...Lenceviciene (formerly Butkiene), and Audrone Vodzinskaite-Stadje. None of the publishers live in Lithuania: Elze Hamilton lives in Austin, Texas, U.S.A.;
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Absinthe Faery]]
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  • '''The Science Fantasy Fan''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine by Arthur ...Science Fantasy Fan'' first appeared in April 1941 in wartime UK. Fans of the fanzine soon dubbed it "Stan".
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  • [[Image:Cry_of_the_Nameless_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Cry''' (Cry of the Nameless) <br/>1959 <br/> Cover Art by [[Arthur Thomson|ATom]]]] '''Cry of the Nameless''' was a science fiction fandom fanzine published by F.M. Busby (1
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  • ...ianity]]. Issues featured photographs of monks in ossuaries (places where the bones of monks were stored) and true articles about Christians who died for ...ittle-known lore of Russian mysticism and the clairvoyant Optina Elders to the attention of young pilgrims. Rose died in 1982. A biography of him is cal
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  • '''Finger on the Trigger''' was a zine made by Adee from Florida. ...[[Cut and Paste|cut n paste]] layout but amazing writing and good stories, the zine only had a few issues.
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  • [[Image:dictionary-hugs.jpg|frame|The Dictionary of Hugs]] ...nclude: Shakespeare hugs, movie hugs, and even zombie hugs! There are also the classics like: bear hugs, A-frame hugs, and heart-to-heart hugs! Hug like y
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  • ..., NSW, Australia based [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]] [[zine]] focused on the Australian [[Underground Culture|underground]], [[punk]] and [[hardcore]] m
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  • #REDIRECT [[Phases of the Moon]]
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  • '''Sympathy for the Strawberry''' is a [[feminist]] [[perzine]] published out of Swansea, UK, b [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the UK]] [[Category: Feminism]] [[Category:Perzine]] [[Category:Zines from Wale
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  • [[Image:Lcz_composite.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Issue #4 of the Love City Zine.]] '''The Love City Success Story''' (2009 - present) is a photography [[zine]] from
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  • ...music, often with quite in-depth reviews that showed true appreciation for the subject matter. ...y Not For The Squeamish and began producing horror movies, including ''Off The Beaten Path'' and ''Doomed To Consume''.
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  • [[Image:JTO.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The J.T. Oliver Photo Collection'''<br/>May 2013]] '''The J.T. Oliver Photo Collection''' is a science fiction fanzine by Bill Plott.
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  • '''The Light is Much Too Bright''' is a [[minicomic]] by [[Oura Sananikone]] of Ri ...ry:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Minicomics|Light is Much Too Bright, The]][[Category:Virginia Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • [[Image:Angry-at-the-bus-stop-5.gif|200px|thumb|right|Angry at the Bus Stop issue 5]] '''Angry at the Bus Stop''' was a Nottingham, UK based [[fanzine]] which was dissolved in 2
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  • ...-theyd-fix-the-wires_2022.jpeg|200px|thumb|right|''I Still Wish They'd Fix the Wires'', Summer 2022]] ...a [[Perzine|perzine]] by [[Enola Dismay]] out of Chico, CA. Enola is also the author of ''[[No Gods No Mattress]]''.
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  • ...al Who Ever Thrived'' is a [[one-shot]] [[compzine|collection]] of many of the works of [[Michael Sugar]], a writer who provided articles for many small z ...come from the zines [[Stacked Decks]], [[Penny Re-Low]], [[Trying to Fuck The Furniture]], [[That Rounded V]], [[Suck]], [[YANKspot]] and at least two pi
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  • '''King of the Sad People''' was a [[punk]] [[zine]] from Wexford, Ireland. ...e or Conor KOTSP. It contained news on punx picnics that were happening in the parks of several towns around Ireland and on gigs. It also had funny quizze
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  • ...started in the early 2000s by [[zinesters]] Una Crow and Vix Spooky out of the University of Toronto Women's Centre.
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  • [[Image:RSNG-Kent.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Royal Swiss Navy Gazette'''<br/> Issue 21 2010<br/> Cover by Ken Fletcher]] '''The Royal Swiss Navy Gazette''' is a science fiction fanzine by Garth Spencer.
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  • '''Zuzu and the Baby Catcher''' was a mothering [[zine]] written by [[Rhonda Baker]] of Por ...otherhood," the zine included stories about becoming a licensed midwife as well as anecdotes from life as a stay at home mom to two young daughters. It al
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  • [[Image:Dopsoc_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Transactions of the Doppelganger Society'''<br/>1990<br/>Cover by Colin P. Langeveld]] '''Transactions of the Doppelganger Society''' was a literary supernatural and horror publication
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  • [[Image:The-Fabulous-Faust-Fan-zine-vol-1-no-2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine'''<br/>Volume 1, No. 2 December 1948<br/>Cover art '''The Fabulous Faust Fan-Zine''' was a fanzine edited and published by Darrell C.
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  • '''The Stay At Home Girlfriend''' is a zine by Missmuffcake.
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  • [[Image:Chigger_patch_of_fandom_195x_n2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Chigger Patch of Fandom''' Issue 2]] '''The Chigger Patch of Fandom''' was a science fiction fandom fanzine edited by [
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  • [[Image:Myletter13.JPG|frame|My Letter to the World #13]] '''My Letter to the World''' was a long-running (1993-2001) [[zine]] from Berkeley, CA., U.S.A.
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  • '''Adventures of the Swamp Yankee''' is a fictional [[zine]] set in Bushwick, Brooklyn, written ...the Snowpocalypse; The Silent Barn, Ridgewood; The Flea Theater, Tribeca; The Manhattan Bridge; Ft Greene Park; Myrtle Ave.; Bushwick.
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  • '''Please Don't Feed the Bears''' was a [[Veganism|vegan]] cookzine from the mid 1990s. ...and rants on the benefits of a vegan lifestyle add a flavor of anarchy to the heavily illustrated zine.
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  • ...BFE) is published by a Detroit, MI-based FedEx-Kinko's and distributed via the internet. ...and shows the vital stages of business communication needed to compete in the global economy.
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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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  • '''Morgan Anne and the Pirates''' is a [[one-shot]] [[zine]] by [[Jen Pilles]] of Ontario, Canada. Jen continues the adventures of Barrie's characters from his kid classic Peter Pan.
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  • ...of Dark Shadows''' is a [[fanzine]] published by Kathleen Resch devoted to the ''Dark Shadows'' television shows, movies and characters. ...photos, memorabilia, classified ads for collectors, updates on airings of the show, news about Dark Shadows conventions and festivals, and current new it
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  • '''The Australian Science Fiction Bullsheet''' is a monthly newsletter devoted to ...0. It was relaunched in February 2011, and is published by Wendy Palmer on the first Sunday of each month.
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  • '''The Mean Green Neat-o Zine''' has been published since 2005 by Cassie Podish fr The Mean Green is a music culture [[zine]], focusing mostly on the [[punk]] rock genre. Although zine is mainly a music zine, it also aims to
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  • [[Image:BIML.jpg|width=10|frame|The Borough Is My Library issues 1 & 2]] '''The Borough is my Library: A Greater Metropolitan Library Workers Zine''' is a
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  • '''You Promised Me The Starts''' is a [[perzine]] in the works by [[Raven]].
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  • ...has been a home for artists since 1987. The poster and graphic output for The Cologne Art Book Fair was created by [[Hamed Eshrat]].
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  • ...a specific time period, they could for simplicity all be referred to as '''The way of D.I.Y. Rocking''' series. ...rothers but the other comics contained anonymous characters and themes and the writings were mainly abstract accounts of cycling or walking.
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  • '''The Castle of Dark Shadows''' was a newsletter devoted to the original television series ''Dark Shadows''. ...al International Dark Shadows Fan Club. It was first published in 1970, in the U.S.A.
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  • ...oys, safer sex supplies, and gender empowerment items; and a zine library. The space is a wheelchair-accessible safe(r) space for people of all genders, a ...library which is much larger and any zines that we distro (currently or in the past) are available for borrowing.
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  • '''Bonnie the Stalker and Friends''' is a [[perzine]] and [[minicomic]] by Alison and Myr Issues 1 and 2 of the zine were published in 1995 in Los Angeles, Ca., U.S.A.
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  • '''A Zine For The Ladies''' by xHannahx features interviews with women involved with [[punk]] The first issue (2008) featured an interview with Naomi Hates Humans.
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  • [[Image:Adita001.jpg|thumb|right|275px|Adita #0 or (1), the cover of the first issue, "powerline/steeple."]] ...lic Library, Denver Zine Archive, the [[Chicago Underground Library]], and the Special Collections Departments at DePaul University and University of Iowa
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  • '''Eighteen- The Magazine''' is a [[fanzine]] from Ontario, Canada. ...]] Magazine'' #18, a spin-off publication was released. Based primarily on the world of horror movies, ''Eighteen'' features exclusive interviews essays a
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  • ...e of civilization, both in terms of its effect on the planet as well as on the psyche of every person and community who exists within it. ...orth between theories and poetic descriptions of events taking place along the bicycle trip.
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  • '''The Science Fiction Fan''' was a fanzine published by Olon F. Wiggins. ...Colorado, U.S.A., before the last issue, #55, appeared in February 1941. The Associate Editor was P.J. Searles. Contributing Editors were Hayward S. Kir
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  • [[Image:8068_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Science Fiction Yearbook 1957''' (caption: "Move over Pop, I'm taking over" '''The Science Fiction Yearbook 1957''' was a science fiction fanzine edited by Ja
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  • [[Image:VOM47at_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Voice of the Imagi-Nation'''<br/> Issue 47 Hallowe'en 1945]] '''Voice of the Imagi-Nation''' was a science fiction fanzine by Forrest J Ackerman and [[M
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  • '''The Little Golden Book of Angst''' was created by Sydney-based [[zinester]] and The [[zine]] is the story of post breakup angst. It was launched at the [[Sydney Zine Fair]] on January 15th, 2006.
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  • '''Do Not Look at the Sun''' is a Paris based [[lit-zine]]. ...iminately throughout the city- from seats on the metro to park benches- as well as obliging bookshops. It has since spread to London.
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  • ...on. It's an anthology of original stories, poems, and illustrations about the moon - even a moon bookmark. Says author Hendricks, "It's about time we sal Sections include: Stories, Moon Animals, Moonstruck, Quatros, In the Chinese Manner, Moon Lovers, Dark Moon, Kid's Moon, Sayings, Science Moon,
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  • ...mostly with the topics of anti-technology, love, and an abandoned house in the city of Brampton, Ontario Canada. ==Excerpt from Gotta kick at the darkness==
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  • [[Image:RevHome.jpg|200px|frame|The Revolution Starts At Home]] ...ctive: [[Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha]], Ching-In Chen and Jai Dulani. The cover was drawn by [[Cristy Road]].
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  • *[https://www.etsy.com/listing/672469017/the-library-zine-extended-hours Buy The Library Zine on Etsy] [[Category:Zine]][[Category:Zines from the UK]][[Category:Zines about libraries]]
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  • '''Denizen and the awkward introduction''' (July 2007-) is a small (8 page) [[zine]] created b
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  • [[Image: The adventures of Ann Aurora.JPG|200px|thumb|right|The adventures of Ann Aurora]] '''The adventures of Ann Aurora''' (2007-) is a literary [[zine]] by Australian wr
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  • '''The Canadian Journal of Detournement''' is a zine by [[Dale Speirs]] of Calgary ...out cartoons from mainstream newspaper [[Comic|comic strips]] and removed the word balloons or captions, replacing them with text of his own creation.
