box 1, box 2, box 3, box 4, box 5, box 6, box 7, box 8, box 9, box 10, box 11, box 12, box 13, box 14, box 15, box 16, box 17, box 18, box 19, box 20, box 21, box 22, box 331, box 332, box 333
Writings by Griffin
circa 1980-2015
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
SERIES CONTAINS AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS: Audiovisual materials in this collection will
require assessment and possible digitization for safe access. To review these
audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
SERIES CONTAINS DIGITAL MATERIALS: Special equipment or further processing may be
required for viewing. To access digital materials you must notify the reference desk in
advance of your visit.
Scope and Content
Writings by Griffin include published and unpublished manuscript writings, including
proofs and galleys, monographs, and serials featuring Griffin's writings.
box 1, box 2, box 3, box 4
Manuscripts
Scope and Content
The published and unpublished manuscript writings by Griffin include proofs and
galleys and are organized in chronological order.
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
SUBSERIES CONTAINS DIGITAL MATERIALS: Special equipment or further processing may be
required for viewing. To access digital materials you must notify the reference desk
in advance of your visit.
box 1, folder 1-2
Typescripts
circa 1980s
Scope and Contents
Materials include typescripts of Griffin's poems and a play.
box 1, folder 3-6
True Blue manuscripts
1982, 1985
Scope and Contents
The title page reads
True Blue: A tale of love colorful and
true
. . . For Sharon From Steve. These folders contain an annotated
typescript, the original manuscript, a final bound manuscript printed on blue paper,
and publisher correspondence concerning this children's book manuscript.
box 1, folder 7-9
"Where Streets Collide - Pigstreet"
1983, 1984
Scope and Contents
Folders contain an early annotated typescript entitled, "City of the Jealous Gods -
Pigstreet" and two annotated typescripts for Griffin's
poetry
/play which was
performed during the months of January and February 1984 on Thursday, Friday, and
Saturday evenings at the Figtree Theatre in Hollywood located at 6539 Santa Monica
Boulevard, Los Angeles, 90038. Performance flyers included with the typescripts
publicize the preview as January 12th with words and music of Doug Knott, S.A.
Griffin, and Bobbo Staron.
box 1, folder 10
S.A. poems
1984-1992, 1996, 2004, 2009, 2012
Scope and Contents
This folder includes typescripts and photocopies of poems such as "Whorehunter,"
"Suddenly Down," "Walt Whitman's Beard," "Love Came Home Late Last Night and Fell
Asleep in Front of the Television," "Legacy to the Poor of L.A.," "The Cat Knows,"
"A Reason to Live," "carma bums rules of the road/'04," and "The Collage Is
Unforgiving."
box 1, folder 11-13
"Long Distance" and other poems
1984-2013
Scope and Contents
Typescripts, some of which are annotated, include the following: "The Revolution,"
"
Poetry
Is A Drunk Animal Mounting The Moon," "
Poetry
Is Fucking," "It Was A Good
Day," "President of Nothing," "Bukowski To The Curb," "Let The Music Name You,"
"Hollywood Bus Stop 1979," and "Kill All White People." Folder 12 contains Griffin's
speech for the "Tribe Must President" Out of Historical Necessity which he performed
with The Lost Tribe.
box 2, folder 1
Notes
1985 March 8
Scope and Contents
Stream of consciousness style writing and sketches.
box 2, folder 2
Poetry
1985-1995
Scope and Contents
Handwritten and typed poems which include "There Is A River," "I Felt You In My
Morning Coffee," and "Remember These Words."
box 2, folder 3
S.A. Griffin
Poetry
1986
Scope and Contents
A collection of poems which include "Pigstreet," "Bad
Poetry
," "Football And Beer,"
"Paperwork,"and "The America Poem."
box 2, folder 4
Poems
1987
Scope and Contents
This folder contains an annotated version of "Other Side Of The Television."
box 2, folder 5-6
Poetry
1988-2004
Scope and Contents
Poems include "The Next Bukowski," "On The Work Of Burroughs," and "A Strange Peace
(for Misty Mallory)."
box 2, folder 7-9
Poetry
Notebooks
circa 1989-1994
Scope and Contents
Four spiral bound notebooks filled with Griffin's handwritten
poetry
, notes, and
sketches.
box 2, folder 10
Group poem
1992 February 29
Scope and Contents
A twenty-eight page group poem entered and printed on leap day at Bruce Morasch's
s.r.o.
poetry
and beer party at the West Los Angeles
Poetry
Palace. Contributing
writers included S.A. Griffin and Scott Wannberg.
box 2, folder 11
"#128" poem
1992
Scope and Contents
A poem written in pencil on a white piece of cardboard.
box 3, folder 1
L.A. Riot poem draft
1992 April 29
Scope and Contents
Eleven pages of Griffin's handwritten poetic response to the uprising in Los
Angeles following the Rodney King verdict.
box 3, folder 2
Cannabis Cup journal
Scope and Content
Journal contains writing, art and ephemera from Griffin's trip to Amsterdam with
Tony Scibella.
box 3, folder 3
Heaven galleys
1993 April
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Content
In addition to galleys for
Heaven Is One Long Naked
Dance
, this folder contains a floppy disk, an original paste-up flyer for
the book's release, and a black and white Jeffoto photo of Griffin wearing his Rip
Griffin's Truck Travel Centers t-shirt.
box 3, folder 4
S.A. Griffin
poetry
1993-2001
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
Poems include "Hate for Breakfast," "Music For Shredding Metal By Candlelight (for
Kurt Cobain)," "The Soft Poetic/Easter Hill (for Janice Ugland)," and "(Untitled)
Poem For A Sudden Stranger." This folder also contains a floppy disk labeled "S.A.
Griffin
Poetry
: This Has Everything."
box 3, folder 5
Burt Lancaster...poem
1993-2001
Scope and Contents
Computer print-out of "Burt Lancaster And The 12 Year Old Bottle of Booze" poem for
Rafael RJ Alvarado's birthday. Authors cited for this poem are as follows: S.A.
Griffin, Doug Knott, Mike M. Mollett, Lorraine Perrotta, Blakeslee Stevens, and
Scott Wannberg.
box 3, folder 6-7
12 Kisses...galleys
1994
Scope and Contents
Folder contains
12 Kisses To The Universe For J.W.
McCullough
galleys and manuscripts of poems included in this chapbook
published in memory of J.W. McCullough by Griffin's Rose of Sharon Press.
box 3, folder 8-11
Duckwalking...typescripts
1996-1997
Scope and Contents
Folders contain five annotated typescripts of
Duckwalking
Thru The Apocalypse
which includes the following poems: "Food Shopping,"
"A Blessing For The Arts," "A House Divided," and "At The Spanish Drag Queen Place
on Santa Monica Blvd."
box 3, folder 12
Walt Whitman's...galleys
1996-1997
Scope and Contents
Paste-up boards and galleys for
Walt Whitman's
Beard
, a chapbook published by Rose of Sharon Press in celebration of
National
Poetry
Month at the University of Southern California. A final copy of this
artifact dedicated to the memory of Allen Ginsberg is included and contributors
writers are the following: Laurel Ann Bogen, Millicent Borges, Dennis Cruz, S.A.
Griffin, Doug Knott, Jeff McDaniel, Ellyn Maybe, Patricia Wagner, Scott Wannberg,
and Pam Ward.
box 3, folder 13
(Exploding Text)...galleys
1997
Scope and Contents
(Exploding Text) On the Work of Burroughs was
created for the May 10th Tribute to Allen Ginsberg at Beyond Baroque. The exploding
text from Ginsberg's piece, "On Burroughs Work" was altered and added to by S.A.
Griffin, Mike Bruner, Olly Ruff, David Rhaesa, Derek Beaulieu, Marie Countryman,
Michael Stutz, and James Stauffer.
box 3, folder 14
Big Belly anthology
circa 1998
Scope and Contents
The cover describes this as a "spontaneous anthology of L.A. and S.F. poets
assembled at the attic on the eve of scattering jack micheline's ashes over brown
bag farm." Contributors include: S.A. Griffin, Tarin Towers, Alan Kaufman, Rafael FJ
Alvarado, Hank Hyena, St. Theresa Stone, Eugene Ostachevsky, Bucky Sinister, Doug
Knott, Katie Degentesh, and Kathleen Wood.
box 3, folder 15
Wedding vows
1998
Scope and Content
Three pages of vows written by Griffin for the wedding of Rob Zabrecky and Tommy at
the Old Griffith Park Zoo, August 8, 1998. Zabrecky was a member of Possum Dixon, a
magician and an actor. Griffin met Rob through Pleasant Gehman when they did a gig
at the Pik Me Up Cafe around 1992. Griffin tailors the ceremonies to suit the couple
even these vows have not fundamentally changed since he performed his first wedding
in 1995 for Eric Brown and Tori Williams. According to Griffin, each set of vows is
altered with personal questions and other slight additions so that it remains
unique. For more information on Griffin's wedding performances please consult the
subject files for Universal Life Church and Temple of Man.
box 3, folder 16
"The Edge Generation"
1999
Scope and Contents
This piece may be located in its published form in Box 15. It was published in
(Sic) Vice & Verse, Issue 7, June-July 1999, One Year Anniversary Issue.
box 3, folder 17
The Dear Lady...typescripts
1999, undated, 2007
Scope and Contents
This folder contains the following poems: "My Dear Lady Night (for Philomene
Long)," "New Year's Party," and "The Vision." These typescripts include Griffin's
annotations.
box 3, folder 18
Re)verb submission
2003 June 25
Scope and Contents
Griffin's submission to Re)verb includes a letter and typescript of his work
entitled, "This One (The Bald Headed Mouse)."
box 4, folder 1
The Carma Bums...paste-up boards
2004 May
Scope and Contents
Paste-up boards for The Carma Bums'
Armageddon Outta
Here!
chapbook. This chap was written and produced by The Carma Bums: Doug
Knott, Mike Mollett, Mike Bruner, S.A. Griffin, and Scott Wannberg.
box 4, folder 2
T's Mile High Parade galleys
2004 October 20
Scope and Contents
Folder contains galleys for
T's Mile High Parade
chapbook published by Black Ace/Temple of Man.
box 4, folder 3
Reflections...submission
2005
Processing Information
Original manuscript was photocopied due to mold damage. Original was removed from
the collection and it was replaced by the facsimile.
Scope and Contents
Folder contains "Reflections of A Mind Corrupted By A Nightmare Childhood &
Congenital Dysfunction" manuscript and correspondence from The Editors of The
Atlantic Monthly.
box 4, folder 4-6
Numbskull Sutra galleys
2007
Scope and Contents
Folders 4 and 5 contain galleys for
Numbskull Sutra,
a collection of Griffin's
poetry
edited by John Dorsey and David Smith for Rank
Stranger Press. Folder 6 contains a handwritten "Numbskull Sutra (for Mark
Hartenbach)" manuscript and a typescript of this piece in addition to the following
excerpt from Hartenbach's "land of nod": "i am the numbskull sutra/ to be read then
destroyed/ i am the gospel truth/ that will never make it/ through the editing
process."
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Folder 5 contains two CD-Rs. One is labeled Numbskull Sutra Text and the other,
Numbskull Sutra Cover Images.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
box 4, folder 7-10
Black Ace Book 8 galleys
2007
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Folder 8: Four CD-Rs
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
Black Ace Book 8 is dedicated to Tony Scibella,
published by S.A. Griffin for Temple of Man, and edited by John Macker, Marsha
Getzler, and S.A. Griffin. The manuscript includes work by Scibella, Todd Moore,
Saul White, Jack Micheline, Stuart Z. Perkoff, James Ryan Morris, Philomene Long,
John Thomas, Frank T. Rios, Steve Wilson, Ellyn Maybe, Diana di Prima, Ed Ward, and
Marcia Ward among others. Folders 8-10 contain art work, digital files, and
correspondence concerning this publication.
box 4, folder 11
Poems
2007-2011
Scope and Contents
Poems include "Walking the Line," "what it is (for Todd Moore's 70th)," "27 Years
in El Lay," and "Rivers (for Langston Hughes)."
box 4, folder 12
American Garbage Head script
2011 June 16
Scope and Contents
Griffin wrote and annotated this script based on
Confessions
of An American Garbage Head
by Mark Hartenbach.
box 4, folder 13
"Flowers" poem
undated
Scope and Contents
This one page poem is handwritten in black ink on lined paper.
box 5, box 6, box 7, box 8, box 9, box 10, box 331, box 332
Monographs
Scope and Content
The monographs featuring Griffin's writings include the writings of The Lost Tribe,
The Carma Bums, and White Trash Apocalypse.
Books from S.A. Griffin's library that were originally donated with the papers have
been individually cataloged in the UCLA Library online catalog. Records for these
items may be found by searching the Special Coll/Archive SPAC "SALA" using the
Advanced search tab in the Library catalog, or keyword searching "Books from the
Library of S.A. Griffin".
box 11, box 12, box 13, box 14, box 15, box 16, box 17, box 18, box 19, box 20, box 21, box 22, box 333
Serials
Scope and Content
Serials featuring Griffin's writings, which include serials that he published, have
been organized alphabetically by title of publication.
Biography/History
The first publication Griffin worked with was
Shattersheet, edited and published by Jim and April Burns out of the
Valley. Jim walked into Al's one night giving away free issues to introduce the zine
to everyone. Mike Bruner and Griffin responded immediately and volunteered to do
whatever Jim wanted.
Shattersheet was important because
not only did it publish
poetry
, but it was the first publication, to Griffin's
knowledge, that published a fairly comprehensive listing of
poetry
events in and
around Southern California. Just previous to this Griffin had worked at Medicus, a
local printing broker. With Jim and April, wanting to learn everything he could about
DIY/small press, Griffin did much of the same tasks: cut and paste, inputting on the
ancient Mac used primarily for word processing, collating/folding, distribution,
collections, and some editing. Working with
Shattersheet Griffin got to know the local community and became very
familiar with Scott Wannberg's work long before they met and became friends.
Wannberg's book
The Electric Yes Indeed!, officially
published by Shelf Life Press and with initial editing and publishing by Jim, became
the second book Griffin had published.
As
Shattersheet was waning,
The
Moment
was on its way up, in Griffin's opinion inspired by the local success
of
Shattersheet.
The
Moment
was edited and published by Kevin Bartnof, Chris Behling and Eric
Lyden, who were more Gonzo in their approach. With
The
Moment
, Griffin was introduced to a deeper Beat dynamic, and in time was
introduced to Allen Ginsberg and Jack Micheline, among others. In Griffin's words,
"the Carma Bums got directly plugged into
The Moment
since we fit directly into what it was they were all about."
Griffin became friends with Rafael FJ Alvarado, a regular of the old Onyx, when he
disrupted a reading that Griffin was conducting at The Onyx Cafe on Vermont.
