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  • '''Brilliant Mistake''' is a [[perzine]] out of Chicago, IL, U.S.A. by Carrie. ...ome poetry. The layout is old school [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]] with a retro kind of design vibe.
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  • ...of Psychoholics Unanimous, gave her a copy of [[The Scaredy Cat Stalker]], a [[perzine]] about stalking Henry Thomas of E.T. fame, published by Krista G ...Scruff was reviewed in the final issue of [[Factsheet Five]] (#64) and ran for three issues before Raz folded it and moved to Chicago to attend Columbia C
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  • '''SLANder''' was a science fiction fanzine by Jan Sadler Penney. ...sue of ''SLANder'' was published in the 1950s in Jackson, Mississippi, U.S.A. The second issue, published in New Orleans, Louisiana, appeared in 1957, t
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  • ...known for singing in Bay Area punk bands and making art - but he also was a zine editor. ...t, better known as [[Aaron Cometbus]]. He also contributed art and writing for early issues of [[Robert Eggplant]]'s zine, [[Absolutely Zippo]].
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  • '''Kindergarden Moshpit''' is a [[Riot Grrrl]] [[zine]]. ...dergarden Moshpit will be, I'm not aiming for anything specific. Maybe its a search to 'find myself' or some shit like that. Who knows."
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  • '''Sarah Wood''' is a [[zine]] distributor from Chicago, Il., U.S.A. ...ham, North Carolina, U.S.A., acquired as part of the Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture. The zine collection is called the Sarah Wood
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  • '''Cynical Soul''' is a [[zine]] by [[Victoria Crowder Payne]]. ...rch and [[Search and Destroy]]), and Jeremy McConnell (Flavorpak) together for real discussion and community building. Subsequent guests included William
    2 KB (310 words) - 03:35, 29 November 2007
  • ...nt Accost''' was a [[perzine]] created by [[Lakisha]] of New York, NY, U.S.A. ...a while, during which time she produced, with her friend [[Abby Denson]], a cable show called ''Rools Like Ozzy''.
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  • ...but having nowhere and no one to turn to for help and not even having one friend. ...riends, can’t find a job, and can’t even afford to seek counseling. What’s a guy with autism supposed to do around here to get some support?" from ''Liv
    839 bytes (144 words) - 08:34, 15 December 2007
  • ...and issued by [[David St. Albans]] in 1993 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A. .../marketing issue for each artist involved and was mostly put together on a friend's professional grade Mac graphics computer)...and SWAC (Southwest Writers A
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  • ...ght out banned. Editor Jack J discovered horror and splatter movies during a three year stint in London, England (1988-90) where he frequented many an a ...al work on the zine otherwise. Most of the reviews were written by Jack J. A handful of reviews were submitted by ''Simon Nielsen'', co-editor of the pu
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  • ...trated and written by New York artist [[Liz Baillie]]. Each issue features a hand-stamped cover (and issue five's cover was printed in glow-in-the-dark- ...eenage punks. The series begins with 16-year-old Kate falling for a female friend and 13-year-old Joey dealing with issues with his father.
    875 bytes (130 words) - 01:12, 23 December 2009
  • '''Fluxxi'''i is a mental health [[distro]] based in Ohio, USA. ...ssions relating to mental health, directly or indirectly, that encompasses a huge variety of topics.
