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  • Chicago Zine Fest Volunteers Needed!

    The Chicago Zine Fest is run entirely by volunteers, so your willingness to pitch in is sincerely appreciated. Here’s the announcement from the nice folks at CZF:

    CZF needs volunteers the weekend before the fest (March 4th) and for the actual tabling day of the fest (March 10th). Below you will find descriptions of the volunteer opportunities available and the times we need help. Please read through the information and if you are able to participate send us an e-mail to chicagozinefest(at)gmail(dot)com with your full name, phone number, the type of volunteering you’d like to do, & what day/shift you prefer (please list three choices for shifts that you are interested in — if your first choice has been filled, we will move to the next available shift on your list). We appreciate your excitement and willingness to help, and will work around your schedules.

    Volunteer opportunity available in preparation for the Chicago Zine Fest:

    Sign Making Party! It has become a Chicago Zine Fest tradition to host a Sign Making Party the weekend or two before the zine fest. By this we mean the creation of informational signs to be hung at the venues i.e. “Information Table”,“Restroom This Way”, etc. The Sign Making Party will be held on Sunday, March 4th from 3-5pm at the Read/Write Library (914 N. California). We’ll supply all of the materials needed — all you have to do is let us know you are coming!
    Volunteer opportunities for day two of the fest, Saturday March 10th at Columbia College, 1104 South Wabash:

    Set-up volunteers. This will involve helping set up chairs and tables, putting up posters and signs, etc. You’ll have first crack at the free coffee! This shift is from 9-11am.

    Information/Registration table volunteers. You will be responsible for maintaining one of the information tables at the zine fest exhibition. This includes handing out programs and answering any basic questions exhibitors and visitors have. Shifts are as follows:
    Shift One: 9:30am-12pm
    Shift Two: 12-2pm
    Shift Three: 2-4pm
    Shift Four: 4-6pm

    Exhibitor food room volunteers. We will be offering free snacks & lunch to the zine fest exhibitors and volunteers. You will be responsible for maintaining the food room; refilling supplies as needed, making sure nobody eats a days worth of food or stuffs a tote bag full of chips, and cleaning any messes or spills. There will also be a coffee service by employees from Wormhole coffee shop. You may be asked to assist them with refilling water, cleaning up or where needed. Shifts are as follows:
    Shift One: 11-1pm
    Shift Two: 1-3:30pm
    Shift Three: 3:30-6pm

    Workshop volunteers. Tasks include helping workshop presenters with any sort of set up or breakdown (i.e. moving chairs around), monitoring the time and signalling to the presenter when time is nearing wrap up, cleaning up any materials left after the room is cleared. These shifts will be in blocks based on the length of the workshop, which vary.  Workshops start at 12pm and run until 5:45pm. If you are interested in helping with a workshop, let us know! We’ll email you the workshop list (with times) once it is finalized.

    Art & Reading Room volunteers. This year’s zine fest will feature a room that features exhibitors’ artwork, as well as examples of the zines that are available for purchase at the fest. Tasks include handing out floor maps to folks interested in particular zines (so that they can purchase zines at the authors’ table), making sure no one steals the zines, making sure no one removes or tampers with the artwork, and answering general questions about the art or zines. The art show will begin to come down at 5:30. The last shift may require assistance with de-installing art pieces, returning zines or art work to exhibitors at the fest, and compiling all reading room zines into one box. Shifts are as follows:
    Shift One: 9:30-12pm
    Shift Two: 12-2pm
    Shift Three: 2-4pm
    Shift Four: 4-6pm

    Kids table volunteers. The kids table will feature all of the materials that kids need to make their own zine on-site! Tasks include greeting the kids, encouraging them to make a zine, showing them the clip art/markers/etc, and taking pictures of their finished works. Shifts are as follows:
    Shift One: 11-1pm
    Shift Two: 1-3:30pm
    Shift Three: 3:30-6pm