Eventually, Alvarado and Griffin would publish and edit
(Sic)
Vice & Verse
, first as the broadside
(Sic) Random
Vice & Verse
, then as a periodical. Griffin worked directly with Michael
Simmons and Rachel Kusher.
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
SUBSERIES CONTAINS AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS: Special equipment or further processing may
be required for viewing. To access audiovisual materials you must notify the reference
desk in advance of your visit.
box 11, folder 1
Poetry
Sheet
. Los Angeles.
1983 November
Scope and Contents
"Fuck You, Remember When I Said I Loved You" appears on the back page.
box 11, folder 1
Poetry
Sheet
, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
1984 January
Scope and Contents
"Pigstreet" appears on the front page.
box 11, folder 2
Artfax. Los Angeles.
1985
Scope and Contents
"Pigstreet" and "The America Poem" are flagged within this issue.
box 11, folder 3
The Drawing Board, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1986 Spring
Scope and Contents
"The America Poem" appears on page 11.
box 11, folder 4
Nude Erections, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
1986
Scope and Contents
"how many times have I" is flagged within this issue.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 8. Canoga
Park.
1986 April
Scope and Contents
"Paperwork" appears on page 3.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 9. Canoga
Park.
1986 May
Scope and Contents
"There Is No There There" appears on page 7.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 10. Canoga
Park.
1986 June
Scope and Contents
"I was born with bombs" appears on page 3.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 11. Canoga
Park.
1986 July
Scope and Contents
"global ratings war spins" appears on page 5.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 12. Canoga
Park.
1986 September
Scope and Contents
"Congratulations!" appears on page 3.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 17. Canoga
Park.
1987 February
Scope and Contents
"the man operating" appears on page 2.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 19. Canoga
Park.
1987 April
Scope and Contents
"They say" appears on page 10.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 22. Canoga
Park.
1987 July
Scope and Contents
"pain" co-authored with Mike Bruner appears on page 2.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 23. Canoga
Park.
1987 August
Scope and Contents
"in the wild blue" appears on page 5.
box 11, folder 5
Shattersheet, no. 24. Canoga
Park.
1987 September
Scope and Contents
"The America Poem" appears on page 4.
box 11, folder 6
Rattler, no. 4. Los Angeles.
1987
Scope and Contents
"Football and Beer" appears on page 11 and "Bad
Poetry
" appears on page 12.
box 11, folder 7
Water Row Review, v. 1. Los
Angeles.
1987
Scope and Contents
"who during this moment" appears on page 33.
box 11, folder 8
Data File. Los Angeles.
1987
Scope and Contents
The Nude issue features "At the meercat nudist club" on page 3.
box 11, folder 8
Data File. Los Angeles.
1987
Scope and Contents
The Open issue features "One mile $5 Exacta" on page 19.
box 11, folder 8
Data File. Los Angeles.
1988
Scope and Contents
The Rubberstamps issue features "Why is it that the stars are suddenly a whirling"
on page 19.
box 11, folder 8
Data File. Los Angeles.
1988
Scope and Contents
The Time issue features "my 86 year old grandfather" on page 18.
box 11, folder 9
Anthology of 1st Year of The Poecentric
Lounge
, v. 1, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1987 March-1988 March
Scope and Contents
"Pigstreet" appears on page 25 and "This Apartment That We Live In Hung By The
Letter 'F'" appears on page 27.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 7. Woodland
Hills.
1988 Summer
Scope and Contents
"I have seen the shouting hallelujahs" appears on page 6 and "we dreamed in big
cars" appears on page 11.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 8. Woodland
Hills.
1988 Fall
Scope and Contents
"Reasons Why Some People Don't Like My
Poetry
" appears on page 4.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 9. Woodland
Hills.
1989 Winter
Scope and Contents
Griffin is featured on the front and back cover with Sholom "Red" Stodolsky at
Baroque Bookstore, formerly located at 1643 N. Las Palmas in Hollywood. "Another
Fucking L.A. Car Poem" appears on page 7.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 10. Woodland
Hills.
1989 Spring
Scope and Content
"So If They Ever Name The Streets" appears on page 5.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 12. Woodland
Hills.
1990 Spring
Scope and Contents
"So Even Italian Mobsters Can Become Songs" appears on page 33.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 13. Woodland
Hills.
1990 Fall
Scope and Contents
"It Is Not About Homosexual Art In Ohio, 7 Dirty Words In Florida, Abortion,
Liberty Or If Aids Had Five Letters There Might Be A Cure & We Don't Burn Our
Flags Here Anymore" appears on page 17.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 14. Woodland
Hills.
1991 Summer
Scope and Contents
"Let Us Pray That The Legs Of War Are Shattered Long Before The Music Of Collapsing
Cities" appears on page 18.
box 11, folder 10
The Moment, no. 15. Woodland
Hills.
1997 Fall
Scope and Contents
"Suddenly Down" appears on page 9.
box 11, folder 11
Harp. Glenwood Springs.
1995 Winter
Scope and Contents
HARP Four Rivers Arts Journal was a quarterly
journal edited by John Macker and circulated throughout the Roaring Fork Valley,
Colorado, and in other states. "For Red: Two Birds Still Flying" appears on page 15.
Additionally, three photocopies of Griffin's "12 Kisses To The Universe - for J.W.
McCullough" published in
HARP are contained in this
folder.
box 11, folder 12
Pearl, no. 15. Long Beach.
1992 Spring/Summer
Scope and Contents
Pearl magazine was founded in 1974 by Joan Jobe
Smith while she was an undergraduate at California State University, Long Beach.
This issue was edited by Smith, Marilyn Johnson, and Barbara Hauk. "There's Always
Fear In All Of Your Love Songs" appears on page 13.
box 11, folder 12
Pearl, no. 24. Long Beach.
1996 Fall/Winter
Scope and Contents
This issue was edited by Joan Jobe Smith, Marilyn Johnson, and Barbara Hauk. "12
Kisses To The Universe (For J.W. McCullough)" appears on page 19.
box 12, folder 1
Saturday Afternoon, no. 3.
Hollywood.
1987 Summer
Scope and Contents
"there are black Santas" appears on page 134.
box 12, folder 2
Saturday Afternoon, no. 6. Los
Angeles.
1990 Winter
Scope and Contents
"Golden Years" appears on page 79.
box 12, folder 3
Saturday Afternoon, no. 8. Los
Angeles.
1992 Winter
Scope and Contents
"Poet's Drink" appears on page 7. Journal includes "Lyres Make Better Lovers"
bumper sticker.
box 12, folder 4
Saturday Afternoon, no. 10. Los
Angeles.
1994-1995
Scope and Contents
"12 Kisses To The Universe (For J.W. McCullough)" appears on page 3.
box 12, folder 4-5
Saturday Afternoon, no. 12. Los
Angeles.
1997
Scope and Contents
"The Late Show" appears on page 85. Folder 4 journal includes a note from its
Publisher and Editor, Cynthia Walker.
box 12, folder 5
Saturday Afternoon, no. 14. Los
Angeles.
1999
Scope and Contents
"The Bad Thing" appears on page 134. Journal cover photo of a young boy smoking a
cigarette at the Zero Zero Club in Hollywood by Gary Leonard.
box 13, folder 1
Rock City News, v. 6, no. 15. Los
Angeles.
1989
Scope and Contents
Folder includes clippings of T. Adam Boffi's column, "Rock Guard'N." This column is
devoted to love and includes "At The Core Of Love."
box 13, folder 1
Rock City News, v. 7, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1990
Scope and Contents
Folder includes clippings of T. Adam Boffi's column, "Rock Guard'N." This column is
devoted to Los Angeles and includes excerpts from "Pigstreet."
box 13, folder 2
Rocky Mountain Arsenal Of The Arts, v. 4,
no. 2. Denver.
1989 June-July
Scope and Contents
"Pigstreet" appears on page 8.
box 13, folder 3
Stick, v. 1, no. 2. Black Hawk.
1989 July
Scope and Contents
"While Making Copies At The Xerox Place In West L.A." appears on page 35.
box 13, folder 4
A Piece Of Paper. Los Angeles.
1990 March 23
Scope and Contents
"Saw Another One Flip Today" appears on the back page.
box 13, folder 4
A Piece Of Paper, v. 1, no. 3.
Glendale.
1990 July 20
Scope and Contents
"Etc." appears on the front page.
box 13, folder 4
A Prank Piece Of Paper.
Glendale.
1990 August 2-3
Biography/History
Lou Mensch, the owner, booked The Carma Bums for a gig on that year's tour at
Father's Office, and also gave them a few bucks to land and eat somewhere. According
to Griffin, back then Father's Office had sawdust on the floor and folks were still
smoking cigarettes. The Carma Bums hung out there a lot in the late 1980s and early
1990s drinking pitchers of Grant's Russian Imperial Stout. They played Spades
endlessly while they talked and planned (at times).
Scope and Contents
"My farts are" appears on the front page. This issue was created at Father's Office
in Santa Monica and in addition to beer stains, includes pieces by Rafael RJ
Alvarado, S.A. Griffin, and Scott Wannberg.
box 13, folder 4
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 August 3
Scope and Contents
"There Are No Seat Belts In The Cadillac" appears on the back page. This issue is
dedicated to The Carma Bums for their No Seat Belts Tour of Words and includes
pieces by Doug Knott, Scott Wannberg, Mike M. Mollett, and S.A. Griffin.
box 13, folder 4
A Piece Of Paper. S. El Monte.
1991 February 15
Scope and Contents
"I Have Seen The Shouting Hallelujahs" appears on the back page.
box 13, folder 4
A Piece Of Paper. S. El Monte.
1991 March 15
Scope and Contents
"So If They Ever Name The Streets" appears on the back page.
box 13, folder 5
OnTarget, no. 2. Glendale.
circa early to mid 1990s
Scope and Contents
"You Could Measure My Passion With A Stick" from
Heaven Is
One Long Naked Dance
appears in this issue.
box 13, folder 5
OnTarget, no. 4. Glendale.
circa early to mid 1990s
Scope and Contents
"
Poetry
Is A Drunk Animal Mounting The Moon" appears in this issue.
box 13, folder 5
OnTarget, no. 5. Glendale.
circa early to mid 1990s
Scope and Contents
"Driving Fast Down Olympic With Jesus Feet" appears in this issue which is signed
by many of the contributors.
box 13, folder 6
OnTarget, no. 7. Venice.
circa early to mid 1990s
Scope and Contents
"She Was A Voluptuous Hand Grenade Waiting For A Decent Guy To Come Along And Pull
Her Pin" appears in this issue.
box 13, folder 6
OnTarget, no. 8/9. Venice.
circa early to mid 1990s
Scope and Contents
"Hate For Breakfast" appears in this issue.
box 13, folder 7
OnTarget, no. 10/11. Hollywood.
circa early to mid 1990s
Scope and Contents
"Bukowski To The Curb" appears in this issue.
box 13, folder 8
Dribble Rag, no. 1. Woodland
Hills.
1989
Scope and Contents
"At The Core Of Love" appears in this issue.
Biography/History
Dribble Rag was edited and published by Christopher
Behling. Behling was born on December 9, 1965 and died on September 11, 1994.
box 13, folder 8
Dribble Rag, no. 2. Woodland
Hills.
1990
Scope and Contents
An excerpt from "Pigstreet" and "I Ate Fig Newtons Until I Puked" appear in this
issue.
box 13, folder 9
Verve, v. 2, no. 2. Simi Valley.
1990 Winter
Scope and Contents
"The Mexican Orange Merchant" appears in this issue.
box 13, folder 10
Wajlemac, no. 9. Larkspur.
1990
Scope and Content
"One Night In San Francisco" appears within the "Like,
Poetry
and Fiction, Man"
section.
box 13, folder 11
The Hollywood Review, no. 1. Santa
Monica.
1991 Spring
Scope and Contents
"I Ate Fig Newtons Until I Puked" appears on page 79.
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 1.
Hollywood.
1991 May 24
Scope and Contents
"Coverbeauty Has It All" appears on the back page. Rafael RJ Alvarado describes
this publication as a broadsheet zine in "A (Sic) History" published in the June
1998 Premiere Issue. This particular issue is contained within Box 17, folder 5.
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 2.
Hollywood.
1991 June 14
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 3.
Hollywood.
1991 June 21
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 4.
Hollywood.
1991 June 28
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 5.
Hollywood.
1991 July 5
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 6.
Hollywood.
1991 July 12
Scope and Contents
"Golden Years" appears on the back page.
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 7.
Hollywood.
1991 July 26
Scope and Contents
"I Ate Fig Newtons Until I Puked" appears on the front page.
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 8.
Hollywood.
1991 August 30
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 9.
Hollywood.
1991 September 6
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 10.
Hollywood.
1991 September 13
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 11.
Hollywood.
1991 September 20
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 12.
Hollywood.
1991 September 27
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 13.
Hollywood.
1991 October 4
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 14.
Hollywood.
1991 October 11
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 15.
Hollywood.
1991 October 18
Scope and Contents
"All The Questions Had Made Me Allergic To The Answers" appears on the back
page.
box 14, folder 1
(Sic) Weekly Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 16.
Hollywood.
1991 October 25
Scope and Contents
"Kiss Of Death" appears on the back page next to a "Cum & Pray" stamp. A
packaged lubricated Sheik condom is stapled to this AIDS issue.
box 14, folder 2
(Sic) Random Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 17.
Los Angeles.
1992 March 13
Scope and Contents
"So If They Ever Name The Streets" appears on the front page.
box 14, folder 2
(Sic) Random Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 18.
Los Angeles.
1992 March 27
box 14, folder 2
(Sic) Random Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 19.
Los Angeles.
1992 June 12
box 14, folder 2
(Sic) Random Vice & Verse, v. 1, no. 20.
Los Angeles.
1992 June 26
Scope and Contents
"The World Cried Itself To Sleep Again Last Night While The News Was Busy Shaving"
appears on the back page.
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 1. Hollywood.
1993
Scope and Contents
"The Monster" appears on the back page.
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 2. Hollywood.
1993 April 15
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 3. Hollywood.
1993 May 5
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 4. Hollywood.
1993 May
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 5. Hollywood.
1993 May 31
Scope and Contents
"The Revolution" appears on the back page. This is the Memorial Day (A Grave
Issue).
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 5. Hollywood.
1993 June 20
Scope and Contents
"
Poetry
Is A Drunk Animal Mounting The Moon" appears on the back page. This is the
Kurt Schwitters' 106 Birthday Issue designed by mail artist Leslie Caldera aka
CT/Creative Thing and represents issue no. 6. This folder also includes
correspondence concerning this issue from CT to Griffin.
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 7. Hollywood.
1993
box 14, folder 3
(Sic), v. 2, no. 8. Hollywood.
1993 September 23
Scope and Contents
"Remember These Words" appears on the back page.
box 14, folder 4
(Sic), v. 3, no. 1. North
Hollywood.