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  • ...Robtoy, Scott Plant and Andy Maret and featuring many other [[writer]]s as well. *[http://www.myspace.com/ftroumagazine For The Rest of Us]
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  • [[Image:Speculative_Poetry_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Magazine of Speculative Poetry'''<br/>Volume 1, # 3 Summer/Fall 1985<br/>Co '''The Magazine of Speculative Poetry''' was a small press publication by Roger Du
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  • ...News of the Vanessa Berry, Summer 2006-2007.JPG|200px|thumb|right|News of the Vanessa Berry, Summer 2006-2007]] '''News of the Vanessa Berry''' (2006?-) is an [[perzine]] by prolific Sydney [[zinester]]
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  • ...[cookzine]]. Each issue contains a variety of recipes for vegan dishes, as well as cartoons, essays, recommended reading and a guide to vegan-friendly rest ...s based in Oakland, Ca. It is made by Ashley Rowe, who is also a member of the [[AK Press]] collective and a vegan baker currently starting up her own bus
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  • ...nted on Jan 17, 2006. It is 17 pages long with 9 original illustrations by the author. Sample, "Nowadays being 1 in a million means there's 6,000 just lik
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  • [[Image: The original Yonah Schimmel zine review.JPG |200px|thumb|right|''The original Yonah Schimmel zine review'']] '''The original Yonah Schimmel zine review''' (2001) was published by Melbourne-ba
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  • '''Change the World in 7 Days''' is a zine made by [[Pippa]], published in the UK. It contains a task for every day of the week to do your bit to change the world.
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  • ...org/ website]. All issues are free, keeping in the gift-economic policy of the [[Strangers]] [[distro]] which carries them. * ''anarchy-shirt'' and ''robot-shirt'' - the primary protagonists lack both name and gender
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  • [[Image:LoveMakestheWorldGoAwry5_copy.jpg|right|frame|'''Love makes The World Go Awry'''<br/>Issue 5 June 1981]] '''Love makes The World Go Awry''' was a science fiction fanzine by Fran Skene.
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  • ...anonymous and occasionally public sources and edited by [[Joe Biel]] under the pen name, Abner Smith. ...ting'' was one of the zines selected for the 2003 tour of North America by the travelling library of independent publications, [[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]].
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  • '''Brains: The Journal of Egghead Sexuality''' is a queer-guy fetish [[zine]] first publis ...Alvarez decided to create a zine that celebrated their favorite sex organ. The first issue uses Mr. Peabody as a cover model. It featured a nude couple m
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  • '''Attack Of the Zombie Soy Bot!''' is [[perzine]] written by tOM Dewing out of Pittsburgh, ...og and points out the humor with in it. Every issue has one record review. The zine started out as funny stories and has turned more into a [[comic]] zine
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  • '''The Whizzbanger Guide To Zine Distributors''' is a print zine by [[Shannon Cole ...xt.php?s=browse&tid=24&route=browseby.php&category=49&by=category&s=browse The Whizzbanger Guide to Zine Distributors] in [[Edmonton Small Press Associati
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  • ...the UK; it aims to try and make logic and sense from within the bubble of the writer's illogical and contradictory mental illness. The zine is available from the [[Cause and Effect]] distro.
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  • [[Image:Fleabeet2.jpg|thumb|Front cover of Flea Beetle: the anti-smoking zine]] ...hism|anarchist]] voice against consumerism and the promotion of tobacco in the mass media.
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  • '''The top eleven attractions in Merrimbula''' (2007) is a [[zine]] by Melbourne-b The [[zine]] was published in an edition of 10.
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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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  • '''Drinking Sweat In The Ash Age''' was a [[zine]] written by [[Mike Taylor]] and [[Travis Fristoe]] ...Mark Murrmann]] of BlankGeneration.com favorably reviewed the zine, saying the "''articles are critical, intelligent and engaging, but most of all, they a
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  • ...rly a project of the Las Vegas Alliance of the Libertarian Left. Distro of the Libertarian Left is based in Alabama and carries books and [[zines]] on ana [http://distro.libertarianleft.org/ Distro of the Libertarian Left] (Link now redirects to a spam site; beware!)
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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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  • '''The Chattahoochee, Okefenokee, & Ogeechee Occasional Gazette''' is a science fi ...eleased many one shot titles and short run fanzines during the 1950s and ''The Chattahoochee, Okefenokee, & Ogeechee Occasional Gazette'' was one of these
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  • ...loving, and other life adventures. Currently this zine is loosely based in the San Francisco Bay Area. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • '''Please Pass the Plants: a vegan cookzine''' is a [[zine]] created by [[Laura-Marie Taylor]] [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:California Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • [[Image:LATSOT22-9-02.jpg|frame|''Laughter and the sound of teacups'', 22 September 2002]] '''Laughter and the Sound of Teacups''' was a [[Perzine|personal zine]] written and published b
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  • [[Image:The Hand.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Cover art]] '''The Hand: a Tale of Old Belfast''' is a one-off [[comic]] created and published
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  • ...ited by Phyllis Ann Karr and [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]] and published by The Fellowship of Odysseans in Zenith, Washington, U.S.A.. The first issue of ''The Literary Magazine of Fantasy and Terror'' was released in 1973, with three
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  • '''Now I Don the Mask of Melancholy''' is a [[zine]] by [[Joshua Plague]], published in Seat ...zines beginning with the phrase "Now I..." that Joshua Plague released in the 1990's. Other titles included ''[[Now I Devour You]]'', and ''[[Now I Write
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  • [[Image: The life and times of Mavis McKenzie -1.JPG|200px|thumb|right|The Life and Times of Mavis McKenzie #1 (January 1996)]] ...McKenzie''' (1996-) is a [[zine]] from Melbourne, VIC, Australia, in which the editor, 'Jason', pretends he is an elderly woman, Mavis McKenzie.
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  • '''Zen and the Art of Brownie Baking''' is a [[cookzine]] written by Joshua Kahn Russell o ...cribes them as "a creative vehicle of revolutionary gustatory sensation." The contents are radical and humorous, with punk rock parallels to brownie baki
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  • [[Image:Chavelacover.jpg|200px|thumb|right | ''The Life and Times of Butch Dykes'', Chavela Vargas issue cover]] ...and Times of Butch Dykes''''' is a series of [[fanzine]]s that chronicles the biographies of masculine lesbians of note by Montreal micro publisher B&D P
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  • '''HUH? Magazine: The Journal of Neo-Confusionism''' was first penned, cut pasted, glued, stapled ...SWAC (Southwest Writers And Cartoonists) he had made some serious leaps in the field of producing his own graphic arts and magazines.
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  • [[Image:DIY.15%.jpg|frame|'''DIY: The Rise Of Lo-Fi Culture''' - Amy Spencer - 2005]] ...Y: The Rise Of Lo-Fi Culture''' is a documentation of [[DIY]] culture over the years.
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  • [[Image:Bootsandlace.jpg|frame|'''The Marriage of Combat Boots & Vintage Lace''' Zine]] ...ludes her travels, stories, and thoughts. Also documented in this zine are the adventures of [[Morgan Wade]], friend and fellow [[zinester]].
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  • '''I Have Seen The Truth And It Makes No Sense''' was a [[perzine]] written by P. Mark Wannop ...ecember 1997) - The author writes about cycling, being Wiccan, The Rutles, the sad state of comic books, and other random topics.
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  • ...ion held from October 7 till December 30 in 2005 at Yerba Buena Center For The Arts. ...he editors of these publications and their contributors were on display in the gallery.
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  • '''Spilling The Ink''' is a distro run by [[Clare Marie]]. ...[[Pink Spider Bites]], [[Ephemera]] and [[Phases of the moon]]. Spilling The Ink also is interested in trading [[mail art]].
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  • '''The Muse''' is an online Bi-annual International Journal of poetry from India. The vision of the journal is to make it a storehouse of best
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  • '''The Copyist Conspiracy: An Exhibition of Zine Art''' was an exhibition held in Sponsored by Needles & Pens, the exhibition included the zines and the work of a number of [[zinesters]]. Those whose work was shown were;
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  • [[Image:zinescene.jpg|frame|Zine Scene: The Do It Yourself Guide to Zines]] '''Zine Scene: The Do It Yourself Guide to Zines''' was published in 1998 by Girl Press. It wa
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Page text matches

  • ...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
    1 KB (196 words) - 01:11, 24 November 2013
  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • '''''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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  • 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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • '''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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • ...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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  • [[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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  • .... 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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  • ...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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  • 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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  • ...& 2, the latter having a cover illustrated by [[Marisa Falco]], editrix of the zine [[Red Hooded Sweatshirt]].
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  • ...lled "Zine of the Month," introducing many girls to the zine phenomena for the first time.
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  • ...[[Papermouth]], [[Dregs]], [[Dark Diamonds]] and [[Punk Shocker]]. A very well put together half-sized zine with great writing, good ideas, and excellent [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Split Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the UK]][[Category:1990's publications]]
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  • ...2 November 1968) is a musician, zine [[writer]] and one of the founders of the [[Riot Grrrl]] movement. ...he mainstream media; however, it carried on underground and it's effect on the music and zine scenes continue to last to this day.
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  • ...[[Maximum Rock N Roll]]. His essay "The Problem With Music" (an attack on the major labels) is widely reprinted. ...dited with recording 2,000 records and CDs. He is the owner and founder of the Electrical Audio recording studio in Chicago.
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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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  • #REDIRECT [[Taking back the Night]]
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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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  • '''The East Village Inky''' is entirely hand written and illustrated by [[Ayun Hal ...What started as a chronicle of family life in New York City has evolved as the children have grown older.
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  • ...elling around Europe. It also contained zine reviews and information about the Dublin/Irish punk scene.
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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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  • '''Sky Flying By''' was a [[zine]] written by [[Erika Jones]] in the mid-'90s, first in her hometown of Nashville, Tennessee, and then in Boston The zine included band interviews, political articles, book reviews, stories ab
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  • ...and cutting edge art. ''Search and Destroy'' was a minimalist document of the emerging punk youth rebellion, packed with an energy that leaped off its pa ...that Punk was total cultural revolt. It was a hardcore confrontation with the black side of history and culture, right-wing imagery, sexual taboos, a del
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  • ...a decisive documentary offering film festival audiences an inside look at the queercore scene. ...niversary, a compendium of the zine was published in book format, titled ''The Salivation Army Black Book''.
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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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  • ...of the Photocopier''' (February 2008) is a [[zine]] festival organised by the [[Sticky]] Institute to celebrate Australia’s underground [[zine]] cultur '''Festival of the Photocopier''' is supported by the City of Melbourne.
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  • Emma began publishing zine in the late 1990s, with four issues of [[Telly Narcosis]], appearing between appro ...name [[Papercut Collective]]. The project ran from 2005-2006 and produced the [[Post No Bills Fun Pack]].
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  • .... Lovecraft]] published by Race Mathews and Ian J. Crozier and released in the 1950s in Australia. ...as an 8 1/8 by 9 3/4 size publication of 32 pages, edited by Race Mathews. The second, and last issue, appeared in December 1956 and was edited by Ian J.
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  • ...lso published the zines [[Dracula Meets Jesus]] and [[The Banshee (U.S.A.)|The Banshee]]. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...ree issues. It first appeared in September 1955, with issue 2 in May 1957, the 3rd in June 1959, issue 4 was released in March 1960. ...except to say, perhaps, that this is a commentary on life as seen through the Ashworth eyes…Recommended."
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  • ...for the 10 year anniversary of the death of Sid Viscious. This issue is in the format of a full 8 1/2 x 11 page. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...Bookshop. The bookshop regularly sells zines and also the gallery has held the [[Strange Perfume]] queer zine and small publishing fair. ...cialises in print styles including riso. Many of the zines and tablers use the PageMasters printing facillities in Lewisham, south east London.
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  • ...a Ghost Town''), which was named [[Broken Pencil]]'s March 2006 ''Zine of the Month''. ...participated in the [[Bluestockings Zine Reading Extravaganza]], as one of the zinesters reading from their zines.
