ASPEN: The Magazine in a Box
Complete ten-issue run of this elaborately produced and hugely influential artists' magazine, one of the defining publications of the 1960s.
Complete ten-issue run of this elaborately produced and hugely influential artists' magazine, one of the defining publications of the 1960s.
Scarce first edition of Reznikoff's poetry collection, the final publication from The Objectivist Press.
Limited first edition, signed by Ginsberg, of Selerie's extensive three-part interview with Ginsberg, conducted in 1979 before and after a reading at Battersea Arts Centre in London.
Limited first edition, signed by Ginsberg, of these excerpts from Ginsberg's letters to Kerouac and selections from Kerouac's then-unpublished journals.
Original exhibition catalogue, with an interview with the artist by curator King and a critical essay by Feld.
Signed first edition of this monograph on the Polish-American photojournalist and portrait photographer.
Signed first edition of Spiegelman's self-published mini-comic, produced around the time of the artist's move to San Francisco and immersion in the underground comics scene.
First edition of this personal reflection on the place where skateboarding meets entrepreneurship, by "the most famous and influential skateboarder of all time" (jacket).
Inscribed limited edition of this chapbook by the Long Island poet, illustrated by artist and fellow East Hamptonite Josh Dayton.
Inscribed first edition of these poems by the Irish-American poet and musician associated with Washington, DC's "Mass Transit" school of Language poetry.
Scarce catalogue of an exhibition introducing eight mid-'80s photographers from West Berlin to the American public.
Scarce limited edition chapbook containing di Prima's and Matson's poetic reponses to the 2001 attacks on and by the United States; both works also appeared in the antiwar anthology AN EYE FOR AN EYE MAKES THE WHOLE WORLD BLIND.
First printing of the Artists' Workshop Press edition of 1966, from the original Fug Press edition of 1965.
Collection of verse from Sanders and his notorious press.
Complete eleven-issue run of this arguably the greatest publication to emerge from the mid-century experimental music scene.
Complete set of Ed Sanders's short-lived "Quote of the Week" from his notorious press, featuring three brief selections from Harry Fainlight, John Ashbery, and Kenneth Koch.
Signed limited handbound edition of this illustrated book by frequent New York School collaborators Rivers and Koch, the product of friendly poetic competition between Koch and Frank O'Hara.
First edition of this pamphlet on proper handling of crime scene evidence, written for police use by Charles Stockley Collins of Scotland Yard, leading expert in the field and identifier of the first man convicted for murder in Britain by fingerprint evidence.
Printed (and "freaked, groped, slurped...") in November 1964, featuring poetic contributions all thematically related to "buggery" in one form or another.
Scarce signed artist's book, setting Wilson's illustrations of anthropomorphized owls against snippets of disturbing text from scientific research papers.
Signed limited edition handmade pop-up book by the painter, street artist, and creator of Grosse Victime magazine, one of just five copies produced.
Very scarce collection of visual imagery in a wide variety of media, produced as part of an international project on Non Verbal Communication originated by Angers School of Art with participation from several art schools in England and Germany.
Uncommon first edition of this energetic contemporary guide to punk's leading practitioners and cultural predecessors, with a significant section devoted to French musicians often absent from Anglophone histories: Elodie Lauten, Metal Urbain, Marie et les Garçons, Electric Callas, and more.
Publisher's file copy of the Fall 1966 issue, including Tony Tanner on William S. Burroughs, scenes from Weiss's play THE INVESTIGATION, and William Styron's short story "Runaway."
Original issue of the literary magazine featuring interviews with Peter Gay and Lionel Trilling, and dueling responses to William Styron's CONFESSIONS OF NAT TURNER by Michael Thelwell and Robert Coles.