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  • [[Trying to Fuck The Furniture]] was a one-shot by [[SaBean MoreL]] that dealt with her long-term heroin use and r ...ed to seduce him in order to get money to support her habit. Sugar's death a few weeks later, coupled with MoreL's increasing habit, led her to shelve t
    1,015 bytes (161 words) - 23:39, 19 November 2011
  • ...and one offs between the late 90's and about 2009. For a time he also ran a small zine library in Anchorage, Alaska where he lived. ...aken down. The items that made up the zine library he ran were given to a friend who donated them to the Consortium library at the University of Anchorage,
    920 bytes (155 words) - 05:35, 1 September 2010
  • The Deadbeats is a comic-zine created in the summer of 2015 by Beth Wood (aka [[Squimoo]]). ...lowing the lives of 20-something's Effy and Maven and their friends. It is a mildly satirical 'slice of life' strip series that tackles issues such as s
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  • ...the sixth of June of 2006. It was initially a gift for a friend but, after a few months, Mae decided to distribute it to the zine world. ...onships, traveling to places like Philippines, Thailand and Singapore, and a piece about concerts she's been to and how even this simplest of experience
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  • '''Functionally Ill''' is a mental health [[zine]] by [[Laura-Marie Taylor]]. ...coming bipolar", Laura-Marie discusses what depression and mania feel like for her and describes her voices. She details the process of getting on with c
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  • ...ed horror [[fanzine]], since its creation in 2001. He has written fanzines for over half of his life time, since the age of 14 in 1995. ...3 sheet publication reviewing fanzines called [[Zine Machine]] that lasted for three issues.
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  • ...Love''' is a [[minicomic]] by [[Abby Denson]], published in New York, U.S.A. ...ch with Denson, and ''Tough Love'' was then serialized in the magazine for a couple of years, garnering it many fans around the world. At the same time,
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  • '''A New Clear Threat''' was a [[punk]] [[fanzine]] from Dublin, Ireland that was done firstly by PA and t ...t sold zines, Freebird records and Base X. '''A New Clear Threat''' lasted for 5 or 6 issues until 1984/5. The band Deko and PA were in, Paranoid Visions,
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  • A '''split zine''' is a [[zine]] written by more than one author. Generally a split zine combines two existing or new zines in one issue. When reading th ...ying costs and distribution, partnering up with a friend to collaborate on a project, or when two [[zinester]]s write about similar subjects.
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  • '''Chaos Runs The Family''' or '''CRTF''' is a [[zine]] that was first published by Zeke Pando in 2000. ...been a solo project with 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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  • ...ño and Cristina Ahita [[Image:Portada_definitiva.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Art for Art's Shake #6 cover by Chromatic Nü [https://www.facebook.com/NuIllustrat ...oined in, and several weeks and a lot of DIY later the first number of Art for Art's Shake could be found in the more popular pubs of the cultural scene i
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  • ...teman writes, she "started making a fanzine called [[Snarla]] with my best friend from high school, [[Miranda July]]." ...um Benning left the band and JD Samson filled her place. The band released a number of recordings before going on hiatus in 2006.
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  • ...ter]], best known for his 1990s zine [[Topical Studies]], as well as being a folk music singer/songwriter and [[poet]]. According to the''Rick Howe Memo ...ce community lost our friend, Rick Howe. We have added a new Memorial Page for him. - Wrong Place website</blockquote>
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  • '''Ignatz''' was a science fiction fanzine by [[Nancy Share]]. ...into the 1970s. It was an 8 1/2 by 11 inch, mimeographed publication, with a dittoed cover.
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  • ...published by H. (Herman) C. Koenig (1893-1959), in New York City, NY, U.S.A. ...luence for publishing the "journal of literary comment" came from his late friend and fellow Kalem Club member, [[H. P. Lovecraft]].
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  • '''Chuch''' was a science fiction fanzine by Avedon Carol and Rob Hansen. ''Chuch'' appeared in 1986 and was published in the UK. It was a [[one shot]] fanzine of 22 pages, Quatro size.
