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©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©
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©© a n d s o i t g o e s ©©
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©© a personal column by john weller ©©
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Hello, and welcome to the third - but unfortunately last - 'and so it goes'
column. It's been a lot of fun writing it and I've had some good laughs along
the way (some intentional, some unintentional), but I've now arrived at a point
where there's just not enough hours in the day to write everything I want to
write and still have time for my own projects. Something had to give, and
unfortunately it was ST+.
The other reason is that I've just had an unmissable offer to write for a US
zine-review-zine. It went something like this... Liz and I had sent a copy of
Rainbox, our small-scale paper zine, to an American magazine run by Doug
Holland, a writer we very much admire, and we were as pleased as f*ck when he
wrote back not only with praise, but an invitation to join the reviewing team
at Zine World.
Doug wants to expand the zine to justify the 'World' in its title, and this
means that I'll be fully committed from now on in, rounding up British
publications, reviewing them, and acting as Zine World's British correspondent.
There's no money involved, but we'll be receiving review copies of all the
zines that we've always wanted to read but could never afford. It's going to be
a lot of fun, and for once, a worthwhile return for my writing.
"But what are 'zines'?" Read on, gentle reader, read on...
An attempted history of the Zine phenomenon
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"What are zines?" Well, the simplest definition is anything self-published
that's genuinely 'alternative' and/or radical: anything that's dissenting, non-
mainstream and definitely not to be found in WH Smiffs. They can be about any
topic at all, providing they match the above definition. They could be about
music, politics (fascist right through to screaming left - taking in
libertarianism and Anarchism en route), people's personal lives, sexual
freedom, conspiracy theories, ufos, art, mail art; just about any subject
under the sun, providing it's written from an individual and dissenting point
of view.
The zine tradition goes back a long way. My own view is that it goes back to,
and includes, the religious and political pamphlets written during the English
Civil War, but not many historians would agree with that. The first true zines
were the mimeographed newsletters circulated by SF fans from the 1930s
onwards. 'Fan magazines' was shortened to 'fanzines' and then 'zines'. The
other main strand was the radical/hippie scene in the sixties: the San
Francisco Oracle, OZ, IT, and all the other manifestations of psychedelic
freakdom.
Punk picked on on the zine phenomenon in the late 1970s and emphasised the
funky 'do it yerself' side of it. And so it goes. It's a genuinely underground
phenomenon that's rarely sighted from the mainstream, and why should it be?
Zines are ordered and distributed via the post, and anyone with access to a
photocopier can make their voice heard. Now that's what I call true democracy,
rather than the sham that we normally live.
There are so many zines, covering so many different different topics, that it's
impossible to keep track of them all, let alone read every one of them. And
that's where the review zines come in. You send your publication to a review
zine, it gets reviewed and, hopefully, readers who are on the same wavelength
will write to you for it. It's a virtual community of like-minded conspirators
from all over the world who live through, and for, the morning's post.
Factsheet 5, the granddaddy of them all, reviews something like two or three
thousand US zines every six months, and ByPass - a small-scale copy of F5 that
I used to review for - covers a couple of hundred British zines every six
months. Zine World carries almost 500 reviews per quarterly issue, and will
soon be covering the British and European scene as well. There's a whole new
world out there if you'll only scratch the surface...
And now for the reviews
©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©
If I've whetted your appetite at all with the above, then here's some pointers
towards what's happening in the zine scene. The reviews cover a wide range of
publications and were originally written forRainbox #2.
"Here's the best of a four month trawl through the ever-increasing zine world,
and all reviewed in our usual impartial style: we review the best and forget
the rest."
Twisted Times #17
(? '95) Any zine that comes certified 99.44% free of fiction, poetry, folk
music, interpretive dance and pantomime can't be bad, but does TT really live
up to its cover promise of strange news, dangerous ideas, cultural terror,
reviews, humor and madness? Well, frankly, no... It's about as dangerous as
someone posing in front of a mirror.
The graphics and layout are original, but you soon get the feeling that more
effort went into the style than the contents. It's a good read, but the
radicalism just doesn't ring true, and there's far too many articles taken from
the Net; a sure sign of creative burnout. It's worth seeing a copy, just for
the look of it, but this is a zine that's just cruising, and no amount of
DTP'ed flashness can hide that.
File under 'Armchair Anarchist'.