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  • .... Since this time the zine has grown, with 15,000 copies being released of the most recent issue, #21, published in 2005. Some of the bands covered in IndustrialnatioN over its lengthy period of publishing inc
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  • ...sy Cat. Deadsy Cat, after trying to scare away Kissy Kitty, tells her that the graveyard is his home. His bed is a large tombstone and, indeed, he looks d [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:New York zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Cate
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  • 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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  • ...d in the UK, going to Ohio,recipes, and internet porn, among other things. The editor has also related her experience meeting Brad Douriff and has publish Davida Gypsy Breier is also the editor of [[Glovebox Chronicles|The Glovebox Chronicles]], [[Rigor Mortis]], and [[Xerography Debt]].
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  • Terry contributes to [[Razorcake]], and maintains the blog site GullibleZine.blogspot.com. [[Category:Zine]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:1990's publications]] [[Category:2000's publications]][[
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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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  • ...l experiences with sexual assault/abuse, depression and anxiety, sexism in the (Ohio/Midwest) punk scene, grief, family, traveling/touring and trying to l ...e in other formats (such as #21, which is half-legal sized). It is made in the traditional [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]] style with typewritten text and
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  • ...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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  • 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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  • '''Debbie Rasmussen''', from San Francisco, is the current publisher of ''[[Bitch]] Magazine''.
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  • ...ine]] highlighting the best in independent publishing and small press from the previous year. It was published annually by [[Clamor Magazine]] from 1996 t ...well-deserved visibility and recognition to people who make the zine world the vibrant community that it is.
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  • ...Lesa, Lynn, Jim Igoe, The Nutty Redskin, M. W. Russell, Zero, and [[Donny The Punk]]. ...stuffy-head, fever, so you can rest 'zine]], [[No KKK No Fascist USA]], [[The Noise]], [[Not Your Bastard]], [[Open Road]], [[Ooompa! Ooompa!]], [[Rude R
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  • ...ix'' contained stories written by Narrelle Harris based on characters from the television series ''Blake's 7''. ...Harris also published the fanzines [[Inconsequential Parallax]], [[Out Of The Warzone]], and [[Scenario]].
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  • ...l zines a go-go]] series. Let's DIY I was created in 2003 to further share the knowledge about organizing your own zine workshops. ...ng zine-based workshops in your community with a resource list, history of the movement and women's involvement in it, and some tips and tricks for making
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  • ...The Journal Of Light & Dark, a London based photocopied A5 [[fanzine]] for the gothic rock band Children On Stun. ...eos, photos, news and artwork. Each issue usually ran to around 180 pages, the format was always A5 paperback bound and there was never an index or conten
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  • ''Starlanes'', with the subtitle "International Quarterly of Science Fiction Poetry", was published ...the Philip Jose Farmer poem, "Beauty in this Iron Age" (#11, Autumn 1953). The 14th issue (April 1954) also contained a poem by Farmer.
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  • ...fiction fandom community. It was published in Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.A. in the 1970s. Issue three was released in 1978, and issue four in March 1979. Al Curry was also one of the co-editors of [[Quantum]]. An interview with Al Curry by Dave Locke appeare
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  • ...ny movies, reading lotsa books & zines and whatever else is on her mind at the time. Always [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]], mostly typewritten and averag
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  • ...of ''Natural Disaster'' were published as a book by [[Stickfigure]], using the same titel. ''Natural Disaster'' is included in the [[St. Patrick's Zine Library]].
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  • ...om 1996 to 2000 out of Louisville, KY. There were nine issues. The goal of the zine was to "promote social awareness about and among youth, encourage comm '''Brat''' is included in the Sophia Smith Zine Collection at Smith College.
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  • '''Spock''' (1976-1994) was a media science fiction [[fanzine]] published by the Austrek fan club. ...lowed by George Ivanoff in 1993, John Prentice in 1994, Katharine Shade ([[The Captain’s Log]]) (from issue 69).
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  • ...issues were printed in black and white. It contains news and reports from the biggest science fiction series, Perry Rhodan.
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  • ...m'' was a zine published in Boston in the early 1990s by [[Dan Rhatigan]]. The two issues contained articles, reviews, photography, and collage illustrati ...gan]]'s first visit to California, where he found himself in the middle of the Northridge earthquake.
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  • '''Amra''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine devoted to the "Swords and Sorcery" genre published by George H. Scithers (1929-2010). ...nd was numbered 2.1, as Scithers had used the title on a previous venture. The final issue, number 71, was dated July 1982.
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  • ...Scott Home and Franklin Searight. Articles were by Dirk Mosig, editor of [[The Miskatonic]], on [[H. P. Lovecraft]], [[Charles R. Saunders]], editor of [[ ...in Searight, is considered by Edward P. Berglund to be an integral part of the [[Cthulhu Mythos]].
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  • ...and an interview with Black Flag. Full page drawings by Pettibon on 13 of the pages. ...Francisco band Hevy Balloon. Great full page drawings by Pettibon on 20 of the pages.
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  • ...in 1959; it was published monthly for the next four years, with issue 23, the last issue, released in 1962. Issue 9 was released August 1960, and features the article "An Effect of Television" by Mike Deckinger, and artwork by Jeff Wa
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  • C/O The Werks<br>
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  • ...Robtoy, Scott Plant and Andy Maret and featuring many other [[writer]]s as well. *[http://www.myspace.com/ftroumagazine For The Rest of Us]
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  • ...views with Limpwrist, Good Clean, R.A.D., Make the most, and Infection; as well as articles on animal testing for cigarettes and Monsanto's association wit
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  • ...her and illustrator who provided thousands of cartoons for [[fanzine]]s in the USA, Canada, and UK. ...ion Five Yearly]]'', and in early Rock 'n Roll zines, including covers for the early rock fanzine ''[[Bomp]]''. He won five Hugo Awards for Best Fan Artis
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  • '''Gulp''' was a [[mini-zine]] published by [[John Kehoe]] in the 1990s. Each issue of Gulp featured poems, fiction, three word reviews and a
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  • [[Image:Pranas001.jpg|frame|Pranas, circa 2005, aka the better days]] ...et Tonic'' rans weekly in ''The District'', the student run newspaper for the Savannah College of Art and Design, until he graduated in Fall 2008.
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  • '''The cat's pyjamas''' (2007?-) is a 'cat[[zine]]' created by [[Maddy Phelan]], a
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  • ...Grrrl. Despite knowing she was making money for Oprah, she wanted to have the opportunity to encourage other young women to "go and start something" too. ...y''. The film plays at festivals across the U.S. to this day. She followed the success of this video with two shorter works in 2004.
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  • ...s]`, published by [[Au-go-go Records]] in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The [[zine]] included text and illustrations by [[Rev Head]] and published arti *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scientists The Scientists], Wikipedia entry
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  • ...tor [[Genevieve K. Stephens]]. Two issues appeared, one in Spring 1948 and the next in Summer 1948. ...f writing for the comics during these years: He had one story published in the first issue of ''Minuteman Comics'' (1941), and co-authored two ''Captain A
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  • ...gan small press publishing in the late 80's before moving on to novels. [[The Boomerang Press]] is still active, focusing on publishing on demand and ind
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  • [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...mall-press distro focusing on survival and sustainability from the farm to the city, in addition to health, gender, sexuality, and a cruelty-free lifestyl ...Pioneers Press no longer carry any Microcosm Publishing titles or support the company or its owner in any way.
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  • '''Aaron Cometbus''' is a [[zinester]] from Berkley, California, who writes the [[zine]], [[Cometbus]]. ...end [[Jesse Michaels]] in the 1980s. These early zines, now lost, lead to the publishing of ''Cometbus''.
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  • <div style="top:+0.2em;font-size: 95%">ZineWiki: the zine encyclopedia that [[ZineWiki:Introduction|anyone can edit]]</div> ...dent media. It covers the history, production, distribution and culture of the small press.
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  • ...iginally from Upstate New York. She relocated to the suburbs of Chicago in the early 1980s and spent several years bouncing between Australia, Russia, Bos ...ned in the 2007 Southern California fires, though they were in Helsinki at the time.
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  • ...r neutral throughout. Book reviews and music reviews were also included in the zine. ...ews, interviews and tips from horn players in the underground music scene. The zine also included an enema article about keeping your own horn clean....
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  • ...y in post-90's information culture. It is distributed over the Internet as well as on floppy disks through traditional [[zine]] networks.
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  • ...ed'' and Robert Matusiak from ''Refuse Records'', plus a few zine reviews. The entire zine is in English. The 2nd issue came out in November 2011 as a split with [[Zwerghain]] #1. It co
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  • Invicta distro is run by Ivone, from the suburbs of Porto city, in the north of Portugal.
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  • [[Image:BIML.jpg|width=10|frame|The Borough Is My Library issues 1 & 2]] '''The Borough is my Library: A Greater Metropolitan Library Workers Zine''' is a
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  • The first issue was heavily concentrated on Mental Illness and Psych Wards. The following 9 issues had stream-of-conciousness poetry. Most were sold in a c [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...These two artists created and published this collaboration or "battle" on the occasion of their exhibition ''DUO'' at ''Beletage'', Cologne, in Januar 20 ...A4 publication consists of 20 pages. With regards to content the title is the concept: picture battle!
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  • [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...Bukowski was the pornagrapher of pussy and a damned good one at that. I'm the pornographer of violence." And a damn good one at that. His poetry is featu
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  • ...he Madison, WI zine [[Temp Slave!]] during the 1990s. He often wrote under the pseudonym '''Keffo'''. His writing is dark, angry and occasionally humorous ...eet Five Zine Reader]]. He compiled a selection of articles for the book ''The Best of Temp Slave!'', published by Garret County Press.
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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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  • ...A''' (Adelaide, S.A.: E.C. Productions, 1979-) written by Harry Butler, is the longest running [[fanzine]] in Australia, running to ~120 issues, primarily Over the years many other non-Adelaide bands have featured, often including detailed
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  • ...he 1990's. It was never sold through distributors or stores: the slogan of the zine was "Free to those who deserve it". Dennis Cooper, in his 1992 article on Queer Zines in ''The Village Voice'', quotes from '''Bimbox''':
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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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  • ...a science fiction fanzine edited by [[Jerri Bullock]] and Russ Manning in the U.S.A. and published by Fantasy Artisans in 1948. ...e editors for art. ''Fan Artisans'' was the first publication to come from the club.
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  • [[Image:AntiCommon.jpeg|frame|'''The Anti-Common'''#4]] ...comics, and show reviews. A lot of the content in the zine was focused on the local music scene in Anchorage.
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  • ...João Sobral, a Communication Design student at the Faculty of Fine-Arts of the Oporto University, in Portugal. The creation of this small publisher was motivated by the will to divulge his and his colleagues work, creating patterns of productio
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  • The A5 zine with 28 pages was printed using a Risograph duplicator. Each issue ...s from [[Pareidolia]] and exclusive texts by Bdolf and ''Gehirnschnecke'' (the brainslug), aswell as an adaption from “Mormons in Space”.
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  • ...e about his life at that time as a bisexual pagan [[punk]] incarcerated in the California prison system, what led to his imprisonment, and his existence s ...has been published in Fanorama and [[Maximum Rock 'N' Roll]] as well as in the anthology ''That's Revolting'', a book published by Suspect Thoughts.
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  • ...iters who seek to expose what they see as the corruption and insularity in the American book-publishing establishment while providing alternative avenues ...the prizewinning authors are independently wealthy. It has also criticized the aesthetics of modern literary fiction.
