BEAN SPASMS
Scarce hardcover issue of this collaboration by Berrigan and Padgett, illustrated by Joe Brainard, mostly composed between 1962 and '65.
Scarce hardcover issue of this collaboration by Berrigan and Padgett, illustrated by Joe Brainard, mostly composed between 1962 and '65.
Uncommon Burroughs item from Ed Sanders' legendary mimeo press.
First edition of this collection of poems from the third generation New York School poet.
Second issue of this periodical, with contributions from Charles Olson, Jackson Mac Low, Aram Saroyan, Theodore Enslin, Diane Wakoski, and Ed Dorn.
Scarce final issue (the fourteenth) of Sander's legendary and infamous mimeo, printed "At a Secret Location on the Lower East Side" — from the library of poet and publisher Kenward Elmslie.
Complete eighteen-issue run of one of "the last of the great mimeo magazines," edited by Bernadette Mayer and Lewis Warsh.
'60s collection of poetry with work by Ralph Dickey, Ken Mikolowski, Jay Vogelbaum, Kent Rush, Mark Nakell, Sheldon Tannenbaum Jonathan Schwartz, David Hereshoff, Esther M. Broner, Walter Hall, Phillip Klukoff, and Richard M. Sweeney.
Complete fifth "Mexico" issue of Berman's legendary artist's magazine.
Original promo flyer for a reading series at NYC's Ear Inn (Dec. 5 to Feb. 27) where poets both major and lesser-known performed.
Second edition overall (after the Berkson/Brainard edition of 1971), first thus with Schneeman cover and illustrations. A charming collaboration.
Complete run of one of the rarest and more unusual journals of the mimeo revolution.
First edition of Notley's uncommon sixth collection, mimeographed "at The Poetry Project, New York City, in an edition of 350."
Signed first edition of Starbuck's second book,humorously inscribed by him to publisher and poet Alan DeLoach: "Alan Delouch's copy. / Watch it, bookfilcher: who / do you think you are, better / wiser more stylish or more of a / poet than he?"
Fifth issue of this "poets' newsletter" edited by Myers and published by his gallery, Tibor De Nagy.
First edition of this drama in verse, the seventh in the Artists' Workshop Press series of Workshop Books, under the general editorship of Robin Eichele.
First edition of this collection of Clark's poetry, illustrated with seven of his drawings.
First edition of this slim and beautiful collection of poems, one of the smallest editions from d.a. levy's Renagade Press.
Debut issue of Kupferberg's Greenwich Village magazine.
First edition, association copy, inscribed by Towle to fellow poet Terence Winch, with cover art by Allan D'Arcangelo.
Later issue of Nuttall's masterful mimeo magazine, one of the pinnacles of the form.
Substantial collection of Saxon's poems, editor of POETS AT LE METRO, divided by the table of contents into three groups: News Madness; Waiting Room; and Moorings.
First edition of Ron Padgett and Johnny Stanton's presentation of Henry Carey's satirical tragedy. Based on the text of the 1743 first edition of Carey's Dramatic Works with only minor orthographical changes.
First City Lights issue of the San Francisco literary mag, the brainchild of Allen Ginsberg, Bob Kaufman, and John Kelly.
Last regular issue (and next to last issue overall) of Berrigan's quintessential NY mimeo, a cornerstone of the movement.
Eleventh in the Artists' Workshop Press series of Workshop Books. Caplan's poems, with a front cover illustration by Sherry Higgins and cover lettering by Gary Grimshaw.