THE FINE BOOK
Scarce signed handmade artist's book on the subject of itself, produced in a limited edition of just 20 copies.
Scarce signed handmade artist's book on the subject of itself, produced in a limited edition of just 20 copies.
First edition of this early pamphlet documenting the dramatic changes to the community with the rise of Silicon Valley.
First edition of this collection of four short fictions, with graphics by the author and a critical essay by Susan Smith Nash on Martin's "apocalyptic feeling".
Halloween issue of this monthly guide for girls of the early 1950s; the publication was equal parts part social training manual, craft project suggestions, and advertisement for Dennison Crepe Paper (sold by the publisher.)
Clubzine of the Birmingham Science Fiction Club, inscribed by editor Jim Gilpatrick to science fiction writer Grant Carrington.
Rare Neoist mail art and zine assemblage.
First three issues of the E.G. Records Newsletter, founded to promote the label's artists following the January '79 opening of its U.S. office.
Early Chicago punk and new wave fanzine, whose 23-issue run lasted from 1979 to 1983.
"All British Number," featuring work by Bill Butler, Tom McGrath, Dave Cunliffe, Lionel Kearns, Dick Wilcox, Pete Berry, Gary Lundberg, and Bob Knapp. "Edited, drawn, layed out, cut-up & interred" by Nuttall.
Fourth issue of this wonderfully titled mimeo, subtitled "The Magazine of Mental Intercourse."
An independent publication by two ex-military brothers, Thomas and Robert Dunker, whose sexually explicit and cynical work shares something with Raymond Pettibon and similar developments in underground comics.
Single issue of the long-running art zine helmed by Frank Gaard, a teacher at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design.
Four issues of this bi-weekly tabloid from the peak of derby's mid-70s revival (which remained its last until the current boom).
Includes articles on Ultravox, Captain Beefheart, Gary Numan (cover story), XTC, and The (English) Beat.
Rare proto-zine of pseudoscience, all five issues of this perpetual motion journal which issued its first four numbers (as well as the PERPETUAL MOTION HANDBOOK) under the editorship of Barrows.