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  • ...atures a hand-stamped cover (and issue five's cover was printed in glow-in-the-dark-ink). ...follows the lives of best friends Kate and Joey, two queer teenage punks. The series begins with 16-year-old Kate falling for a female friend and 13-year
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  • ...black and white. It features interviews with the two bands 69 Charger and The Shining, a scene report from Guildford, music reviews and articles about se [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Category:Zines from the Netherlands]] [[Category:Punk]]
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  • '''Drool Beat''' was a [[punk]] [[zine]] published in Paducah, Kentucky in the 1980's. ...p Chemists; local record releases; and police harassment of Paducah punks. The contributors included Mitzi Waltz, Brent Starkey, Jason Willis, Tonya Shaia
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  • ...._She_Said_Boom_small.jpg||frame|right|'''G.B. Jones''' in "She Said Boom: The Story of Fifth Column", 2012]] ...music scene of the period, and included articles, photos and interviews in the fanzine on music, movies and art. Five issues were published.
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  • ...''', was an anthology [[comic]] published in Belfast, Northern Ireland, in the mid-1970s. ...ham raw", and satirical strips about a Loyalist Navy and about how to tell the difference between Protestants and Catholics), Liam de Frinse, Ian Knox, Al
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  • [[Category:Zines from the UK]]
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  • ...andrum launched his zine [[Every Reason]], a bi-monthly literary zine that the editor says ""features and promotes words that people actually want to read He is also one of the co-editors of [[Sorrow Pants]], along with [[Tina Armstrong]], [[Karley Bay
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  • ...in a quarter-size format. The zine explores Pinterest from top to bottom: the editor looks at what's on Pinterest and thinks about why it's there, reveal ...adline, but a tired Tervo glued on some of the pages crooked. She reserves the right to fix these at a later date.
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  • The editors published their fanzine in the U.S.A. in the late 1960s and early 1970s. ...971, and issue 6 in May 1971. Issue 7 was published in July, 1972, and was the last issue.
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  • ...long with books by [[Jack Saunders]] and others. He is an active member of the [[Underground Literary Alliance]], and is known for his long, distinctive p
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  • ...7-) is an "Australian [[punk]] [[hardcore]] media blitz" published by DX. The author’s aim for '''Kill or maim''' is to "compile two pages from every a
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  • A number of issues of '''Clit Rocket''' have been published in the 2000's. The zine covers queer bands, topics dealing with gender, feminism and race, and The inside cover of Issue five, released in 2006, announces that the zine is about, "Gender plus...F*U*C*K, Critical Feminism, glitter stars & f
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  • ...Guide for the Rest of Us'' (Oakland, Calif.: AK Press, ISBN 1904859720). The book includes parenting advice, personal anecdotes, and political discussio
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  • ...e fiction fanzine published by Ron Smith in New York, N. Y., U.S.A. It won the [[Hugo Award for Best Fanzine]] in 1956. ...side'' with White as editor and new editor Leland Sapiro, who would rename the zine [[Riverside Quarterly]].
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  • [[Image:Blue_lady_donna_taylor_burgess_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Blue Lady'''<br/> Issue 3 <br/> Cover art by Erik Wilson]] '''The Blue Lady''' is a small press publication devoted to horror and weird ficti
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  • ''Ebon Lute'' was published in San Francisco, California, U.S.A. in the 1970s. The first issue appeared in 1976. It featured contributions of writing from Kar
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  • '''Please Pass the Plants: a vegan cookzine''' is a [[zine]] created by [[Laura-Marie Taylor]] [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:California Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • ...l]]. His work has also appeared in [[Sabotage in The American Workplace]], the [[Some Zines]] endeavor (Prof. Tom Trusky) and a couple of other books. ...se days. A broadsheet format, it covers the poetry as well as a wee bit of the visual arts scene of Los Angeles on a quarterly basis.
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  • ...ronic, and things that appealed to the darker side". This was the birth of the legendary [[Punk Magazine]], which became an inspiration to countless other * ''Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk'' with Gillian McCain (Penguin Books, 1997)
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  • ...BFE) is published by a Detroit, MI-based FedEx-Kinko's and distributed via the internet. ...and shows the vital stages of business communication needed to compete in the global economy.
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  • ...onio Gonzalez''' contributed to the photocopied [[zine]] [[Three Sheets to the Wind]] while living in Austin, TX. He went on to write his own personal zin
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  • ...king it an invaluable bible of resources for zinemakers new and veteran to the craft. It is mostly presented in a [[Cut and Paste|cut-and-paste]] layout e ...omotion, distribution, mailing, the zine community, zine events, zines and the Internet, and dealing with incarcerated individuals, plus skill shares on b
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  • ...t known PDF zines in science fiction fandom are [[Vegas Fandom Weekly]], [[The Drink Tank]], [[In A Prior Lifetime]], [[eFNAC]], [[Emerald City]] and [[Pi
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  • ...e 1981 - 1985 era and published a fanzine, called [[Bullshit Detector]] in the 1982, 1983 period. ...George Hurchalla. One of her Articles of Faith photographs was included in the book, ''American Hardcore: A Tribal History'' by Steven Blush.
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  • ...e per year in a 6 1/2 x 8 1/4 inches format. Some of Booty was included in the 2001 [[Zine Yearbook]]. ...ologies, including [[Not My Small Diary]], [[I Keee You!!]], [[CROQ]], and the three Trees and Hills anthologies. She is currently at work on a longer boo
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  • ...f [[No Barcodes Necessary]] zine, which existed for 9 issues. The focus of the zine was on international [[DIY]] [[hardcore]] [[punk]]. ...]][[Category:Website]][[Category:Zines from Ireland]][[Category:Zines from the UK]][[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • '''The Nearsighted Revolution''' was written by [[Christie Gorman Shaw]] from 1994 The zine had charming, funny and touching stories from people who are nearsight
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  • ...1984 and grew to be a nationwide zine sharing bisexual voices in the UK in the 1980s. It ended in around 1989 and a similar role was taken up by the zine/newsletter [[BiFrost]] and later by [[Bi Community News]].
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  • '''Rune''' is a science fiction fanzine published by The Minnesota Science Fiction Society. ...to ''Rune''. It was published throughout the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and into the 2000s. Issue 89 went to print in November 2013.
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  • ...t in Füssenich (Germany). The publication is included in the collection of the [[St. Patrick's Zine Library]]. ...c]] by Doninik, Anika and Miriam was created and published parallel during the same event.
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  • The '''British Library''' is a national legal deposit library, in London, UK. I ...its collections hold countercultural, music, women's and football zines as well as small press comics and graphic novels. It's collection is predominantly
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  • ...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'.
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  • ...on, VIC. She has read and performed in places like Voiceworks and Poetrix, the Melbourne Writer's Festival and Midsumma. Together with [[Shelley O'Reilly]
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  • [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.|I Defy]]
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  • ...fe and travels as a punk rock musician and anarchist. It was published in the late 1990s in Oakland, California, U.S.A. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:California Zines]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[C
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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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  • '''Ad Astra''' was a science fiction fanzine published in the United States by Richard Meyer and Mark Reinsberg. ...o November 1940. Two pages of the unfinished sixth issue appeared later in the fanzine ''Midwest Marky''.
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  • 16 issues were published in the U.S.A., first in Reserve, New Mexico, and later in Blue, Arizona, from Janu ...L. Manachino, Paatricia Shaw Mathews, Ash Miller, Ezra Pines, Mark Rich ([[The Silent Planet]], [[Treaders of Starlight]]), Lenora K. Rogers, Sara Ryan, M
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  • ...nati, Ohio. The first issue of Your Secretary was published for release at the first Chicago Zine Fest.
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  • ...or Our Lives''' is an [[anarchism|anarchist]] primer [[zine]] published by the [[Crimethinc]] ex-workers collective. ...se possibilities, and for those who have been consciously participating in the anarchist project for years or decades already.
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  • ...Edited by Kurt Sayenga (who went on to design album artwork for Fugazi, as well as write, direct, and produce documentaries). Its subject matter was divers Issue 1 - Rites of Spring, Velvet Monkeys, The Replacements - 1986
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  • ...eact]] as well as the [[Veganism|vegan]] cook book and documentary zine of the Dublin [[DIY]] gig scene [[Document]].
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  • ...rongly suggested a name change to avoid copyright infringement issues with the band Agent Orange. ''Small Town Loser'' contained interviews with West Virginia punk bands as well as political articles, poetry, record and zine reviews, satire, and musings
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  • ...ting columns for [[HeartattaCk]] and [[Punk Planet]]. He has also released the [[minicomic]] [[Things are Meaning Less]]. Al has published two issues of a ...y guitar in the band Challenger. Since late 2011 he continued 'kicking out the jams' with his Berlin based band ''Big Eater''.
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  • '''Sporadic Droolings''' is a music [[zine]] from New Jersey released in the 1980's. ...ustrations and comic strips. Extensive record and show reviews rounded out the publication, along with reviews of zines such as [[Conflict]], [[Factsheet
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  • ...[[perzine]] by zinester [[lb]] of Chicago, Illinois. It tells the story of the author's daily life and work as a grocery bagger. lb has also published the zines [[Susie is a robot|susie is a robot]] and [[Truckface|truckface]].
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  • '''Anna Papij''' is the creator of [[Asphyxia]]. ...ublished online in the form of a blog. The general theme is "Fairytales of the 21st century" and it contains mostly short stories, but also accepts contri
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  • Filth DIstro is a zine distro out of the Florida Panhandle. They publish [[Glag]] by [[Howard Zepp]] and a variety o
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  • '''HUH? Magazine: The Journal of Neo-Confusionism''' was first penned, cut pasted, glued, stapled ...SWAC (Southwest Writers And Cartoonists) he had made some serious leaps in the field of producing his own graphic arts and magazines.
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  • ...irst part, called "Dawn of Flame", of Weinbaum's post-apocalyptic novel, ''The Black Flame''. The cover of this 22 page fanzine was by Fay Dishington.
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  • ...d published their official organ [[Peri]]. Together, they had also put out the fanzines [[Triumph]], and [[Scientifiction (UK)|Scientifiction]], prior to ...Amateur Press Association|APA]]. Issue six was the last issue, released in the early sixties.
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  • ...g on Issue #6 of Opinionated Nobody, and has three [[music zine]]s also in the works.
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  • ...ine made by the New Zealand-based [[Migrant Zine Collective]], documenting the personal experiences of migrants of colour in Aotearoa (New Zealand). ...im was to celebrate her Hong Kong-Chinese diasporic background, along with the personal stories of other migrant youth in Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland).
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  • [[Category:Zine]] [[Category: POC Zine]] [[Category: Zines from the Philippines]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Category:Perzine]]
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  • '''Xenon''' (1984) was an Australian science fiction [[fanzine]] published by the Adelaide, SA based ''Blake 7'' fanclub Aftermath. '''Xenon''' is included in the Susan Smith-Clarke Zine Collection at The National Library of Australia.
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  • '''Warfear''' was a [[zine]] produced by the Warfear Collective, published in Anaheim, California, U.S.A. ...o features information on animal rights, and the social [[activist]] group The Lesbian Avengers.
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  • Ericka was the owner of [[Pander Zine Distro]] and author of many [[zine]]s, including [[P
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  • Nine issues of ''Psychotrope'' were released between the years of 1994 to 2001. Subtitled "Tales of mad love, psychological horror a ...[[Nemonymous]]), John Light, Brian Edward Lindenberger, Mark McLaughlin ([[The Urbanite]]), Tony Lee, Jane Omerod, Mike Philbin as 'Hertzan Chimera', Leig
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  • Chris Nelson started the fanzine in 1989 as a way of staying in touch with friends while Chris was a ...agazine or prozine, usually alternating with an original illustration from the ''Oz'' series of books.
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  • [[Image:Poemsfortherevolutioncover.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Poems for the Revolution of Love cover]] * In the church of my skull (2005)
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  • ...tor Who'', and became much better known. Thirteen issues were published in the 1980s. ...writing included Nick Cooper, Paul Cornell, Clare Ford, Robert Franks, and the editors, among others.