1996
Scope and Contents
"Cunt Pussy Dick Cock Fuck Poem" appears on the front page.
box 14, folder 4
(Sic), v. 3, no. 2. North
Hollywood.
1996 December 5
box 14, folder 4
(Sic), v. 3, no. 3. North
Hollywood.
1997 January 25
box 14, folder 4
(Sic), v. 3, no. 4. North
Hollywood.
1997 March 12
box 14, folder 4
(Sic), v. 3, no. 5. North
Hollywood.
1997 May 11
Scope and Contents
"At The Core Of Love" appears on the back page.
box 14, folder 4
(Sic), v. 3, no. 6. North
Hollywood.
1997 August 16
box 14, folder 5
The Fold. San Francisco.
1991 Fall
Scope and Contents
This issue was edited by Kathi Georges and includes "Kiss Of Death."
box 14, folder 6
Purple Patch, no. 61. West
Bromwich.
circa 1991
Scope and Contents
"There Is Always Fear In All Of Your Love Songs" appears on page 3.
box 14, folder 7
Nuthing Sacred, no. 2.
Hollywood.
1991 June
Scope and Contents
"I Ate Fig Newtons Until I Puked" appears in this issue.
box 14, folder 7
Nuthing Sacred, no. 3.
Hollywood.
1991 September
Scope and Content
"One Night In San Francisco" and "Our Son Was Born With An Old Man's Eyes" appear
in this issue.
box 14, folder 7
Nuthing Sacred, no. 4.
Hollywood.
1991 October
Scope and Contents
This issue includes an interview with Griffin about The Carma Bums.
box 14, folder 7
Nuthing Sacred, no. 5.
Hollywood.
1992 September
Scope and Contents
This issue includes excerpts from Pleasant Gehman's "Rock 'N Roll" diaries and
features Griffin's "Love Came Home Late Last Night And Fell Asleep In Front Of The
Television."
box 14, folder 7
Nuthing Sacred, no. 6.
Hollywood.
1993 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features "I Was Abducted By Aliens" by S.A. Griffin, correspondent.
box 14, folder 7
Nuthing Sacred, no. 7. Los
Angeles.
1993
Scope and Contents
This issue includes an interview with the L.A. Mudpeople by S.A. Griffin.
box 14, folder 8
Black Ace Book, no. 2, Los
Angeles.
1992
Scope and Contents
"The World Cried Itself To Sleep Again Last Night While The News Was Busy Shaving"
appears on page 84.
box 14, folder 8
Black Ace Book, no. 4, Los
Angeles.
1994
Scope and Contents
"12 Kisses To The Universe (For J.W. McCullough)" appears on page 145. Also
published in this issue is a letter to the editor from Charles Bukowski and a note
to Griffin from Tony Scibella which reads, "I know u didn't want to use the J.W.
poem again but I felt it was necessary."
box 14, folder 9
Black Ace Book, no. 7, Los
Angeles.
2002
Scope and Contents
"2001" appears on page 5. This folder includes correspondence from Marsha Getzler
and proofs of Griffin's work.
box 14, folder 10
Dance Of The Iguana, v. 1, no. 3, Los
Angeles.
1992
Scope and Contents
"To Swim Below The Surface Of The Water Where The Rain Is Never Felt But Always
Welcome" appears on page 23.
box 14, folder 10
Dance Of The Iguana. Los
Angeles.
1992 Autumn
Scope and Contents
"This Music Is A Strange Language" appears on page 7.
box 14, folder 11
New Observations, no. 87. New
York.
1992 January/February
Scope and Contents
"So If They Ever Name The Streets" appears on page 14.
box 14, folder 12
in remembrance, no. 10. Studio
City.
1993
Scope and Content
"The World Cried Itself To Sleep Again Last Night While The News Was Busy Shaving"
appears in this issue which is signed by publisher, Jenny Soup.
box 15, folder 1
Insomnia, v. 2, no. 3. Whittier.
1993 Summer
Scope and Contents
"You Could Measure My Passion With A Stick," "The Revolution," and "
Poetry
Is A
Drunk Animal Mounting The Moon" appear in this issue.
box 15, folder 1
Insomnia, v. 2, no. 4. Whittier.
1993 Fall
Scope and Contents
"Remember These Words" appears on page 50.
box 15, folder 1
Insomnia, v. 3, no. 1. Whittier.
1994 Winter
Scope and Contents
"Variations On Sonnet Of Shakespeare" and "Fuck You, Remember When I Said I Love
You" appear in this issue.
box 15, folder 1
Insomnia, v. 3, no. 4. Whittier.
1994 Fall
Scope and Content
"Hate For Breakfast" appears on page 47.
box 15, folder 2
Flipside, no. 87. Pasadena.
1993 December/1994 January
Scope and Contents
"Hate For Breakfast" appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 3
Flipside, no. 90. Pasadena.
1994 June/July
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 33 1/3 rpm stereo soundsheet slip recording of "disbelief" by Stanford Prison
Experiment.
Audiovisual materials in this collection will require assessment and possible
digitization for safe access. To review these audiovisual materials you must notify
the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
"12 Kisses To The Universe (For J.W. McCullough)" appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 3
Flipside, no. 92. Pasadena.
1994 October/November
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 33 1/3 rpm stereo soundsheet slip recording of "Monkey Drunk" by Cop Shoot
Cop.
Audiovisual materials in this collection will require assessment and possible
digitization for safe access. To review these audiovisual materials you must notify
the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
"Bukowski To The Curb" appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 3
Flipside, no. 95. Pasadena.
1995 April/May
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 33 1/3 rpm stereo soundsheet slip recording of "Stop For A Moment" and
"Expanding" by Funeral Oration.
Audiovisual materials in this collection will require assessment and possible
digitization for safe access. To review these audiovisual materials you must notify
the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
"There Is A River" appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 4
Flipside, no. 98. Pasadena.
1995 October/November
Scope and Contents
"Insomnia (For Rocco)" appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 4
Flipside, no. 100. Pasadena.
1996 February/March
Scope and Contents
"I Have No Poem For You Today" appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 4
Flipside, no. 103. Pasadena.
1996 August/September
Scope and Contents
"Sad Poem For A Dysfunctional Planet Caught In The Crossfire Of A Brief Childhood"
appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 5
Flipside, no. 105. Pasadena.
1997 January/February
Scope and Contents
"Suddenly Down" appears in the
poetry
section.
box 15, folder 6
Brain Child, no. 2. Los Angeles.
1994
Scope and Contents
"I Looked At Lorraine And I Felt" appears in this issue. The featured Artist of the
Month is Diane Gamboa who presents 10 pen and ink drawings. Other contributors
include Barbara Mendes, Butt Trumpet, Trina Robbins, Ken Tao, Simone Gad, Vinzula
Kara, and The L.A. Mudpeople.
box 15, folder 7
Mobius, v. 8, no. 1. St. Claire
Shores.
1994 Spring/Summer
Scope and Contents
"Love Came Home Last Night And Fell Asleep In Front Of The Television" appears on
page 42. This
poetry
magazine is signed by Editor Jean Hull Herman and includes
correspondence to Griffin.
box 15, folder 8
NoHo, v. 2, no. 8. North
Hollywood.
1994 October
Scope and Contents
"There Is Always Fear In All Your Love Songs" appears on page 12.
box 15, folder 9
Zuzu's Petals Quarterly, v. 3, no. 2-3.
Allentown.
1994-1995 Winter/Spring
Scope and Contents
"
Poetry
Is A Drunk Animal Mounting The Moon" appears on page 56.
box 15, folder 10
Sure, no. 10. Oak View.
1994
Scope and Content
"FOR RED Two Tough Birds Still Flying" appears on page 59 of this Charles Bukowski
newsletter.
box 16, folder 1
Blue Satellite, v. 1, no. 1.
Venice.
1994 September
Scope and Contents
"Bukowski To The Curb" appears in this issue.
box 16, folder 1
Blue Satellite, v. 1, no. 2.
Venice.
1995 February
Scope and Contents
"There Is A River" appears in this issue. This issue was copy edited by
francEyE.
box 16, folder 2
Blue Satellite, v. 2, no. 1.
Venice.
1995 September
Scope and Contents
"The Race Gets A Little Long In The Turn" appears in this issue.
box 16, folder 2
Blue Satellite, v. 2, no. 2.
Venice.
1996 February
Scope and Contents
Within this issue, The Sacred Beverage Press announces their first ever book
featuring The Carma Bums and includes a special Bums section with "Hell The Love
Song (For Bob Flanagan)" along with work from Mike Bruner, Doug Knott, Mike M.
Mollett, and Scott Wannberg.
box 16, folder 3
Blue Satellite, v. 3, no. 1.
Venice.
1996 September
Scope and Contents
"A Blessing For The Arts" appears in this issue.
box 16, folder 4
Campus Circle, v. 4, no. 9. Beverly
Hills.
1995 February 7
Scope and Contents
"Food Shopping" appears on page 29.
box 16, folder 5
The Grindstone, v. 2, no. 2. Studio
City.
1995 August/September
Scope and Contents
"Smells Like Love" appears on page 21.
box 16, folder 6
Spillway, v. 2, no. 2. Huntington
Beach.
1995
Scope and Contents
"12 Kisses To The Universe (For J.W. McCullough)" appears on page 39.
box 16, folder 6
Spillway, no. 5. Huntington
Beach.
1996
Scope and Contents
"There Is A River" appears on page 41.
box 16, folder 7
Coyote Suitcase, no. 1.
Berkeley.
1996
Scope and Contents
This publication was privately issued in conjunction with the Bancroft Library
exhibit and symposium celebrating "Ferlinghetti, City Lights, and the Beats in San
Francisco: From the Margins to the Mainstream," on April 12, 1996. "Love Came Home
Late Tonight And Fell Asleep In Front Of The Television" appears on page 41.
box 16, folder 8
Freedom Isn't Free, no. 4.
Orange.
1996
Scope and Contents
"Remember These Words" appears in this issue.
box 16, folder 9
Citadel. Los Angeles.
1996 Spring
Scope and Contents
"Suddenly Down" appears in this Los Angeles City College publication signed by
David Lovins.
box 16, folder 10
Haight Ashbury Literary Journal, v. 15, no.
1. San Francisco.
1996 Summer
Scope and Contents
"There Is A River" appears on page 6 of this issue dedicated to the memory of
Richard Louis (Tet) Tetenbaum who died on the evening of June 2, 1996.
box 16, folder 11
Fuck This Shit, v. 1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1996 Fall
Scope and Contents
"Long Distance" appears in this spoken word anthology.
box 17, folder 1
Epicenter, v.4, no. 1.
Riverside.
1997
Scope and Contents
"Leaving God For Another Woman" appears on page 20.
box 17, folder 2
Babylon's Hot City On Parade. West
Hollywood.
1997
Scope and Contents
"Coffeehouse Etiquette" appears on the inside of the back cover.
box 17, folder 3
Chiron Review, no. 52. St. John.
1997 Winter
Scope and Contents
"Suddenly Down," "I Have No Poem For You Today," and "There Is A River" appear on
page 6.
box 17, folder 4
Damaged Goods, v. 1, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
1997 September/October
Scope and Contents
Griffin's praise for Christopher Felver's
Angels, Anarchists
& Gods
appears in the Book Review section.
box 17, folder 4
Damaged Goods, v. 1, no. 5. Los
Angeles.
1998 February/March
Scope and Contents
Griffin's "Onword" column appears on page 48.
box 17, folder 4
Damaged Goods, v. 1, no. 6. Los
Angeles.
1998 April/May
Scope and Contents
Griffin's "Onword" column concerning Jack Micheline appears on page 45.
box 17, folder 5
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1998 June
Scope and Contents
This Premiere Issue features includes "Orgy For World Peace," Griffin's interview
with proprietor Farrell Tim Blake and Griffin's column "Onward" in which he
describes Ellyn Maybe's
The Cowardice Of Amnesia as
"something original that demands the attention, respect, and love of all." This
folder also contains galleys for this issue.
box 17, folder 5
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
1998 August/September
Scope and Contents
Griffin's "Onword" column chronicles the lives of coffeehouses and clubs such as
The Water Espresso Gallery, Lhasa Club, the Pik Me Up Cafe, and The Onyx. "The Bad
Thing" appears on page 42.
box 17, folder 6
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
1998 October/November
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a piece by Pleasant Gehman about her trip to Burning Man and
Iris Berry's "Punk Rock Royalty." This folder also contains galleys for this
issue.
box 17, folder 6
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 4. Los
Angeles.
1998 December/1999 January
Scope and Contents
"It Was A Good Day" and "Bye Bye Baroque: Farewell To A Hollywood Icon: Red
Stodolsky 1916-1998" appear in this issue. Griffin's "Onward" column describes his
trip with Tony Scibella to the 11th Annual High Times Cannabis Cup. This folder also
contains galleys for this issue.
box 17, folder 7
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 5. Los
Angeles.
1999 February/March
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a piece on The American Hotel and Pleasant Gehman's "How I
Spent My Winter Vacation."
box 17, folder 7
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 6. Los
Angeles.
1999 April/May
Scope and Contents
Bob Flanagan's "Love Is Still Possible In This Junky World" and Sherman Alexie's
"The War Of The Mice" appear in this issue. This folder also contains galleys for
this issue.
box 17, folder 7
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 7. Los
Angeles.
1999 June/July
Scope and Contents
Griffin's "Onword" column discusses The Edge Generation and "There Is A River"
appears on page 49.
box 17, folder 7
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 8. Los
Angeles.
1999 August/September
Scope and Contents
This issue includes an interview with Sherman Alexie by Juliette Torrez and
introduces the column "Notes From A Medium Brown Girl" by Michele Serros.
box 17, folder 7
(Sic) Vice & Verse, no. 9. Los
Angeles.
1999 November/December
Scope and Contents
This issue includes Pleasant Gehman sharing "More Lurid Tales" about The Zero Zero
Gallery, Linda Gamboa's "Sweet Sunshine On Skid Row," and Vinzula Kara's "Kitten
With A Whip" comic which speaks to gentrification.
box 17, folder 8
Angry Thoreauan, no. 23.
Hollywood.
1998 December
Scope and Contents
"We Are Born Falling" appears on page 34. This issue also includes an interview
with John Gilmore, author of
Severed: The True Story of The
Black Dahlia Murder
. Copies of
Angry
Thoreauan
covers may be found in box 194.
box 17, folder 8
Angry Thoreauan, no. 26.
Hollywood.
2000 December
Scope and Contents
"In The Fat Wild Moment Beats The Unquenchable Yes" appears on page 19.
box 17, folder 9
Scat. Los Angeles.
