Category: news

  • Scary Zines in Spooky Series!!

    With the full force of spooky season upon us, I’d like to share some of my favorite scary zines around the shop, each of which just happens to come from a series.  So whether you want classic tales, fabulous comics, or a heavy dose of reality, we’ve got something for you with issues to spare.
    DSP Classic Ghosties Book Five: The Shell of Sense by Olivia Howard Dunbar
     The last of this spooky series is perhaps my favorite; a heart-breaking, inspiring tale of life after death and love after jealousy.  I didn’t know who Olivia Howard Dunbar was before this perfectly pocket-sized zine fell into my hands, but now that I do I’m hungry for more.  Presented by Displaced Snail Publications via Project Gutenberg, these public domain classic short stories are sure to sneak a little creep into your reading pile.  @DisplacedSnail
    Scorpio Venus Rising #2 by Corinne Halbert
    Following Venus on her escape through celestial existence steeped in Tarot is gorgeously horrific.  I especially enjoyed #2, because her strength is challenged as she literally unpacks her emotional baggage in a struggle of self-transformation. And if you can’t relate to that, then perhaps you should take a moment to contemplate your own existence or get yourself a reading to consider what Scorpio season has in store for you.  Fans of Acid Nun will eat up the artwork by the one and only Corrine Halbert (full disclosure of her awesomeness: she used to work here!).  @CorinneHalbert
    So… You Wanna Unionize? #2
    Let’s be serious for a second: there are few things in this world scarier than unchecked capitalism!  Thank the heavens for unions and the workers who have fought and continue to fight against the evils of corporate greed.  This series of political zines from the Starbucks Workers United gives voice to the working class struggle with a heavy dose of education and community.  Because step one in worker solidarity is knowledge, these zines explain terms, quote laws & policies, and present infographics alongside comics and collages to clarify the importance of unions and the path to get them.  All three are great, but I especially love the cover art of a decaying skeleton worker on issue #2.  @SBWorkersUnited
    Because they are abundant with Halloweenie content, I have shied away from the Outer Limits, the How To, and the Film & TV sections, though I highly recommend that you browse those in our store as well.  Honorable mention goes to the mini-zine series of ‘Thirteen Facts’ which lists–you guessed it–thirteen facts about select horror movies, their characters, and actors such as the venerable Vincent Price.
    Keep it spooky silly!
    Toujours, elizabeth  @GetBackToPrint
    P.S.  Yes, Rosie is my third costume so far this week!  You’re welcome.
  • New Stuff This HalloWeeeeeeeek

     

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    Zines

    2 Public Collectors/Half Letter Press Titles! CB Radio Postcard People $7, Johnnie Anderson’s Botany and Zoology Drawings $13

    Draculas Dumpster #3 Wild World of Color $9.75

    Zines by by S. Hansen: Staying Resilient As a Working Artist: Advice From the Field $4, Tools at the Queer Press $4, Average Person to Zinester Pipeline: The Seven Phases I Passed Through to Become a Zinester in Just a Year $5 & more.

    zines by Yhasmin: YHVSM #1 & #2 $5 each, Body $8

    Friday Aug 2nd $3

    One Skate Beyond #1 Chicago Edition by Buster Wawrzaszek $3

    Sk8 Movie Watchlist by Johnny Misfit $2

    Klaus-o-graphic issues #6 & #8 by K. Klaus $2

    Thirteen Facts, multiple issues, $2 each about topics like Dracula, Vampira, Vincent Price & more.

