Category: music-related

  • Recommended Reading: Vibrant Voices on the Page

    A pile of books and zines that tell personal stories, available at Quimby’s Bookstore in Chicago.

    The world is a flaming mess right now. If you’re feeling overwhelmed, I’m right there with you. Whenever I’m struggling, I know that I can find respite in personal narratives. Reading about another person’s challenges, triumphs, sorrows, and joys reminds me that, as Adrienne Rich wrote, our stories flow in more than one direction.

    Our shop is, of course, packed to the brick walls with vibrant voices on the page. Here are a few of the tales in which I’ve taken solace lately.

    Every single issue of Lucinda J. Williams’ Bookshelf Voyeur series is a pure delight. Her latest release, #8: On Scrapbooks, delves into the fascinating lives that the zinemaker first encountered within a collection of turn-of-the-century ephemera.

    Anxious Critters #1 and #2: I adore this pair of sweet zines about the relationship between creator Alex O’Keefe and her housemate: A very cute bunny named Ivy.

    Although I’m a native Chicagoan, I’ve lived a good chunk of my life in small Midwestern towns, each with its own unique DIY community. Punks in Peoria: Making a Scene in the American Heartland by Jonathan Wright and Dawson Barrett takes a compelling look at how the hardcore punk movement played out in one central Illinois city in the ’80s and ’90s.

    When someone I know returns from a trip, the first thing I ask is what they ate during their journey. April Malig chronicles her culinary adventures, with words and gorgeous colorwashed images, in April’s Eating Zine #5: Everything I Ate in Japan (Part One: Toyko!) and April’s Eating Zine #5.5: Everything I Ate in Japan (Part 2: Osaka, Kyoto, Fukuoka, Atami!).

    I love a pocket-size zine, since I like never want to be without a story to get lost in. Ker-bloom! always delivers a perfect bite-sized tale presented in a beautiful letterpress package. Issue #171 begins with the epic statement: “Sometimes it pays to be a known Lord of the Rings nerd.”

    So perhaps you’d like to add your own story to the glorious chorus of voices in this universe? We’ve got two of my favorite books about writing in stock right now. 1000 Words: A Writer’s Guide to Staying Creative, Focused, and Productive All Year Round by Jami Attenberg and many of the writer’s literary friends — including Carmen Maria Machado, Roxane Gay, and Kiese Laymon — just came out in paperback. Body Work: The Radical Power of Personal Narrative by Melissa Febos is the book I would put into the hands of any storyteller who wants to deepen their own practice.

    If you do decide to share your story with the world, please consider putting it into a zine and consigning it with us! You might want to grab a This is Going in My Perzine sticker to give folks a heads-up. 🙂

    —   With love and solidarity, C.E. Hanifin

  • Gifts for the Music Obsessed

    What does the Red Devil Lady have in her red-hot little hands? Wicker Park’s most wicked rock chick is showing off some of my personal gift recommendations for folks who are as music obsessed as I am.

    In between shows, I love to delve into thoughtful music writing. We’ve got quite a few titles in the shop right now from the stellar and wide-ranging 33 1/3 series, including fresh releases about the Kate Bush album Hounds of Love and Dolly Parton’s White Limozeen. Questlove’s intimate take on how Hip Hop is History is a must-read not only for fans of the genre, but anyone interested in the fascinating ways that music and popular culture build off each other like a pair of spinning turntables.

    You can find deep dives of all kinds in our music zines section, too. Here at the Q, we rejoiced when fabled music publication CREEM returned to the scene. We’ve got the two most recent issues of this substantial mag in stock right now. One of the zines I’ve been giving to friends is Forgotten Music Masters Volume 1, a hilarious illustrated history by Chris Auman and Deron Grams. (Check out Used Records and Tapes, the awesome collab zine series that Chris edits, as well!) I’m also really into Lennon McCrea’s monthly perzine-style album review zine, Stacks.

    And if your favorite music fanatic likes to wear their impeccable taste on their sleeve (or battle vest or car bumper), we’ve got patches, pins, and stickers galore. I’ve snapped up these particular pieces of flare that pay homage to the Replacements (pin by World Famous Original), my fellow goth ghouls (sticker by local comedian Winslow Dumaine), and the Cure (patch by Neoshiki) as gifts for myself. After all, Robert Smith is my Santa Claus this year.