    Roaming volunteer shifts. You will be available to attendees, exhibitors, other volunteers and organizers on either the first or eighth floor for miscellaneous tasks. Duties also include clean up of materials dropped on the ground (look for recycling bins throughout the building). You will be asked to direct patrons to where elevators, bathrooms, workshop/art rooms are. You might be asked to relieve an exhibitor from their table, thereby sitting at a exhibitors’ tables if they need to use the restroom, etc. Shifts are as follows:
    Shift One: 10am-12pm
    Shift Two: 12-2pm
    Shift Three: 2-4pm
    Shift Four: 4-6pm

    Tear down/clean up volunteers. We only have one hour to close up shop! Tasks include breaking down tables and chairs, removing any zine fest signs posted on the walls (including adhesive), and general clean up of waste materials (again, recycling is key!). This shift is from 6-7pm.

    (Please note that all venues are wheelchair accessible.)

  • Weekly Top 10

    1. Soup and Bread Cookbook: Building Community One Pot at a Time $20.95 – Thanks to everybody that came out for the event for this wonderful Soup and Bread Cookbook, compiled by Martha Bayne from the Hideout’s weekly winter soup nights of the same name.

    2. Kramers Ergot #8 ed. by Sammy Harkham and Dan Nadel (Picturebox) $32.95 – This latest Kramer’s anthology feels a little bit like cocaine and a reptile tank. The contemporary comics contributions are bookended by Robert Beatty’s retro-digital airbrush wizardry and bisected by higloss cgi still lives by Takeshi Murata. Then there’s a mouthwash Preface by Ian Svenonius’ space cowboy essay “Notes On Camp, Part 2”. Followed by some great cartoonists paring it down and playing it cinematic and cool – CF’s Hunger-ish scenario, Harkham’s Kubrick’s cube, Ben Jones gives us a long yarn in a dental floss line, Frank Santoro and Dash Shaw do a foggy bit about sexual predator entrapment hued in Cold Heat pervert-purples. Johnny Ryan delivers a space carnage ramble, Chris Cilla does some smut with David Heatly flavor overtones. Tim Hensley does Svenonius’ essay one better in a single panel National Lampoon sort of gag. Despite a icy hands-off feel to much of book there’s still a pulpy heart beating here-Gabrielle Bell nails down something sinister in pastel California colors. Leon Sadler is at the best I’ve ever seen him here – grungy characters in a feral bizarro smurfville. I may be biased, but I’m especially partial to the converging and diverging paralell multiverses of Anya Davidson’s brutal “Barbarian Bitch” which I think acts as a great counterweight to the book’s closer, a 40-page reprint of Penthouse’s “Wicked Wanda” that’s a (yes) campy  combo like if you remade “The Mouse That Roared” with the plotline of Hothead Paisan. -EF

    3. Monocle vol 5 #50 Feb 12 $10.00

    4. Adbusters Mar Apr 12 #100 vol 20 #2 $8.95

    5. Juxtapoz #134 Mar 12 $5.99

    6. Dazed & Confused vol 3 #6 Feb 12 $9.99

    7. Mono Kultur #30 Win 11 12 Chris Ware: A Sense of Thereness $15.00 – Well, yes…..Surprising, compelling interview zine import with Mr. Ware.

    8. Raw Deal #13 – Formerly “Loitering Is Good”, “Raw Deal” picks up in the West Oakland trainyards, an ode to California’s sun-drenched post-industrial shitscape. Partially about acclaimating to a job as a rookie brakeman for the Southern Pacific Rail, RD#13 incoroporates plenty of curmudgeonly appreciation for the yards’ old-timers and lots of salty anectdotes of train history. With a palpable sense of love-hate for West Coast wastelands, the segway gets made to the obsessive neccessity of punk botany. Like a beligerent Johnny Bad Appleseed, the heart of this issue is an account of cultivating rare trees, seed smuggling, survival and botanical accountability, renegade urban improvement, and the deep feeling of connection once you set your sights on an ecosystem as the big picture. Written with a ton of passion and a little swagger, it’s a little similar to Erick “Iggy Scam” Lyle’s personal-is-political-is-punk writing, totally badass and hungry to get at the core of it. Best two bucks yer going to spend all day.  -EF