1999
Scope and Contents
"There Is A River" appears on page 60 of University High School's literary
magazine. In addition to student
poetry
, this issue also includes work by Ellyn
Maybe, Jeffrey McDaniel, Rafael F.J. Alvarado, and Scott Wannberg.
box 17, folder 10
1999
Poetry
Calendar
. La Jolla.
1999
Scope and Contents
"I Have No Poem For You Today" appears on page 102.
box 194, folder 1, box 18, folder 1
The Fool, no. 1. Venice.
2000 January 1
Scope and Contents
Box 18: According to Chief Fools, S.A. Griffin and James Stauffer, this publication
is the print arm of Holy Fools Week -- Big Beat Roadshow Vortex 2000 at the Big
Intersection of Wichita, Kansas from September 26 through October 1, 2000. This
holiday issue features a collage cover by Griffin and Dafydd McKaharay's "Gabba
Gabba Howl!": X New Yorker Rides the Beat/Punk Connection." This folder also
contains the galleys for this publication.
Box 194: This box contains the layout boards for printing this issue.
box 194, folder 2, box 18, folder 2
The Fool, no. 2. Venice.
2000 March 12
Scope and Contents
This issue was published in conjunction with Jack Kerouac's birthday and Holy Fools
Week -- Big Beat Roadshow Vortex 2000 and features Bibbe Hansen's "Jan Kerouac
Remembered" and "Last Words: Broctman's Memorial Hospital June 24, 1974," a
transcript of Stuart Z. Perkoff's final hour with Philomene Long. The folder
includes galleys for this publication.
box 18, folder 3
Grit, no. 1. San Pedro.
2000
Scope and Contents
"Table Talk" appears in this issue edited by RD Armstrong.
box 18, folder 4
The Butcher's Block, v. 1. Rockaway
Beach.
2000 Summer
Scope and Contents
"Suddenly Down" appears in this volume edited and published by David Greenspan.
box 18, folder 4
The Butcher's Block, v. 4. Rockaway
Beach.
2002 Winter
Scope and Contents
"365 Words About Los Angeles" appears in this volume edited and published by David
Greenspan.
box 18, folder 4
The Butcher's Block, v. 6. Rockaway
Beach.
circa 2004
Scope and Contents
"There Is" appears in this volume edited and published by David Greenspan.
box 18, folder 5
Lummox Journal, v. 7, no. 4. San
Pedro.
2001 April
Scope and Contents
"2001" appears in this issue edited by Raindog.
box 18, folder 5
Lummox Journal, v.10, no. 4. San
Pedro.
2004 July/August
Scope and Content
"The Buk" appears on page 7.
box 18, folder 5
Lummox Journal, v. 11, no. 3/4. San
Pedro.
2005 May/June/July/August
Scope and Contents
"Love Poem For My Wife" appears in this issue edited by Raindog.
box 18, folder 6
Staplegun Press, no. 13.
Birmingham.
2001 Fall
Scope and Contents
"365 Words About Los Angeles" on page 11.
box 18, folder 7
Ecstatic Peace, no. 1. Florence.
2001 March
Scope and Contents
"2001" appears in this
poetry
journal edited by T. Moore. Contributors include Kim
Gordon, Mike Watt, Lee Ranaldo, and Thurston Moore.
box 18, folder 8
The Mercury Reader, no. 2.
Denver.
2002 June
Scope and Contents
This is a Denver Poets Guild/Temple of Man production in which "Memory Snapshots"
and "Savage Jets Sword The Sky" appear on page 6.
box 18, folder 8
The Mercury Reader, no. 13.
Denver.
2003-2004 Winter
Scope and Contents
This is a Denver Poets Guild/Temple of Man production in which "The Ballad Of
Victor Bent (For Tony Scibella)" appears on the second to last page.
box 18, folder 9
St. Vitus Press &
Poetry
Review
, no. 5.
Albuquerque.
2004
Scope and Contents
"Everything Is All Right In Time Even Death" appears on page 4 in this publication
edited by Theron Moore and Todd Moore.
box 18, folder 9
St. Vitus Press &
Poetry
Review
, no. 6.
Albuquerque.
2005 Fall
Scope and Contents
"The Apes Of Wrath" appears in this publication edited by Theron Moore and Todd
Moore.
box 18, folder 10
Mad Blood, no. 2. Evergreen.
2003 October
Scope and Contents
"Variations On Sonnet Of Shakespeare," "Fist Of Love," "Natural Selection," and
"Beat Cocktail" appear in this issue.
box 18, folder 11
The-Hold.com, no. 1. Deptford.
2003 January
Scope and Contents
This underbeat journal is signed by editor/publisher Cait Collins and includes "New
Year's Party" and "Talking Pictures," Griffin's interview with Michael Montfort.
box 18, folder 11
The-Hold.com, no. 2. Deptford.
2003 July
Scope and Contents
"The Edge Generation" and "In A Pig's Eye" appear in this underbeat journal edited
and published by Cait Collins.
box 19, folder 1
Bottle, no. 1. Leesburg.
2003
Scope and Contents
"Fist Of Love" appears in this "all broadside" magazine, designed and printed by
Bill Roberts of Bottle of Smoke Press.
box 19, folder 1
Bottle, no. 2. Bear.
2004
Scope and Contents
"The Ballad Of Victor Bent (For Tony Scibella)" appears in this "all broadside"
magazine, designed and printed by Bill Roberts at Bottle of Smoke Press.
box 19, folder 1
Bottle, no. 3. Dover.
undated
Scope and Contents
"Weapons of Mass Destruction" appears in this "all broadside" magazine, designed
and printed by Bill Roberts at Bottle of Smoke Press.
box 19, folder 2
Bottle, no. 4. Dover.
circa 2006
Scope and Contents
"Throwing Glass At Brick Houses" appears in this "all broadside" magazine, designed
and printed by Bill Roberts at Bottle of Smoke Press.
box 19, folder 2
Bottle, no. 5. Dover.
circa 2007
Scope and Contents
"Asphodel, That Greeny Bookstore" appears in this "all broadside" magazine,
designed and printed by Bill Roberts at Bottle of Smoke Press.
box 19, folder 2
Bottle, no. 6. Dover.
circa 2009
Scope and Contents
"Fear, Inc." appears in this "all broadside" magazine, designed and printed by Bill
Roberts at Bottle of Smoke Press.
box 19, folder 3
Beat Scene. Coventry.
2004 March
Scope and Contents
Griffin's "Talking Pictures: An Interview with Michael Montfort" appears on page 24
of this special Charles Bukowski issue.
box 19, folder 4
Mystery Island Magazine, v. 1, no. 1.
Sacramento.
2004 Summer
Scope and Contents
"There Is" appears on page 14.
box 19, folder 4
Mystery Island Magazine, v. 1, no. 5.
Sacramento.
2005 Summer
Scope and Contents
"The Right Kind Of Eyes" appears on page 16.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 1. Los Angeles.
2005 August 16
Scope and Contents
"The Emperor Is Stark Raving Naked" appears on the back side.
Biographical / Historical
These broadsides were edited and published by Griffin via his Rose of Sharon Press.
Like
(Sic) Vice & Verse, these were distributed
by hand across town. They were left at coffeehouses, bookstores, or any workable
distribution location. Additionally, these were mailed across the country and others
would drop them off at similar venues in their neighborhoods.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 2. Los Angeles.
2005 September 23
Scope and Contents
This is the "Burning Bridge" issue.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 3. Los Angeles.
2005 October 29
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to the life and work of d.a. levy.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 4. Los Angeles.
2005 November
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to Tony Scibella, Jack Micheline, and Cait Collins and
includes poems by each writer. It features photos of Cait Collins and Linda Bukowski
and a collage by Griffin.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 5. Los Angeles.
2005 December
Scope and Contents
"Weapons of Mass Destruction" appears on the front side of this Rose of Sharon
publication and the back features a photo of Frank T. Rios by Pegarty Long.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 6. Los Angeles.
2006 January
Scope and Contents
The Butcher, S.A. Griffin wishes A.D. Winans a Happy 70th!
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 7. Los Angeles.
2006 February
Scope and Contents
This issue includes work by Tammy F. Trendle, Romella D. Kitchens, Pris Campbell,
and Teka-Lark
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 8. Los Angeles.
2006 April
Scope and Contents
This "Venus In The Badlands" issue features work by Frank T. Rios, Amanda Oaks,
John Dorsey, John Macker, Beka Parrish, Todd Moore, and Elizabeth Wagstaff
Williams.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 9. Los Angeles.
2006 July
Scope and Contents
This issue was created by Griffin (Los Angeles) and C. Allen Rearick
(Cleveland).
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 10. Los Angeles.
2006 August
Scope and Content
This issues features "Buk" and a collage by Griffin, "Love" by Ann Menebroker, and
"Bukowski Poem" by Bob Flanagan.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 11. Los Angeles.
2006 October 27-29
Scope and Contents
"Throwing Glass At Brick Houses" appears on the back side of this special Rabbits
Over Clevyland issue dedicated to Lady Bree Bodnar.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 12. Los Angeles.
2008 June 20-22
Scope and Contents
"What It Is" for Todd Moore's 70th appears on the back side of this special
Unregulated Word: A Summer Accident (Kansas City, Kansas) issue.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 13. Los Angeles.
2011 March
Scope and Contents
John Dorsey's "The Death Of Language (For Todd Moore and S.A. Griffin)" and
"Don-Cor-nigga-leoni" by Billy Burgos appear on the back side of this broadside.
box 19, folder 5
Meat, no. 14. Los Angeles.
2013 August 19
Scope and Contents
This broadside is dedicated to the work of Scott Wannberg and includes the
following poems: "Dance It As If You Mean It," "Be Kind To Your Open Wound Week,"
"34 Brand New Concoctions," and "Don't Go Into Your Mind Without Being Accompanied
By An Adult."
box 19, folder 6
Zen Baby, no. 13. Santa Cruz.
2005
Scope and Contents
Griffin's "American Babylon" collage appears on the back cover and "There Is"
appears on the inside of the back cover.
box 19, folder 6
Zen Baby, no. 14. Santa Cruz.
2005
Scope and Contents
A review by Griffin and John Dorsey of Todd Moore's
The Dead
Zone Trilogy
appears in this issue.
box 19, folder 6
Zen Baby, no. 18. Santa Cruz.
2006
Scope and Contents
This issue includes Griffin's memorial for Tracy Thielen of Tracy and The
Hindenburg Ground Crew. Thielen's mother Sally was a regular at the Water Espresso
Gallery.
box 19, folder 7
Poems-For-All, no. 489.
Sacramento.
2005 January
Scope and Contents
This PFA is a miniature book containing "The Apes Of Wrath."
Biographical / Historical
The Poems-For-All (PFA) project began in March 2001 with the publication of The
Bells of The Cherokee Ponies by poet and small press publisher d.a. levy who sparked
what became known as The Mimeograph Revolution, which involves outsiders and
underground writers publishing on their own terms by any means possible. Richard
Hansen describes the PFAs as "Little books, scattered like seeds. That is, they're
given away, left around, thrown about the place for people to find. Free. Always
free."
box 19, folder 8
Open Wide Magazine, no. 18.
Chester.
circa 2005
Scope and Contents
"Call & Response," Griffin's work written in direct response to A.D. Winans' "A
Call To Poets" appears on page 29.
box 19, folder 9
Poesy, no. 28. Santa Cruz.
2005 Spring
Scope and Contents
"There Is A River" appears in this issue.
box 19, folder 9
Poesy, no. 31. Santa Cruz.
2006 Spring
Scope and Contents
"A Poet's Drink" appears in this issue.
box 19, folder 9
Poesy, no. 34. Santa Cruz.
2006-2007
Scope and Contents
"Confessions Of A Door To Door Autographed Outlaw Bible Salesman" appears in this
issue.
box 19, folder 9
Poesy, no. 39. Santa Cruz.
2012
Scope and Contents
"Let The Music Name You (For Scott Wannberg, 1953-2011)" appears in this issue.
box 19, folder 10
Poetry
For The Masses
, v. 1, no. 1.
2005 April
Scope and Content
"Everything Is All Right In Time Even Death" appears in this issue.
box 20, folder 1
The Flatlands, no. 1. Toledo.
2005 Spring
Scope and Contents
"James Dickey Was Never A Pickled Half-Sheep Preserved In A Jar" appears in this
issue.
box 20, folder 2
The Rise and Fall of the Harbor Area, no. 4.
San Pedro.
2005 May-August
Scope and Contents
Excerpts from an interview with Mike Watt appear on page 26 and Griffin's film
review of
We Jam Econo: The Story of the Minuteman
appears on page 46. The cover features a photo of Charles Bukowski by Linda Lee
Bukowski.
box 20, folder 3
The Rise and Fall of the Harbor Area, no. 5.
San Pedro.
2005 September-December
Scope and Contents
An interview with Raymond Pettibon who designed the cover and part one of Griffin's
interview with Saccharine Trust appear in this issue.
box 20, folder 3
The Rise and Fall of the Harbor Area, no. 6.
San Pedro.
2006 January-April
Scope and Contents
Part two of Griffin's Saccharine Trust interview and Iris Berry's memorial piece
for Vandals singer Stevo (Steven R. Jensen) appear in this issue.
box 20, folder 4
Eighty-Six Magazine. San Diego.
2005 January
Scope and Contents
"Finger Fucked By The Gods" appears on page 20.
box 20, folder 4
Eighty-Six Magazine. San Diego.
2006 February
Scope and Contents
"Elvis Changed My Life On The Big Screen At The Fox Theatre In Downtown Richmond,
CA" appears on page 11.
box 256
The Brickbat Revue, Los Angeles.
2006 March
Scope and Content
Griffin is the feature poet for this quarter-annual broadsheet.
box 20, folder 5
No Spring Cleve, no. 6. Cleveland
Heights.
2006
Scope and Contents
"The Sun Is The Sun Is The Sun" appears in this Green Panda Press publication for
d.a. levy and Cleveland.
box 20, folder 6
Fearless, no. 63. Lancaster.
2006
Scope and Contents
"The Unspeakable Journey Into The Future" appears on the second page of this
issue.
box 20, folder 7
Desert Shovel Review, v. 1, no. 1. Santa
Fe.
2006
Scope and Contents
"This Is Where (For Dave Alvin's Big 5-0)" appears on page 60.
box 20, folder 8
The Seed, v. 1, no. 2.
2006 January-March
Scope and Contents
"The Apes Of Wrath" appears on page 14.
box 20, folder 8
The Seed, v. 1, no. 3.
2006
Scope and Contents
"Weapons Of Mass Destruction" appears on page 14.
box 20, folder 9
ArtCrimes, no. 21. Cleveland.
2006 July
Scope and Contents
"I Choose Not To Believe In War Holy Or Not" appears on page 34 of this final
issue.
box 20, folder 10
"remark." no. 45. Windsor.