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  • Started in June or July of 2005, ''Poet's Espresso'' is a [[zine]]/[[newsletter]]/free independent publication that takes contributio ...n, and his then co-editor Nikki Quismondo, with an occasional sponsor of a friend when in need, but recent years has been funded by the San Joaquin Delta Col
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  • '''Gearhead Nation''' was a monthly [[D.I.Y.]] [[punk]] [[Freesheet|freesheet]] [[zine]] from Dublin, ...their friend Alan) called Catharsis. '''Gearhead Nation''' was a mainstay for three and half years in pre-internet Dublin, lasting from the early 90’s
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  • '''Erick Lopez''' is a writer and editor for [[Communique']] zine. He resides in Norwalk, California. ...abel called My Dog Brownie (named after Francisco's dog). Erick also wrote a couple of [[perzine]]s: [[Inside Looking Out]] and [[Men Are From Bars not
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  • ...rsonal writing. A story from ''Cupsize'' about Sasha and a friend going to a strip club and recounting the experience was featured in [[The Factsheet Fi ...Francisco Chronicle'', ''San Francisco Chronicle Magazine'', [[Bitch]], ''A Girl's Guide to Taking Over the World'', and [[The Factsheet Five Zine Read
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  • '''Some People Are Jerks''' is a [[zine]] from Austin, Texas, U.S.A., published in the 1990's. The editors for this publication are Waverly, Zana, Sausylito and Lula. The zine covers the
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  • '''Grue''' was a science fiction fanzine by Dean Grennell. ...hrough 29. Issue 30 marked a return to FAPA distribution for a run of over a dozen more issues.
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  • ...e details, and its old-school charm (it was originally processed solely on a manual typewriter). Unfortunately, Issue#3 of XYZed received some rather h ...the outer reaches of pop culture and obscure entertainment, but there was a more personal touch.
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  • '''Angry Violist''' is a [[zine]] published in Cambridge, U.K. ...problems and preconceptions that come with being a violist (as opposed to a violinist).
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  • '''Joshua Plague''' is a prolific zine editor and musician from the Northwest U.S. Joshua's real name is Joshua Ploeg. He began to call himself "Plague" as a play on the mispronunciations of his real last name "Ploeg" and it stuck th
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  • ...ht''' was a short lived campus [[zine]] published in Bristol, Pennsylvania for the Bucks County Community College campus. ...uction of the zine came to an end after it was banned from the BCCC campus for its controversial content.
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  • ...is an artist, musician and [[minicomic]]s creator living in New York, U.S.A. ...ntil the story came to an end. In 2006, the entire series was released as a graphic novel called ''Tough Love'', and published by Manic D Press. In 200
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  • ...is a sequel to Sean's zine [[Binocular Rebellious]] and is intended to be a continuing publication. ...leading us deeper down, down, into Goblin Town, a place that used to look a lot like America but is now an overgrown punk-rock European forest brimming
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  • '''better! magazine''' was a zine begun by [[cee jacob cee]] and Salvador M. Carmagno. ...mic]]s, doodles, essays, and art on the the terrors of high school life in a small town, pop culture, the underground music scene and pro-wrestling".
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  • '''Kathleen Hanna''' (born 12 November 1968) is a musician, zine [[writer]] and one of the founders of the [[Riot Grrrl]] mov ...ntense corporate media scrutiny and exploitation, several women called for a media blackout and this eliminated the movement's presence in the mainstrea
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  • '''On Edge''' is a mental health [[zine]] with a political edge published by [[Tracey Mitchell]] in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, ...by Erika Dyck, articles on parenting with mental illness and dealing with a parent's mental illness, ''On Psychoanalytic Poetry'' by Jackie Kennelly
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  • ...H. Pugmire, is a writer and fanzine editor from Seattle, Washington, U.S.A. ...ications. Both titles also featured contributions from Pugmire's long time friend [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]].
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  • '''Sister Nobody''' is a [[zine]] released in San Francisco, California, U.S.A. by Laura. ...s, Sister Nobody was among the early wave of queer zines, and a proto-type for [[Riot Grrrl]]. Laura played in the band Snakepit with Billy Karren, who wa
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  • ...Smith from his home at 308 Groveland St. in Haverhill, Massachusetts, U.S.A. ...shed in his backyard where he put it together. The publication was noted for its typographical errors, referred to by H.P. Lovecraft as "tryoutisms". ''
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  • Released in the late 1980's in Selden, NY, U.S.A., '''Scut''' was a photocopied, [[Cut and Paste|cut and paste]] zine devoted to [[Anarchism|an ...ing Gymnast; "Diary of a Vege-Marxi-Tarian" by Ray; "News from The Front", a series of reports on activites such as the December, 1986 activities of the
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  • '''Dishwasher Pete''' is the pen name for U.S. zinester Pete Jordan, the writer and publisher of the now defunct [[Di ...and writing about it. The resulting zine, <b>''Dishwasher''</b> attracted a legion of fans and near-legendary status within the world of zines. In tota
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  • '''Different Shades of Normal''' is a [[perzine]] created by Zippity Zinedra of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Zippity Zinedra is a queer identified zinester, writer and artist.
