The unexpected
package arrived in the mail in November 1989. It was from a former
colleague, Simon Dumenco, an editor at Seventeen Magazine
at the time and a media junkie who, like me, appreciated alternative
and obscure publications.
A
Few of My Favorite Zines
Sidney
Suppey's Quarterly & Confused Pet Monthly, v. 6 no.
2
Editor Candi Strecker shares her life with readers,
telling them that being 40-plus isn't that bad. "I'm
more focused and self-disciplined, much less a prisoner
of my moods, and I'm actually pursuing the one career
I've always wanted -- freelance writing," she says. I liked
this issue's feature titled "The Theory and Practice
of Lawn Goose Dressing." She explores the small-town
phenomenon of putting clothes on ceramic geese and even
tracks down the Midwest's largest manufacturer of goose
clothing. $2 to Candi Strecker, PO Box 515, Brisbane,
CA 94005-0515.
The
East Village Inky #5
Ayun Halliday is the mother of a young girl named Inky
and edits this pocket-sized, all-handwritten zine about
life in New York's gritty Tompkins Square Park neighborhood.
She writes about the comings and goings of area small
businesses, reviews retail shops and restaurants, and
shares recipes. She also keeps readers updated on Inky's
life. $2 to Ayun Halliday, 406 E. 9th St. #7, New York,
NY 10009.
The
Duplex Planet #155 David Greenberger's long-running zine profiles nursing
home residents and lets them answer questions of this
sort: What does it mean to sell out? If Gone with the
Wind didn't exist, what would be your favorite movie?
His questions are never mocking, and Greenberger treats
all of his interview subjects with respect. $2 to David
Greenberger, PO Box 1230, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866.
Convention
Crasher
The anonymous editor practices "gonzo journalism" by
using fake press passes to get into New York City's
best trade shows, then writing about what he witnesses.
For his most recent issue, the editor got into the Fancy
Food and Confections Show, the Industrial Maintenance
Convention, the Frozen Food Show, and other confabs.
$3 to Convention Crasher, Box 1684, New York, NY 10113.
How
to Find Print Zines
Zine
Book Resources.
Veteran zine editor Chip Rowe has compiled one of the
Internet's largest collections of zine resources, including
how-to guides, interviews with editors, and links to
fanzines. www.zinebook.com
Factsheet
Five
This zine directory hasn't been published in two years,
but its online component is still useful for those looking
for fanzine information and resources. There's also
snail-mail and website information for the "editor's
choice" zines. www.factsheet5.com
A
Reader's Guide to the Underground Press Answers to frequently asked questions about zines,
zine listings, and reader/publisher resources. www.undergroundpress.org
"Thought
youd be interested in this," he wrote on a Post-It Note
attached to a copy of a newsprint magazine titled Factsheet Five,
a title that I wasnt familiar with. That was all he said.
Factsheet
Five, or F5, as its called in the alternative press, was
a catalog of thousands of publications with titles like The Food
Insect Newsletter, Hossatopia, Homocore, and Fame
Whore. There was Dick E. Bird News, the zine for serious
bird watchers, and SOS (Secular Organization for Sobriety),
a pamphlet for people looking for alternatives to religion-based
recovery programs. Often, the descriptions of the quirky magazines
contents were stranger than the titles.
That was my
introduction to the world of fanzinesor zines, pronounced
zeens.
Dumenco knew
I was a voracious reader and he figured Id want to somehow
be a part of this subculture and network with these publishers.
He was right. Within a week, I started my own fanzine, which I called
Obscure Publications. I intended to serve as a trade magazine of
sorts for this publishing genre.
In Obscure,
I profiled the most interesting of these amateur journalists and
gave their works wider exposure. For a decade, I traded publications
with thousands of other micro-press
publishers, taught classes on fanzine history and production, and
spoke at conferences about the role of zines in the publishing world.
Often, I was asked whether fanzines were journalism and if their
creators could be called journalists.
But
Is it Journalism?
The best answer:
Yes and no. Some fanzines are sloppy rants produced by psychopaths.
(One of these guys sent me a 10-page death threat in 1992; he was
unhappy with a review of his "work.") Others are carefully
produced works of excellent writing and reporters.
So what are
these fanzines?
Simply put,
theyre homemade publications that usually have a staff of
one and are produced as entertainment and not for profit. They generally
dont have regular publishing schedules, and theyre usually
traded or sold through the mail. Many of them are handwritten and
Xeroxed. Others are pounded out on old Royal typewriters. Some,
though, are published on newsprint or glossy stock.
Zines
Fill Niches
Mike Gunderloy,
who founded the Factsheet Five catalog in the mid-1980s,
says zines are "so diverse as to be pretty much unclassifiable."
The mainstream press, when writing about the zine scene, usually
showcases the quirky ones--The Daily Cow, Pills-A-Go-Go,
and The Tawdry Times, for example. But Gunderloy notes that
" a lot of people are doing solid, useful work in niche markets
that traditional magazines never fill."
Zine publishers
cant be stereotyped- nor can their readers. The zine
producers I know range from gay punk rockers, to legal assistants,
to college librarians, to the man who pens "The Playboy Adviser."
While zines
are usually pegged as reading material for teens and GenX-ers, thats
not always true. James Danky, the middle-aged newspapers and periodicals
librarian at the Wisconsin State Historical Society, has one of
the countrys largest fanzine collections. Hes collected
them around the world. Tom Trusky, an English professor (hes
headed to retirement age) at Boise State University, discovered
fanzines in the early 90s. He was so taken by them that he
curated two campus exhibits.