2006 May
Scope and Contents
"A Sixteen Year Old Rain Floods The Room With Far Off Future Flowers" and "A
Million Years Ago & Now (For David Lerner)" appear in this issue.
box 20, folder 10
"remark." no. 53. Windsor.
2007 March
Scope and Contents
"Numbskull Sutra (For Mark Hartenbach)" appears in this C. Allen Rearick issue.
box 20, folder 11
words dance, no. 9. Cherry Tree.
2006 Spring
Scope and Contents
"Reflections Of A Mind Corrupted By A Nightmare Childhood & Congenital
Dysfunction" appears on page 18 of this publication made and arranged by Amanda
Oaks.
box 20, folder 11
words dance, no. 10. Cherry
Tree.
2006 Fall
Scope and Content
"One Night In San Francisco" appears on page 26 of this publication made and
arranged by Amanda Oaks.
box 20, folder 11
words dance, no. 11. Cherry
Tree.
2007 Spring
Scope and Contents
"Patriot Poem" appears on page 23 of this publication made and arranged by Amanda
Oaks.
box 20, folder 12
Hard Fic, no. 1. San Diego.
circa 2007
Scope and Contents
"What It Is" appears in this issue. Box 333 includes numbers 5 and 27 of 100.
box 20, folder 13
The Quirk, no. 1. Warsaw.
circa 2007
Scope and Contents
"Numbskull Sutra (For Mark Hartenbach)" appears in this issue. Folder contains
correspondence to Griffin from Editor Kaveh Akbar.
box 21, folder 1
Zygote In My Coffee, no. 3.
Kettering.
2007 Spring
Scope and Contents
"Man With The Hole In His Stomach" appears on page 13.
box 21, folder 1
Zygote In My Coffee, no. 4.
Kettering.
2007 Summer/Fall
Scope and Contents
"Big Kiss Before The Big" appears on page 38.
box 21, folder 2
Falling Star, v. 6, no. 2. Thousand
Oaks.
2007 August
Scope and Contents
"The Queen Of Meat" appears on page 13 and chronicles Griffin's journey with Cait
Collins to Bukowski's grave site.
box 21, folder 3
GPP Reader. Worldwide.
2007
Scope and Contents
The Guerrilla Poetics Project published selections from its poets such as
Griffin's: "Everything Is All Right In Time Even Death," "This Place Of Love You
Make," "Lady," and "One Night In San Francisco."
box 21, folder 4
Tears in the Fence, no. 47.
Ashburton.
2008 Spring
Scope and Contents
"A Beautiful Disgrace In Time (For Pris Campbell)" appears on page 26.
box 21, folder 5
Letterhead, v. 2. Buffalo.
2008
Scope and Contents
"What It Is" appears on page 95.
box 21, folder 6
Dark Star Dust, no. 1.
2008 February
Scope and Contents
This zine was compiled by Exene Cervenka while she was living in Missouri.
"Throwing Glass At Brick Houses" appears in this issue.
box 21, folder 7
Chiron Review, no. 86. St. John.
2009 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features Griffin and Lorraine Perrotta on the cover, poems by Griffin,
and an interview with Griffin by Yama Lake.
box 21, folder 8
Conversations, v. 5. Pollock
Pines.
2009 May
Scope and Contents
Griffin's interview with B.L. Kennedy begins on page 69.
box 21, folder 8
Found & Lost Magascene, v. 1, no. 0. Los
Angeles.
circa 2010
Scope and Contents
"Walt Whitman's Beard" and "Letter To An Over-Dosed Poet" appear in this issue
along with work by A.D. Winans, Charles Plymell, Jack Micheline, Scott Wannberg,
Wallace Berman and Michael Leon.
box 21, folder 9
Found & Lost Magascene, v. 1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
circa 2010
Scope and Contents
"Open Communique From A Wounded World To The President Of The United States"
appears in this issue alongside work by Mike Watt, The Carma Bums, Frank T. Rios,
and Charles Plymell.
box 22, folder 1
The Mas Tequila Review, no. 1.
Albuquerque.
2010 Summer
Scope and Contents
"Walt Whitman's Beard" appears on page 57.
box 153, folder 1
SIC, no. 1. Venice.
2011 April
Scope and Content
This broadside was published by Rafael FJ Alvarado at Beyond Baroque. "Throwing
Glass At Brick Houses" appears on the front side.
box 22, folder 2-3
Malpais Review, v. 3, no. 1.
Placitas.
2012 Summer
Scope and Contents
"Let The Music Name You (For Scott Wannberg, 1953-2011)" appears on page 222.
box 333, folder 2
Maintenant, no. 3. New York.
2009 Spring
Scope and Content
"Night of Mayhem" and "Beautiful Blessings" appear on page 33.
box 22, folder 4
Maintenant, no. 6. New York.
2012
Scope and Contents
"I Saw Jesus Hanging With Mohammed" appears on page 63.
box 333, folder 2
Maintenant, no. 9. New York.
2015
Scope and Content
"The Digital Kind" appears on page 81.
box 333, folder 3
Maintenant, no. 10. New York.
2016
Scope and Content
"Presidential Candidate Upside Down Cake" appears on page 122.
box 22, folder 5
The Mas Tequila Review, no. 7.
Albuquerque.
2013 Summer
Scope and Contents
"Sketch Of Two Older Women As Naked Lunch & One Young Man Surfing The Silver
Shadow Of The Sunset Strip" appears on page 16.
box 22, folder 6-7
The Lowdown. Ellison Bay.
2013
Scope and Contents
Griffin's collages and
poetry
are published throughout this literary arts journal
edited by Robert M. Zoschke (RMZ). RMZ's inscription to Griffin reads, "Hey
S.A.--Your work makes the book work..."
box 22, folder 8
Moon & Sun Review, no. 1.
Venice.
2014 Spring
Scope and Contents
"You Hate" appears in this issue.
box 333, folder 4
Edgar Allan Poet, no. 3. Sherman
Oaks.
2015
Scope and Content
"Los Angeles in the Rain" appears on page 43, "Kitten with a Whip" appears on page
166, and "Ubiquitous Freud" appears on page 176.
box 333, folder 5
MILK, no. 3/4. Los Angeles.
2015
Scope and Content
"Kitten with A Whip" appears in this issue.
box 333, folder 6
AMASS, issue 59, no. 3, v. 20. Los
Angeles.
2016
Scope and Content
"The Invisible Hand Discusses the Future of the World" appears on page 35.
box 23, box 24, box 25, box 26, box 27, box 28, box 29, box 30, box 31, box 32, box 33, box 34, box 35, box 36, box 37, box 38, box 39, box 40, box 41, box 42, box 43, box 44, box 45, box 46, box 47, box 48, box 49, box 50, box 51, box 52, box 53, box 54, box 55, box 56, box 57, box 58, box 59, box 60, box 61, box 62, box 63, box 64, box 65, box 66, box 67, box 68, box 69, box 70, box 71, box 72, box 73, box 74, box 75, box 76, box 77, box 78, box 79, box 80, box 81, box 82, box 83, box 84, box 85, box 86, box 87, box 88, box 89, box 90, box 91, box 92, box 93, box 94, box 95, box 96, box 97, box 98, box 99, box 100, box 101, box 102, box 103, box 104, box 105, box 106, box 107, box 108, box 109, box 110, box 111, box 112, box 113, box 114, box 115, box 116, box 117, box 118, box 119, box 120, box 121, box 122, box 123, box 124, box 125, box 126, box 127, box 128, box 129, box 130, box 131, box 132, box 133, box 134, box 135, box 136, box 137, box 138, box 139, box 140, box 141, box 142, box 143, box 144, box 145, box 146, box 147, box 148, box 149, box 150, box 151, box 152, box 153, box 154, box 155, box 156, box 157, box 158, box 159, box 160, box 161, box 162, box 163, box 164, box 165, box 166, box 167, box 168, box 334, box 335, box 336, box 337, box 338, box 339, box 340, box 341, box 342, box 343, box 344, box 345
Writings collected by Griffin
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
SERIES CONTAINS AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS: Audiovisual materials in this collection will
require assessment and possible digitization for safe access. To review these
audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
SERIES CONTAINS DIGITAL MATERIALS: Special equipment or further processing may be
required for viewing. To access digital materials you must notify the reference desk in
advance of your visit.
Scope and Content
box 23, box 24, box 25, box 26, box 27, box 28, box 29, box 30, box 31, box 32, box 33, box 34, box 35, box 36, box 37, box 38, box 39, box 40, box 41, box 42, box 43, box 44, box 45, box 46, box 47, box 48, box 49, box 50, box 51, box 52, box 53, box 54, box 55, box 56, box 57, box 58, box 59, box 60, box 61, box 62, box 63, box 64, box 65, box 66, box 67, box 68, box 69, box 70, box 71, box 72, box 73, box 74, box 75, box 76, box 77, box 78, box 79, box 80, box 81, box 82, box 83, box 84, box 85, box 86, box 87, box 88, box 89, box 90, box 91, box 92, box 93, box 94, box 95, box 96, box 97, box 98, box 99, box 100, box 101, box 102, box 103, box 104, box 105, box 106, box 107, box 108, box 109, box 110, box 111, box 112, box 113, box 114, box 115, box 334, box 335, box 336, box 337, box 338, box 339, box 340, box 341, box 342
Monographs
Scope and Content
The monographs, which are organized alphabetically by last name, largely relate to
the Venice West and Denver Beat
poetry
scene, other Beat
poetry
, and underground
poetry
from the greater Los Angeles area which include Charles Bukowski's own
collection of foreign editions of his work, which Linda Bukowski gave to Griffin. Many
of the monographs are small press or independently published chapbooks.
Books from S.A. Griffin's library that were originally donated with the papers have
been individually cataloged in the UCLA Library online catalog. Records for these
items may be found by searching the Special Coll/Archive SPAC "SALA" using the
Advanced search tab in the Library catalog, or keyword searching "Books from the
Library of S.A. Griffin".
box 343, box 344, box 345, box 116, box 117, box 118, box 119, box 120, box 121, box 122, box 123, box 124, box 125, box 126, box 127, box 128, box 129, box 130, box 131, box 132, box 133, box 134, box 135, box 136, box 137, box 138, box 139, box 140, box 141, box 142, box 143, box 144, box 145, box 146, box 147, box 148, box 149, box 150, box 151, box 152, box 153
Serials
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
SUBSERIES CONTAINS AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS: Audiovisual materials in this collection
will require assessment and possible digitization for safe access. To review these
audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Content
The serials, which are alphabetized by title, are comprised of
poetry
and punk
related journals, zines and magazines, including
Bachy,
Obras,
Puppet Terror,
Rats With Keys,
The Rise and
Fall of the Harbor Area
,
Spiegelman's Mailart
Rag
, and
Sunset Palms Hotel.
box 116, folder 2
51%, v. 2, no. 1. Costa Mesa.
1996 September
box 116, folder 1
2B, no. 14. Chicago.
1999
box 116, folder 3
Abraxas, no. 44/45. Madison.
2006
box 116, folder 4
Accent. Urbana.
1957 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed by Diane di Prima on page 111 where her "Poem" appears.
box 116, folder 5
Adam Bedside Reader, v. 1, no. 47. Los
Angeles.
1971 October
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a Special Charles Bukowski Samplers and the cover model's chest
is signed by Hank.
box 116, folder 6
The Adventures of Principal X.
undated
box 116, folder 7
Alcatraz, no. 2. Santa Cruz.
1982
box 116, folder 8
Aldebaran Review, no. 4.
Berkeley.
1969 May
Scope and Contents
This issue includes work by Douglas Blazek, Lyn Lifshin, Emilie Glen, and Alta. It
was printed at Noh Directions Press by John Oliver Simon and Richard Krech.
According to the title page, "Contents are not copyright since that would imply a
willingness to employ pig penal system, but they are guarded and will not be
misused."
box 116, folder 9
Alpha Beat Press. New Hope.
undated
Scope and Contents
This Post Beat Independent Broadside is published monthly by Ana and Dave Christy
and features Mark Hartenbach's "Chili, Cornbread, and The Blues."
box 116, folder 10
American Film, v. 13, no. 2. New
York.
1987 November
Scope and Contents
This issue features Mickey Rourke, Charles Bukowski and the making of Barfly.
box 116, folder 11
American Splendor Special: A Step Out of the
Nest
, no. 1. Milwaukie.
1994 August
box 116, folder 11
American Splendor: Music Comics.
Milwaukie.
1997 November
box 116, folder 11
American Splendor: Odds & Ends.
Milwaukie.
1997 December
box 116, folder 12
The Amphibian, v. 1, no. 1.
Reseda.
1990 October/November
Scope and Contents
This issue includes work by Lisa Neal, Marcia Arrieta, Kris McHaddad, and Lyn
Lifshin.
box 116, folder 13
Angerbox, no. 3. Los Angeles.
1999 April
box 116, folder 14
Angry Thoreauan, no. 11.
Anaheim.
1994 November
Processing Information
Copies of Angry Thoreauan covers may be found in box 194.
box 116, folder 14
Angry Thoreauan, no. 12.
Anaheim.
1995 February
box 116, folder 14
Angry Thoreauan, no. 15.
Anaheim.
1995 November
box 116, folder 14
Angry Thoreauan, no. 16.
Anaheim.
1996 March
box 116, folder 14
Angry Thoreauan, no. 17.
Anaheim.
1996 July
box 117, folder 1
Angry Thoreauan, no. 18.
Anaheim.
1996 December
box 117, folder 1
Angry Thoreauan, no. 21.
Hollywood.
1998 May-June
box 117, folder 1
Angry Thoreauan, no. 22.
Hollywood.
1998 September-November
box 117, folder 1
Angry Thoreauan, no. 24.
Hollywood.
1999 April
Scope and Contents
This issue features Rev. Randall Tin-ear's "My Laugh At The LAPD" and "Fuck Work!"
his interview with Unamerican Activities co-founder James.
box 117, folder 2
Angry Thoreauan, no. 25.
Hollywood.
1999 August-September
Scope and Contents
This issue's theme is Coprology and includes a "Talkin' Shit with the Muffs"
interview.
box 117, folder 2
Angry Thoreauan, no. 27. Los
Angeles.
2000 November
box 343, folder 1
ANTE, v. 4, no. 2-3. Los
Angeles.
1968
box 117, folder 3
A*PALzine, v. 1, no. 6. San
Gabriel.
1993 July
box 117, folder 4
APO-33: A Metabolic Regulator, no. 1. San
Francisco.
1966
Scope and Contents
This bulletin distributed by City Lights is "A Report on the Synthesis of the
Apomorphine Formula" by William S. Burroughs.
box 117, folder 5
Arcade: The Comics Revue, v. 1, no. 3.
Berkeley.
1975 Fall
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed on the cover by Charles Bukowski and features his "Bop Against
The Curtain" on page 29 with illustrations by R. Crumb.
box 117, folder 6
Arcanum, no. 3. Denver.