    Rate of Decay #10 $2

    Zines by Karina Hagelin: Femme Filth #5 $10, What is Suicide Prevention? Or How to Create a World Worth Living In $6

    Why Do Honeybees Kill if It Kills Them? Reflections on Evolutionary Selection for the Instinct to Self Destruct by Dalia Silverstein $6

    1438 #2 Midwest Jungle, Techno and Rave Culture by Ripe Productions and Aria Pedraz $15

    Better Homes and Dykes vol 1 #4 by Elli and S. $20

    Comics

    I Hope This Finds You #15 Diary Comics by Kevin Budnik $6

    Shadow Banshee Periodical #1 Pontificating Amongst Nature by Nadia Stodder $7

    Whoopsie Doodle – Short Comics by Kat Tuesday $10

    Gallant Valor #1 by Dylan Sparks $20

    Graphic Novels

    OUT LATER THIS WEEK! Acme Novelty Datebook vol 3 by Chris Ware (Drawn & Quarterly) $49.95

    Brian Blomerth’s Lilly Wave: Visual Biography of the Infamous Ketamine Researcher John C. Lilly $35

    Kids Are Still Weird and More: Observations From Parenthood by Jeffrey Brown $9.99

    My Time Machine by Carol Lay (Fantagraphics) $24.99

    Longboxes by Nate McDonough $20

    Parasyte vol 8 Full Color Collection by Hitoshi Iwaaki $19.99

    The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers: High Times and Misdemeanors by Gilbert Shelton & Dave Sheridan (Fantagraphics) $22.99

    Jessica Farm by Josh Simmons (Fantagraphics) $29.99

    Art Books

    Profane Creations: The Metal Art of Mark Rudolph $49.99

    Politics & Revolution Books

    Palestine in a World on Fire: A Global Conversation by Katherine Natanel & Ilan Pappé (Haymarket Books) $17.95

    Music Books

    Country and Midwestern: Chicago in the History of Country Music and the Folk Revival by Mark Guarino $20

    The Chronicles of DOOM: Unraveling Rap’s Masked Iconoclast by S.H. Fernando Jr. $30

    Sonic Life: A Memoir by Thurston Moore $20

    In Defense of Ska: Expanded 2nd Edition by Aaron Carnes $24.95

    Fiction

    Gigantvm Penisivm: A Tale of Demonic Possession by Jose Elvin Bueno $18.95

    Chap Books & Lit Journals

    I Almost Had It by Sophie Potocsnak $6

    Sinister Wisdom #134 $16

    Chicago Review vol 67 #2-#4 $24.99

    Sexxxy

    Drawings of Rainier Flores Side B (Rainstrike Comics) $5

  • Don't Know Where to Start? We'll Make it Easy For You!

    Browsing the store can be overwhelming, especially if it’s your first time in. We recommend checking out our staff picks section! Located right underneath our fabulous LGBTQIA+ shelves, (sorry to those with weak knees) our staff faves are filled with gems selected by our expert team of zine makers and readers. Next time you’re in the shop, check out some of these standout titles handpicked just for you!

     

    Shotgun Seamstress: The Complete Zine Collection by Osa Atoe

    We’re huge fans of zine anthologies, especially this beautiful collection of one of our all-time faves: Shotgun Seamstress by Osa Atoe! Shotgun Seamstress began in 2006 in Portland, OR out of necessity. From the author: “The zine came out of the experience of being the only black kid at the punk show.” Each issue highlights Black punk bands, artists, and musicians, many of them friends of Atoe or musicians and artists she looked up to. The layout style is timeless and the interviews, comix, and zine and album reviews highlight underground Black musicians and artists by bringing them to the forefront.

    Feminist Art Punks: Riot Grrrl, Zines, and the Radical Power of Self Authorship by Katie Kiesewetter

    A syllabus zine that includes resources, writing prompts, and ways to map your own feminist history in a radical and self-guided way. You really can’t go wrong with zines by local zine maker Katie Kiesewetter, which we have plenty of titles in stock at the moment!

    Staring Contest Essays About Eyes by Joshua James Amberson

    A memoir written in essays, all about your eyeballs! Joshua James Amberson writes about pseudoxanthoma elasticum, a rare eye disease he developed early in his childhood that later turned into an obsession. Amberson bares his soul and writes about the frustrating trips to oncologists and the fear of possibly losing his sight earlier than planned. The pop culture references about eye disabilities in the media (think Mr. Magoo, Lisa “Left Eye Lopes,” and the song “Betty Davis Eyes”) make this book a truly fascinating read! Joshua James Amberson is also the founder of one of our favorite book and zine distros, Antiquated Future.