"There
are goofy publications in the subculture," Trusky notes, "but
some zines are very serious and on serious subjects."
Fanzines have
been around since the Depression era. The earliest ones were rooted
in science fiction. When Gunderloy started his Factsheet Five
catalog in 1982, he focused on these sci-fi publications. Over time,
though, he branched out into other area as the zine world expanded
with the declining price of photocopying.
Music (especially
punk) publications took off in the 1980s, as did gay and lesbian
zines. By late 1989, Gunderloys zine catalog was published
bimonthly and each issue had 140-pages of tightly packed reviews.
When I jumped into the zine world in 1989 (while serving as a senior
editor at Milwaukee Magazine), I discovered there were many
zine publishers who took their work seriously (while having fun
doing it). Many of them produced desktop-published zines that were
more entertaining and better written than some professional magazines.
One of the
best editors is David Greenberger, who interviews residents of nursing
homes for his long-running zine, The Duplex Planet. Hes
published 155 issues so far, all of them filled with honest, respectful
conversations with senior citizens.
John Marr
is another veteran zine publisher with his Murder Can Be Fun
zines, now over a decade old. Marr is a self-taught expert on disasters
and has written historically accurate tales about the Great Boston
Molasses Flood, various Disney Parks tragedies, and postal worker
killings. Marr, who says he spends weekends doing research at the
library, was recognized a few years ago in a front-page Wall
Street Journal profile.
Another favorite
of mine is Al Hoff who publishes Thrift Score, a zine about
shopping for second-hand goods. Its a quirky publication (which
was recently published in book form) that profiles popular thrift
items and offers tips on thrift shopping. Hoff is considered an
expert in this area and is often called on by feature writers looking
for "analysts" to comment on the second-hand store scene.
Fred Woodworth
is regarded as the undergrounds leading expert on anarchism.
Hes been publishing The Match: An Anarchist Journal from
his Tucson home for 30 years now and is working on his 95th issue.
Experts
on Everything
In the zine
world, there are experts on nearly everything. A young man who calls
himself Dishwasher Pete, has been publishing Dishwasher,
a handwritten zine about his restaurant job adventure, since the
1980s. Hes finally gotten recognition from the mainstream
media. (David Letterman even invited him on his show a few years
ago.) Pete was recently discovered by the popular Public Radio International
show, "This American Life." Its producers put him to work.
Now a regular on the program, Petes beat is the restaurant
industry. Most recently, he covered a restaurant association show.
I recently
started selling Mark Saltveits zine, The Palindromist,
in my online store. His journal for people who write and read palindromes
is a cult favorite. Salveit proudly reports that New York Times
crossword puzzle editor Will Shortz recently cited his magazine
and used one of his puzzles on NPRs Weekend Edition.
Success
Story
One of the
great fanzine success stories surrounds Beer Frame: The Journal
of Conspicuous Consumption, which was founded in 1993. Editor
Paul Lukas examined products of the likes of Armour Pork Brains
and Darkie toothpaste from Asia. His zine led to a book, and got
him writing jobs with New York Press, Fortune, and
Money magazine.
Most zine
editors dont start their publications with the hope of becoming
acknowledged experts in their field, and to be mentioned on public
radio. So why then do they publish? What drives them to put so much
effort into work that gets so little exposure? Thats a question
thats been asked for decades. In the 1940s, psychiatrist Frederic
Wertham discovered these small publications and tried to understand
what made them so appealing. In the end, he decided that the answer
was in the "aliveness and naturalness" of zines.
He wrote in
his 1978 book, The World of
Zines:
"Having seen, in my years in psychiatry, so much of the general
flaws in human
relations, I was attracted to something that was so positive and
was not acknowledged
as such. I felt that (the zine culture) was essentially unpolluted
by the greed, the arrogance, and the hypocrisy that has invaded
so much of our intellectual life."
As for zine
publishers, they offer a variety of answers to the question of "Why
Publish?" Daniel Drennan, editor of Inquisitor, an attractive
zine that covers art, technology, and culture, says, "Independent
voices are so important in a world of corporate media culture. If
I didnt do this, Id go crazy."
In my 10 years
of exchanging zines and letters with other publishers, I often asked
myself why I kept publishing. I realized it was the networking with
other writers that motivated me to continue Obscure Publications.
I traded zines and letters with people like "Mr. Apology,"
who set up a confession telephone line and published transcripts
of the callers tell-alls in a magazine titled-of course-Apology.
I got to
know Beowulf Thorne, publisher of Diseased Pariah News, the
zine for persons living with AIDS. Another snail-mail friend was
Jeff Kelly, whose Temp Slave! zine was publishing stories
about the exploitation of temporary workers long before the mainstream
press began examining the issue.
Over the years,
Ive probably received tens of thousands of zines, with most
of them ending up in the trash can. I have saved the best zines,
though. They fill some five boxes that Ive carted around for
years. These zines have names like Chips Closet Cleaner,
Slug & Lettuce, Evil Eye, My Pathetic Life,
and Crash. Only one of the five titles is still being published
today.
Print
to Web
Many zine
editors have abandoned their print editions and moved to the web
in recent years. The publishing subculture still thrives, though,
I realized a few weeks ago when my copy of Zine Guide catalog
arrived. It was 160 pages thick and packed with titles as quirky
as the ones I read in my 1989 issue of Factsheet Five.
There will
never be a shortage of young zine editors to take the place of veterans
who outgrow zine publishing or move to the mainstream, says professor
Trusky.
"There
are always going to be passionate people, disaffected people, and
people with agendas," he says. "When there arent,
thats the day zines will die."
--
This story first appeared in the Winter 2000
Poynter Report.