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  • ...UK-based magazine and webzine edited by [[Neil Scott]] and reporting upon the psychological dimensions of arts and culture. It has a postmodern slant but ...atures and artworks around the theme of the human form. The first issue of the main run is expected in 2006 after a brief hiatus.
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  • ...nchorage, featuring interviews and show reviews from local legends such as The Clyng-Onz, Psychedelic Skeletons, and Skate Death. Frank has since moved to '''#16 (Fall 1985)''' “The Yeah We’re Still Here Issue”. Cover by J. Alexander
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  • ...tly micro fiction. Issue number 1 consisted of stories written right after the author's mother died of cancer. Most are sad and sexualized tales of love [[Category: Zine]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[category:Florida Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]] [[Cate
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  • '''Hey, 4-Eyes!''' is a hand-crafted [[zine]] dedicated to the subject of eyeglasses. It is an anthology-style zine that offers entertain
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  • ...of stories from Aaron's life that revolve around his penchant for escaping the doldrums of daily life through drinking, bad sci fi, and fights. Though onl ...gory:Illinois Zines]][[Category:2000's publications]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...e. zines). A couple of years later she focused on crafting with the book ''The Crafter Culture Handbook''. ...ic and arts festival series. She is part of a promotions collective called The Bakery and is currently working towards a PhD in Digital Publishing.
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  • ...ed radical literature on politics, history, culture and the psychedelic to the underground of Adelaide.
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  • ...rld and contained contributions from members of the online mailing list of the same name. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the Philippines]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[Category: Poetry Zines]]
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  • ...llective based in numerous cities in the North of the [[UK]]. The focus of the collective is to provide safe and encouraging spaces for queer/feminist DIY ...Cartwheels''' runs its own [[distro]] both online and at all their events. The distro has appeared at events such as [[Bradford Zine Fayre]] and [[Exeter
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  • '''Martin Bowes''' was the [[editor]] of influential Coventry, UK fanzine [[Alternative Sounds]]. ...Attrition', who have released many CD's, toured the world over, and pushed the boundaries of sound beyond where it really ought to be. Once ''Alternative
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  • ...s and band interviews, with an odd "curse" that every band interviewed for the zine broke up. ...nk Planet]] until someone stole a box of records and CDs when she lived on the Lower East Side before that area was prestigious and safe.
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  • ...me Directive''' (1993-1995) was a science fiction [[fanzine]] published by the ''Star Trek'' fan club Trek Australis, in Sydney, NSW. ''Prime Directive'' is included in the Susan Smith-Clarke Zine Collection at The National Library of Australia.
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  • ...Rock''' is a [[zine]] by [[Jesse Gehlen]], published in Joensuu, Finland. The first issue was published September 2013. ...w. The first issue of the zine features the following interviews: Nardwuar the Human Serviette, Michael Gira, Jim Coleman, Eric Friedl, Red Dons, Dan Pete
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  • Published in the 2990s in Los Angeles, California, U.S.A., at least two issues of this title ..., Michael Glass, bands such as Psycho-drama, Sonic Youth, Wayne County and the Electric Chairs, Ween, and Youth Brigade. Photographs were contributed by J
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  • ...m. In 2004, Love Bunni Press branched out into publishing paperback books, the first title ''[[Blister Packs]]'' was met with a smattering of lukewarm pra ...er/trade ethos of underground publishing, Love Bunni Press gives away all the zines it publishes for free, postage or trade.
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  • '''Perhaps: The International Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction''' (1953) was a short ...ssen, Roger Dard and Mervyn Binns. The cover was by Ditmar 'Dick' Jenssen. The second issue appeared in December of 1953. Issue 3 was published in January
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  • ...d author Dennis Cooper. Other articles include a history of Noise Rock and the label Sub Pop. ''you can't hide your love forever'' also featured extensive The staff for this zine are listed as Michael Segal, John Huston, and David Seg
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  • ...nnedy]], the softcover book was published in 1995 by St. Martin's Griffin. The book presents each complete zine in its original format, with new essays by ...the zine was a cartoonish persona reflecting one part of her personality. The essays presented a between-issue biography of Kennedy's life, including her
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  • ...Ann Koi from various locales, such as Marshall, Richmond, and Fairfax, in the State of Virginia, U.S.A. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...he Nova Award for Best Fan Artist for the years 1997, 1999, and 2000, and the Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist in 2003 and 2005 ...] cabal, so while not exactly an editor, she is an indispensible member of the team.
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  • The '''Pocket Reader series''' is collection of monthly mini zines by [[Deirdre ...n Pocket Reader, followed by The Choom Gang: A Barack Obama Pocket Reader, the most recent issue, its third, released in October 2012, We Must Bleed: A Ge
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  • '''Stephan the STfan''' was a science fiction fanzine by [[Myrtle Douglas (Morojo)|Myrtle Released in 1939 in the U.S.A. for the occasion of the first World Science Fiction Convention, this was a small pamphlet of approx
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  • ...ns on a computer bulletin-board site [[BBS]] called ''The Enterprise'', in the late 1980's; later these riffs and rehearsals continued on Paulauskas' own ...k theatre troupe founded by the late John W. Wilson (an original member of the Joffrey Ballet and a Dada scholar); these pieces were performed internation
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  • ...e, Blonde and 21''' is a [[fanzine]] written by [[Stephanie Scarborough]]. The first (and so far only) issue came out in 2006. ...pictures, facts about her life, quotes, movies reviews and a filmography. The second issue is due out in 2007.
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  • ...on but also about the women’s lives and the events leading up to and after the abortions. ...frustration with doctors, and coming to terms with difficult decisions. In the second issue Merrydeath tried to get more stories from women of colour. In
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  • #REDIRECT [[The Neighbors]]
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  • ...tchen table to shop floor, the barrio to the playground, the barbershop to the student center, it's old school meets new school in a battle for a better t ...Kucsma]] were profiled as two of "30 Under 30 Visionaries who are Changing the World" by ''Utne Reader''.
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  • [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Michigan Zines]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[Cat
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  • ...eations to the City Library [[Zine]] Collection by adding them directly to the exhibition itself. The City Library also hosts a zine club called '''City Library Street Press'''.
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  • *''After the Execution '' *''The Martial Arts Master''
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  • ...ic as well as books and zines. The label went out of business in 1994 and the mailorder and wholesale distribution closed in 1997.
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  • '''The Satellite''' was a science fiction fanzine published by John F. Burke of Li ...t issue appearing in October of 1938, after which 17 issues were released, the last appearing in August of 1940.
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  • ''Fan To See'' was published in the 1950s in St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A. ...ished January 1953, with issue 2 following in February 1953. At this point the editor announced that ''Fan To See'' would appear irregularly. At least two
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  • ..., New South Wales, Australia. It was released from 1981 till 1989. Each of the issues were offset printed, about 10 to 12 pages, and featured updates on c ...Gamma Award for Best Fanzine in 1984, and 1988. Paul and Tina Kennedy won the Double Gamma Award for Best Editor in 1984.
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  • ...ed with a 7" featuring songs by [[Lisboa]] (from Detroit) and [[Automat]] (the solo project of [[Mike Appelstein]], ''[[Caught in Flux]]'' creator).
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  • *[https://www.etsy.com/listing/672469017/the-library-zine-extended-hours Buy The Library Zine on Etsy] [[Category:Zine]][[Category:Zines from the UK]][[Category:Zines about libraries]]
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  • ...gar packet added to the cover. Sample; "Sometimes I miss you and I look to the sky with mist & fog in my eyes. I glance at a star or two and walk without [[category:zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:California Zines]]
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  • ...ly as Candace, is a Melbourne-based writer and [[zinester]], who published the [[zine]] [[Giantess]].
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  • The first issue appeared in 1991. '''Q.T.''' was "pour Femmes & Hommes", and it ...ace; "War is Menstruation Envy"; reprints of tabloid newspaper covers from the 1950s; an article on harrassment of Asian dykes and punk fags at Ottawa bar
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  • ...iews with Kate ClickJaw, Aoi, Ultra Violet MC, Dotåbåtå, Axximilation, and the Brown Panthers. ''(A5 size)''
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  • ...ine''' is given out annually by the Canadian SF and Fantasy Association at the awards ceremony organized by Canvention. The ''Aurora/Boreal Awards'' began in 1980, however awards for fanzines were no
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  • ...fftrails Magazine Publishers Association]], but not the subsequent issues. The second issue also appeared in 1972, with issue three, co-edited with Alan B ...or Best Fanzine]] in 1974, produced the science fiction poetry anthology [[The Purple Hours]], and released her other apazine [[Gambit (UK)|Gambit]], also
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  • The zine is a [[nichtnachdenken.de]] publication.
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  • ...990's, the focus of ''Charmed Lives'' was on the writer Diana Wynne Jones. The first issue appeared around Hallowe'en, 1997. Four issues appeared in all. ...nd Hemlock'', reviewed by Maureen Kincaid Speller ([[Steam Engine Time]]); the beginning of an interview with Diana Wynne Jones, "Diana Wynne Jones in her
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  • [[Category: Zine]][[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • The focus of this zine was mainly on thrash music; thrash metal, thrash [[hardc
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  • ...[zinester]]. The [[zine]] is a small compilation of reviews of thirteen of the writers’ favourite songs that appear in films.
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  • ...n published in Scientia Magna, MathWorld.com, Neometropolis, Prime Curios, The Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, and three of Clifford Pickover's ...Scream]], O.G.'s [[Speculative Fiction]], [[Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens]], [[Wretched and Violent]], [[Swallow's Tail]], [[AlienSkin]], [[
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  • [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Musea Zine Hall of Fame]][[Category:1990's publications]
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  • '''Bust''', once a zine, is now a commercial newsstand magazine published in the U.S.A. ...not directly associated with that movement. It was originally subtitled "The New Girl Order," but later changed to "for women with something to get off
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  • ...eports from L.A., Berlin, Brazil, Israel, Italy and other locations around the world, with a focus on electronic music. '''Issue Nine''': "Anti-Imperialism: Bankruptcy of the Left?" by Christopn Frengeli; "Say Fear Is A Man's Best Friend" by Matthew
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  • ....SeattleDIY.org SeattleDIY.org] and a member of the SeattleDIY Collective. The first issue of '''Heart Murmur''' dealt with his experiences working with y [[Category:Zine]][[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Washington Zines]][[Category:Perzine]]
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  • ...exual abuse, [[anarchism]], depression, and the author's personal musings. The zine often features stick-figure drawings as illustrations. Twenty-nine iss ...y be psychological (as a survivor of abuse) or physical (trying to camp in the freezing rain), in a fresh and unself-conscious way." (Zine World)
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  • ...] to try and break the silence between men about fathering. It challenges the traditional male role in childrearing of being a distant disciplinarian and ...d "the best new zine of 2005," going on to say that "THIS ZINE ROCKS. It's the radical, anarchist, feminist zine by and for rad fathers we've been waiting
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  • ...n Australian zines''' (2005) a Thesis (Ph. D.) by [[Anna Poletti]] through the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Newcastle.
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  • Bettie currently writes the perzine [[Buy Her Candy]], and previously wrote [[Anatomical Heart]], a per
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  • ...inea Pig Zero'' often features stories that point out the negative side of the "medical marketplace," including questionable practices such as failing to An anthology of selected pieces from the zine was published in 2009 by Garrett County Press (ISBN 9781891053849).
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  • [[Image:Chigger_patch_of_fandom_195x_n2_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Chigger Patch of Fandom''' Issue 2]] '''The Chigger Patch of Fandom''' was a science fiction fandom fanzine edited by [
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  • '''Pippa''' is a zinester who lives in the north of England and makes zines. ...ine]], [[How to write a zine or The Art of Procrastination]], and [[Change the world in 7 days]] zine.