    First Good Time by Aim Ren Beland

    From the author: back in august ’22 I asked the trans community to share their joy with me “because we deserve joy and we deserve to see depictions of our selves being joyful”. First Good Time is the zine born of those submissions; a collection of portraits, drawn by myself, of trans folks with a line about why they feel joy, or in what ways they feel joy. First Good Time is also a Zine-A-Month March 2024 release.

    Prisoners’ Inventions by Angelo and Temporary Services, published by Half Letter Press

    What began as a penpal exchange between Marc Fisher of Half Letter Press and Angelo, a Californian prisoner, this collection features Angelo’s illustrations of inventions he had seen in prison. This is a great resource for prisoners and their friends on the outside.

    Red’s Review of Revolting Prostitutes by Red S.

    Part book review, part resource of sex worker organizing movements and groups in the US and beyond, this is an important zine about the release of the book Revolting Prostitutes the Fight for Sex Workers’ Rights by Molly Smith and Juno Mac. We are fans of book reviews that turn into full blown zines, especially radical zines about sex workers rights!

    Rain Barrel #4 by Jordan Sea

    From the author: An extra vulnerable one. Examining the intersection of anti-aging and anti-fat bias. And am I asexual?

    Jordan is a zine counselor for Zine Club Chicago‘s Zine Camp, co-host of The Zine Report, a monthly podcast, and friend of the store.

    thanks for reading!!! <3 Angel

    @angel.xoxoxoxox

  • Quimby’s October Newsletter Available Now

    Read it here and make sure you sign up to get it in your inbox at quimbys.com.

  • Tessa Recommends a Little Getaway to Hold Off the Inclement Weather Blues

    Alrighty zine fiends, it is about to get gloomy as heck, especially for us in Chicago and the Midwest. Maybe it would help to plan a trip? Could be just a little getawaymaybe even in your imagination. So, I’ve gathered together a collection of zines to help you prepare to escape the dreary months to come. Introducing…

    Tessa’s Guide to Zines That Aren’t Necessarily Travel Guides but Make Me Think About Escaping

    Elephant Buildings by Dave Hankins

    The obvious place to start is Elephant Buildings by Dave Hankins. Now, you’ll have to time travel to visit some of the fascinating elephant-shaped buildings in this zine, but you’ll find plenty of interesting details in Dave’s thoroughly researched zine to accurately set your time travel devices or to travel in your imagination. Before picking this little booklet up, I never thought to wonder about elephant buildings, but after reading it I feel like such a fool. I will now be forever curious about the history of any roadside attraction I encounter.

    Controlled Burn: an Oak Opening Story by Lee Fearnside

    Try out imaginary ecotourism by visiting an interesting local ecosystem in Controlled Burn: an Oak Opening Story by Lee Fearnside. In this little zine, you’ll meet the plants and animals of Oak Openings, a region crossing Ohio and Michigan and learn about the impact of human intervention on this unique habitat and the importance of controlled burns in ecosystems. I love learning about the environments I visit. If you do too, try out Controlled Burn!

    Indianapolis: a Visitor’s Guide by Jone Greaves

    Maybe you’re staying nearby – a little road trip to MidBest mecca, Indianapolis! 😉 Make sure to pick up Jone Greaves’ very helpful, Indianapolis: a Visitor’s Guide before you hit the road! Inside you’ll find secrets, tips and mysterious warnings about the city, like the resting place of the “harbinger of the growing goblin scourge of the Midwest,” a warning about cursed regions, seasonal rituals, and a reminder not to mention The Catacombs (oops!).

     

    Cavern Zines #4 by Ari Ganahl

    Maybe you’re staying even nearer-byTry out Ari Ganahl’s Cavern Zine #4 for an adventure right from your favorite armchair. Everything you need for a spelunking adventure is in this little book. Join the included (great value!) cave guide on a unique journey through paper landscape. Best of all, you can visit this destination again and again with no additional cost!

