OLE: A Magazine for All Those Unacknowledged Legislators of the World, Especially Those Who Are Really Unacknowledged - No. 2 - March 1965
Second issue of this magazine edited by Blazek.
Second issue of this magazine edited by Blazek.
Uncommon booklet publsihed in conjunction with the conference organized by Roger Guedalla and Chris Brookeman.
Two issues of this little magazine featuring contributions from E.E. Cummings, James Merrill (two poems), Wallace Stevens, Richmond Lattimore, and a review of Celine's DEATH ON THE INSTALLMENT PLAN by a 21-year-old Allen Ginsberg.
First issue of this little magazine published from Herbert Lehman College in the Bronx. Features a 12-page interview with Ginsberg, 24 poems by Mary Oppen, poems by Robert Hellman and Michael O'Brien, and two narratives by Alison Colbert.
With front and back covers by Bill Griffith (author of Zippy). A poetry and literature magazine with an interesting roster of contributors, including a sexually explicit Nancy comic from Bill Berkson and Joe Brainard, as well as poetry from Lewis McAdams, Audre Lorde (!), an anonymous interview about the Attica prison riots, a contribution from the Cockettes, and other works of poetry and visual art.
Issue of this Michigan poetry magazine. Other contributors: David Cope, Benjamin Gleisser, Rich Murphy, and David Montgomery.
Features work by V.R
Featues Thomas Merton's poems "St.
Scarce literary magazine featuring work from Kit Robinson (a play called "Creative Floors"), Michael Amnasan (excerpts from the book FIVE FREMONT), and Laura Moriarty (a series of prose poems titled "Jubilee").
Small poetry mag featuring the work of Alan Feldman and Mike Finn, with a photograph of each poet.
Chicago mimeo magazine principally edited by Darlene Pearlstein with Bob Rosenthal, Peter Kostakis, and Richard Friedman, this issue's editor.
Chicago mimeo that ran for 14 issues.
Issue of this lit mag featuring an interview with Norse and several of his poems, along with work by Bukowski, Ferlinghetti and others.
Contains poetry by C.V
First issue of this "magazine of the mind," charmingly illustrated throughout with pulp sci-fi-style collages. With poems by Hollo, Brainard, Violi, Allan Kornblum, Jack Marshall, Merrill Gilfillan, and others.
Short-lived mag founded by Barry Miles (with Berrigan listed as the New York editor), later published as the LONG HAIR TIMES.
Handsomely designed little magazine from Iowa City. A particularly strong issue featuring work from Clark Coolidge, Larry Fagin, Judson Crews, Dick Gallup, Ron Padgett, Anne Waldman, and many others.
Founded in Iowa City by Perelman and Michael Waltuch, HILLS was an early publisher of what came to be known as language poetry. This issue introduces TALKS, a series of lectures, conversations and performances hosted in various locations around the Bay Area [Clay and Phillips, 247].
Founded in Iowa City by Perelman and Michael Waltuch, HILLS was an early publisher of what came to be known as language poetry.
Founded in Iowa City by Perelman and Michael Waltuch, HILLS was an early publisher of what came to be known as language poetry. This issue was typeset by Barrett Watten with cover design by Francie Shaw [Clay and Phillips, 247].
An uncommonly strong issue with O'Hara contributing "For James Dean," four poems by Merwin, and early work from Carruth and Kinnell.
Text in Swedish.
First issue of this British situationist journal.
One of 250 copies.