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Life as a librarian need not be terminally
dull, as Raleigh proves over and over
again in these pages. He recounts
strange questions encountered at the
reference desk, gives us glimpses of what
it's really like in librarian school and sug-
gests ways to discourage masturbation
in the stacks. Along the way, bits and
pieces of obscure writing are dropped
in--almost as much fun as finding them
serendipitously among the stacks.
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All kinds of other zines are treated including ones devoted to
flying saucers, old Norse religions,
sports, hobbies and collecting,
"hip whatnot," travel, fringe
politics--and even experimental
art. Speaking of this last
item, it is refreshing to note
that Gunderloy and Janice parcel
out almost as much space to
graphics, rants, poems and other
matter culled from the zines
they discuss as they do to their
own comments. Hence, we're not
just told about zines, we're
meaningfully exposed to parts of
them. Contact and ordering
information for every
publication mentioned is
included, too. Moreover, a
number of pages at the book's
end deal in detail with the
nitty-grit of starting, running
and circulating one's own zine.
Of course, it can't be said that The World of Zines is
perfect: every connoisseur of
the field will find dozens of
terrible omissions (where, for example, is my favorite
zine, the subtle journal of raw coinage?!?).
Considering that there are
something like 20,000 zines
extant (according to the
authors' estimate, which seems
sound to me), this is
inevitable. It is not
important, for the object of the
book is to introduce the scene
it covers, not exhaustively
memorialize it, and introduce it
The World of Zines does with efficiency and
flair.
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