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Editors_Choice
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1994-10-02
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This file/document is ShareRight 1994; you may copy, reproduce, use and/or
distribute this information however and as often as you like as long as
this sentence is included.
Posted April, 1994 by Jerod Pore. This file is part of
FactSheet Five - Electric. Questions or comments regarding
FactSheet Five - Electric should be directed to jerod23@well.sf.ca.us
If you wish to send zines for review in both the electronic and print
versions of Factsheet Five, the snailmail address is
Factsheet Five
PO Box 170099
San Francisco CA 94117-0099
EDITOR'S CHOICE
%Title: AMBERZINE Issue 5 November, 1993
%Descr: A thick, beautiful zine dedicated to Zelazny's epic _Amber_
series and the *diceless* RPG extrapolated from it.
Usually issues of _Amberzine_ comprise of helpful hints for both
GMs and players, some reader feedback and a big hunk or two of
stories taken from some long-running campaigns. *This* issue is
different. All the game-related stuff is still there, and the
letters of course, but instead of stories built upon Zelazny's
work, Erick re-publishes, *in its entirety,* the single-most
influential source for _Amber_, Henry's Kuttner's (or C. L.
Moore's, there is some debate as to who actually wrote most of
it) _The Dark World_ with illustrations by Michael Kucharski.
With a new introduction from Zelazny himself, and a reprint of a
Ray Bradbury essay on Kuttner *and* Jane Lindskold's essay which
presents a point-by-point comparisson of the two tales. (Who is
Jane Lindskold? She's the writter of Zelazny's biography.) And
if all that weren't enough, _The Dark World_ is traced back to A.
Merritt's _Dwellers in the Mirage_. If, somehow, you were able
to find Kuttner's book in some dusty old bookstore, you wouldn't
have all the other neat, and very nicely typeset writtings to
accompany it. And this is the sort of thing that makes
_Amberzine_ a really wonderful publication. Erick and crew truly
*love* the worlds of _Amber_, and that love and affection shine
in this issue.
This issue of _Amberzine_ is essential to anyone interested in
the roots of the _Amber_ series.
%Info: $10.00 Each , Subs: $40.00 for 5 issues to
Erick Wujcik, Phage Press, PO Box 519, Detroit, MI 48231-0519
(162 Pages/D/JP)
No trades/submissions OK/back issues/takes ads.
%Title: ASYLUM FOR SHUT-INS Volume 1 Issue 1 Oct. '93
%Descr: Rev. Ivan Stang published his classic book *High Weirdness
by Mail* back in 1987. It was an incredible compendium of
strange groups publishing rants and tracts all across the
county. While much of the book is still valid, it was sadly
never updated. The Kole clan took the work of Stang and the
SubGenius and turned it into a quarterly publication. This
exciting new publication is like an expansion of all the
weirdness in *Factsheet Five* like the Stuff, Catalogs, and
most importantly, the Fringe reviews.
Packed full of off-the-wall clip art, this premier issue is
regular grab-bag of strangeness. Sure they've got zine reviews,
13 pages of listing very simmilar to this here mag. Then there's
16 pages with extensive descriptions of the stangest stuff
available through the mail. Lost worlds, weird sciences,
prophetic religions, utopian communities, secret societies, and
Jack Chick comics. There's even an Crumb-styled Photo Phunny
showing how to have fun with the mail system. I particularly
liked the introduction where Mr. Kole explains the inspiration
for this zine.
It's weirdness spinning out of control.
%Info: $2.50 Each , Subs: $ 9.00 for 4 issues to
Mike Kole, Asylum for Shut-Ins, P.O. Box 46581, Bedford, OH 44146
(48 Pages/S/RSF)
Trades OK/submissions OK/back issues/takes ads.
%Title: BLAT! Issue 2 Fall 1993
%Descr: It's been forty years since Ted White published his first
fanzine. After that much practice, you'd think he'd get it
right. He most certainly did. _Blat!_ is, among all the
other sfanzines I've seen, the archetypal sfanzine. You can
measure all others against it, measure how they rate in
their Blat!ness. _Balt!_ also covers a lot of fandom
history, and the re-publication of classic, if somewhat
unnoticed zines from the past, makes it a living history of
fandom. Best of all, one can get a good introduction to
both the gestalt and the names and faces of sfandom without
having a Master's Degree in fanspeak.
In this edition, Ted reprints _Spung_ - his fanzine he did in
prison. Yup, fen behind bars. Ted was a casualty in the War on
Civil Rights, a.k.a. the War on (some) Drugs. _Spung_ and
_Blat!_ tell of story of the bust, the boring and frustrating
life in jail, and eventual release. It's one of the best
accounts of 'life' in jail that I've read. Of course, this issue
of _Blat!_ has much more than depressing jail stories. _Blat!_,
if nothing else, is a celebration of life, and at 94 pages (with
20 pages of letters, no less), there's a whole buncha celebrating
going on. Bob Tucker's introduction to a book on fandom, cut
from the book, is printed here. Andy Hooper, William Rotsler,
et. al. (the only people to have enjoyed WorldCon) provide
postcard reports. Will Straw writes on being in East Berlin
during the Fall of the Wall. And all the 'typical' fanzine stuff
of other fanzines, conventions, and even some books and a great
slagging of Jurassic Park.