1989 March
box 117, folder 7
Arshile, no. 11. Los Angeles.
1999
box 117, folder 8
Art & Scope. Oneonta.
1998 Fall
box 117, folder 8
Art & Scope. Oneonta.
1999 Spring
box 117, folder 8
Art & Scope. Oneonta.
1999 Fall
Scope and Content
This Millennium Edition is signed by Editor-In-Chief David Greenspan.
box 117, folder 9
Art Fax, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1985 November
Scope and Contents
This punk rock zine was created by Mike M. Mollett.
box 117, folder 10
Art Gallery of South Australia.
Adelaide.
1991
Scope and Contents
This catalogue for the
Milton Moon Retrospective was
written by Christopher Menz, Associate Curator of Australian and European Decorative
Arts.
box 193, folder 1
Arthur, v. 1, no. 13.
Gaithersburg.
2004 November
box 193, folder 1
Arthur, v. 1, no. 24.
Gaithersburg.
2006 September
box 117, folder 11
Artillery, v. 3, no. 5. Los
Angeles.
2009 May/June
box 117, folder 11
Artillery, v. 6, no. 6. Los
Angeles.
2012 Summer
box 117, folder 12
Art:Mag, no. 23. Las Vegas.
2000
box 117, folder 13
Art-Rite, no. 18. New York.
1978
box 117, folder 14
Ashes. Denver.
1981 September
Scope and Contents
This Howling Dog Press monthly features Yr Daily Ace by John Loquidis with drawings
by Steve Wilson. The dedication reads: To all the hookers of Denver without whom
there wld have been no one to talk to -- & ain't that bad or good.
box 117, folder 15
Athena Louise Replies.
circa 1990s
Scope and Content
This zine prints problems and replies from Athena Louise such as Problem: Allow
alcohol at least in the backyard! Reply: This is a problem you should discuss with
the management. Jabberjaw, Los Angeles.
box 117, folder 16
Aversion, no. 6. Chatsworth.
1986 Fall/Winter
Scope and Contents
This issue features a review of Henry Rollins at Bebop Records and Scott Wannberg's
"They Got."
box 117, folder 17
AziMuth, no. 2. New Haven.
2001 Fall
box 118, folder 1
Bachy, no. 8. West Los Angeles.
1976
Biography/History
This
poetry
journal was published and edited by Papa Bach aka John Harris, along
with a changing cast of others including Leland Hickman.
Scope and Contents
This semiannual journal is "dedicated to the discovery of previously unpublished
artists of worth." Publisher John Harris states, "We publish all kinds of material
-- except sentimental, academic, or metaphysical bullshit."
box 118, folder 1
Bachy, no. 9. West Los Angeles.
1977
box 118, folder 1
Bachy, no. 10. Los Angeles.
1977
Scope and Contents
This issue's silver cover features a photo of a woman in shades standing inside a
Los Angeles party house.
box 118, folder 2
Bachy, no. 11. West Los Angeles.
1978
Scope and Contents
This issue features multiple works by Wanda Coleman, including "Male Order Catalog"
in which she references Sir Lady Java circa 1969 as the world's most famous female
impersonator.
box 118, folder 2
Bachy, no. 12. West Los Angeles.
1978
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Holly Prado and the article, "
Poetry
in Los
Angeles Since 1945: Part One" by Alvaro Cardona-Hine.
box 118, folder 3
Bachy, no. 14. West Los Angeles.
1979
Scope and Contents
This issue contains William Mohr's review of Bob Flanagan's
The Kid Is The Man and a collection of Wanda Coleman's poems including
"Flight Of The California Condor/Wind Sistuh Blooded Eyes/Mind Full Of Flesh" for
"Los Angeles -- you at my jugular."
box 118, folder 3
Bachy, no. 16. West Los Angeles.
1979
Scope and Contents
This issue features "Feel The Leather," an interview with Wanda Coleman and
collections of
poetry
by Coleman, John Thomas, and Kate Braverman.
box 118, folder 4
Bachy, no. 17. West Los Angeles.
1980
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with John Rechy, "The Relentless Pursuit of
Integrity" and three selections from
Pablo!, his
unpublished novel completed when the author was eighteen.
box 343, folder 1
Bachy, no. 18. Los Angeles.
1981
box 118, folder 5
Back Off, v. 1, no. 3. Gardena.
1991 May
Scope and Contents
An advertisement for Mondo Video when it was located at 639 Channel Street in San
Pedro appears in this issue.
box 118, folder 6
Bagazine, no. 2. San Francisco.
2007
Scope and Contents
Contributors to this "Assemblage - Bagism - Happening" include Charles Bukowski,
Bill Roberts, Billy Childish, and F.N. Wright.
box 118, folder 6
Bagazine, no. 4. San Francisco.
2010
Scope and Content
Contributors to this "Assemblage - Bagism - Happening" include Billy Childish,
Johnny Brewton, and Richard Krech.
box 119, folder 1
Bagozine, Cleveland
Scope and Content
No. 29 (2004 October), no. 39 (2005 August), no. 40 (2005 September).
box 119, folder 2
Bart Simpson's Creepy Crawly Tales, no. 1.
Los Angeles.
1999
box 119, folder 3
Basura, no. 1. Laguna Beach.
1992
box 119, folder 3
Basura, no. 3. Laguna Beach.
1993 July
Scope and Content
A letter from zine creator, Bob Basura to S.A. Griffin may be found inserted
between page 32 and 33.
box 119, folder 3
Basura, no. 4. Laguna Beach.
1993 November
box 119, folder 3
Basura, no. 5. Laguna Beach.
1994 May
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a letter to Bob, the zine's creator, from Jen Hofer.
box 119, folder 4
Bathtub Gin, no. 17. Erie.
2005 Fall/Winter
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 217. Venice.
1988 February
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 269. Venice.
2003 November
Scope and Content
This issue includes "Elegy for Tony Scibella" by Bill Fleeman. Scibella died of a
heart attack on October 28.
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 270. Venice.
2003 December
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 272. Venice.
2004 February
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 293. Venice.
2006 February
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 310. Venice.
2007 August
Scope and Contents
This issue contains an 8 1/2" x 11" black and white photocopy of a photo of
Philomene Long and John Thomas alongside the following text: "We open a door/To
where/There is no road/We take it."
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 350. Venice.
2010 December
box 119, folder 5
Beachhead, no. 371. Venice.
2012 September
box 119, folder 6
Beacon Review, v. 3, no. 1.
Seattle.
1984 Summer
box 119, folder 7
The Beat Journals, v. 2.
Coventry.
1995 September
Scope and Contents
This volume contains "Jaggernaut," a short story by Charles Bukowski.
box 119, folder 8
Beat Scene, no. 2. Coventry.
1988 Mid Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue features the Neal Cassady jail letters.
box 119, folder 8
Beat Scene, no. 3. Coventry.
1988 Autumn
Scope and Contents
This issue features Rhoda Ryder's story.
box 119, folder 8
Beat Scene, no. 4. Coventry.
1988 Winter
Scope and Contents
This issue features Jim Burns on Lester "Prez" Young.
box 119, folder 8
Beat Scene, no. 7. Coventry.
1989 Summer/Autumn
Scope and Contents
This issue features a rare Jack Kerouac interview.
box 119, folder 8
Beat Scene, no. 8. Coventry.
1989
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Carolyn Cassady.
box 119, folder 8
Beat Scene, no. 9. Coventry.
1989
Scope and Contents
This issue features Charles Bukowski holding a cat on the cover and includes
interviews with William Burroughs, Lydia Lunch, and Jack Micheline.
box 119, folder 9
Beat Scene, no. 15. Coventry.
1992
Scope and Contents
This issue includes Charles Bukowski's "Husk," Beat Scene flyer No. 1, given away
to subscribers with this issue.
box 119, folder 9
Beat Scene, no. 16. Coventry.
1993
Scope and Contents
This issue contains an interview with Ann Charters and a feature on Beat Women.
box 119, folder 9
Beat Scene, no. 17. Coventry.
1993
Scope and Contents
This issue contains an interview with Professor Eric Mottram and a feature on The
Fugs.
box 119, folder 9
Beat Scene, no. 18. Coventry.
1994 January/February
Scope and Contents
This issue contains an interview with Carolyn Cassady and a feature on Mal
Dean.
box 119, folder 9
Beat Scene, no. 20. Coventry.
1994
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to Charles Bukowski and contains a pink chapbook inserted
between the cover and the table of contents. This chap is number 11 of 75 and is
signed by Bukowski. The cover art is a headstone with 1992 on it. The text is
excerpted from a letter Bukowski wrote to Ann Menebroker on November 23, 1966
box 119, folder 9
Beat Scene, no. 43. Coventry.
2003 Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue contains a feature on Bukowski and The FBI and a profile piece on
Kulchur, a 1960s Beat magazine.
box 119, folder 10
Beat Scene, no. 48. Coventry.
2005 Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue contains a feature on the Six Gallery and a piece on the Naropa
University archives alongside a photo of William Burroughs and Anne Waldman at the
Naropa University at Boulder, Colorado in 1975.
box 120, folder 1
Beatitude, no. 17. San
Francisco.
1960 October-November
Scope and Contents
This issue was published by City Light Books and according to the editors,
"MANUSCREEDS WILL NOT BE RETURNED even if accompanied by the usual return-postage
scene. (The stamps will be unlicked and used for evil purposes.) The following are a
few of the contributors: Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, Gregory Corso, Lenore Kandel,
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Leroi Jones.
box 120, folder 2
Ben Is Dead, no. 5. Hollywood.
1989 Summer
Scope and Contents
Ben is God: The L.A. Newsletter #B is inserted into this issue.
box 120, folder 2
Ben Is Dead, no. 11. Hollywood.
1990-1991 Winter
Scope and Contents
This Obsession and Bad Habits theme issue includes an interview with Glen Meadmore
of Pedro, Muriel and Esther, a drag queen speed metal parody band.
box 120, folder 2
Ben Is Dead, no. 12. Hollywood.
1991 April
Scope and Contents
This Censorship theme issue includes an interview KXLU General Manager Colin Sicc
and an interview with Stuart Sweezey and Brian King of Amok Books.
box 120, folder 2
Ben Is Dead, no. 13. Hollywood.
1991 May
Scope and Contents
This Broke theme issue features The Ben Encyclopedia of Broke: An A-Z guide of
tips, scams, techniques, and the like for getting by with a less-than-impressive
cash flow.
box 120, folder 2
Ben Is Dead, no. 16-17.
Hollywood.
1991-1992 December-January
Scope and Contents
This Gross theme issue contains a performance artists piece which features Bob
Flanagan, Kembra Pfahler, Curtis York, Annie Sprinkle, Johanna Went, Lisa Suckdog,
Deen Swaydon, Frank Moore, and Karen Finley.
box 120, folder 3
Ben Is Dead, no. 18. Hollywood.
1992 March-April
Scope and Contents
This Glamour themed issue features cover Supermodel Sean deLear, lead singer of
Glue. An interview with the band appears on page 24.
box 120, folder 3
Ben Is Dead, no. 19. Hollywood.
1992 June-July
Scope and Contents
This "themeless" issue contains various features on the riots or uprising following
the Rodney King verdict. The cover photo is of a sidewalk with "Bad Cop No Donut"
graffiti.
box 120, folder 4
bender, v. 1, no. 1. South Pasadena.
1997
box 120, folder 5
Best Buy Comics. San Francisco.
1979 February
Scope and Contents
These stories and comic strips are by R. Crumb.
box 120, folder 6
Best Poems of 1962, v. 15. Palo
Alto.
1963
box 120, folder 7
Beyond Baroque, no. 7. Venice.
1996
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to the memory of Bob Flanagan and William Bitting.
Biography/History
Bob Flanagan was a poet, performance artist and Modern Primitive pioneer who
influenced Griffin as a poet and performance artist. Flanagan was a long time
facilitator for Beyond Baroque's Wednesday night writing workshop. When Flanagan
passed away, Griffin went to the open
poetry
reading at Beyond Baroque where he was
spanked while he read as tribute to Flanagan's
poetry
and performance.
box 120, folder 7
Beyond Baroque, v. 26, no. 2.
Venice.
2004
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to Hubert Selby, Jr. in Memorium, April 26, 2004.
box 120, folder 7
Beyond Baroque, v. 28, no. 2.
Venice.
2006
Scope and Contents
This "Truth, Etc." issue is dedicated to Gary Webb, Hunter S. Thompson, and H.R.
Shapiro.
box 120, folder 8
Beyond Baroque 802, v. 11, no. 2.
Venice.
1980 Spring
Scope and Contents
This gay and lesbian theme issue is dedicated with love to David Goodstein, creator
of "The Advocate Experience."
box 120, folder 9
Beyond Baroque NeWLetterS, v. 5, no. 5.
Venice.
1974 September
Scope and Contents
The cover features Stuart Z. Perkoff (1930-1974) at Papa Bach's in addition to
poems by Blakeslee Stevens and Neeli Cherry (aka Neeli Cherkovski).
box 120, folder 10
Beyond The Blackout, no. 1.
Hollywood.
1984 June
Scope and Contents
This issue features interviews with The Cramps and John Waters.
box 120, folder 11
Big Cigars, no. 3. Washington
D.C.
1988 Winter
box 120, folder 12
The Big Issue, no. 8. Venice.
1998
box 120, folder 13
Big Two-Hearted, v. 3, no. 1. Iron
Mountain.
1988 Winter/Spring
box 120, folder 14
Bizarre Sex, no. 10. Princeton.
1982
box 120, folder 15
Black Ace Books Catalog, no. 1.
Aurora.
1971 February
Scope and Contents
This "Modern Literature" catalog features a cover design by the Secret 6 and
contains two poems by Larry Eigner.
box 120, folder 15
Black Ace Books Catalog. Los
Angeles.
1992 Spring
Scope and Contents
This "Beat & Other Lit" catalog includes a letter from Rose Idlet and Tony
Scibella printed on the inside of the cover.
box 120, folder 15
Black Ace Books Catalog, no. 11. Los
Angeles.
1993-1994 Winter
Scope and Contents
This "Beat & Other Lit" catalog includes a letter from Rose Idlet and Tony
Scibella printed on the inside of the cover.
box 120, folder 15
Black Ace Books Catalog, no. 13. Los
Angeles.
1996
Scope and Contents
This "Beat & Other Lit" catalog includes a letter from Rose Idlet printed on
the inside of the cover. Gabrielle Idlet is the guest cover artist for this
issue.
box 120, folder 15
Black Ace Books Catalog, no. 14. Los
Angeles.
circa 1998-1999
Scope and Contents
This "Beat & Other Lit" catalog includes a letter from Rose Idlet printed on
the inside of the cover. Gabrielle Idlet is the guest cover artist for this
issue.
box 120, folder 15
Black Ace Books Catalog, no. 15. Los
Angeles.
circa 2003
Scope and Contents
The introduction to this "Beat & Other Lit" catalog was written by Tony
Scibella. According to a note inside the cover, Scibella had just finished the
catalog, fell ill for a few weeks, and died on October 28, 2003.
box 121, folder 1
Black Cross Magazine, no. 3. Long
Beach.
