Zines to download -weekly roundup- March 7th 2010

Ok boys and gals, here’s a new list of zines to download for the past week. This week two new zine-download blogs were started: essential ephemera and You’re a Disease (70s Punk Fanzines blog) and I’m really excited about it.

Let’s start with the new ones…
From essential ephemera:

From You’re a Disease (70s Punk Fanzines blog):

From the Digital Fanzine Preservation Society:

From Punks is hippies:

I also found:

Once again, shitloads of zines, pamphlets, political publications at the zinelibrary.info:

Finally from this site words and stuff:

Did I miss any? Let me know. Did you upload or planning to upload a zine? Let me know. Do you know someone who uploads zines? Let me know…
Happy reading!

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The Prisoner #1

The Prisoner #1 comicI don’t usually review zines that I don’t have a physical copy on my hands because without the physical copy it is hard to get a better understanding of the zine and its author. However I’ll do an exception for this particular one since the creator doesn’t have the luxury to go xerox and mail it. As you might have already figured out from the title of the zine, the author is in prison, serving a 6 year sentence. So the only distribution it gets is in the digital form, online.

This is an autobiographic mini-comic. The writer recounts his first days in prison, starting from the judge ruling against him. He presents the absolute absurdness of the life in prison. He describes his days, how he bears with the guards and their snitches, the fear of solitary and how boredom turns into depression.

Despite the horrible conditions that this comic was written under, the author manages to maintain a sense of humor and an optimistic attitude, which I can only imagine how important it must be when you are locked up.

Unfortunately there is no contact info to provide. You can download it from the link below.

Download

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New zines to download -weekly roundup- February 28th 2010

The weekend is here again, time to roundup all (?) the zines that were uploaded in various websites this week. Download, print or read on screen and when you’re done, send your thoughts to the creator(s). So here we go…

New zines from Punks is hippies:

New zine from the Digital Fanzine Preservation Society:

Here’s a bunch more from various sources:

As usual, there are tons of new zines, pamphlets, political publications at the zinelibrary.info:

Not a zine but here’s the Microcosm Publishing’s 2010 Catalog in PDF.

Did I miss any? Let me know.
Happy reading everybody!

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New zines to download -weekly roundup- February 20th 2010

This is a collection of the zines that were posted online this week. All the credit and thanks goes to the people who scanned and uploaded them, so leave a comment to thank them!

New zines at the Digital Fanzine Preservation Society:

New zines at Punks is hippies:

New zines at the The Queer Zine Archive Project:

New zines at the zinelibrary.info:

As we found out from a post at the Digital Fanzine Preservation Society, Richard Johnson has scanned and uploaded all the issues of his fanzine, Disposable Underground. Follow the link to download them.

Did I miss any zines? Let me know.
Happy reading!

*update*
Here’s another one: PUNK ZINE, released two years ago, focused mainly on the punk scene in Columbus, Ohio.

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Black Carrot #12: The Jewish Issue

Black Carrot #12: The Jewish Issue coverStrangely enough this is a punk zine about religion. More surprising it’s not a religion bashing zine, on the contrary actually. Don’t worry, no one will try to proselytize you to follow religion in this zine. It is only the personal accounts of the author, Dave Fried (also known as Dave Taco and Dave Pulps), a Jew for life as he is says, in a big auto-biographical story.

He writes about growing up in a Jewish family. He shares how as a teen punk he stopped practicing religion and how he started again years later. How he’s trying to balance between tradition and his personal believes. He goes shortly into politics (Israel, Palestine, Gaza strip etc) and more into the oppression of women and LGBT people in traditional Judaism (and Christianity and Islam). However as he explains, things have started to change. He writes about Jewish feminists and LGBT activists who are trying to make a difference and how more Jews see their point and support with simple acts such as adding an orange on the Seder Plates.

Although I’m not keen on religion, I thought this was a good read and I got to know a lot about Judaism. Don’t get put off by me saying that this is a religious issue. This is personal writing about religion. It is old fashioned cut and paste and if you want to download a copy and print it or read it on the screen, the Queer Zine Archive Project has it online: download Black Carrot #12.

You can listen to an interview that Dave did with FeastofFun.com and check his band Bromance.

To contact the author and/or order a hard copy:

Dave Fried’s profile in We Make Zines
black carrot
box 830
chicago il 60690 / usa
disdoom@gmail.com

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