    — C.E. @zineclubchicago

     

  • South Side Zine Library Launch Party in Bridgeport, June 9th

    Zine Club Chicago is thrilled to announce the launch of a brand-new South Side Zine Library! This free community resource, stocked with zines of all kinds, will be permanently housed in the Community Room at the Richard J. Daley branch of the Chicago Public Library in Bridgeport.

    To celebrate, Zine Club Chicago is pairing up with the Blue Ribbon Glee Club to host a launch party featuring the intermittent reading and performance series Three Songs, plus an open mic and zinemaking!

    All are invited to the Zine Club Chicago South Side Zine Library Launch Party featuring Three Songs with the Blue Ribbon Glee Club on Sunday, June 9 at the Richard J. Daley branch of the Chicago Public Library, 3400 S. Halsted St. in Bridgeport. Zinemaking begins at 1 p.m.; the Three Songs readings and performance will start at 2 p.m. Free!

    For the Three Songs performance, a trio of featured readers will each share a story about one of the songs in the BRGC punk a capella repertoire, and then the group will sing it. The readers are:

    More info at quimbys.com and on the Zine Club Chicago socials: @zineclubchicago

    Zine newbies and longtime enthusiasts alike are always welcome at Zine Club Chicago. This free event series is produced by Cynthia E. Hanifin and sponsored by Quimby’s Bookstore. Anna Jo Beck designs the monthly flyers and created the logo, and she also created the visuals for the South Side Zine Library.

    Zine Club Chicago would like to thank the South Side Zine Library sponsors: The Richard J. Daley branch of the Chicago Public Library + branch manager Jeremy Kitchen, Quimby’s Bookstore, Lucinda J. Williams, and Johnny Misfit.

    Want the Facebook Event Post for this? Go here!

    Want the CPL listing? Go here!

    Image description

    A flyer with an image of the Chicago skyline viewed from Palmisano Park in Bridgeport and this text: “Zine Club Chicago South Side Zine Library Launch Party! Featuring Three Songs with Blue Ribbon Glee Club; Readings by Nikki Roberts, Liz Olney, and Cynthia E. Hanifin; Punk a capella performance, open mic + zinemaking!: 1-4 p.m. Sunday, June 9; Richard J. Daley Branch, Chicago Public Library in Bridgeport; 3400 S. Halsted St.; More info: quimbys.com; Instagram: @zineclubchicago; chipublib.org

  • Rob Drew Celebrates Unspooled: How the Cassette Made Music Shareable, June 22nd

    Rob Drew Celebrates
    Unspooled: How the Cassette Made Music Shareable,
    In Conversation with Liz Mason
    at Quimby’s Bookstore
    1854 W. North Ave
    Saturday, June 22nd, 3pm

    Quimby’s welcomes Rob Drew to celebrate the release of his book Unspooled: How the Cassette Made Music Shareable on Saturday, June 22nd at 3pm, in conversation with Quimby’s manager Liz Mason.

    Join us to hear Dr. Rob Drew trace the history of the cassette tape, a cheap, low-fidelity music medium that fans grew to love. Rob will discuss how cassettes upended the music industry, inspired independent musicians, and initiated rituals of music sharing through mix tapes.

     

    Well into the new millennium, the analog cassette tape continues to claw its way back from obsolescence. New cassette labels emerge from hipster enclaves while the cassette’s likeness pops up on T-shirts, coffee mugs, belt buckles, and cell phone cases. In Unspooled, Rob Drew traces how a lowly, hissy format that began life in office dictation machines and cheap portable players came to be regarded as a token of intimate expression through music and a source of cultural capital. Drawing on sources ranging from obscure music zines to transcripts of Congressional hearings, Drew examines a moment in the early 1980s when music industry representatives argued that the cassette encouraged piracy. At the same time, 1980s indie rock culture used the cassette as a symbol to define itself as an outsider community. Indie’s love affair with the cassette culminated in the mixtape, which advanced indie’s image as a gift economy. By telling the cassette’s long and winding history, Drew demonstrates that sharing cassettes became an acceptable and meaningful mode of communication that initiated rituals of independent music recording, re-recording, and gifting.