44 DTP'ed pages, colour cover, quarterly, $3 ("overseas add $2 per issue, or
enough IRCs for 2.5oz mailing"): PO Box 271222, Concord, CA 94527, USA.
HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE FIRST 16 ISSUES OF SIDNEY SUPPEY'S QUARTERLY AND CONFUSED
PET MONTHLY
(March 22,1996) Why is it that anything good we find is always just about to
fold? Candi Stecker is one of the best writers in the zine world, and one who's
recently achieved her aim of paid freelance work. This means that future Sidney
Suppeys will be thinner on the ground than before. But dinna fret, here's the
best of her first four years of writing, from 1979 to 1983.
The selection starts with an overview of how SSQCPM, and zines in general, came
about; from a mixed parentage of SF fanzines and the Sixties underground press.
There were no examples to follow back then, and this shows in the range and
originality of the writing. Paperclips from around the world jostle next to
book reviews, her love of Devo and Philip K. Dick, science quotes, cartoons and
personal essays.
The best of these is 'The Self-Amusing Personality', an essay that neatly
defines the outsiderdom that most of us are familiar with. If you find
conflicting expressions of amusement and horror on your face much of the time
(when looking at the world at large), you're probably what I've come to call a
Self-Amusing Personality.
Other highlights are a review of 'Operators and Things: the Inner Life of a
Schizophrenic', and her reaction to the news of Philip K. Dick's death. This is
zine writing at its best: literate, intelligent and unmissable.
'It's a Wonderful Lifestyle' (Parts One & Two) - Candi's take on the 1970s - is
also available for $4.00 per part (but no trades, unfortunately).
20 11" x 8" pages, $2, back issues available: PO Box 515, Brisbane, CA 94005-
0515, USA (new address).
BEER FRAME NO.6: THE JOURNAL OF CONSPICUOUS CONSUMPTION
(June '96) It's all true, it's not satire. There really are products like
Kelly's Pork Brains in Milk Gravy and Lawn Makeup Spray. Paul reviews these,
and others, in a straight-faced style that never quite tells you whether he
approves of this consumer wonderland, or sees it as choice run riot.
It's witty, it's literate; it's as smug as hell. File under'amusing ourselves
to death'.
56 DTP'ed pages, 8.5"x5.5", occasional, $3 (no subs, cheques payable to Paul
Lukas): 160 St John's Place, Brooklyn, NY 11217, USA.
A WEEK OF SUB-INCEST
(June '96) Joseph Champniss questioned friends and neighbours about incestuous
incidents from their childhood, and then celebrated them in 12 pages of
beautifully understated drawings and captions. "No names or facial
characteristics have been changed - there are no regrets."
The shocks and secrets of burgeoning sexuality are drawn clearly and
accurately, and give the lie to the current line that incest is automatically
destructive.
Our favourite page is the one where Andrew and Alex masturbate while watching a
video of Andrew's mother giving birth to him. The square frames around the
illos are a nice touch and make them look almost like family snapshots.
16 hand-drawn & lettered A6 pages, 70p (inc. P&P): Swordfish Distro, PO Box 26,
Crawley, RH11 7YS, UK.
FOR THE CLERISY #17/18: ABOUT LATVIA
(Oct/Nov '96) Brant Kresovich is an American who teaches English in Latvia, and
FtC details his thoughts and experiences there. (See elsewhere in this issue
for an interview with him.) These two issues mark a change of style from
classic typewritten to slickly DTP'ed - a definite visual improvement.
Aunty Clockwise continues her snide answers to expatriates' problems; readers'
questions about Latvia are answered; there's an all-too-brief holiday in
Helsinki; young professionals talk about their mistreatment by Western firms;
the hot water fails; European languages change; and a curse is laid on the
Latvian Post Office.
And the world toilets correspondence that plumbed the depths has now been
dumped (by Editorial edict).
12 & 16 DTP'ed A5 pages, bi-monthly, "available for the usual: trade or letter
of comment": Brant Kresovich, Riga Business School, Skolas 11, LV-1010 Riga,
Latvia.
TANKED LIKE THE POSTMAN: FISH STORY
(May '96) Ahh, now this is more like it, and something we warmed to as fellow
beast keepers. Ken Miller recounts his stressful experiences in setting up a
tropical fish tank to counter his stress. It's one of those "O god, I wish I'd
never started this..." stories, but with a (semi-)happy ending. There's also a
packed page of mail art contacts.