1997
Scope and Contents
The submission directive tells artists to "Send a SASE and a nude photo (cute art
chicks only)."
box 121, folder 2
Black Messiah, no. 1.
Ellensburg.
1981
Scope and Contents
This is a Henry Miller tribute issue signed by Editor John Bennett.
box 121, folder 3
Black Rose, v. 1, no. 3. Boston.
1979 Fall
Scope and Contents
Editorial Collective member Marty Blatt briefly explains why he is an anarchist in
the first six pages of this issue.
box 121, folder 3
Black Rose, v. 1, no. 4. Boston.
1979 Winter
Scope and Contents
An annotated Black Rose envelope is inserted between page 3 and 4 of this issue.
The addressee label reads: William J. Margolis 1507 Cabrillo Avenue Venice, CA
90291.
box 121, folder 3
Black Rose, v. 2, no. 5. Boston.
1980 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue includes Richard Mandel's "Politics of Disease: Cancer in a Metastatic
Society."
box 121, folder 3
Black Rose, v. 2, no. 6. Boston.
1980 Summer
Scope and Contents
This "No Index" issue considers the following: "Why Do We Suppose Our Rose is
Black? Or Lucubrations on a Theme."
box 121, folder 3
Black Rose, v. 2, no. 7. Boston.
1981 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features Paul Avrich's "An Anarchist Life: Mollie Steimer
(1897-1980)."
box 121, folder 4
Blasts!, no. 2. San Francisco.
circa 1996
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to spirituality and includes work by Camilla Smith, Aram
Saroyan, Scott Wannberg, and Thich Nhat Hanh.
box 121, folder 5
Blood and Ink. Northridge.
1991
Scope and Contents
These Inkspots were created on the 7th floor Sierra North, California State
University, Northridge (CSUN).
box 121, folder 6
Blue Satellite, v. 4, no. 1.
Venice.
1997 September
Scope and Contents
This literary journal edited by Amelie Frank and Matthew Niblock and published by
The Sacred Beverage Press includes work by Ellyn Maybe, Richard Modiano, francEyE,
Scott Wannberg, and Viggo Mortensen.
box 121, folder 6
Blue Satellite, v. 4, no. 2.
Venice.
1998 February
Scope and Contents
This literary journal edited by Amelie Frank and Matthew Niblock and published by
The Sacred Beverage Press includes work by Ellyn Maybe, Laurel Ann Bogen, Marcia
Cohee, Scott Wannberg, and Erica Erdman.
box 121, folder 6
Blue Satellite, v. 5, no. 1.
Venice.
1998 September
Scope and Contents
This literary journal edited by Amelie Frank and Matthew Niblock and published by
The Sacred Beverage Press includes work by Hope Alvarado, Kathleen Hietala, Scott
Wannberg, and Ellyn Maybe.
box 121, folder 6
Blue Satellite, v. 6, no. 1.
Venice.
1999 September
Scope and Contents
This literary journal edited by Amelie Frank and Matthew Niblock and published by
The Sacred Beverage Press includes work by francEyE, Robert Wynne, Sarah Maclay, and
Maggie Smith.
box 121, folder 7
blue star, no. 1. Echo Park.
undated
Scope and Contents
This is the first edition of Trinie Dalton's literary magazine.
box 121, folder 8
Blue Unicorn, v. 7, no. 3.
Kensington.
1984 June
box 121, folder 9
Blue Window. Santa Monica.
1986 Fall/Winter
Scope and Contents
This premier edition includes an interview with Allen Ginsberg and
poetry
from
Wanda Coleman, Charles Bukowski, Jack Grapes and Holly Prado.
box 121, folder 9
Blue Window. Santa Monica.
1987 Spring/Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue includes
poetry
from Wanda Coleman, Maureen Hurley, Charles Bukowski,
and Ron Koertge.
box 121, folder 10
Bowery, no. 35. Denver.
1983
Scope and Contents
Bowery/West: The Gathering Tribe is a Black Ace/Croupier/Temple of Man anthology of
west coasters in celebration of Bowery birthday No. 15. The cover design is by
Stuart Z. Perkoff. Adjacent to the title page is a photo of Croupier Press Editor
James Ryan Morris. There is a letter printed near the end of this publication from
Black Ace Editor Tony Scibella.
box 122, folder 1
Brainchild, v. 1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1994
Scope and Contents
This coloring book/catalogue edited and published by Gail Zone includes work by
Barbara Mendes, Simone Gad, and Vinzula Kara.
box 122, folder 1
Brainchild in Babylon. Los
Angeles.
1994
Scope and Contents
This coloring book/catalogue edited and published by Gail Zone includes work by
Diane Gamboa, Exene Cervenka, and Jenny Lens.
box 122, folder 1
Brainchild, no. 4. Los Angeles.
1995 February
Scope and Contents
This
Brainchild in Love coloring book/catalogue
edited and published by Gail Zone includes work by Barbara Mendes, Diane Gamboa,
Vinzula Kara, and Simone Gad.
box 122, folder 1
Brainchild Art Productions.
1995 Summer
Scope and Content
This art coloring book,
poetry
and prose publication edited by Gail Zone includes
work by Mary Fleener, Vinzula Kara, Katie Soljak, as well as an advertisement for
Exene Cervenka's Silverlake store You've Got Bad Taste.
box 256
The Brickbat Review, Los
Angeles.
2006 October
Scope and Content
The feature poet for this quarter-annual broadsheet is Wanda Coleman.
box 122, folder 2
B.S.B., v. 1, no. 3. Long Beach
1993 December
box 122, folder 3
Building/Burning/Man. San
Francisco.
1993 Summer
box 122, folder 4
Buk Scene, no. 1. Montreal.
2009
Scope and Contents
This publication includes works inspired by Charles Bukowski and includes three
postcards designed and signed by Jocelyne Desforges.
box 122, folder 5
Bukowski Review, no. 4. Long
Beach.
2006 Spring/Summer
box 122, folder 6
Bull Horn, v. 3, no. 3. East Palo
Alto.
1990 March
box 122, folder 7
Burnside Review, v. 4, no. 1.
Portland.
2008
box 122, folder 8
But Is It Art, v. 1, no. 4.
Altadena.
1987 April
box 122, folder 9
Butcher Shop Press Catalogue.
Oneonta.
2001 January
box 122, folder 10
The Butcher's Block, v. 3.
Oneonta.
2001 Spring
box 122, folder 11
Buzz. Boulder.
1992 May/June
Scope and Contents
This issue features
PULP by Charles Bukowski.
box 122, folder 12
Caffeine, v. 1, Woodland Hills
1992 - 1994
Scope and Content
no. 1. (December 1992), no. 2. (April 1993), nos. 4-5 (1993), nos. 6-7 (1994)
box 122, folder 13
Caffeine, v. 1, Woodland Hills
1994 - 1995
Scope and Content
Nos. 8-10 (1994), nos. 11-12 (1995).
box 123, folder 1
Caffeine, v. 1, Woodland Hills.
1995 - 1996
Scope and Content
No. 13 (1995), nos. 14-15 (1996).
box 123, folder 2
California Pop, no. 4. Orange.
2002
box 123, folder 3
Carbomb. Silverlake.
1997 December
box 123, folder 4
Carp, no. 4. Albuquerque.
1997 February
box 123, folder 5
Cat's Eye, v. 2, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
1985 Fall
box 123, folder 6
The Cauldron, no. 1. Silver
Lake.
1995
box 123, folder 6
The Cauldron, no. 2. Silver
Lake.
1995
box 123, folder 7
Cement Squeeze, no. 10. Tempe.
1998 Fall/WInter
box 123, folder 8
Cerebus, no. 163. Ontario.
1992 October
box 123, folder 9
Change Links. North Hollywood.
1997 April
Scope and Contents
A poem by Ellyn Maybe appears on page 2.
box 123, folder 10
Charles Bukowski Society Yearbook.
Oldenburg.
2009
box 123, folder 10
Charles Bukowski Society Yearbook.
Oldenburg.
2010
box 123, folder 11
The Complete Cheech Wizard, v. 2. San
Francisco.
1987
box 123, folder 12
Chicago Review, v. 12, no. 1.
Chicago.
1958 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features ten San Francisco poets including Burroughs, Ferlinghetti,
Ginsberg and Kerouac.
box 123, folder 12
Chicago Review, v. 12, no. 3.
Chicago.
1958 Autumn
box 193, folder 3
Chiron Review, v. 8, no. 4. St.
John.
1989 Winter
Scope and Content
The cover of this issue is inscribed to Griffin and kissed by Justice Howard.
box 123, folder 12
Chiron Review, no. 53. St. John.
1998 Spring
box 123, folder 13
Chiron Review, no. 54. St. John.
1998 Summer
box 123, folder 13
Chiron Review, no. 55. St. John.
1998 Autumn
box 123, folder 13
Chiron Review, no. 66. St. John.
2001 Autumn
box 193, folder 3
Chiron Review, no. 87. St. John.
2009 Summer
box 123, folder 14
The City. San Francisco.
1991 August
box 123, folder 15
City Lights Review, no. 2. San
Francisco.
1988
box 124, folder 1
Coagula, no. 4. Huntington Park.
1992 October
box 124, folder 1
Coagula, no. 10. Huntington
Park.
1993
box 124, folder 2
Collegian, v. 126, no. 7. Los
Angeles.
1992 May 13
box 124, folder 3
Colorado Modern, v. 1, no. 4.
Denver.
2004 August
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a feature on Beat artist, Steve Wilson.
box 343
CONJUNCTIONS, no. 21.
Annandale-on-Hudson.
1993
Scope and Content
The Credos issue.
box 124, folder 4
Convergence. North Hollywood.
1994 August
box 124, folder 5
A Conversation With Ann Menebroker. Pollock
Pines.
2007
Scope and Contents
This publication is part of the
Rattlesnake Interview
Series: #1
from Rattlesnake Press.
box 124, folder 6
Conversations, v. 1. Pollock
Pines.
2007 October
box 193, folder 4
The Coventry Reader, Cleveland
Heights.
1988 Summer
Scope and Content
v. 1, no. 1. (Summer 1988); v. 1, no. 3. (Winter 1988), v. 2, no. 2. (Summer
1989)
box 124, folder 7
CQ, v. 12, no. 4. Los Angeles.
1985
box 124, folder 7
CQ, v. 13, no. 4. Los Angeles.
1986-1987 Winter
box 124, folder 8
Cranial Malfaction, v. 1, no. 1.
Chicago.
1992 September
box 124, folder 9
The Crash Update. San Francisco.
1991 December
box 124, folder 10
Crazy Hip Groovy Go-Go Way Out Monsters, no.
29. New York.
2003
box 124, folder 10
Crazy Hip Groovy Go-Go Way Out Monsters, no.
32. New York.
2004
box 152, folder 1
Creem, v. 1, no. 3. New York.
1992 March
Scope and Content
The Cramps are featured on page 10.
box 343, folder 4
Crisis Chronicles, no. 85.
Cleveland.
2016
Scope and Content
2016 Hessler Street Fair
Poetry
Anthology.
box 124, folder 11
Crying Macho Man. Playa Del Rey.
2007
box 124, folder 12
Culture, v. 5, no. 4. Corona.
2013 October
box 124, folder 13
Cups
Scope and Content
V. 2, no. 4 (1992 April); v. 3, nos. 1, 5, 6, 7 (1993).
box 124, folder 13
Cups. San Francisco.
1994 September
box 124, folder 13
Cups. San Francisco.
1994 October
box 124, folder 13
Cups. San Francisco.
1995 February
box 124, folder 13
Cups. San Francisco.
1995 March
box 124, folder 14
Cups, no. 74. San Francisco.
1996 August/September
box 124, folder 14
Cups, no. 75. San Francisco.
1996 October
box 124, folder 14
Cups, no. 76. San Francisco.
1996 November
box 124
Cups, no. 77. San Francisco.
1996 December
box 124, folder 14
Cups, no. 78. San Francisco.
1997 January
box 124, folder 15
Da' Fold, v. 1, no. 11. San
Francisco.
1991 Summer
box 124, folder 16
Damaged Goods, v. 1, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
1997
Scope and Contents
This magazine is published and edited by Tracey Lee Williams.
box 124, folder 17
Data File. Los Angeles.
circa 1987
Scope and Contents
This pleasure and pain theme issue was compiled by Richard Meade.
box 125, folder 1
David Lovins' Comic Book, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1995
Scope and Contents
The cover is signed, "To S.A. You missed a great time at Jumbo's Clown Room. David
Lovins. November 28, 1995."
box 125, folder 2
Denali. Eugene.
1987 Winter
box 125, folder 3
Dert! Box, no. 8. Los Angeles.
1993 August
box 125, folder 4
Desperado, v. 1, no. 3. San
Francisco.
1970 October
box 125, folder 5
Dishwasher, no. 11. Arcata.
undated
Scope and Contents
This is one of the final issues of Dishwasher Pete Jordan's zine.
box 125, folder 6
Dog Show. Los Angeles.
undated
Scope and Contents
This is Jula Bell's zine. Bell is a former member of the following bands: Bulimia
Banquet, Nip Drivers, and Bobsled.
box 125, folder 7
Don't Blame Cleveland.
Cleveland.
2005
box 125, folder 8
Dope Comix, no. 4. Princeton.
1981
box 125, folder 9
Dork, no. 8. Corona.
undated
box 125, folder 9
Dork, no. 9. Corona.
undated
box 125, folder 10
Double Bill. Toronto.
1991
Scope and Contents
Contributors and creators of this Canadian punk rock zine include Jena von Brucker,
G.B. Jones, Johnny Noxema, Caroline Azar, Rex, and Diesel Mechante.
box 125, folder 11
The Dragon's Tooth, v. 18.
Birmingham.
1993
box 125, folder 12
The Drawing Board, no. 2. San
Francisco.
1986
Scope and Contents
S.A. Griffin served as staff for this publication which features poet Mike
Bruner.
box 125, folder 13
Driver's Side Airbag, no. 41. Los
Angeles.
undated
box 125, folder 13
Driver's Side Airbag, no. 42. Los
Angeles.
undated
box 125, folder 14
Drul, no. 1. Metairie.
July
box 125, folder 15
Dumb Angel Gazette, no. 4. Los
Angeles.
circa 2004
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed to S.A. Griffin by Editor and Publisher Brian Chidester.
box 125, folder 16
Durable Goods, no. 20. Painted
Post.