This issue of _Blat!_ would make the best explanation of sfanzine
fandom that anyone could offer.
%Info: The Usual Each to
Dan Steffan Ted White, 1014 N. Tuckahoe Street, Falls Church, VA 22046
(94 Pages/S/JP)
Trades OK/submissions OK/no ads.
%Title: CHIP'S CLOSET CLEANER: Pop Culture - Humor - Trivia - Fun
Issue 10
%Descr: Spring '93
*Chip's Closet Cleaner* is rising into my top 10 list of
personal zines. This issue is almost a stretch from the
"perzine" format but who can deny that tag to a zine editor
who puts kiddie pictures of himself and his sister on the
covers of his zine.
Anyone that liked the *Religion of the Month Club's* collectors
of useless garbage issue will love this one. Anyone that hasn't
seen it -- get this before it's gone. Chip sent out 20
questionaires to the strangest collecting zines/support groups
and 15 of them responded. The winners for best zine title goes to
the International Sand Collectors Society and their zine *The
Sand Paper*. I also liked reading about Bill Bond and his 2,000
spark plugs. As for my own personal obsession, collecting beer
bottle openers, I don't see it here but I would like to join the
bus token collectors group and read their zine *the Fare Box.*
You thought the index to *Factsheet Five* was cool, wait till you
read his subject index to the *Weekly World News*. Ten pages of
tiny type listing articles on Aliens, Amputees, Bigfoot, Breasts,
Canabalism, and Cavemen. It reads like one of J.G. Ballard's
postmodern novels. He also interviewed Walter Cronkite's
biography and told us about his fondness for a musical fountain
in his home town in Michigan.
Always a fine issue and this is his best one yet.
%Info: $3 Each to
Chip Rowe, 826 Aspen St NW, Washington, DC 20012-2510
(28 Pages/HL/RSF)
No trades/back issues/no ads.
%Title: CRASH COLLUSION: A Quarterly Guide to the Fringe Issue 6
Winter,
%Descr: 93/94
UFO's, ethnobotany, orgone, conspiracies and more all come
together in this most excellent zine. Scholarly, but not
stuffy, open-minded, but not gullible, _Crash Collusion_ is
the best source of information regarding very dangerous
subjects.
This issue is packed with more information than any prior edition
of _Crash Collusion_. I'm amazed that so much data can be
legibly packed into 44 pages. Yael Dragwyla's article on the
connections between Magick and paranoid schizophrenia makes one
hope that magick is *not* real. John Carter's "The Red Lodge" is
*the ultimate* Masonic conspiracy, and would make RAW spin in his
VR grave. Still on the conspiracy trail, Steve Mizrach
synthesizes some of the more outlandish information available on
UFOs and related phenomenae (c.f. _Extra-Terrestrail Freinds and
Foes_ in the Books section) and the alledged government cover-up.
Meanwhile, Paul Rydeen offeres a Jungian perspective on the UFO
mysteries. Donna Kossy's article on trepanning should *not* be
read while eating. Friends, don't make the same mistake that I
did. Then there's the three articles on modern psychdelia,
including an interview with Thomas Lyttle (publisher of
_Psychdelic Monographs and Essays_) who talks about many things,
including the rave scene and his experiences in the O.T.O. And
if all that weren't enough, there's reviews of, and ads for even
more information!
Forget this tired, old reality. Read _Crash Collusion_ and warp
your DNA in ways never before dreamed.
%Info: $4.00 Each , Subs: $14.00 for 4 issues to
Wesley Nations, PO Box 49233, Austin, TX 78765
(44 Pages/S/JP)
Trades OK/submissions OK/back issues/takes ads. email
wnations%podbox.uucp@cs.utexas.edu
%Title: DHARMA COMBAT
%Descr: Jim Keith found time after finishing his most-impressive
book, *Secret and Supressed*, [see F5 #49] to compile one
last issue of his zine. It's been so long since I saw the
last issue of *DC* that I barely remember what was in it.
He's going out with a bang on this one. 130 pages filled with
reprints of the most bizare, yet thought-provoking articles from
the fringes of our scientific, political, and spiritual world.
There are many articles here exploring the various controverseys
surrounding AIDS such as extensive heterosexual transmission or
the virus theory. Other articles include John Stockwell on the
CIA, Wayne Hederson's experiences inside Kalifornia prisons,
Daniel Brandt's political memoirs, the plan for national
emergency, the oil state in Somalia, the L.A. Riots, early UFO
sightings, and a modern look at the Qaballah.
Check Ferral House of IllumiNet Press for info on other projects
by Jim.
%Info: $12 Each to
Jim Keith, Dharma Combat, P.O. Box 20593, Sun Valley, NV 89433
(130 Pages/S/RSF)
No trades/back issues/no ads.
%Title: DRAG ALLEY
%Descr: A great zine about hanging out in Berkeley and hoping
freight trains around the country. 40 pages of dense,
handwritten, but readable type, telling stories so engaging
it just draws you in. Lots of pictures too, to give it that
gritty "you-are-there" feel.