    “Offering a comprehensive history of the cassette from its origins in post-World War II taping technologies to the recent revival of the music cassette as a hipster artifact, Unspooled is the first book to give an extended account of the various ways that cassettes have transformed musical culture. This wonderfully engaging, clear, and witty book will appeal to a wide audience of music fans and critics interested in mixtapes, cassettes, and cassette culture and will become a classic in many fields.” -Will Straw, Professor of Urban Media Studies, McGill University

    “Rob Drew is one of my favorite writers on music, and I wish more people knew about his work. This is the definitive cultural history of indie music’s tangled but fascinating love affair with the audiocassette.” -David Hesmondhalgh, author of Why Music Matters

    “Any readers who have ever received or created a mixtape will appreciate this narrative. A solid blend of history and nostalgia about cassette tapes that’s perfect for Gen Xers.” -Tina Panik, Library Journal

    “The story of the cassette tape Drew and Masters tell is compelling: how a lo-fi, accident- and deterioration-prone, and more-or-less parasitic audio technology not only achieved market dominance but captured a permanent place in the imaginations and practices of music-makers, labels, distributors, and fans the world over. Unspooled and High Bias show readers that the peculiar technology of the cassette tape exemplifies the inherent contradictions of popular music perhaps better than any other medium.” — David Pike, Popmatters

    “Divided into six sharp chapters, Unspooled walks readers through the rich history of music nerds who used cassettes in ever-evolving ways. By following the chronology, Drew provides a detailed exploration of the cassette in terms of format, medium, and artifact.” — Adam P. Newton, Treble Zine (Read the full review here.)

    Rob Drew is Professor of Communication at Saginaw Valley State University and author of Karaoke Nights: An Ethnographic Rhapsody. Follow him at @slobster48602

    Liz Mason is the manager of Quimby’s Bookstore, a zine publisher, a mix tape aficionado and a karaoke enthusiast. Follow her at @caboosezine

    Want the Facebook event invite for this? Here ya go!

    Watch Rob on the “Cassette Books Mixtape” panel with Marc Masters (High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape), Jerry Kranitz (Cassette Culture: Homemade Music and the Creative Spirit in the Pre-Internet Age), moderated by Tom McCourt.

  • Shovelin' USA: The Estrus Records Book Tour Stops at Quimby's, Oct 21st

    Korero Press is happy to announce that a hefty slab of punk rock history is coffee-table-ready: Shovelin’ The Sh!t Since ’87 is a 250+ page book of influential artwork, photographs, interviews and text detailing the history of the legendary garage rock label, Estrus Records. For nearly two decades, Dave Crider’s Bellingham, Washington-based operation churned out hundreds of releases from mainstays in garage, trash, surf, and punk — among them, The Mummies, Man or Astroman?, The Makers, Teengenerate, and Crider’s own Mono Men. And because the imagery associated with Estrus’ releases matched the ferocity of the music, this beast is filled with vivid concert posters, iconic album covers and bizzare oddities created by a handful of elite graphic artists — including visionary Art Chantry, who was behind much of the label’s artwork.

    Author Chris Alpert Coyle and designer Scott Sugiuchi are taking copies of the new book with them on the Shovelin’ USA Tour. Join them here at Quimby’s Bookstore in Wicker Park on Saturday, October 21st beginning at 1pm. The Q&A session with Chet “The Cheetah” Weise (Quadrajets, Immortal Lee Co. Killers), Alex Wald & Marty Perez will be an opportunity for folks to ask questions about the iconic label’s history — and Coyle and Sugiuchi can give insight on what the multiyear project was like.

    The book does not go on sale to the general public until late November, so Quimby’s will be one of the few places people can buy it ahead of time at the event on October 21st!

    FREE EVENT!

    Bios!

    Chris Alpert Coyle is a nomadic music journalist (and serious journalist) whose material has been featured on CBS News, WGN, CBS Radio and The Inlander. As a musician, he has toured much of the United States with two different punk rock combos. As an outside linebacker for the ’79 Pittsburgh Steelers, wait…Different guy, actually. Never mind. Yeah, this guy (above) just writes stuff.