    Pocket Road Atlas by Mel Watkin and Maps by Chris Auman

    For more armchair adventures, check out Mel Watkin’s Pocket Road Atlas to plan out an imaginary road trip through beautiful imagined regions illustrated right over real road maps. I also recommend Chris Auman’s Maps, which will provide you with plenty of imaginary landscapes, cityscapes, mostly-waterscapes, and other scapes, to escape into. 

     

    Anxious Planet by Jone Greaves

    Finally, if you happen to be reading this blog from your spaceship, contemplating a visit to Earth, make Quimby’s your first stop planet-side to pick up Jone Greaves’ Anxious Planet for a general overview of what’s going on here with this weird rock we’re living on.

    Happy trails, Zine Travellers! I hope to see you in-store to wish you well on your zine journeys!

    See ya soon!

    -Tessa <3

  • Local Spooky: Full Bleeeeeeeeed

    AHHH! WHAT’S THAT BEHIND YOU???

    Oh! It’s the spooky season!!

    Fall is here and there’s already a little chill in the air… With October (the best month of the year by a gapingly enormous margin) just around the corner, many of us are looking very much forward to all the fun, fun activities of the spooky season: coming up with Halloween costumes; eating supernatural amounts of candy; carving 80 to 90 pumpkins into exact replicas of Moo Deng the sassy baby hippo; and, of course, watching as many horror movies as humanly possible! 

    Whether you’re a seasoned horror flick connoisseur, a sweet lil’ chicken whose terror tolerance is maxed out by It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, or somewhere in between, October is a great time to watch some scary (and not-so-scary) movies. If you agree, I’d like to point your attention to a new zine that you won’t want to sleep on: 

    An orange zine titled "Full Bleed" is displayed on a shelf, among other spooky zines and decorations, including a white, plastic skull and crossbones and a skeleton sticker pack.

    The premier issue of Full Bleed: Chicago’s #1 Horror & Exploitation Zine is currently on the shelves at Quimby’s, so get it while we got it! This wicked zine is jam packed with horror movie reviews, an interview with local comic artist Tyrell Cannon, a Chicago horror directory, a frighteningly hilarious comic, and more. 

    Don’t miss Eerie Ed’s 31-day Argentober Letterboxd challenge, which is outlined on page 9! Eerie Ed challenges readers to join him in watching one horror movie from another country per day during the month of October. 

    And be sure to check out the STACKED calendar of upcoming local events that graces the center spread! It showcases horror film screenings and other spooky events that will be happening in Chicago from October through December.

    A hand holds a zine open to a Table of Contents page and a Letters to the Editor page of a zine titled Full Bleed.

    Chicago thanks you, Full Bleed staff (“Tombstone” Tony Recktenwald, “Eerie” Ed Witt, “Jump-scare” Judson Picco, and Dean “the Ween” Gibbs), for this horrifically delightful new horror zine!

    Shine on, zine-stars! 

    <3 <3 <3 Echo

  • All Ages Content Featuring Cats

    If you’ve ever been to Quimby’s shopping for an underage zine enthusiast, you may have noticed that our kids section is kinda small.  But that’s not because we don’t have zines for all ages; it’s just that we include that creativity in all sections throughout the store.  So we’ve been adding green signs around the bookstore lately to denote All Ages content, and I’m here to highlight a few of my favorites that all just happen to have a cat theme.  

    Marceline’s Alley Stories by Cecilia Jane

    In this adorable comic, Marceline (a house cat) tells us three tales of her alley starring the creatures she sees and encounters via her window view.  These tales hit on some serious feelings of jealousy, hardship, friendship, mortality, and love without being heavy or hard to understand.  Aside from a brief mention or two or hardships, this comic keeps things positive and hopeful.  Marceline reminds readers to find peace in being yourself, to comfort friends in times of need, and to appreciate a connection without being possessive.  All appropriate lessons for everyone of all ages.  