    9. Bikenomics How Bicycling Will Save the Economy if We Let It by Elly Blue $5.50

    10. Field Guide to the Aliens of Star Trek by Joshua Chapman $1.00 – I mean, why stop with Season One, right? -EF

  • 3rd Annual Chicago Zine Fest to Take Place March 9th and 10th

    And we’re a sponsor! Events in various places around the city, including here at Quimby’s!

    On March 9th and 10th, Chicago will celebrate self-publishing at the 3rd Annual Chicago Zine Fest. Events kick off Friday, 1pm at Columbia’s Conaway Center with a Silver Tongue Reading Series all-female reading followed by Gender, Race and Sexuality: A Discussion with Women in Self-Publishing with zinesters Cristy Road (Bad Habits), Mimi Thi Nygen (Evolution of a Race Riot) and Anne Elizabeth Moore (Cambodian Grrrl). Friday evening features a Youth Zine Reading, and an Exhibitor Zine Reading at 826CHI and a lively celebration of the 2012 Spring Zine Olympics hosted by Billy da Bunny here at Quimby’s Bookstore.

    The Zine Fest will continue Saturday from 11am – 6pm at the Conaway Center where 200 zinesters will exhibit their publications, host workshops and lead panel discussions all in the spirit of self-publishing. Also featured will be a DIY Film Festival, art show and reading room. All events are free, open to the public and wheelchair accessible. All Friday readings and the panel will have ASL interpretation.

    “We have an amazing list of invited guests and a broad range of topics covered in workshops,” says Leslie Perrine, an organizer focused on event programming.

    Festival registration opened and sold out on December 15th 2011.  “We’ve had overwhelming support and enthusiasm from the zine community all over the country, from Canada, and as far away as the UK this year!” says Jen Twigg, organizer heading up exhibitor coordination.

    The Chicago Zine Fest is an independent event creating an outlet for small press and independent publishers to showcase their work with the aim to make DIY zine-making accessible, highlight the talents of self-published artists, and give independent artists a chance to interact and swap skills. The Chicago Zine Fest is sponsored by Columbia College Chicago’s Silver Tongue Reading Series, Quimby’s Bookstore, Renegade Craft Fair, DIYCHI and 826CHI.

    Friday, March 9th
    1-3pm Columbia College Conaway Center 1104 S Wabash Ave. www.colum.edu
    6-9pm 826CHI, 1331 N. Milwaukee Ave. 773-772-8108, www.826chi.org
    9:30-12am Quimby’s Bookstore 1854 W. North Ave. 773-342-0910, www.quimbys.com

    Saturday, March 10th 11am-6pm Columbia College 1104 S Wabash Ave. 1st & 8th floors.

    For more info visit chicagozinefest.org

  • New Stuff This Week

     

    We’re excited to have mono.kultur #30 – Chris Ware: A Sense of Thereness, Winter 2011/12 $15.00 – Interview by Urs Bellermann, artwork by Chris Ware.