    Scott Sugiuchi has been designing for more than 30 years. Highlights include work for Artisan Films (The Blair Witch Project), the American Film Institute and countless bands, record labels and venues. He is the founder of Hidden Volume Records, a boutique record label with more than 50 releases and is currently the Art Director for Alamo Drafthouse Cinema. He lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

    Chet Weise’s poetry and fiction have appeared or been anthologized in publications such as Apocalypse Now: Poems and Prose from the End of Days, Birmingham Poetry Review, Constant Stranger: After Frank Stanford, Copper Nickel, Peach Mag, and the Rough Trade 40th Anniversary Journal. A musician, too, Weise toured and recorded with groups The Quadrajets and ?the Immortal Lee County Killers?. He was banned from Canada during 2008. Weise currently lives in Nashville, Tennessee, where he is the editor at Third Man Books and plays guitar in Kings of the Fucking Sea.

    Alex Wald: Painter; illustrator for Estrus Records, Wired, Playboy, Hustler, many more; comic artist and colorist, art director, First Comics; kaiju scholar and collector, Astromonster Co., Ltd. designer and proprietor; blues harp player, ex-Dirty Wurds, Sunnyland Slim, Johnny Young and others; still making coffee.

    Marty Perez is a Chicago-based photographer who has been documenting the parallels between the worlds of underground rock as well as some of the biggest stars of pop music, from 1976 to the present.

    Very important links!

    Facebook Event Post

    instagram.com/estrus_records_book

    facebook.com/estrusrecordsbook

    koreropress.com/estrus-shovelin-the-shit-since-87

    kickstarter.com/projects/estrus/estrus-shovelin-the-shit-since-87

  • New Stuff This Week

     

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    Zines

    The Wonder of It All #12 $3

    Postcards from Irving #4 $2

    Horror Macaroni #4 $5

    zines by Erin Dorney: How to Bathroom, Accept Reject and more.

    Molotov College Zine Edition an RPG by WH Arthur $15

    Self Harm – A Zine about NSSI by Sharaya O $3

    Comics

    Smoke Signal #41 Keiichi Tanaami (Desert Island) $12

    Glass Chamber #0 by Tia Roxae $5

    Delia by Quinn Thomson $5

    By the Moonlight by Mae Lyne $15

    Comics by Carmen Johns $10 each: Diva World #1 + #2, How to Lose a Friend In Seventh 7th Grade #1-#3

    Comics by Clara Brubaker $10 each: In Between Some Thoughts on Place, Bein’ Weird With Plants
    Plus Sticker Sheets: Native Wildflowers of Illinois $12, Moths of North America $15

    Graphic Novels

    Dear Mini vol 1 A Graphic Memoir by Natalie Norris $29.99

    The Comics Journal #309 $16.99

    The Planetoid And Other Stories by Joe Orlando + Al Feldstein (Fantagraphics) $35

    Big Ugly by Ellice Weaver (Avery Hill) $19.95

    Film & Music Books

    Corman/Poe: Interviews and Essays Exploring the Making of Roger Corman’s Edgar Allan Poe Films, 1960-1964 by Chris Alexander $27.95

    Johnny Thunders: In Cold Blood – The Official Biography (Revised and Updated Edition) by Nina Antonia $24.95

    Book of Days by Patti Smith $28.99

    Outer Limits Stuff

    Hellebore magazine: A Summoning of Ancient Terrors, issues #1-#9, $15 each
    +
    The Hellebore Guide to Occult Britain and Northern Ireland, edited by Maria J. Perez Cuervo $34.95

    Fiction Books

    New Directions Storybook series:
    Road to the City by Natalia Ginzburg $18.95
    In the Act by Rachel Ingalls $18.95

    Lapvona: A Novel by Ottessa Moshfegh $18

    Stray Dogs by Richard John Parfitt (Third Man Books) $16.95

    Short Stories of Gustav Meyrink vol 1 the Opal and Other Stories $13.99

  • Quimby's Offsite: Hit Girls: Women of Punk in the USA, 1975-1983, Chicago Book Party at GMan Tavern, April 27th

    Join us at the GMan tavern on while we sell books for a very special Chicago Book Party!