    Cats Words Feelings by Heather Anacker

    This perfectly titled zine displays beautiful cat portraits each accompanied by a sentence or two intended to inspire.  While presenting some big ideas (like “When conditions are right things manifest.”), this zine stays simple, digestible, and sweet.  These are ideas worth considering for readers of all ages.  

    Cat Butts by Dana Amundsen

    I can’t get enough of this micro zine from DnA artists, despite the plethora of cat butt that is presented to me every moment that I am at home.  There are no words past the title page, because the drawings do it all.  The simple line sketches perfectly capture grooming cats; my favorites are the lifted leg poses when the cat pauses, fully exposed, to stare at its onlooker.  These cuties can be readily enjoyed by all ages. 

    Purr-haps you also know some of the great all ages content on our shelves.  If so, please drop us a comment or point them out to me the next time you see me at the shop.  Despite my penchant for smut, I’m still a kid (just ask my ma!), and I’ll never grow up, not me.  

    Toujours, elizabeth

    @GetBackToPrint

  • On Quimby's Turning 33

    Quimby’s turns 33 on September 15th this year.*

    We thought about a number of ways to honor Quimby’s turning 33 that didn’t make it past the brainstorming stage: give everybody an honorary membership to the highest degree of Freemasonry, print a 33(1/3) disc, make some religious jokes, radiate harmoniousness that resonates with the significance of 33 as a Master Number (that’s a choice right? to radiate?) then have a tattoo artist on hand for customers that want to get a tattoo of it on their forehead…There’s definitely a joke in there about 33’s relation to 666, or quite possibly some tricky math about pi. But at the end of the day, we decided to just have a party (and you should join us on 9/21, while we also celebrate Zine Club Chicago’s sixth anniversary here as well. More info about that here).

    Recently the owner of the store (Eric Kirsammer) handed me a stack of file folders with some ephemera of the store, and I saw some old notes that were clearly in his handwriting (I mean, I’ve worked here for 23 years — I know everybody’s handwriting by now), but it looked like maybe Eric had sat down with Steven Svymbersky, the founder of the store, when Eric first bought the store from Steven in the 90s. This must have been quite a meeting because notes were taken. In light of our anniversary, see if you can tell what the thing is that struck me from this note:

    First, I chuckled at the old school zine itemization (Duplex Planet! Dishwasher! Crap Hound! Film Threat! Like it was a zine grocery list.). And of course, Jack Chick. Jesus, we still carry those.** And I’ve heard Steven talk about Harriet Quimby before (which stands to reason, given Steven’s link to Boston with the “ur Quimby’s” which was called Primal Plunge, that he bought from Michael McInnis). Then my eyes zeroed in on something at the bottom: “33 is magical #” which was rather serendipitous. Our 33rd birthday was mere weeks away from that moment. (Also, the lack of the noun marker “a” was not lost on me, because it always makes people writing shorthand sound like a caveman.)

    Also serendipitously, Steven was visiting from NY that week, and I showed the stack of stuff to him. When I showed him this and reminded him we were turning 33 this year, he arched an eyebrow and said, “You know, 33 is a magical number.” He reminded me of some really great stuff, so I present to you, in Steven “Burf Quimby” Svymbersky’s words, the significance of 33 in Quimby’s history. I put it in pink! So you know it’s Steven talking!

    “So, the short version of the significance of the number 33 in Quimby’s history is that in the mid to late 1980s when I was publishing the magazine, Quimby’s Quarterly, the preferred beer of the Quimby’s staff (also known as the delinquents I partied with) was Rolling Rock, primarily because it was cheap and came in a nice green bottle. Printed on the inside of the bottle were the words ‘Rolling Rock From the glass lined tanks of Old Latrobe, we tender this premium beer for your enjoyment, as a tribute to your good taste. It comes from the mountain springs to you.’ It was followed, inexplicably, by the number 33. If you look it up, the internet claims the 33 is an acknowledgement of the 33 words in this pledge. We always figured it was a nod to 1933, the year prohibition was repealed.”