    Zines
    Big Hands #9 by Aaron Lake Smith $4.00 – The first line I read of this zine when I randomly opened to a page in the middle of it had me hooked: “Overnight they had to drag an employee out of the plant after a vat of chemicals boiled over on top of him.” -LM
    Bestiary Captain Birthday Press by Michelle Yacht $3.00
    Amazing Women #6 by Devan Elyse Bennett $2.50
    Moms Mabley A Life by Devan Elyse Bennett $1.50
    Goat Fucker #2 $6.00 – This second issue of GF is more zine-y than the first issue, which was more comics heavy. Text about occulty stuff, and would be a good companion zine to go with The Current. -LM
    Ugly  No 1 #2 Feb 12 A Collection of Drawings and Crap by Matt Soria $4.00 – Attractive humour pamphlet with Shriglesque overtones. -EF
    Broken Pencil #54 $5.95
    Super Friends #1 $3.00 – Featuring found notes and pictures in the tradition of FOUND mag. Always interesting, no matter who is publishing it. It makes you want to hold on to or burn any evidence of photos you’re in or your early published work (read: notes you wrote in junior high). -LM
    Moral Fiber #2 and #4 by Chris Pernula $2.00 each – Clever pictures, quotes, drawings and what have you. David Shrigley meets street art, with some Fly-ish portrait renderings. Very funny. And snarky. Just the way I like it. -LM
    Suitable 4 Framin #8 Win 11 $5.00
    Oh My Word Picture That #1 by Kriss Stress $2.00
    Meanwhile by Sydney Paula Benjamin Smith $2.00
    The Inner Swine vol 17 #3 and #4 by Jeff Somers $2.00

    Comics & Comix
    Berlin #18 by Jason Lutes (D&Q) $4.95
    Chameleon #2 2011 by Jesse Balmer et. al $10.00
    Peehole #7 by Jim Donaldson $3.00 – Worlds collide! Welcome to the life of blood-drenched, skull-kissing, pantsless peacenik Danziggy! File this one next to Henry and Glenn Forever on your Danzig Humor Zeitgeist Shelf. -EF

    Wecome Fever Its Me the Magic #2 by Keenan Marshall Keller (DrippyBone) $4.00
    Galactic Breakdown #4  by Keenan Marshall Keller (DrippyBone) $8.00
    Brendan Wells Presents: Mickey Comics #2 Fantasia by Walt Disney Jr. $3.00 – Mickey drinks, Mickey swears, Mickey admits that Fantasia is boring. Isn’t this way more interesting than the movie? – LM
    Free Dog Food #2 Jan by Brendan Wells et. al $3.00
    Station In Life #1 Dec 11 by Delia Jean Hickey $3.99
    Vortex #1 by William Cardini $5.00 – The narrative of a primordeal blobby, swampy Paul Nudd-like goo, at once escaping and merging, in the “Hyperverse.”

    Graphic Novels and Trade Paperbacks
    Chairs Hiatus by Matthew Bogart $9.00
    Athos in America by Jason (Fantagraphics) $24.99
    Preacher Book Three HC by Garth Ennis et. al (Vertigo) $39.99
    Jinchalo by Matthew Forsythe (D&Q) $17.95
    Batman Time and the Batman TPB by Grant Morrison et. al (DC) $14.99
    Batman and Robin Batman Reborn  by Grant Morrison et. al (DC) $14.99
    One Model Nation by C. Allbritton Taylor and Courtney Taylor (Titan) $24.95 – This is the epic journey of art noise band One Model Nation, the final dark days of the Baader-Meinoff Gang, and the band’s mysterious disappearance only months later. It’s by Courtney Taylor, from the band The Dandy Warhols and Jim Rugg, the co-writer and artist of Street Angel.
    The Saga of the Swamp Thing HC Book Five by Alan Moore et. al (Vertigo) $29.99

    Art & Design Books
    Bellas Pockets by Lisa Bauso (Read Leaf) $19.95
    The Delusional Story of the Jonathan LeVine Gallery by Caleb Neelon (Gingko) $34.95
    Every Man Is My Enemy: Skinner (Gingko) $29.95 – Influenced by 80s pop culture, human struggle, myths and violence, dungeons and dragons, and the heavy metal gods, Skinner’s mind is one full of mayhem fueled by a calculated chaos. His work has been featured in many publications, including Blisss, Juxtapoz, Hi Fructose, and Beautiful / Decay. This is just one of the many images in this book.