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  • '''Diablerie''' was a science fiction fanzine by Bill "Willie" Watson. ...e'' appeared in February 1944, published in San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
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  • '''The Monthly Monthly''' was a science fiction fanzine published in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ...ne Charest when I started seeing her and Bob Weir because 'he was Robert's friend'. Randy Beichardt was an ex-officio member..." And they put out ''The Month
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  • ...nnes Bok''' (July 2, 1914-April 11, 1964) is an American artist who played a major part in the development of early science fiction fanzines. ...early Bok painting owned by Petaja was painted on a piece of rusted metal. A sketch owned by writer and artist Clark Ashton Smith was done in crayon sin
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  • '''Butcher Queers''' is a limited edition LGBTQ [[zine]] from Dublin, Ireland. ...k from writers and artists to produce the first issue. It was published as a 34 page zine in April 2008. ''Butcher Queers'' is printed in black and mage
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  • ...him, and Comicopia thrived. Jeffrey left Comicopia in June 2007 to create a new zine, [[The Original Universe]]. .... He ultimately ended up graduating from Concordia University in 1990 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Animation, having specifically focused on t
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  • ...ey Marie Kitley'' (now ''Parkhill'') and ''Sarah Shay''. It was created as a physical companion to Parkhill's webcomic, '''Life's So Rad'''. ...gan to publish the zine that same year. It was published sporadically, for a total of six issues printed between 2002-2003. The zine was photocopied, ha
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  • '''Jenna Freedman''' is a [[zinester]] and librarian from New York City, N.Y., U.S. ...ans Yahoo Group and of Radical Reference. She writes and speaks frequently for trade and scholarly publications, as well as library and academic conferenc
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  • ...ing and women gamers, Game Quest ultimately explores the theme of fighting for what one believes in the face of near certain failure. Inspired by a true story, Game Quest follows the diverse characters of Madre Games Entert
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  • '''Eydthe Eyde''', better known as '''Tigrina''', and as Lisa Ben, is a fanzine publisher, writer and musician. ...g to fanzines, she was also one of the Associate Editors of [[The Mutant]] for the first issue, which appeared in 1946.
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  • ...sued by me: [[David St. Albans]] in 1993 in [[Albuquerque, New Mexico]] to a select group of people. It was never on any comic book stands nor sold via ...scale. Some Mac users did have some pretty heavy-duty interfaces going on for making graphics. However cut & Paste, collage, hand drawing and copier tech
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  • ...ugh initially popular amongst the scenester-set it soon became known as "L.A.'s most hated zine" due to its editors alienating some of the local zines l ...to a copy machine at a friend's workplace and would photocopy after hours for free.
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  • ...he site and began debugging and updating all the code with the help of his friend, [https://twitter.com/wardenunleashed Andrew Johnson]. ...w an immediate flurry of activity as zinesters created informational pages for their own zines, their friends’ zines, and various distros.
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  • '''The Hanged Men Dance''' was a punk and literary fanzine by Jim Shedden and Sara Bellum Heinonen. ...o, 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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  • ...orn and the New Zealand based HORROR STORY. The section lineup has changed a lot since the beginning. Here were the sections for the first issue:
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  • '''Aaron Cometbus''' is a [[zinester]] from Berkley, California, who writes the [[zine]], [[Cometbus] Aaron Cometbus began creating zines with teenage friend [[Jesse Michaels]] in the 1980s. These early zines, now lost, lead to the
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  • '''Scavenger's Newsletter''' was a literary [[newsletter]] by Janet Fox (1940-2009). ...''Scavenger's Newsletter'' beginning in 1984 from Osage City, Kansas, U.S.A., until it ceased publication in 2003.