Hollie wrote about how her troubles started in New Orleans with a
visit to a hospital that resulted in a prescripton for
Amdxacillin. She hopped a freight train to Memphis, passed out in
the train yard, and woke up in at the Methodist General Hospital.
It turns out that all she really needed to do was to eat some
yogourt and stay away from doctors. More stories about freight
trains and travels through the south. The last story is a trip up
to Oregon and then back to Oakland. She even tossed in
instructions on making wine.
Highly recomened. I think the price is $1 but enclose some extra
stamps.
%Info: $1 Each to
Hollie , P.O. Box 65, Berkeley, CA 94701
(40 Pages/D/RSF)
No trades/no ads.
%Title: IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFESTYLE: A Seventies Flashback Issue 2
%Descr: "A Seventies Flashback," indeed. This zine is a loving
deconstruction of the decade that's currently both reviled
and steeped in nostalgia. Candi Strecker takes an almost
academic (but much more fun to read) direction, giving a
good, hard look to the decades fads, "lifestyles," products,
and people.
In issue 2, Strecker gives us the facts on "Grand Themes of the
Seventies," including "natural" and "survival." The 1972
cigarette ad that touts "natural menthol" Strecker describes sort
of sums up the "What were they thinking?" tone of this zine.
There's also a great article on '70s food that breaks down
categories of alternative eating into subjects like "the
organic," "the political," and "Oriental mysticism." All the
great '70s foods are discussed: sun tea, tofu, Screaming Yellow
Zonkers. There's even a recipes page and a sidebar on useless
appliances of the '70s, like the ever-popular Fry-Baby. Also look
for toys, advertising, and sex of the '70s. This eagerly awaited
second issue lives up to its level of anticipation.
%Info: $4 Each to
Candi Strecker, It's A Wonderful Lifestyle, 590 Lisbon, San Francisco,
CA
94112
(0 Pages/MLW)
No trades/back issues/no ads.
%Title: NOTES FROM THE LIGHTHOUSE E Issue 7
%Descr: This zine is almost an archtype of the category of
personal/travel zines. Like *Cometbus,* *Mudflap,* or
*Dishwasher,* Joshua writes engaging autobigraphical tales
of traveling around the country, people he's met and things
he's done. When he ends up sticking around for more then a
fortnight we get all the inside scoup of wherever he happens
to be living. Like Keoroac's *On the Road,* this zine is
truly a product of the time. All over the country people are
abandoning the "American Dream," realizing that there are so
few career options that may lead to prosperous wealth
they're taking what's available and running with it. Many
communities are filled with affordable housing and a
plethora of *McJobs.* Couch surfing and temping from city to
city. Meeting people and starting a zine. Joshua has been
doing for about five years.
Joshua collected enought money to print 1,000 compies of this
hugely-expanded issue #7 of *NFTL*. He's been living in Eureka
and Arcata for a while so most of this issue contains stories
about Northern California. He told us of his job cleaning up a
school during the Summer, his crappy resturant job, living in a
strange rotting cabin, the music scene in Eureka, and the two big
24-hour garage sales. We also find out about some of the unusual
people in Loveland, Colorado, the famously unhelpful Oakland
cops, and his experiences hitch hiking. It's a thick zine that's
loads of fun.
Send him a bunch of stamps to help out with mailing costs. Also
available from Blacklist Mailorder and Wow Cool.
%Info: $1.25 Each to
Joshua Baker, P.O. Box 165, Eureka, CA 95502
(40 Pages/S/RSF)
Trades OK/submissions OK/back issues/takes ads.
%Title: SHIP OF FOOLS Issue 3 Summer '93
%Descr: More legal problems for Kif Davis and his mom Pamela. Back
in May of '92 they got busted for for accepting a package
containing about an once marijuahna from a cop posing as a
UPS driver. Right before the trial was to start on their
shop got busted for selling totally legal sterilized hemp
seeds to be used as a food additive. She was found inocent
on the marijuhana seed charges but guilty on the UPS case
with two years of jail time ahead of her.
The entire case is completely documented in this, the third,
issue of *Ship of Fools*. These types of injustices are happening
all over the country as a result of the "war on drugs" which is
destroying peoples's lives and cloging our courts and jails. I've
read no better example if this insane activities then this
clearly documented first-hand account here. That's only a third
of this 56-page issue packed full of intellegent political rants
and news of radical activities around the world. Much of it
reprints, but selected from a huge range of alternative souces
making for wide overview of radical views. Included here is an
intro to anarchism (by Emma Goldman), self-defense against the
police (by William Kunstler), a report from the '92 Anarchist
Gathering (from *Anti-power*), and the murder of Sacco & Venzetti
(from *The Match!*). Totally worth the money and a worthy group
in serious need of financial assistance.
They are now selling books and magazines. Write them for their
4-page flyer.
%Info: $2 Each , Subs: $ 5.00 for 3 issues to
Kif Davis, Ship Of Fools, PO Box 2062, Westminster, MD 21158
(56 Pages/T/RSF)
Trades OK/submissions OK/takes ads.