8 X 8.5"x5.5" pages, "send a stamp or something cool in trade": ASKalice
Exchange Net, PO Box 246, Yardley, PA 19067-8246, USA.
THINGS I'M COLLECTING
(June '96) Mark Pawson is collecting "Crash Test Dummies babies in ejector
seats,enamel biker badges, Frufoos, 70's cereal toys and pissing/flashing
toys/keyrings". It's a wants list, but with a 50p price tag.
12 x A6 pages, 50p: Mark Pawson, P.O. Box 664, London, E3 4QR, UK.
SMILE #1
(Spring '96) Imagine a folded A3 sheet with beautifully designed agitprop
graphics and texts. Each A6 page is a self-contained postcard with altered
images, engravings and hand stampings that question our programmed responses to
life.
Pick and mix from: 5 things you should try to do every day (all of them wise),
Stewart Home and Polly Toynbee discuss theory on the Victoria line ("why don't
we invest the money into art instead?"), abandon poetry, and 10 other thought
provoking pages.
"Please fold, bend, spindle and mutilate this object in whatever way you see
fit. No lasting value guaranteed." #2 should be out now.
16 pages (folded A3 sheet), irregular, free for SAE or trade: Danny Birchall,
3b Montpelier Road, Brighton, BN1 2L, UK.
ERASER CARVERS QUARTERLY #24
(Autumn '95) A small but welcoming mag filled with readers' contributions and
rubberstampings. There's also ads for suppliers and 'how-to' booklets. ECQ has
a friendly tone, and crams an amazing amount of info and graphics into just 16
pages. The highlight, for us, was an article on how to make an 8-page booklet
from a single sheet.
16 8.5"x5.5" pages, quarterly, $3, subs - $10 for 4 US, $12 Canada, $15 foreign
(cheques payable to Mick Mather): PO Box 222, Clay, NY 13041, USA.
THEE DATA BASE NO.7
(Spring '96) Thee Data Collectiv is a group of Scottish activists who are
trying to bring people together in ways that encourage original thought, rather
than passive consumption. Among other things, they've organised club nights,
gigged, and broadcast two radio shows. tdb, the zine, is just one small part of
this, and a part that seems to be overlooked at times... Which is a shame, as
this is the most original and intelligent British zine that we've seen to date.
Issue 7 contains: off-beat news items; conspiracy theories as a healthy view of
life; an intelligent overview of the media hysteria provoked by Leah Betts' E-
induced death; two tired pieces on the decline of style mags and the Function
of the Student in Britain Today (who cares?); a defense of technology;
practical advice on how to immobilise yourself at a demo; a good directory of
activist contacts; and best of all, a 7-page interview with The K Foundation
about art, music, and what really happened when they cremated a million
portraits of the Queen (£1,000,000). Read this!
They take a while to reply, so be prepared for a 6-8 week wait.
28 DTP'ed A5 pages, irregular, free for donation or SAE, subs - send 1st class
stamp for each future issue: thee data collectiv, PO Box 1238, Glasgow, G12
8AB, UK.
CLEAN RESTROOMS THIS EXIT: A TRAVEL DIARY & CALIFORNIA IS A FUNNY PLACE...
(Oct '96) If you only know Ashley from Global Mail, then you in for a
surprise... Clean Restrooms is her blow-by-blow account of moving (by truck and
trailer) from Illinois to San Francisco. California continues the story after
she arrives.
The first thing that strikes you is the intensely personal nature of the
writing, which can be seen as being either incredibly brave, or incredibly
self-indulgent. I'd (Liz) say the former; it's well written and utterly
compulsive to read, although the painful level of honesty can make you uneasy
at times.
The most unforgettable moment is when Ashley lives out one of her sexual
fantasies, of making love through a hole in a sheet during her period - blood
everywhere, and then finger-painting each other's body. Anyone who can write
with this much honesty deserves to be read.
28 8.5"x5.5", and 24 11" x 8" pages, $?, trades? : Ashley Parker Owens, PO Box
410837, San Francisco, CA 94141-0837, USA.
OBLONG #4
(Nov '96) Another of our favourite personal zines. This issue contains: some
fine mask drawings; a page from Candi Strecker detailing a month in the life of
a survivalist Martha Stewart; a nice 'neighbourhood pervert' reminiscence from
A. Kolthoff; Five Films People Should Know More About; odd items that appeared
in his office; entertaining letters; a review of Savage Art by Robert Polito;
and the obligatory zine reviews.