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  • ...ul stories—some of them told best through [[comics]]. Unfortunately, it is a waning artistic tradition, crushed by the current realities of the marketpl I sat in an open-air restaurant, hunched over my amok, a national dish of steamed, curried fish and served here in an open coconut,
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  • ...iences are encouraged to submit! Contributors do not have to identify with a particular gender and/or as feminists in order to submit work to Hoax. ...details can be found on [http://hoaxzine.tumblr.com/post/71971515204/call-for-submissions-hoax-10-feminisms-and Hoax's tumblr listing].
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  • ...ion. A coffee addict and developper by day, she crafts by night to create a variety of Artist Trading Cards, journal pages and zines. Often about cats *A Headful of Cats / Des chats plein la tête
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  • ...''Doris'' is always an educational experience, but feels more like a wise friend opening up to you rather than an authority talking at you. She explores her ...ically obligated to do it, as she had identified a lack of effective tools for opening up discussions on consent and the subtle ways abuse and manipulatio
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  • ...ds the writing and not any visual medium. For most issues the cover art is a unique piece done by an artist of the author's choosing. ...dds and ends. Thoughts on patriotism, my salvation experience, dating, and a series of conversations. Cera Smith cover art. Quarter-size. Approximate re
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  • '''Aorta VI''' is a [[Collective]], featuring the work and collaborations of [[Jared Blunk]], [ ...ished [[minicomic]] work from Pj's house in Redondo Beach, California, U.S.A.
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  • ...jpg|200px|thumb|right|'''Shards Of Glass In Your Eye!''' <br/> #13, ''Take A Breather'' <br/>March 2015]] Established in 1995 by [[Kari Tervo]], '''Shards Of Glass In Your Eye!''' is a humor + random zine (as described by the author) featuring offbeat insights
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  • '''R*E*P*E*A*T''' is a [[fanzine]], independent record label, and music promoter based in Cambridg ...in 1994 by Cambridge schoolteacher [[Richard Rose]]. The fanzine began as a homage to the Manic Street Preachers, but it quickly grew to also include a
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  • ...ts, businesspeople and events. In addition to features, the zine dedicated a reviews section to the work of bands, filmmakers, restaurants, websites and '''Love, Chicago''' was made possible by a group of people, including, but not limited to: Chris Beck, Mike Segawa, J
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  • ...In the insular [[comics]] community Shaw has made a name for himself (and a good one it is) by willfully eschewing the mainstream to follow his own dec ...He's a former D&D nerd and Boy Scout, who girls fawn over and who emanates a relaxed sense of cool, even while effusing about favorite science fiction m
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  • ...happy ending while the supplementary features and ''Mini'' editions are of a more light-hearted nature. Originally released under the imprint of ''The Tangled Press'', a name derived from her [[TangleCrafts]] blog, later issues & reprints of the
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  • ...al and international punk and alternative community became incorporated as a steady part of the zine. ...man were also involved in the music scene as the guitarist and the drummer for the local punk band StuntCock. The zine included many artists and musicians
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  • * [[Annex]] by A. Langley Searles * [[Drake's Potpourri]] by David A. Drake
    36 KB (5,546 words) - 02:28, 18 May 2021
  • ...und artists. Each issue contains interviews, record reviews, drawings, and a CD compilation. It’s edited, designed, photocopied, folded, and stapled b ...erent covers on each side with content meeting in the center, and includes a burned CD compilation of bands featured in the zine with many previously un
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  • * [[Entropy (U.S.A.)]] * [[Epitaph for my heart]]
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  • * [[Pandora's Box (U.S.A.)]] * [[Panic: A Guide to Recovering From Panic Attacks With Resources for Managing Long-Term Anxiety]]
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  • * [[10 Seconds from a Breakdown]] * [[3 a.m.]]
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