    Closer by Soren Solkaer Starbird (Gingko) $35.00 – Amazing photographs of many of the world’s leading musicians from this Danish photographer: Amy Winehouse, Lily Allen, The White Stripes, Kate Nash, Metallica, Damon Albarn and more.
    We Own the Night: The Art of the Underbelly Project by Workhorse and PAC (Rizzoli) $35.00 – From early 2009 to mid-2010, the Underbelly Project was the world’s best-kept urban art secret. This is the only book documenting the project, during which the world’s leading urban artists, such as Swoon, Faile, Revok, and Lister, made late-night trips to an abandoned New York City subway station, painting night after night to transform the space into the largest underground art gallery in the world.

    DIY
    Seed to Weed: A Pot Enthusiasts Guide to Growing Marijuana by Chris Stone $13.99
    Sillk Screen Basics: A Complete How To Handbook by Claire  Dalquie et. al $24.95

    Fiction
    The Coincidence Engine by Sam Leith $23.99 – The tale of fascination with a random event sets into motion a madcap caper that will bring together an eccentric mathematician, last heard of investigating the physics of free will, a lovelorn Cambridge postgraduate and more.
    Moment in the Sun by John Sayles (McSweeneys) $18.00
    Simple Machine Like the Lever by Evan P Schneider $14.00
    Node by Tito Perdue $12.00

    Mayhem, Miscreants, Memoirs & Misc
    Hannibal and Me: What History’s Greatest Military Strategist Can Teach Us by Andreas Kluth (Riverhead) $26.95
    Frank Reade: Adventures in the Age of Invention by Paul Guinan and Anina Bennett $24.95 – Before Jules Verne’s flying machines and H. G. Wells’s spaceships, there was Frank Reade, globe-trotting inventor and original steampunk hero. Frank Reade magazines were the world’s first science fiction periodicals, enthralling millions of readers with tales of fantastic inventions and adventures. Now many of the spectacular images from the vintage dime novel series are being reprinted for the first time in more than a century, along with excerpts from the action-packed stories.

    The Electric Information Age Book: Mcluhan/Agel/Fiore and the Experimental Paperback by Jeffrey Schnapp and Adam Michaels $22.95 – Zinesters take note! There’s a cultural cut and paste in the house.
    Great American Cereal Book: How Breakfast Got Its Crunch by Marty Gitlin $19.95

    Magazines
    Juxtapoz #134 Mar 12 $5.99
    Wholphin #15 DVD $19.95
    Zingmagazine #22 $30.00
    There Magazine #13 $15.00
    Eyemazing 2011 #4 $35.00
    Mermaids and Mythology #2 $8.99
    Tattoo Revue #157 $7.99
    Witches and Pagans #24 $6.00
    Skeptic vol 17 #1 $6.95
    Mojo #220 Mar 12 $9.99
    Record Collector Feb 12 $10.50
    Mixmag #249 Feb 12 $10.50
    Uncut Mar 12 #178 $9.99
    Adbusters Mar Apr 12 #100 vol 20 #2 $8.95
    In These Times Feb 12 $3.50
    The Progressive Feb 12 $4.95
    Radical History Review Win 12 $14.00
    Tattoo #272 Apr 12 $6.99
    Tattoo Savage Apr 12 #119 $7.99
    Xalt vol 1 #1 $5.95 – A new tattoo and body art mag
    Rebel Ink Magazine Mar 12 $5.99.

    Literary Journals, Chap Books and Poetry
    N Plus 1 #13 Win 12 $13.95
    Creative Nonfiction #43 Fall Win 11
    Elephant #9 Win 11 $19.99
    PEN America #15 $10.00
    Coffin Factory #2 $9.00
    Pank #6 $15.00
    IdN vol 18 #6 $17.95

    Other Stuff
    Beci Orpin Blank Notebooks: Lost Girl, Bear Magic $7.95 each
    Free Wheelin Loony by Sid Yiddish $10.00

    Not everything listed here is available on our website; much of it is in the brick and mortar store. To see new items available for purchase on quimbys.com click here.