    Deep Eddy Vodka welcomes
    Hit Girls: Women of Punk in the USA, 1975-1983
    Author Reading with Jen B. Larson * Q&A hosted by WBEZ’s Jill Hopkins
    Thursday, April 27th
    Doors: 7pm / Show: 7:30pm
    $10 Adv. / $12 Door / 21+
    Jen Lemasters (aka She Bop), Clare Kelly, and Jill Hopkins DJ
    at GMan Tavern, 3740 North Clark Street Chicago, IL.
    (Note: this event is not at Quimby’s.)

    Click this link to buy tickets at etix.com.

    About Hit Girls (published by Feral House):

    Think punk was only a boys club? Read about the women who were the punk revolution!

    Women have been kicking against the pricks of music patriarchy since Sister Rosetta Tharpe first played the guitar riffs that built rock-n-roll. The explosion of punk sent shockwaves of revolution to every girl who dreamed of being on stage. Punk godmothers Suzy Quatro, The Runaways, Patti Smith, Poison Ivy, Tina Weymouth, Debbie Harry, The Go-Gos, and Fanny’s Millington sisters provided the template for thousands of girls and women throughout the United States to write and record their songs.

    Hit Girls is the story local and regional bands whose legacy would be otherwise lost. Despite the modern narrative labeled women anomalies in rock music, the truth is: women played important roles in punk and its related genres in every city, in every scene, all over the United States. The women and bands profiled by Jen B. share their experiences of sexism and racism as well as their joy and successes from their days on stage as they changed what it meant to be in a band. These pioneering women were more than novelty acts or pretty faces–they were fully contributing members and leaders of mixed-gender and all-female bands long before the call for “girls to the front.”

    The women of Hit Girls are now rightfully exalted to cult status where their collective achievement is recognized and inspiring to new generations of women rockers. Included are interviews with: Texacala Jones, Stoney Rivera, Mish Bondaj, Alice Bag, Nikki Corvette, Penelope Houston, and many more formidable and infamous women who made their voices heard over the screaming guitars.

    Hit Girls includes over 100 rare and never-before seen images. Author Jen B. includes a comprehensive playlist of all the artists. Foreword by punk journalist, Ginger Coyote.

    About the author:  Jen B. Larson is a writer, musician, and public art schoolteacher living in Chicago. She holds a B.A. in English literature and creative writing as well as an M.Ed. in special education. Her bands, Swimsuit Addition, beastii, and Jen and the Dots, have performed and recorded extensively over the last decade. Visit Jen on the web at instagram.com/conspiracyofwomen.

    Wanna buy the book in advance? Come in to the store or get it off our website here.

  • New Stuff This Week

    Happy Saturday! Did you know that April 9 is National Unicorn Day? While we don’t have any mythical creatures in stock right now, we do have a TON of fun new stuff in the form of zines, comics, and books. Check out this fantastic list of fresh arrivals!

    Zines

    My Favorite Actor is a Dog by Aim Ren $2

    Women in Print #8 $8

    Razorblades and Aspirin #14 $8

    Dealing with COVID: Hopefully Helpful Tips by Lost Fillings $1

    Time’s Up: No More Rape Culture in Our Skate Culture by Smash the Skatriarchy $3.95

    How It Felt to Me: The Further Writings of Annie Howard $11

    Gothic Lyric Book by Karina Song and Blaketheman1000 $5

    I Miss You by Karina $1

    Cut Me Up #8: Guided by Instinct $18

    Something Rather Than Nothing Zine #1 $4

    Bad Year by Nick Greer $5

    Comics & Minis

    Ghouls by Jenn Woodall $12

    Future #8 by Tommi Musturi $6

    Teeni Bop #1 $4

    Annual Eternia Bodybuilding Contest #1 $2

    Forms Saint George and the Dragon by Ryan Shipman $5

    Eschew #5 by Robert Sergel $8

    Smear Girl of Clay #1 $2

    Heavy Metal #315 $13.99

    Reptile House #9 by Nick Bunch $5

    Scoundrels Don’t Get Caught by Hannibal Gerald $6

    Graphic Novels

    Rave by Jessica Campbell $22.95

    Hell Phone: Book One by Benji Nate $14.99

    One Hundred Columns for Razorcake: The Complete Comics 2003-2020 by Ben Snakepit $11.99

    Book Tour by Andi Watson $24.99

    Mr. Lightbulb by Wojtek Wawszczyk $29.99

    Squeak the Mouse by Massimo Mattioli $29.99

    Fiction

    Manhunt by Gretchen Felker Martin $17.99

    The Candy House by Jennifer Egan $28

    Hummingbird Salamander by Jeff VanderMeer $18

    The Time of Our Singing by Richard Powers $21

    DIY Books

    Creative Not Famous the Small Potato Manifesto by Ayun Halliday $14.95

    Stolen Sharpie Revolution: A DIY Resource For Zines and Zine Culture vol 6 by Alex Wrekk $15 – In fancy hardcover!