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  • ...r 2007, in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Anna Davour has previously published the fanzine [[Of Physicists and Fen]]. ...Time]], and ''Steampunk Magazine''. Letters are from [[Chris Garcia]] ([[The Drink Tank]]), Jerry Kaufman ([[Littlebrook]]), and Peter Sullivan.
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  • ...es ''Dr. Who'', the first issue appeared in 1983. 300 copies were printed. The contents included art work, poetry, short fiction, and filk lyrics. ...and Phred. The front cover art was by Jane Fancher and Stefanie Hawks, and the back cover by Jane Fancher. Writing was contributed by Gail Bennett, Cheryl
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  • ...[[Action Girl Guide]]'s less frequent publishing schedule at the time was the cause for a new zine that reviewed zines by young women. ...Grrrl Review''' is included in the Sarah and Jen Wolfe Zine Collection at The University of Iowa.
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  • [[Image:Bobthesuperdog.jpg|frame|''Bob the super dog'']] ...he cat Milk Whiskers who is wanted for questioning by the police following the robbery of milk.
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  • ...he poetic potential laying next to the boring, the far away, the small and the non-pretty phenomena of everyday life.
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  • [[Image:RevHome.jpg|200px|frame|The Revolution Starts At Home]] ...ctive: [[Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha]], Ching-In Chen and Jai Dulani. The cover was drawn by [[Cristy Road]].
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  • ...hington, U.S.A. Two issues of this publication were released in the 1970s. The first issue came out in 1977, with issue two following in 1978. ...ontributions appeared from Grant Canfield, [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]] ([[The Literary Magazine of Fantasy and Terror]]), and Dan Steffan ([[Boonfark]]).
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  • ...disbanded, and Jensen decided to begin a small magazine based on the ideas the Drac Pac had discussed. ...released in August 1993. Increasing interest in the fanzine meant that by the end of 1993, several hundred copies of each issue were being produced.
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  • The press is not not open to unsolicited submissions. All projects that involve The press plans to renew and expand in 2013, through ebook and other ephemeral
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  • [[Image:Sin_and_the_september_issue_cover.jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''Sin & The September Issue''' September 2015]] '''Sin & The September Issue''' is a mini art zine (3.6" x 3") published in September, 2
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  • ...ng, while other more established artists continue to produce minicomics on the side. Minicomics are even less mainstream than alternative [[comic]]s. ...ook format&mdash;were the anonymous and pornographic [[Tijuana bible]]s of the 1920s.)
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  • ...[[zine]] was published by John Rot'n'Hell out of Vancouver, Canada, during the early and mid-1990's. ...ite an accomplished artist and painter and usually signed his artwork with the pen name Crazyman.
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  • ...taught literature and cultural studies at Monash, La Trobe University and The University of Newcastle. ...gramming of writing events such as the National Young Writers Festival and the Emerging Writers Festival, and conducts workshops on diy writing and publis
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  • ...Murphy published [[Noise Queen]] from 1996 till 2001, releasing 25 issues. The zine contained editorials, fiction, articles, and reviews of zines, recordi ...R TEXAS AND T FOR Timmybear'', and ''Holiday In The Sun'', about Texas and the Dominican Republic respectively) and three poetry collections in 'zine form
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  • ...cheek journey through one's relationship with sustenance and alcohol. From the 5 senses of wine to anatomizing a hangover, Sandy's meditations on food and
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  • '''Cosmic Tales''' was a science fiction fanzine released in the 1930s and 1940s. ''Cosmic Tales'' had a number of editors over the course of publication, but it was begun by James V. Taurasi in New York, U.
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  • Issue #2 includes poetry from the late [[zinester]] [[Kara Simon]]. [[Category:Zine]], [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]], [[Category:Alaska Zines]], [[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • '''Solstice''' was a science fiction fanzine published by the South Florida Science Fiction Society. ...nce Fiction Society was started in 1985 by Joe Siclari and Nancy Atherton. The first issue of their clubzine, ''Solstice'', was published in November 1985
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  • Published in Beecher, Illinois, U.S.A., beginning in the early 1970s, at least 14 issues were released. ...ers recalls this fanzine in [[E-Ditto]] #1 from January 2011; "DILEMMA was the simplest of zines. Editor and sole contributor Jackie Caugrove chatted abou
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  • ''Snarla'' was published in the 1990s in California, and later Oregon, U.S.A. Six issues were released. ...nter break back in Berkeley, and gave it to girls at a show at 924 Gilman, the local all-ages punk club.
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  • ...down because we’re selling off the rest of our zines in grabbags only", so the distro probably closed in 2008.
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  • [[Image:CGarcia.jpg|frame|Chris Garcia tends bar at the 2007 Silicon (from ''The Drink Tank #146'')]] ...or Best Fanzine]] for [[The Drink Tank]], and in 2012 were shortlisted for the 'Best Fanzine' Hugo again for [[Journey Planet]].
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  • ...al writing and reprinted newspaper articles. It was begun in October 2002. The writing tended to be half in English and half in Dutch. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:2000's publications]][[Category:Zines from the Netherlands]] [[Category:Punk]] [[Category:Anarchist]]
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  • Tedge describes the aim of '''Jiffy zine''' as being: "low budget, high design. With attention *The Outpost (Brisbane, QLD)
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  • '''Maha 1 -''' Well presented and beautifully illustrated, stylised comic zine made up of skits '''Maha 3-''' The comic strips with texts are in German and has comics about the fucking life, super heroes, dog breeds and mustaches.
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  • ...five year old Alyssa, as a limited edition of 50 copies which were sold at the [[London Zine Symposium]] in 2010. The zine had drawings, pictures stuck in, writing and was all about her having
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  • The first issue of ''Saliromania'' was published in Leeds, UK, in September 199 The fanzine reviewers of [[Plokta]] #11 helpfully attempt a definition: "SALIR
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  • [[Image:Faces_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Faces of Time''' <br/>Issue 3 1983 <br/> Cover art by Connie Faddis]] '''The Faces of Time''' was a media science fiction fanzine edited by Mary D. Bloe
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  • ...leased the first issue in January 1962. Issue 2 followed in March 1962 and the third, and last issue, in July 1962. Contributors of cover art work included [[Karen Anderson]] ([[Alif]], [[The Zed]], [[Vorpal Glass]]) (Issue 3) and [[Bjo Trimble]] ([[Shangri L'Affaire
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  • ...erimental rock band The Grief. Its subtitle "fanzine intramuros" refers to the fortified architecture of its home city. Its focus are underground cultures
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  • ...from an email discussion between two anonymous individuals from the UK on the subject of mental illness. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the UK]]
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  • ...implications of doing phone sex for a living. There are also stories about the more strange calls she received while working.
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  • '''Barbara Chapman''' is a [[zinester]] and artist. She currently attends the Savannah College of Art and Design. * [[Pumpernickel and the Lonely Bird]]
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  • '''Pound The Pavement''' is a street-art [[zine]] edited by [[Josh Macphee]]. ...ften features photographs of street art and graffitti from across the U.S. The tenth issue, published in 2007, was a compilation of images mocking Preside
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  • '''Johanna Fateman''', probably best known as a member of the band Le Tigre, attended Reed College of [[Portland, OR]] -- notorious for a ...the Subject of Jackson Pollock]], [[The Opposite]] and [[Artaud-Mania]], the latter of which detailed Fateman's hilarious in-class feuds with an abrasiv
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  • Dameron co-founded the [[Chicago Underground Library]] with [[Nell Taylor]] in February 2006. ...Dameron made his first zine at the age of seven, although he did not know the term.
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  • '''Polaroid-Celluloid''' is a [[zine]] by [[Niku Arbabi]] (director of the [[Ms. Films]] project) that focuses on women in media or women-made media.
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  • ...entle Graffiti''' is a Washington, D.C., USA-based [[zine]] representing the poetry, humor, spiritual exploration, illustration, photography, musical ta The zine is sometimes printed in color, other times in the traditionally zinester black and white.
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  • ...o co-published the fanzines [[The Notional]], with Valma Brown, and [[Fuck The Tories]], with Valma Brown, Judith Hanna, Terry Hughes, and Joseph Nichols. ''Orthinopter'' was distributed through both the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]] and [[Spectator Amateur Press Society
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  • ...tween 2002-2003. It was to continue as a serial publication, although only the one issue was ever produced. Funding from the Boroondara City Council covered the photocopying costs of the first run of 100 copies.
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  • '''''The Rise and Fall of Mr. Fuck You Man''''' is a [[minicomic]] by [[Gregory Kaly Published in the 1990's in Toronto, On, Canada, this is a quarter size zine. Publisher Greg
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  • ...1999-2000. At least two issues were produced and there were links between the zine and London Bisexual Women's Group. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the UK]] [[Category:Queer]] [[Category:Bisexual]]
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  • ...edited by de Lint, this time with the title ''Beyond the Fields We Know''. The titles were then merged as ''Dragonfields'' for two more issue; issue three ...David Madison, Diana L. Paxson, [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]] (in ''Beyond The Fields We Know'') ([[Fantasy Macabre]]), Stephanie Stearns, Sharrie n'ha Ve
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  • ..., along with beverage, zine, and book reviews, plus other assorted pieces. The layout style is generally precise, but done in a traditional cut & paste ma ...rdcage Liner''), all past issues/names were included in the numbering with the release of ''Something For Nothing'' Issue 12.
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  • The series focuses on helping you deal with your creativity as an introvert in The author is interested in distro opportunities.
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  • ...ook''' has the traditional definition of a small book sold by peddlers. In the [[zine]] community where a [[zine]] is a title that has more than one issue
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  • ...ge of Hip-Hop', 'Punk love', 'Ridiculous covers', 'Songs 4 lonely girls', 'The all-time best-ever drinking songs; it also contains Ten guidlines (there ar
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  • ...ay"; issue eleven asks, "Are You A Woman of Mystery?"; and issue twelve is the "Special Intense Issue". ...to reprints from zines editor [[Matt Wobensmith]] felt were influential in the scene.
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  • [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Oregon Zines]] [[Category:Perzine]]
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  • ''Habakkuk'' debuted in February 1960. Six issues were released, the last in July 1961, before taking a four year breather. Donaho termed each o ...editor of [[En Garde]]), Bhob Stewart, Steve Stiles, [[Arthur Thomson]] ([[The ATom Anthology]]), and [[Bjo Trimble]] ([[Shangri L'Affaires]]).
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  • '''Anvil''' is a science fiction fanzine published by the Birmingham Science Fiction Club in Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A. ...ased, the last with Charlotte Proctor as editor. Julie Wall then took over the editorship from her.
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  • ...ales, Australia. It was begun in October 1977 as a fanzine newletter, with the second issue appearing March 1978. It was then relaunched as a small press ...write, "Cygnus Chronicler started as a fanzine in 1977 but soon grew to a well-presented, professional looking semi-prozine. It featured fiction by Collin
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  • ...rom Oklahoma City, but grew up in St Paul and currently lives and works in the Longfellow neighborhood of south Minneapolis. Michael’s artwork spans a v * See work that Michael has for sale online in the [http://www.smirkingtiger.com[Smirking Tiger Etsy shop]].
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  • ...al personality during the early years of [[alt.zines]] and played drums in the pop punk band Zoinks!
