Difference between revisions of "I Hate This Part of Texas"

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The title was a line of graffiti the author read at a rest stop in Oklahoma. The zine addresses queer and feminist issues through a number of personal anecdotes. Several issues have addressed [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Katrina Hurricaine Katrina], notably Issue #7, which was a [[Split zine|split]] with [[Keep Loving Keep Fighting]] #7.
 
The title was a line of graffiti the author read at a rest stop in Oklahoma. The zine addresses queer and feminist issues through a number of personal anecdotes. Several issues have addressed [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Katrina Hurricaine Katrina], notably Issue #7, which was a [[Split zine|split]] with [[Keep Loving Keep Fighting]] #7.
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John Gerken was one of the participating zinesters on the ''[[Y'herd Me Zine Tour]]'' of the east coast in November of 2002, reading from '''I Hate This Part of Texas'''. The selections read from the zine were later documented in the [[compilation zine]] [[Y'herd Me]], which included the work of all the touring zinesters.
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 06:50, 5 October 2007

Issue #5 cover

I Hate This Part of Texas is a perzine by John Gerken of New Orleans, LA.

The title was a line of graffiti the author read at a rest stop in Oklahoma. The zine addresses queer and feminist issues through a number of personal anecdotes. Several issues have addressed Hurricaine Katrina, notably Issue #7, which was a split with Keep Loving Keep Fighting #7.

John Gerken was one of the participating zinesters on the Y'herd Me Zine Tour of the east coast in November of 2002, reading from I Hate This Part of Texas. The selections read from the zine were later documented in the compilation zine Y'herd Me, which included the work of all the touring zinesters.

External Links