    “Over time the number 33 seemed to pop up everywhere and it began to take on a mystical quality for us until we began featuring a list of 33s on page 33 of each issue of the magazine.” [Examples below.]

    “At one point I also created a chart of the most important 33s.”

    “The apotheosis of our inebriated fascination with the number 33 happened in the original Quimby’s store on September 28, 1993, my 33rd birthday, when I hired a band to play the whipping music from Jesus Christ Superstar while my friend, Mistress Bliss, shackled me to the shelves and gave me 33 lashes with her favorite scourge. This was immortalized by the infamous, D.B. Velveeda, which I share with you now because I have no shame.”

    “Congratulations on 33 years of selling the most vile, pernicious and twisted publications known to humankind. You all make me so proud!”

    So there you have it, straight from the instigator himself, the real rundown of the number in question in relation to this shack of weirdness that we call Quimby’s. If you want to go say hi to Steven in NY, you should definitely visit him at Quimby’s Bookstore NYC, at 536 Metropolitan Ave in Brooklyn. He opened it in 2016, and it is a true oasis of awesome.***

    I have both founder Steven and the current owner Eric to thank for holding the legacy of high weirdness in highest regard, a place where I have worked for 2/3 of its life. But I also want to thank all our consignors, the artists who make the zines, comics and books we carry. Without them we would not be the store we are. Thank you for keeping us around for over three decades.

    Liz

    *Yes! We’re celebrating our birthday. Just not on the 15th. On the 21st! Info about it here.

    **Alternative comics artists love Jack Chick comics. They’re still making new ones. And he’s not even alive any more.

    ***And if you want to read about some of the early days of the store, Steven compiled some of the material from his early Magalogs and what not into a wonderful saddle stitched volume called Qvimby’s The First Five Years (1991-1996) which we sell in our webstore. Steven told me recently that it would be really awesome to have the energy, means, money and time to do Magalogs again. I agree. We did a bunch of Mini Magalogs in the early to mid 2000s that were folded broadsheets but then the internet got really, you know, intenet-y. At that point, it made more sense for us to sell stuff on our website instead of spending a gazillion dollars on a catalog like it was a Loompanics mail order endeavor or something. But I miss it. I’ll tell you what though. If you come in and request a Mini Magalog when I’m working, I’ll go down into the basement and get you one of our Mini Magalogs we made in the early aughts. Warning though: the font is tiny. Prepare yourself. And I’m pretty sure we still have a some piles of Steven’s old magalogs down there. You’d be surprised what I find when I’m cleaning out down there. That’s another blog post in and of itself.

     

  • New Stuff This Week

     

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    Zines

    Behind the Zines #18 Sep 2024 A Zine About Zines $4

    Ten Signs You Live in a Haunted House by Alexandra Montclair $8

    Journal Travel Journal Feb/Apr 2024 by Lu Shiying $12

    Comics

    All New Henry and Glenn Comics and Stories #1 by Tom Neely and Justin Hall (Microcosm) $7

    Haji Ali and the U.S. Camel Corps $12

    Graphic Novels

    Stuck by Pratima Pinnepalli $24.99

    Palestine 2024 Edition by Joe Sacco (Fantagraphcs) $34.99

    Buzzelli Collected Works vol 2: HP by Guido Buzzelli (Floating World) $34.99

    Art Books

    Sacred Sites. The Library of Esoterica by Jessica Hundley $40

    Politics & Revolution Books

    Abolish Rent: How Tenants Can End the Housing Crisis by Tracy Rosenthal & Leonardo Vilchis (Haymarket) $17.95

    The Zapatista Experience: Rebellion, Resistance, and Autonomy by Jerome Baschet (AK Press) $21

    Essays & Essay-Like

    The Oscar Wilde World of Gossip: A Subversive Encyclopedia of Victorian Anecdote by Neil Titley (Universal Exports of North America) $25