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  • ...issues were collected in book form and several anthologies were released. The "Hothead Paisan" character has been featured on t-shirts and posters, and o ...as been interviewed in zines such as [[Q.T.]]. As well, she is featured in the short film ''Hotheads'', directed by Jennie Livingston and released in 1993
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  • ...First and Only Live Talk Show. His writing has been published in Bridge, [[The 2nd Hand]], [[Sleepwalk]], F Magazine, Hair Trigger, and many others both o
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  • ...live in the Boston area. Reverend Raye states that there's no advertising, the 'message changes every day,' and is made up of what callers call in. He als [[category:zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Massachusetts Zines]] [[Category: Multi Media]][[Catego
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  • * [[Justin Duerr]] ([[Decades of Confusion Feed the Insect]] zine) * [[Steve Please]] ([[Steve's Guide To Shit Jobs]], The Low Budgets)
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  • ...lancholy]]'', and ''[[Now I Write A Dictionary]]'', this zine came out in the 1990's. It is created in collage-style with images and text combined. ...is "Now, I spank you! Therefore, I spank you now!", a play on the title of the "Now I... " series, which Joshua continued to produce after this zine.
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  • The zine featured strange, script-style fiction resembling some sort of detecti [[Category:Zine]] [[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Michigan Zines]] [[Category:1990's publications]]
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  • ...]] (later known as The [[Organisation]]; later still, fully independent of the BSFG). ...''Events in Dense Fog'', ''Small Blue Thing'' and ''Dark Cafe Days'' - but the underlying numbering was maintained throughout.
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  • ...n December 2007, and includes a collection of stories from Amy's column of the same name, published regularly in [[Razorcake]].
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  • ...ll zines and decided to call attention to the size of these zines by using the term '''mini zines''' to describe them. Within this category these zine edi
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  • ....A. The first issue appeared in November 1987, the second in May 1988, and the third, and last, in February 1989. ...Pugmire]] ([[Queer Madness]]), "In the Airlock" by Ann K. Schwader, and "The Contemplative Sphinx" by Richard L. Tierney, all of which are considered to
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  • ...ious nature of ''Entmoot'' with issue 3, published February 1966. Issue 4, the last issue, was released August 1966. Contributors of poetry included Ned Brooks (later editor of [[It Goes On The Shelf]]), E.E. Evers, Ted Johnstone ([[I Palantir]]), Michael Laton, and Pe
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  • ...r Young]]'''Big Sky''' is a [[fanzine]] edited by [[Pete Young]], possibly the first science fiction fanzine to have originated in Thailand. The first issue appeared in March 2013 (also dated March 2556 in the Thai calendar), and all are downloadable from efanzines.com.
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  • '''Preston is My Paris''' was a photo [[zine]] from Preston in the north of England, UK. After the initial eponymous zine, ''Preston is My Paris'' became a wider publisher of
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  • ...rather than a superhero. Independent comic book stories typically resemble the type of stories you’d find in [[perzines]].
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  • ...] by a Victorian based author, that describes the circumstances around and the authors coming to terms with two suicide attempts, one successful, one not. The title of the [[zine]] is also the title of a Fugazi song.
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  • [[Jennifer Dudley]] was a writer and publisher of the Australian [[zine]] [[Quirk]].
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  • ...s a 'support' publication for those with an addiction to office supplies. The newsletter also provided product reviews, advice, and more. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • The Art Director was Jack Agnew and Associate Editors were John V. Baltadonis ( Issue 1 was released in Dec. 1937 and includes contributions by the editors and J. Harvey Haggard, J. Francis Hatch, Raymond Van Houten ([[Tess
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  • [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...J.T. Oliver, Paul D. Cox, Van Splawn, and John Kelly Jr. and published by The Stone Age Press in Columbus, Georgia, U.S.A. The first and only issue is dated February 1951.
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  • '''Pluto''' was a science fiction fanzine published by the The Literature, Science and Hobbies Club of Decker, Indiana, U.S.A. ...e 5 in November 1940, and the sixth issue released in January 1941. It was the first fanzine to feature multicolor mimeo work — previously all multicolo
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  • ...year in Western Massachusetts, U.S.A., and is a 6 1/2 X 8 1/4 format zine. The 23rd issue was published in 2010. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Zine Yearbook]] [[Category:Comic Zine]] [[Category:1990
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  • '''Keet Geniza''' is the creator of [[Echo! Echo!]] and [[Wash Day]]. She currently lives in Scarbor
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  • ...d out on a friends zine called [[To Hell With It]]. He is also a member of the I.N.F.Y collective, and started [[World War VII]] distro in 2007. He reside
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  • ...lding wilderness of Chicago, IL. In October 2006, [[lb]] took over running the distro.
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  • The first APA was a journal called NAPA (the National Amateur Press Association). It was a batch of [[newsletter]]s by j ...rs today: Mailing Comments. These are individual members' feedback on what the others have produced. FAPA remains active today, though with a smaller rost
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  • ''Culture Slut'' is a queer feminist perzine. Most issues are put together in the classic [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]] manner, with a combination of handw
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  • ...struggles, and are divided into four categories: Dad and the Farm, Katie, The Ex, and Miscellaneous. ...ed]] [[Category:Iowa Zines]][[Category:Poetry Zines]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...just boys' fun''' is mainly a [[perzine]] from Germany by [[Elena Stöhr]]. The first issue came out 1998. ...is an old stockholm-travel diary from 2002." The [[zine]] has 60 pages and the format is A6.
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  • ...Heuschel, Donal Ogilvie, and Jeff Jenke-- all seniors, and all members of the punk-noise band Bryce Hammer. ...]s, and cut and paste [[Anarchism|anarchy]]. Also typically, it attracted the wrath of school administrators, who tried to prevent its distribution on sc
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  • ...pied 8.5"x5.5". In issue three, Dan Nowhere writes about train hopping and the downside of traveling with little money. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • '''Furball''' was a garage-punk zine from the 2000s. ...n available in several stores in Burlington, Vermont in February of 2004. The zine was also guerrilla distributed in bookstores,libraries and coffee shop
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  • '''Mathom''' was a science fiction fanzine published by the Houston Science Fiction Society. ...a Tuttle, and Bill Wallace in 1969. Joanne Burger was the first President. The Society lasted until 1980.
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  • The first issue of ''Black Tea'' was released in summer 2007 with 28 mini-sized ...sady’s, and second about the authors visit to the Tassajara Zen Center, as well as other short & funny autobiographical comics.
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  • ...any of bands and punk stuff) but also some illustrations and other art. As well as Peter, contributors included [[Owen Richards]], [[Jas Grieve]], [[Monica ...er bag, a patch reading 'I <3 PATCH' and a CD from Captain Blood Blood and the sea dogs.
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  • '''Cupsize''' was published during the mid-90s in New York by [[Sasha Cagen]] and Tara Needham. ...iend going to a strip club and recounting the experience was featured in [[The Factsheet Five Zine Reader]].
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  • ...tudents of the Neko Press [[comic]] art school in La Mesa. The concept of the zine is to challenge artists to visualize unique characters based on specif This zine was created as a part of the Collaborative Art Collective, created and organized by Alex Chiu.
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  • The total number of issues were fifteen. Mostly xeroxed with occasional offset ...ed with the zine's files back to Minneapolis in 1986, eventually producing the final issue in Spring, 1989 as a Split zine, or 'ace-double' fanzine with [
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  • '''Em Ledger''' is the editor of [[The World's A Mess and Yr My Only Cure]] zine in which she is credited as ''''M ...toured with her writing as part of Sister Spit: The Next Generation across the UK and Europe in September 2009.
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  • It is announced on the front cover as a "Redlance" publication. ...y Art Rapp ([[Spacewarp]]), which has been cited as being the first use of the phrase "pulp science fiction".
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  • ...er Roberts returned as editor and continued to publish ''Checkpoint'' till the 100th issue appeared in September 1979. ...[[Skyrack]] Fan Poll of the late 1950s and early 1960s. The Poll included the categories Best Fanzine, Best Single Issue, Best Fanwriter, Best Fan Artist
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  • '''Asmodeus''' was a science fiction fanzine published in the 1950s. The first issue was published in Summer 1950 by Alan H. Pesetsky and Michael De
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  • The zine is mostly xeroxed, covers are sometimes risographed, laserprinted or w Issues of ''Pareidolia'' are part of the collection of the [[St. Patrick's Zine Library]].
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  • ...ne Hall of Fame'''. Since that time there have been 9 groups of inductees. The first 3 inductees were [[Factsheet 5]], [[Global Mail]], and [[Farm Pulp]]. 2. Their work must be of the highest quality.
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  • '''Yeah, That'll Definitely Happen''' is a [[zine]] by Nate Logan. The first issue was released in May of 2007.
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  • ...ion consists of letters to a plethora of people, the truth is that most of the series is devoted to one person who doesn't even know this zine exists. ...yptic enough to be specific and vague all at the same time. It delves into the deepest parts of relationships, memories and heart ache. It analyses situat
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  • '''Smart Like Eve''' was a feminist [[zine]] created in the early '90s by [[Ann Carroll]] in Omaha, [[Nebraska]]. ''Smart Like Eve'' is included in the Sarah Wood Zine Collection at Duke University.
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  • ...ncisco, CA writer and publisher of the defunct zines [[Ben Is Dead]] and [[The I Hate Brenda Newsletter]], both of which focused on pop culture and drew m ...several self-publishers through 20 cities in a large recreational vehicle. The zine [[Socially Fucking Retarded]] documents this project and its fallout.
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  • ...hes that they have had on java slingers in their lives as well as being on the receiving end of similar crushes.
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  • The third installment in an ongoing 'how to...' series, '''How to... (spot a ph The other three zines in the series are:
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  • ...''. The zine came with a cd of bike punk music with the lyrics included in the zine, together with loads of photos of cycling on various streets, french p
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  • ...Bru, and addressed local and international indie music, with some nods to the local [[punk]] scene, and was allegedly humorous. ...recurrent features: "Maurice Mouths Off", an angry media analyst rages at the contemporary world; and "Indie Ghetto", fictional news about small-time ind
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  • [[Image:462px-The_Kingsboro_Press_Issue_6.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Kingsboro Press''']] '''The Kingsboro Press''' is a zine based in Brooklyn, NY., U.S.A.
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  • ...k Project 2011, '12, and Limited Edition. He is currently participating in The Sketchbook Project 2013. Carter's other zines include [[How To Tell Secrets]], [[The Encyclopedia Of...]], [[Help]], [[Please Keep Sharing]], [[Merman]], [[Dayd
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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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  • ...er local bands in the Nashville area. The book is printed and produced by the author/artist, and is sold for non-profit, on a donation basis. ...bpoena the easy ones: traffic stops, jay walkers, and noise abusers, while the most heinous criminals are let off free to go, as long as they keep causing
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  • ...as also musically contributed to songs by The Cannanes, Bart & Friends and the Hanshalf Trio. ...& Delicious]], [[Chickfactor]], [[Spammy]], [[Tiki News]], [[Abatoir]], [[The Harvey]], [[Zeeeeen]] and others.
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  • ...paper zines), fed-up computing, fed-up broadcasting, and fed-up editorial. The zine often has a crusty tone, but ultimately comes off as light-hearted, ra
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  • ...An introduction to and review of '''Stoop''' can be found on page 77 of [[The new pollution]].
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  • ...r themed series, the second of which is to pick up the 'Father' theme from the unfinished ''Atomiser'' #2. ...enn Smith, Doug Iannucci, [[Mike Diana]], Neale Blanden, Anton Emdin, Boz, The J Man, Ryan Vella, Martin Humphreys, Gregory Mackay, SCAR, Simon James, Str
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  • ...k and Alex Fergusson. At this time, Tony D also contributed to [[Rotten To The Core]]. ...& Torn'' were released during the period from 1976 till Tony D bequeathed the zine to Vermillion Sands, who continued publishing until 1979.
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  • ...erary zine devoted to the works of [[H. P. Lovecraft]] and his circle, and the [[Cthulhu Mythos]]. ...na, U.S.A. and featured contributions by many notable writers and artists. The final issue, #107, was published for Eastertide 2001.
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  • [[Image:RSNG-Kent.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Royal Swiss Navy Gazette'''<br/> Issue 21 2010<br/> Cover by Ken Fletcher]] '''The Royal Swiss Navy Gazette''' is a science fiction fanzine by Garth Spencer.