    Everything Depends on Me: A Book About OCD by Alice DuBois $24

    A Quick and Easy Guide to Asexuality by Molly Muldoon and Will Hernandez $7.99

    Pure Magic: A Complete Course in Spellcasting by Julia Illes $18.95

    From Big Idea to Book: Create a Writing Practice That Brings You Joy by Jessie L Kwak $14.95

    Music Books

    Sigh, Gone: A Misfit’s Memoir of Great Books, Punk Rock and the Fight to Fit In by Phuc Tran $18.99

    Corporate Rock Sucks: The Rise and Fall of SST Records by Jim  Ruland $30

    Mudhoney: The Sound and the Fury From Seattle by Keith Cameron $24.99

    Essay & Culture & Memoir

    Vagina Obscura: An Anatomical Voyage by Rachel E. Gross $30

    Stalking the Atomic City by Markiyan Kamysh $22

    Mayhem & Outer Limits Books

    Platform Edge: Uncanny Tales of the Railways edited by Mike Ashley $15.95

    Doorway to Dilemma: Bewildering Tales of Dark Fantasy edited by Mike Ashley $15.95

    Tales of the Tattooed: An Anthology of Ink by John Miller $15.95

    Inside the Mind of Jeffrey Dahmer by Christopher Berry Dee $16.95

    Food & Drug Books

    The Microdosing Guidebook: A Step-by-Step Manual by CJ Spotswood $19.95

    Sexxy

    Fantasy Lewds Erotic Anthology by Andy Hood $15

    Experience Points: Illustrated Queer Smutty Stories by N.A. Melamed $12.95

    Magazines

    Little White Lies #92 $16.99

    032c #40 $24.95

    Chap Books & Lit Journals

    Granta #158: In the Family $19.99

    Kids Stuff

    Illustoria #17 $16

    Other Stuff

    What A Time to Be Gay and Alive Bumper Sticker by Archie Bongiovanni $3

  • Quimby's 2021 Holiday Gift Guide

    Right now our shop is crammed full of amazing, unique gifts for everyone in your life. (OK, maybe not your uncle who only wants vintage Nixon paraphernalia, but just about everybody else). Here are just a few of our staff picks for the best stuff to wrap up this season.

    And if you don’t spot the gift you’re seeking on this list, come on into the store and let us help you find that perfect present for someone you love (or for yourself … you surely deserve a little something, too).

     

    Quimby’s Schwag

    You know you love us … so spread the love around by gifting some Quimby’s merch, featuring original designs by some of our favorite artists.

    Quimby’s Gift Certificates, available in a variety of denominations

    Quimby’s Air Freshener, designed by Plastic Crimewave

    Quimby’s Coasters, featuring our classic logo designed by Chris Ware

    Quimby’s 30th Anniversary T-shirt, designed by Caroline Cash

    Quimby’s Logo T-shirt

    Quimby’s Logo Enamel Pin

    Quimby’s Logo Embroidered Patch

    Quimby’s Logo Tote Bag

    Quimby’s Bong Mice Metallic Sticker, designed by Caroline Cash

    Quimby’s Logo Sticker

     

     

    Liz, Manager and Zine Maven

    Broke, Not Broken: Personal Finance for the Creative, Confused, Underpaid, and Overwhelmed by Anna Jo Beck

    Gentrifier: A Memoir by Anne Elizabeth Moore (comes with a free bookplate signed by the author, while supplies last)

    Someplace Special, edited by Aim Ren Beland and Cynthia E. Hanifin

    Lydia Tomkiw: Poems, edited by Dan Shepelavy

    Hang in There Kitten Tea Towel, designed and hand-printed by Heather Anacker

    Dame Darcy Meat Cake Calendar 2022

     

    Caroline, Cartoonist in Residence

    Heaven No Hell by Michael DeForge

    Bubbles, An Independent Fanzine About Comics and Manga #11 (We’ve got issues #1-#10 in stock, too)

    Alanzo Sneak by Nate Garcia

    Be Gay Do Crime by Mary Nardini Gang

    You Have Been Catcalled. What Do You Do? Patch by Jenn Woodall

     

    Cynthia (Zinethia), Zine Warrior

    Qustomized Quimby’s Zine Package $25 Version (also available in $69 and $100 versions)

    Awesome Things #4 by Liz Mason (Awesome Things #1, #2, and #3 are, frankly, awesome, as well!)