  • Awesome Website for Zinesters: stolensharpierevolution.org

    You loved the zine, now love the online resource. stolensharpierevolution.org went live last week. The instigator? Alex Wrekk of the DIY zine resource Stolen Sharpie Revolution: a DIY Zine Resource (and the zine Brainscan, among others). The site is a companion to the book, just in time for the tenth anniversary of the first edition of the book. stolensharpierevolution.org features constant updating of things like zine distribution resources like distros and stores that buy and sell zines, zine-related event listing, international zine-related contacts and more.

  • Weekly Top 10

    1. Coming Insurrection by The Invisible Committee (Semiotexte)- An eloquent call to arms arising from the recent waves of social contestation in France and Europe. Written by the anonymous Invisible Committee in the vein of Guy Debord.

    2. Field Guide to the Aliens of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season Two by Joshua Chapman $1.00

    3. Hi-Fructose #22 $6.95

    4. Monkey in the Basement and Other Delusions by Corinne Mucha (Retrofit) $5.00

    5. New Adventures of Beastlord by Chris Kuzma $4.00

    6. Gangsta Rap Posse #2 by Marra Benjamin $3.00

    7. Apartamento #8 $19.95

    8. Eye of the Majestic Creature by Leslie Stein $4.00 – Hot on the heels of the EOTMC collection Fantagraphics releaed this Spring comes a brand new issue of one of my favorite minicomics, Eye of the Majestic Creature. This time, things take a turn for the worse: even deceptively happy-go-lucky elements like LarryBear’s anthropomorphic guitarfriend Marshmallow are getting drunk a little to much. Stein sets Larry’s New York life of arbitrary retail and sand counting to the grim realist prose of Dreiser’s Sister Carrie. It’s a bit of heartwrench punctuated with Stein’s unflappable dark humor, bleaker certainly but still brilliant. -EF

    9. Butt #29 Fantastic Magazine for Homosexuals $9.90- Good gawd, after a two year hiatus we are back in the pink. This may be the last time Butt goes to print, but it’s hardly a bitter end- this issue serves it extra long and thick. Obscene yet classy homoerotic art? Check. Juicy interviews with a whole gamut of gays? Check. John Waters? Check. Cool, let’s party like its 1999. -EF
    10. Encyclopedia of Doris by Cindy Crabb $18.00 – Issues 19-27 of Doris zine, collected, alphabetized and extended for your feminist excitement.

  • New Stuff This Week

    Tonight (Fri the 3rd) is Punk Rock Karaoke at The Beauty Bar, a fundraiser for the Chicago Zine Fest. See you there!

    Zines
    Rad Dad #21 Occupy by Tomas Moniz $4.00
    On Being Hard Femme #1 by Jackie Wang $1.20 – Wang presents a great little zine about identity, toughness, bike grease femininity and lace trimmed queerness and making up definitions as you go along. -EF
    Xerography Debt #30 $4.00
    Railroad Semantics #5 2011 by Aaron Dactyl $6.50 – Absolutely, positively, without a doubt, obsessed with the rails. Another huge, densely packed issue, plenty of nice spreads of train tags and built around a winding travelogue taking us down the line from one notable stop to the next.

    Want What You Got 2012 by Ana Norell $1.00
    Travel On #1 and #2 by David Solomon $2.00 each – Solomon writes about his icoloclastic sentiments and what he’s trying to iconoclash with. Conversations about scars, letters about love, essays about collecting one’s own ephemera. -EF

    Ways of the Two Spirits #1 Jan 12 by Devan Elyse Bennett $3.00 – Part One in a series of a five zine series of Queer History Trans Traditions.
    Notes and Bolts #1 A Compendium of Music Food and Art by Kris Stress et al. $4.50
    Thought Catalog 2011 by Emily Kozik $5.00
    Light in the Dark With the Neon Arms BY Sonor On $10.00
    Pigeon to the Phoenix $5.00
    Field Guide to the Aliens of Star Trek The Next Generation Season Two by Joshua Chapman, English grade 8 April 13 1991 $1.00