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  • ...ny collages, the small zine is focusing on a list of zine related sites on the internet. The zine was officially published by [[Bone Response Publications]].
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  • ==List of fanzines published by the author== * [[The Gossip]] (1989-1994, 7 issues)
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  • ...d [[babysue]]. His specialty is grim satire, often mocking the excesses of the American counterculture. * [http://www.lycaeum.org/paranoia/stories/comix/back/ Comicstrips on ''the Lycaeum.org'']
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  • ...to as "DFF") is a [[punk]] [[zine]], specifically focussing on [[punk]] in the Boston and New England area. ...wed Gang Green, The Freeze, Mission Of Burma, The Queers, The Street Dogs, The Unseen, and many more.
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  • ...unt-struck.com/zine ''Cunt-struck'' website] includes an online version of the printed zine
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  • ...wys, the [[zine]] is free save for printing costs. Public distribution by the readers is encouraged. ...ing to be published. We cannot offer fees at this time, but we hope to in the future. Please consider submitting to our zine.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Zine World: A Reader's Guide to the Underground Press]]
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  • ...new material was published in 2007 by [[Microcosm Publishing]] entitled ''The Chainbreaker Bike Book: A Rough Guide to Bicycle Maintenance''. ...her experiences with being a woman cyclist as well as a bike mechanic and the harassment that goes along with both.
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  • ...ering the heavier side of Australian music, sports, comics, politics, etc. The first issue was released in April of 2006.
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  • ...sconnected threads. Soiling oneself with a look of smugness. It’s having the dream where you find yourself naked in school and are proud of it." [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...ut a [[punk]] house, and the beginnings of U.S. economic collapse. Much of the writing, especially in recent issues, has been akin to that of new journal [[Category:zine]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • '''Sky Hook''' was a fanzine published by Redd Boggs in the 1940s and '50s in the U.S.A. ...ferent]]), Con Pederson ([[IF!]]), Phil Rasch, Oliver Saari, Jack Speer ([[The National Fantasy Fan]]), Ken Tuttle, and [[Walt Willis]] ([[Slant]], [[Hyph
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  • ''Oblong'' was published in San Francisco, California, U.S.A. beginning in the mid 1990s; issue 1 appeared October 1995, #2 in January 1996, #3 in April 1 ...n. The cover of issue #5, featuring the actor Jack Nance as he appeared in the film ''Eraserhead'', was by editor Bruce Townley.
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  • ...g in 1986, issue 6 in 1987, issue 7 in 1988, issue 8 in 1990, and issue 9, the last issue, in 1992. ...sh Fantasy Award for Best Small Press Publication' for ''Dark Dreams'' for the year 1991.
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  • ...me known as "L.A.'s most hated zine" due to its editors alienating some of the local zines like ''[[Flipside]]'', ''[[Ben Is Dead]]'' and ''[[Fiz]]'' maga ...or his Masters in Library Science at UCLA. A paper he was writing -- about the history of zines -- sparked his interest in starting a non-political punk z
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  • [[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • '''Die, Evan Dando, Die''' was a [[zine]] created by [[Jeff Fox]] in the early '90s. ...was published in Pennsylvania, U.S.A. It was named for the lead singer of the rock band Lemonheads and thus gained some mainstream media attention, altho
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  • ...kscreened cover, and includes prints by artists. '''Riffrag''' focusses on the arts, artists, writers, and [[activist]]s and queer work. L.N.R. (aka Eleanor Whitney) also published the zine [[Indulgence]].
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  • ...d by [[Microcosm Publishing]] in Bloomington, IN at Rhino's All Ages Club. The first event will be organized for Oct 17-18, 2009. The focus is on print media, [[DIY]] skillsharing, education, and fun.
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  • ...photography of live music predominantly, but not exclusively, from the UK. The zine covered bands that haven't been written about a thousand times over - ...Preston, Newcastle and Nottingham. The editors ceased publication because the costs became too high to continue.
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  • ...ly spaces in Kansas City, MO and various free-subscribers scattered around the country. ...nclude a couple dozen select bookstores, infoshops, and coffeeshops around the country.
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  • [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Perzine]] [[Category:Queer]] [[Category:Chicago Zines]]
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  • '''Der Stein''' (German for "The Stone") is a zine by [[Julie Doucet]]. The initial issue was published in May 2010 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. ''Der
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  • =The Deadbeats= [[File:Deadbeats_zine.png|200px|thumb|right|The Deadbeats: Issue 1 (2015) by Squimoo]]
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  • ...ginally called ''Eightball'', but its name was changed by the editor after the fourth issue. ...ors at this time included Alan Child, editor of [[Mephisto]], Moe Diner of the Montreal Science Fiction Association, Bob Gibson, Fred Hurter, Jr., editor
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  • ...bane based artist who created the [[zines]] [[Haich]], [[Bird_Habit]], and the [[minizine]] [[I A Scribe]]. The idea behind it is that a letter of an alphabet can be so much more than jus
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  • ...The contents of this sole issue may be described as New Age ruminations on the nature of death, rebirth, creation, and art. A second issue on the theme of "Love" was slated to be released on February 14, 2009, but was nev
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  • ...into Shelby Vick, editor of [[Confusion]], who soon changed her opinion of the event now that she had found a friendly face. ...tar Trek: The Motion Picture'', and in 1981 in the short film ''Superbman: The Other Movie''.
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  • The first issue was produced in a numbered limited edition of 300 copies, and s ...oto, Bruce D. Griffiths, Deborah K. Raney, [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]] ([[The Literary Magazine of Fantasy and Terror]]), Charles Schneider, and Stephani
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  • This publication is included in the collection of the [[St. Patrick's Zine Library]].
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  • '''''The White Notebooks''''' is a paper [[perzine]] edited by [[Pete Young]]. ...arterly schedule. Mailings include the supplemental single-sheet fanzine [[The Thai Literary Supplement]], collecting reviews of genre and non-genre books
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  • The '''Basement Bookshop''' was located in the back of the [[Basement Radical Social Centre]] in Manchester, England. They sold a sele They also carried many local [[zine]]s, as well as some non-local zines.
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  • ...and by post /mail in order to create an art [[fanzine]] for the people by the people. ...ook format. The zine welcomes trading with other [[zinester|zinesters]] as well as rants, personal quotes, song lyrics, poems, short stories etc.
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  • This [[one-shot]] zine was created as part of the [[24 Hour Zine Thing]] project. This [[zine]] lists 24 things to do in Sydn
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  • ...his strange place. They fall in love and explore the cities and forests of the magical world together. The genre would teeter between magical realism, surrealism, and romanticism.
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  • ...d for its low-brow flavor and political incorrectness, WoRMfEA$t published the works of Charles Bukowski, [[Gregory K. H. Bryant]], Lyn Lifshin, Larry Obe [[Category:Zine]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
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  • ...s a world-wide distribution and can be found in many zine libraries across the country. [[The Unpaved Road]]
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  • ...The East Brunswick UFO Observation League Public Gathering, at the top of the hill, Jones Park, East Brunswick, Victoria, Australia.
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  • ...one from 5-year-old Claire who tells sts that "You look like the queen of the H-word place", upon seeing her with newly bleached hair with reddish tips a ...ues of Painter Lewis were released in the 1990's by sts, who also released the zine [[Nightmare Girl]].
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  • '''Zuzu and the Baby Catcher''' was a mothering [[zine]] written by [[Rhonda Baker]] of Por ...otherhood," the zine included stories about becoming a licensed midwife as well as anecdotes from life as a stay at home mom to two young daughters. It al
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  • ...in 1948. After her marriage to husband Ron Buckmaster, she was a member of the Woolwich Science Fiction and Vargo Statten Appreciation Society in 1954. ...tion in the [[Offtrails Magazine Publishers Association]] (OMPA), but with the 13th issue in 1960 she decided to make it generally available. She stated h
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  • ...roster of around 300 members that lasted from 1951 till 1952. ''TLMA'' was the official organ. ...hen they left a newsstand carrying a science fiction magazine. The goal of the club was to promote science fiction and fantasy reading.
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  • ...the title) was a science fiction fanzine published by [[Charles Wells]] in the 1960's. ...S.A., and was an [[Amateur Press Association|APAzine]] distributed through the [[Fantasy Amateur Press Association]], commonly known as a "FAPAzine".
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  • ...' is the first mini photozine (or [[travelzine]] from [[Pere Saguer]], and the first published by [[Bad Weather Press]] horizontal. ...g the 1970s and 1980s, yet whose innovative work is continuously evolving. The minizine has 24 pages, printed in colour on a light grey paper. All photos
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  • [[Category:Zine]] [[category:Zines from the U.S.A.]][[Category:Minicomics]]
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  • '''''Sounding the Ritual Echo''''' was a 1980s [[fanzine]] edited by [[Steve Green]]. ...fill-in "#2.5" which bore the subtitle ''Atmospheres for Dreaming'' (like the main title, taken from a lyric by Bill Nelson).
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  • The meaning of Transgression, according to the dictionary is " ''n.'': the exceeding of bounds or limits". Artwork, statement, and installation notes can be found on the website.
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  • ...s of her coming to terms of being able to grow a beard and she challenging the stereotypes of what is beautiful in women and in men. ...nted on the 19th of January, 2010, and is 14 pages. It is distributed by [[The Sticky Institute]].
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  • This title was published in 1958 in California, U.S.A., upon the death of writer Henry Kuttner that year. It is a 36 page mimeographed publi ...ne Moore). They met through their association with the "Lovecraft Circle", the group of people who had corresponded with [[H. P. Lovecraft]] while he was
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  • TO BE CONTINUED - this is to hold the name
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  • [[Image:Frozen_Frog_art_by_Philippe_Labelle_logo_Ian_Gunn.jpg|right|frame|'''The Frozen Frog'''<br/>Issue 6 March 1993<br/>Cover art by Philippe Labelle<br/ '''The Frozen Frog''' was a science fiction fanzine published by Benoit Girard.
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  • ...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
  • ...s of code for cataloging on this site. By adding the following ''tags'' to the bottom of pages, they are dynamically cataloged for easier searching. Before creating a new category, check the [[Special:Categories|categories]] section, which lists all categories curre
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  • ...Up-Ins]]'' runs weekly in ''The District'', the student run newspaper for the Savannah College of Art and Design. ...uded cartoonists like [[Pranas T. Naujokaitis]]. Brett is participating in the Spring 2007 Iron Man Challenge against cartoonist [[Joe Bevill]].
    1 KB (186 words) - 19:13, 2 April 2007
  • ...rown Prince of Halloween is looking for candidates who might qualify for ''The Scariest Jack O'Lantern of all!'' His incredible journey of self-discovery ...lloween Witches, anyway? All these questions and more will be answered in the mind-blowing sequel!
    1 KB (172 words) - 07:40, 4 December 2007
  • '''Real Men''' was a [[zine]] published in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada in the 1990's. ...of Education meeting, where Mississauga Christian parents groups protested the teaching of sex education in health classes. There is also an article entit
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  • ...for a variety of basic machines and tools as well as articles celebrating the ingenuity of DIY technology. * N + 4. The Iron Pour, make a banjo, boombox amp, six dollar cider press, bucket pannie
    2 KB (247 words) - 08:43, 30 November 2015
  • ...ny dream interpretation book.Bird_ Habit is a zine that has stepped beyond the perameters of what an art zine could be. More akin to a graphic novel than ''Zine #3 for me but a 1st it is for the series –
    2 KB (279 words) - 02:24, 1 April 2011
  • ...n the late 1990s by [[Rex Ray]] of Anchorage Alaska and Pensacola Florida. The [[zine]] explores story telling influenced by [[punk rock]] and travel. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category: Alaska Zines]] [[Category:1990's publications]] [[Cate
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