    Intellectual Situation: The Best of N+1’s Second Decade edited by Mark Krotov Nikil Saval and Dayna Tortorici $20

    Fiction

    Chicago Joe and the Ancient Pages by Billy McCall $18

    All Friends Are Necessary: A Novel by Tomas Moniz $28

    The Between by Tananarive Due $12

    Eugene Nadelman: A Tale of the 1980s in Verse by Michael Weingrad $16.95

    In the Garden of the Fugitives: A Novel by Ceridwen Dovey $20

    Untenable Mystic Charm Stories by Travis I Tate $13

    Ghost Mom by L. Guzman $13

    Poetry

    We the Gathered Heat: Asian American and Pacific Islander Poetry, Performance, and Spoken Word by Franny Choi & friends (Haymarket) $19.95

    Thoughts I Lost in the Laundry Poems by Leia Butler $13

    We Don’t Know That This Is Temporary Poems by Adrienne Marie Barrios $13

    Unaccounted For Circles of Hell by Lynne Schmidt $13

    Lit Journals

    Stanchion #14 $13

    Away From Home: An Anthology edited by Frances and Will Klein $16

    Wheels

    The Disposable Skateboard Bible by Sean Cliver & photographed by Eric Simpson (Gingko Press) $49.95

    Mayhem

    Children Who Murdered Their Mothers / Mothers Who Murdered Their Children by Alexandra Montclair $20

    Sex Culture and Sex Guides

    Female Gaze by Alexandra Montclair (Harpy House Press) $24.99

    My Dungeon Love Affair: A Memoir by Stephanie Parent $13

    Notebooks & Calendars

    One Line a Day a Five Year Memory Book $16.95

    Moleskine Dotted Notebook $19.95

  • Tessa Picked Some Tiny September-y Zines for You!

    Hey there friend! Welcome to September! This is one of my favorite months and not just because I’m a Virgo. We’re clinging to the last days of summer, and looking forward to all the gifts of fall – including spooky season! This week I’ve picked some tiny zines for you (I love tiny zines)! We have summer vibes, spooky vibes, and some that I just think you should check out!

    Summer Days by Lucy Rose Till-Campbell

    Lucy Rose Till-Campbell is the queen of whimsy, crafting colorful and precious worlds on paper! In Summer Days, you’ll meet three friends, Cranberry, Milkweed, and Chicory. Feast your eyes on detailed motifs that illustrate each personality and the world they share together and then float down the river with your new friends in the shady woods on a sunny summer day. No words, just vibes and the vibes are perfect, cozy summer. 

     

    Haunt by Tori Holder

    Both spooky and beautiful, Haunt is “a collection of spectral comix poems” that feel like a crisp autumn breeze on an overcast day of great portent. Reflect on the ephemerality of seasons, connections, and feelings with a backdrop of jack-o-lanterns, black cats, falling leaves, and full moons. 

     

    Night Out and When do you Stop Growing and Start Aging?  by Madi Baker

    Madi Baker’s micro comics are some of my favorites! Each one I’ve seen has a different approach to visual storytelling and the illustrations are whimsical and elegantly simple. 

    Night Out shows us the progression of a pair of friends going out and not exactly having the best time. Even with no words, a limited color palette, and fairly simple illustrations, Baker gives us relatable characters and a vivid picture of friendship through hard times. 

    When Do You Stop Growing and Start Aging? is a catalog of things that illustrate the evolution from youth to aging. My personal favorite is the comparison between youthful tennis ball (learning tennis), in-your-prime tennis ball (showing off your juggling skills), and elderly tennis ball (on the legs of your walker). This zine is both a little silly and thought provoking. Can you think of some other things that evolve with you as you grow or age?

    We have so many more tiny zine treasures in store! And more by all these authors! You’ve gotta come by and go treasure hunting in our micro-comics section soon! There’s always new things to love!

    See ya soon!

    -Tessa <3