    Comics & Comix
    Nix Comics Quarterly #4 $5.00
    Richie Rich: Poor Little Rich Boy by Sonor On $20.00

    Graphic Novels & Trade Paperbacks
    Life and Death of Fritz the Cat by R. Crumb (Fatagraphics) $19.99
    Action, Mystery, Thrills: Comic Book Covers of the Golden Age 1933- 1945 (Fantagraphics) $29.99
    Young Romance: The Best of Simon and Kirbys Romance Comics (Fantagraphics) $29.99
    Rat Catcher by Andy Diggler et al. (Vertigo) $12.99
    Unspent Love or Things I Wish I Told You by Shannon Gerard (Conundrum) $20.00
    Hermoddities by Temple Bates (Conundrum) $20.00
    Colliers Popular Press – David Collier’s 30 Years On the Newsstand by David Collier (Conundrum) $20.00

    Art & Design Books
    Lisa Anne Auerbach Umma Porjects July 11 – Oct 11 99 by Lisa Anne Auerbach et al. (University of Michigan Museum of Art) $7.00 – I love this phase from the introduction: “she probes the possibilities of craft and advocates for the leftist reclaimation of homemaking.”

    Inklings by Vida Simon $20.00
    Don’t Get Lonely Dont Get Lost by Elisabeth Belliveau (Conundrum) $25.00 – Sensitive, minimal and compelling. By the artist of Something to Pet the Cat About.
    Electrical Banana: Masters of Psychedelic Art ed. by Norman Hathaway and Dan Nadel (Damiani) $39.95

    DIY
    Mend It Better – Creative Patching Darning and Stitching by Kristin M. Roach (Scholastic) $18.95

    Mayhem, Miscreants, Memoirs & Misc
    Grey Gardens by Sara and Rebekah Maysles (FNP) $45.00
    Queer Spirits by AA Bronson and Peter Hobbs $34.95

    Poltics & Revolution
    Accumulation of Freedom: Writings on Anarchist Economics by Deric Shannon et al. (AK) $21.00
    Armitage Avenue Transcendentalists by Janina Ciezadlo, Penny Rosemont et al. (Kerr) $17.00

    Fiction
    Monsieur Pain by Roberto Bolano (ND) $13.95 – Now in soft cover.
    Lullabies For Little Criminals by Heather O’Neill (Harper) $13.99
    Three Messages and a Warning: Contemporary Mexican Short Stories of the Fantastic ed by Jimenez Eduardo Mayo (SB) $16.00
    Embassytown SC by China Mieville (Del Ray) $16.00

    Magazines
    Cabinet #44 24 Hours $12.00
    Apartamento #8 $19.95
    Yeti #12 $14.95
    Artbox #18 $10.99
    Toilet Paper #3 Jun 11 $12.00
    Toilet Paper #4 Nov 11 $12.00
    Dwell Mar 12 $5.99
    Wallpaper Feb 12 $10.00
    Sovereign #32 Feb 12 $3.95
    Flaunt #119 $10.95

    Sex & Sexy
    Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots  – Flaming Challenges… by Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore (AK) $17.95
    Luscious: Stories of Anal Eroticism ed. by Alison Tyler (Cleis) $15.95

  • This Just In! "Zine Firsts" Submissions Wanted

    Are you a Chicago-based zinester or a zine-friendly reader? One of our Quimby faves, Jami Sailor, wants to hear from you. Here she is, we’ll put her on the line…

    Recently I did a reading at Quimby’s that evolved into a talk about how we get into zines, the first zine we encounter and how that encounter has influenced us, and other first experiences relating to zines. This lead me to want to make a project focusing on this topic ZINES and FIRST TIMES = the first time you heard about zines, the first zine you ever got, your first zine fest (attending or tabling), the first time you bought something from a distro or from a brick and mortar store like Quimby’s, first time reviewed in Factsheet 5, Zine World, MMR, any first relating to zines.