    Girl in the World by Caroline Cash (comes with a free sticker sheet designed by the artist, while supplies last)

    Social Justice Kittens Calendar 2021 (available in-store only)

    Zine Game Deck by Billy McCall

    White City Devil Coffee & Coconut Candle (available in-store only, with a free Quimby’s matchbook while supplies last)

  • Ian F. Svenonius Talks The Psychic Soviet: New Expanded Edition in Conversation with Matt Sweeney, ONLINE Event, Thurs, July 23rd

    THE PSYCHIC SOVIET
    essays by IAN F. SVENONIUS
    A reissue of Ian F. Svenonius’s cult-classic debut essay collection, including brand-new writing in this expanded edition.

    ABOUT THE PSYCHIC SOVIET
    A new, expanded collection of essays and articles from one of the mainstays of the Washington, DC, underground rock and roll scene, The Psychic Soviet is Ian F. Svenonius’s groundbreaking first book of writings. The selections are written in a lettered yet engaging style, filled with parody and biting humor that subvert capitalist culture, and cover such topics as the ascent of the DJ as a star, the “cosmic depression” that followed the defeat of the USSR, how Seinfeld caused the bankruptcy of modern pop culture, and the status of rock and roll as a religion. The pocket-sized book is bound with a durable bright-pink plastic cover, recalling the aesthetics of Mao’s Little Red Book, and perfect for carrying into the fray of street battle, classroom, or lunch-counter argument.

    ** Zoom info ** We want to make sure that this online event is a safe space, so we won’t be releasing the Zoom link and password publicly. If you’d like to attend, please email info@quimbys.com to RSVP by 5 pm Thursday, July 23rd. We’ll email you the Zoom link and password one hour before the event begins.

    Quimby’s has limited SIGNED copies of this new edition of The Psychic Soviet. Purchase yours here at quimbys.com.

    Ian Svenonius will be in conversation with musician Matt Sweeney for this event.

    Matt Sweeney is a rock guitarist, songwriter, and producer. His work can be heard on albums by Adele, Current 93, Johnny Cash, Endless Boogie, Neil Diamond, Superwolf, and Chavez. He saw Nation of Ulysses perform back when Ian Svenonius would play with his shoes on fire.

    ABOUT IAN F. SVENONIUS

    IAN F. SVENONIUS is the author of the underground best sellers Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock ’n’ Roll Group and Censorship Now!! He was also the host of VBS.tv’s Soft Focus, where he interviewed Mark E. Smith, Genesis P. Orridge, Chan Marshall, Ian MacKaye, and others. As a musician he has created more than twenty albums and countless singles in various rock and roll combos (Chain & the Gang, Weird War, The Make-Up, The Nation of Ulysses, etc.). He lives in Washington, DC.

    “In a sense the book is Mr. Svenonius’s love letter to the good old days of do-it-yourself punk concerts, though it’s cleverly disguised as a series of Marxian essays.”

    —New York Times

    “The pocket-sized book—given Svenonius’s communism infatuation, the parallel to Mao’s Little Red Book is no mistake—contains well-thought-out arguments on a variety of subjects, from vampires to the origins of punk rock. It’s often funny, but never in a self-consciously ironic way.”

    —Washington Post

    “Ian Svenonius has come a long way since Sassy Magazine first dubbed him the ‘Sassiest Boy in America’ in 1991. The DC singer has never been anything less than political to the extreme.”

    —Village Voice

    More info:

    Here’s the Facebook invite.

    Akashic Books Author Site

    Twitter @CHAINANDTHEGANG

    Instagram @ian_f_svenonius

    Bandcamp toomuchdc.bandcamp.com