12 11"x8.5" pages, irregular, "available for a perceptible display of interest:
like publications in trade, letters of comment, contributions or anything else
that catches my eye": 1732 Washington Street, Apt. #8, San Francisco, CA 94109-
3625, USA.
PLUCK NO.6: A NEWSLETTER FOR JAWHARPISTS
(May '95) This is an old copy, but we've included it as a good example of what
zines could be, but so rarely are: a gathering of like-minded enthusiasts with
a shared obsession.
Pluck has reviews of jawharps (trumps) from around the world; letters; a
Sumpter Valley get-together; Festival Reflections; jawharpist news; and an
enthusiastic review of another journal. This a lovely piece of work that left
us with a warm glow, despite having no interest at all in the subject...
8 11"x8.5" pages, tri-annual, subs - $10 for 3 issues: PO Box 14466, Seattle,
Washington, USA, 98114.
POOPSHEET #15
(Feb '96) Rick Bradford reviews just about anything that comes his way, and
with a nicely unpretentious style. His main interest is US and foreign comix,
but there's also pages of zine and video reviews, zine news, letters and
classifieds. The tiny print means that he can squeeze 25 reviews onto each
page, so you can imagine how dense and text-heavy this is. It's not Factsheet
5, but it's pretty damn good.
18 11"x8.5" pages, bi-monthly? $2.00 post paid (US): PO Box 161095, Fort Worth,
TX 76161-1095, USA.
WORD WATCHERS #39
(Sept '96) Another welcome issue of Jeanette Handling's wordplay and neologism
zine. This issue told us, among other things, that 'Flash' means 'traditional
tattoo designs like red roses, sailing ships and pierced hearts', and defined
other delights. There's also the usual newspaper clippings and cartoons that
comment on how we use words.
6 11"x8,5" pages, free for contribution or SAE: 2405 Sanford Avenue, Alton, IL
62002-2838, USA.
QUARTERLY REVIEW OF DOUBLESPEAK VOL.XXII, NO.1
(Oct '95) An academic journal published by the National Council of Teachers of
English in the States. Each issue contains short contributions about
euphemisms, jargon and obfuscation from a wide range of sources. Politicians,
the military, and the politically correct are the main targets, with mediaspeak
coming a close second. There's also a good review of Franco: A Biography, where
the reviewer points out that violence to language precedes violence to people.
12 11"x8.5" pages, quarterly, ISSN 0735 5920, US sub - $10 per year (cheques
payable to NCTE): 1111 W. Kenyon Road, Urbana, Illinois 61801-1096, USA.
BUMMERS & GUMMERS, YEAR 2, NO.7
(Fall'95) B&G's subtitle - a crusty magaZINE of rural interests and urban self-
sufficiency lightly seasoned with dry humor - just about sums it up. This is a
self-sufficiency zine from people who are doing it, rather than talking about
it. It comes wrapped in a funky homemade style that took us straight back to
the Whole Earth Catalogue of the early 1970s.
Enquire within for: homesteading questions and answers; advice on tools; dirty
tricks to keep your car running; a contract for fair work/trade deals; some
local politicking; an interview with two elderly neighbours; animal tales;
Coquine's 'boat-to-cabin' conversion (with drawings and sketches); Fall
mushroom picking; a 2135 mile cycle trip; some thoughts on 'native' and 'non-
native' plants; excerpts from Pathetic Life; letters, a recipe, and lots of
local ads.
We liked this - we liked this a lot.
32 11"x8.5" pages, quarterly, $2.50, sub - $10 for 4, free to prisoners: PO Box
91, Lorane, OR 97451, USA.
5,000 endings in search of a beginning
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If anyone wants to know how to get hold of any of the review zines mentioned in
the introduction, then feel free to drop us a line and we'll send you the
details.
John Weller & Liz Roudiani, Flat 1, 28 Victoria Road,
Bournemouth, Dorset, BH1 4RR, UK.
And now it's time to go. I'd like to wish ST+ all the best for the future, and
let's hope that it continues to improve and spread like wildfire across the
'Net. It's been an interesting experience writing for it, and it's certainly
broadened my vocabulary. All the best, Dave, and may you 'live long and
prosper'.
The End (promise)
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