    Please consider submitting. For the first issue I am focusing on (present and past)  zinesters currently living in the Chicago area. The deadline for the first issue will be April 1, 2012. Submissions can be text, comics, or a combination. You can submit a comic, write an essay, submit a photograph, your choice. If you would prefer I could also interview you on this topic. Just let me know.

    Topic: Firsts relating to zines
    Deadline: April 1, 2012
    Format: I will layout text pieces unless you have thoughts about how your piece should be laid out. No word limit. If you are submitting a comic or graphic-based piece, the dimensions are half letter size. Try to keep your comic four pages and under.

    If you are interested in submitting let me know, and I will harass you. If you are not interested let me know, and I will not harass you. If I don’t hear from you, you may be harassed. Please forward this onto any current or past zine and mini-comic creators you think might be interested. I would really appreciate it. Thanks for your time and I look forward to your submissions!

    Jami Sailor,
    yoursecretaryzine (at) gmail (dot) com

  • Dan Clowes Signs The Art of Daniel Clowes: Modern Cartoonist 5/17

    The First Monograph on the Celebrated Cartoonist:

    The Art of Daniel Clowes: Modern Cartoonist

     Edited by Alvin Buenaventura

    Designed by Jonathan Bennett

    Interview by Kristine McKenna

    Introduction by George Meyer

    Essays by Chip Kidd, Susan Miller, Ken Parille,

     Ray Pride, and Chris Ware

    “Clowes has explored the tedium and mystery of contemporary American life with more wit and insight than most novelists or filmmakers.” —New York Times

    “A master storyteller and artist. There is poetry in every panel.”—Esquire

    “The country’s premier underground cartoonist.” —Newsweek

    Throughout his twenty-five-year career, Daniel Clowes has always been ahead of artistic and cultural movements. In the late 1980s and 1990s his groundbreaking comic-book series Eightball defined the indie aesthetic of alternative comics, with wit, venom, and even a little sympathy. His breakthrough success, Ghost World, convinced mainstream readers of comics’ literary potential. In the new millennium, with works such as Ice Haven, Wilson, Mister Wonderful, and The Death-Ray, Clowes has redefined the graphic novel as an art form.

    Now, for the first time, the award-winning, New York Times bestselling graphic novelist, cartoonist, and screenwriter opens his archives. The Art of Daniel Clowes: Modern Cartoonist (Abrams ComicArts; April 2012; U.S. $ 40.00/Can. $45.00; ISBN 978-1-4197-0208-2), the first monograph on one of America’s most innovative cartoonists, collects Clowes’s best-known work alongside seldom-seen illustrations, personal photos and memorabilia, behind-the-scenes drawings and sketchbook pages, and unpublished comics and original art. This lavishly illustrated celebration of Clowes’s work, edited by Alvin Buenaventura, designed by Jonathan Bennett, also features essays by noted contributors such as Chip Kidd and Chris Ware.

    The Art of Daniel Clowes ties in to a touring retrospective of Clowes’s work opening at the Oakland Museum of California in April 2012.

    About the Author

    Alvin Buenaventura recently started the publishing company Pigeon Press. He previously published artistic and insightful graphic novels, books, and prints under the imprint Buenaventura Press from 2003 to 2009. Buenaventura also edits the monthly comics section for McSweeney’s literary magazine The Believer. He lives in Oakland, California.

    About the Book

    The Art of Daniel Clowes: Modern Cartoonist

    Edited by Alvin Buenaventura

    Designed by Jonathan Bennett

    Interview by Kristine McKenna

    Introduction by George Meyer

    Essays by Chip Kidd, Susan Miller, Ken Parille, Ray Pride, and Chris Ware

    Abrams / April 2012

    U.S. $40.00 / Can. $45.00

    ISBN 978-1-4197-0208-2

    Hardcover with jacket

    224 pages / 9 ¼” x 12″

    300 color illustrations

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