2010
Scope and Contents
This microzine was created by Aleathia Drehmer. The folder includes DG bookmarks
and correspondence to Griffin from Drehmer.
box 125, folder 16
Durable Goods, no. 26. Painted
Post.
2010
Scope and Contents
This microzine was created by Aleathia Drehmer. The folder includes DG bookmarks
and correspondence to Griffin from Drehmer.
box 125, folder 17
Dust 12, v. 3, no. 4. Paradise.
1969 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to d.a. levy.
box 193, folder 6
The EARTH ROSE, no. 1. Santa
Monica.
Scope and Content
The cover of this Meat
Poetry
Tabloid is signed by editor Steve Richmond and
contributor Charles Bukowski.
box 153, folder 2
EARTH, no. 2. Santa Monica.
1966
Scope and Content
This publication is edited by Steve Richmond, includes work by Charles Bukowski,
and the first page is signed bv Bukowski.
box 125, folder 18
East Village Sampler. New York.
2004
Scope and Contents
This issue includes comics by Jennifer Blowdryer and Nick Zedd.
box 125, folder 18
East Village Comix Sampler, no. 2. New
York.
2004
Scope and Contents
This issue includes comics by Jennifer Blowdryer, Saint Reverend Jen, and Cristy C.
Road.
box 193, folder 7
Easy Reader, v. 17, no. 5. Hermosa
Beach.
1986 September 4
box 125, folder 19
EBNO, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1991 January
box 125, folder 19
EBNO, no. 2. Los Angeles.
1991 February
box 343, folder 5
Edgar Allan Poet Journal, no. 1. Sherman
Oaks.
2013
box 343, folder 5
Edgar Allan Poet Journal, no. 2. Sherman
Oaks.
2014
box 125, folder 20
Ego, no. 5. San Francisco.
1982 December-1983 January
box 125, folder 21
Electrum, no. 29. Santa Ana.
1983 Spring
box 125, folder 21
Electrum, no. 30. Santa Ana.
1983 Summer
box 125, folder 21
Electrum, no. 33. Santa Ana.
1984 Summer
box 125, folder 22
Element Dogz, no. 1. Burbank.
1999 Summer
box 125, folder 23
Elk, no. 14. Los Angeles.
2007 May
box 126, folder 1
The Epic Rites Journal, no. 1. Sherwood
Park.
2010
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to Todd Moore.
box 126, folder 2
Epicenter, v. 3, no. 1.
Riverside.
1996
box 126, folder 3
Espresso Bar. Pasadena.
1992
box 126, folder 4
Exquisite Corpse Annual, no. 1.
Conway.
2009
Scope and Contents
This issue edited by Andrei Codrescu includes "Loba Poetics & More" by Diane Di
Prima.
box 126, folder 5
Falling Star Magazine, v. 3, no. 1. Thousand
Oaks.
2004 Spring
box 126, folder 5
Falling Star Magazine, v. 5, no. 2. Thousand
Oaks.
2006 Fall
box 126, folder 6
Famous Potatoes, v. 1, no. 4.
1979
box 126, folder 7
Fat, v. 1, no. B. Canoga Park.
1993 December
box 126, folder 8
Fearless, no. 62. Lancaster.
2005
box 126, folder 9
Feminist Majority Foundation Report.
Cambridge.
1992
box 126, folder 10
Fervent Valley, no. 3. Placitas.
1973 Spring
box 126, folder 11
Fiction, no. 2. Tempe.
1997 Summer
box 126, folder 12
Fig Tree & Pool, v. 1, no. 1.
Hollywood.
1987 February
Scope and Contents
This issue includes and advertisement for The Lhasa Club.
box 126, folder 13
Film Comment, v. 23, no. 4. New
York.
1987 August
Scope and Contents
This issue includes an interview with Charles Bukowski.
box 126, folder 14
Filmforum. Los Angeles.
1993 Fall
Scope and Contents
This calendar features Ron Athey on the cover.
box 126, folder 15
Filth, no. 19. San Francisco.
1995 November
box 126, folder 15
Filth, no. 20. San Francisco.
1995 December 22
box 126, folder 15
Filth, no. 23. San Francisco.
1996
box 126, folder 16
Fingerpaints, v. 1, no. 1. Long
Beach.
1990
box 126, folder 17
Fiz, v. 1, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1992 September/October
Scope and Contents
This issue features Bulimia Banquet's Jula Bell, Ethyl Meatplow's Carla Bozulich,
The Red Aunts' Terry, and an interview with Sonic Youth.
box 126, folder 17
Fiz, v. 1, no. 6. Los Angeles.
1993 March/April
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with a 70s groupie, Patter of Snatch and Bad Egg
Salad, and an L.A. zine scene tribute.
box 126, folder 17
Fiz, v. 1, no. 8. Los Angeles.
1993 September/October
Scope and Contents
This issue features the Muffs, Pat Fear and White Flag, Iris Berry's "100 Women,"
and Popdefect.
box 126, folder 18
Fizz, no. 5. Seattle.
1995
Scope and Contents
This issue features the Muffs and Butt Trumpet's Bianca.
box 127, folder 1
Flies, Cockroaches, and Poets, v. 2. Fresno.
1992 Autumn
Scope and Contents
This is a Chicano Writers and Artists Association (CWAA) publication created out of
California State University (CSU) Fresno's English Department under faculty advisor
Reuben Sanchez.
box 127, folder 2
Flipside, no. 83. Pasadena.
1993 March/April
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 33 1/3 rpm stereo soundsheet slip recording of "Antonio Baka Guy" by Shonen
Knife.
Audiovisual materials in this collection require the production of reference
surrogates. To access audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in
advance of your visit.
box 127, folder 2
Flipside, no. 84. Pasadena.
1993 May/June
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 33 1/3 rpm stereo soundsheet slip recording of "China Latina" by CELL.
Audiovisual materials in this collection require the production of reference
surrogates. To access audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in
advance of your visit.
box 127, folder 2
Flipside, no. 108. Pasadena.
1997 September/October
box 127, folder 3
Fluff 'n' Nutter, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
1999 September/October
box 127, folder 4
The Fold, no. 1. San Francisco.
1991 Winter
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed by an assistant editor, "Rah, Rah Bums...Scott Larson."
box 127, folder 5
Freak Brothers, no. 1. San
Francisco.
1980
box 127, folder 6
Free Lunch, no. 9. Laguna
Niguel.
1992 Winter
box 127, folder 7
Free People's Voice.
Indianapolis.
1991 May
box 127, folder 8, box 153, folder 3
Free Thought, v.2, no. 1.
Encinitas.
2000 Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue is a Charles Bukowski retrospective in tribute to his 80th birthday.
box 127, folder 9
Freedom Isn't Free, no. 6.
Orange.
1997
box 127, folder 9
Freedom Isn't Free, no. 7.
Orange.
1998
box 127, folder 10
Fringe Festival. Los Angeles.
1987
box 127, folder 11
From BMC to NYC. Asheville.
2010
Scope and Contents
This catalog traces "The Tutelary Years of Ray Johnson (1943-1967)."
box 127, folder 12
Fruit Cup, no. 0. New York.
1969
Scope and Contents
This Beat publication includes contributors such as Ginsberg, Burroughs,
Ferlinghetti, Plymell, Mary Beach, Joyce Mansour, Tuli Kupfurberg, Abbie Hoffman,
Rochelle Owens, Janine Pommy-Vega, Susan Brustman, and Suzanne Frank.
box 127, folder 13
Fuck This Shit, v. 1, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
1997 June
Scope and Contents
This theme of this issue is "Death and Taxes and other inevitable shit."
box 127, folder 13
Fuck This Shit, v. 2, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1998 Summer
Scope and Contents
This Beauty themed issue includes the following note from Editor E.C. Archibeque,
"Some of these poems may have appeared other places, but we don't know and we don't
care."
box 127, folder 14
Fux! Magascene, no. 1. San
Francisco.
1965
Scope and Contents
This issue was edited, published and signed by Bob Branaman. It includes work from
the following: Lenore Kandel, Charles Plymell, Ruth Weiss, George Herms, and
Lawrence Ferlinghetti.
box 127, folder 15
Galeria Otra Vez. Los Angeles.
1994
Scope and Contents
This issue was produced by Arturo Urista for Self Help Graphics and includes
drawings and "A Letter To Pete Wilson" by Guillermo Gomez-Pena.
box 127, folder 16
The Galley Sail Review, v. 8, no. 3, issue
no. 29. Berkeley.
1987-1988 Fall/Winter
box 127, folder 17
Gauntlet, v. 1, no. 15.
Springfield.
1998
Scope and Contents
This issue features a religious series of photographs by Justice Howard and the
cover is signed by Howard.
box 128, folder 1
Genesis West, v. 1, no. 1.
Burlingame.
1962 Fall
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to the memory of Mom Chung (1889-1959) and the inside cover
is signed William J. Margolis.
box 128, folder 2
Gestalt, v. 2, no. 1. Bowling
Green.
1989
box 128, folder 3
Give Me Some More, v. 1. Los
Angeles.
undated
Scope and Contents
This publication was created by The Loopers from Japan, Miyuki Otomo and Kiyomi
Okiayu who were regulars at The Onyx Cafe.
box 128, folder 4
Give Out Sheet Series. East
Windsor.
2005
box 128, folder 4
Give Out Sheet Series. East
Windsor.
2005
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One audiocassette entitled Experimental Tape New Jersey (ETNJ) #2.
Audiovisual materials in this collection require the production of reference
surrogates. To access audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in
advance of your visit.
box 128, folder 4
Give Out Sheet Series. East
Windsor.
2006
Scope and Contents
This includes Mark Sonnenfeld's
Zine Workers.
box 128, folder 4
Give Out Sheet Series. East
Windsor.
2007
Scope and Contents
This includes Mark Sonnenfeld and Joseph Verrilli's "Bra Head."
box 128, folder 4
Give Out Sheet Series. East
Windsor.
2008
Scope and Contents
This issue includes "stupid stories" by Mark Sonnenfeld.
box 128, folder 6
The Golden Age of Los Angeles
Poetry
. Santa
Monica.
1982 Fall
Scope and Contents
This is a Momentum Press catalog.
box 128, folder 7
Green Panda Press, v. 1, no. 4. Cleveland
Heights.
2004 Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue contains poems by Larry Smith edited by Bree.
box 128, folder 7
Green Panda Press, no. 5. Cleveland
Heights.
2005
Scope and Contents
This issue edited by Bree for Daniel Thompson, Jim Lowell and the lore of
Cleveland.
box 128, folder 7
Green Panda Press. Cleveland
Heights.
2005
Scope and Contents
This is an issue of Snippets, "one-liners dreampt, found, misheard, remembered,
impressed upon."
box 128, folder 8
Green Zero, v. 1, no. 1.
Lancaster.
1990 Spring
box 128, folder 9
Grove: Contemporary
Poetry
and Translation
,
no. 2. Claremont.
1975 Winter
box 128, folder 10
Guild of Book Workers Journal, v. 33, no. 1.
New York.
1995 Spring
box 128, folder 10
Guild of Book Workers Journal, v. 33, no. 2.
New York.
1995 Fall
box 128, folder 11
Habit-Forming Poems. Los
Angeles.
2009
box 128, folder 12
Haggard and Halloo, no. 12. Long
Beach.
1998 February
box 128, folder 13
Haight Ashbury Literary Journal, v. 12, no.
2. San Francisco.
1993
Scope and Contents
This issue features Ina Cumpiano on the cover.
box 128, folder 14
Half-Truth, no. 8. Los Angeles.
1992
Scope and Contents
This issue features Keith Morris of the Circle Jerks on the cover and includes a
short story by Charles Bukowski.
box 128, folder 14
Half-Truth, no. 16. Los Angeles.
1993
Scope and Contents
This issue features "Further Musings" by Charles Bukowski.
box 128, folder 14
Half-Truth, no. 20. Los Angeles.
1994 August/September
box 128, folder 14
Half-Truth, no. 22. Los Angeles.
1996 Spring
box 128, folder 15
Hand Guns and Hard Liquor, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
circa 1991
Scope and Contents
This zine includes the following contributors: Justice Howard, Eric Brown, Jay
Sosnicki, Rev. Al, and Rafael FJ Alvarado.
box 128, folder 16
Hanging Loose, no. 11. Brooklyn.
1970 Late Summer
box 128, folder 17
The Harbinger, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1994 Summer
Scope and Contents
This is the newsletter for the AMOK Bookstore.
box 128, folder 18
Hedwig. Woodland Hills.
circa 1995
box 129, folder 1
Henry Moore at Thomas Gibson Fine Art Ltd.
London.
circa 1986
box 129, folder 2
Here Doesn't Come The Flying Fuck!
Sunland.
undated
box 129, folder 3
High Times, no. 340. New York.
2003 December
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with musician/composer/author Dave Amram.
box 129, folder 4
Highwire Daze, no. 58. Burbank.
1998 June/July
box 129, folder 5
Hip Magazine, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
undated
box 193, folder 6
Ho, no. 0. Los Angeles.
1991 August
box 129, folder 6
Ho!, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1993
Scope and Contents
This comix publication edited by Marcel DeJure features the work of Onyx regulars
and includes "What's Going On!" by Josue Menjivar, Bill O'Mahoney's interview with
Beck, "Xenopata" by Gash, and back cover illustration by Mark Durham.
box 129, folder 6
Ho!, no. 2. Los Angeles.
1993 Fall
Scope and Contents
This issue is the Super-Ultra-Mega-Special Heavy Metal Edition.
box 129, folder 6
Ho!, no. 4. Los Angeles.
1999
Scope and Content
This issue includes work by the following artists: Nora Keyes, Dame Darcy, Camille
Rose Garcia, Amos, Mark Gash, and Mark Durham.
box 193, folder 6
lahoja, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1991 December
box 129, folder 7
The Hollywood Kids Street Gossip, v. 2, no.
26. Los Angeles.
1985
Scope and Contents
This issue presents "it's flaming!" in honor of the publication's 1 and 1/2 year
birthday. An advertisement for Griffin's BOSS show appears in this issue.
box 129, folder 7
The Hollywood Kids Street Gossip, v. 2, no.
26. Los Angeles.
1985
box 129, folder 8
The Hollywood Star Magazine, v. 1, no. 1.
Los Angeles.
1979
Scope and Contents
This magazine features a story on Elvis Presley's bisexuality and Charles Manson's
discussion about sex cult celebrities.
box 346
The Holy eARTh, Santa Cruz.
1982
box 129, folder 9
Homeless Writers Forum, v. 2. Los
Angeles.
1994 October
box 129, folder 9
Homeless Writers Forum. Los
Angeles.
1995 Spring
box 129, folder 9
Homeless Writers Forum. Los
Angeles.
1996
box 129, folder 10
The Hooligan. Denver.
1999
Scope and Content
This issue features Skye Barker's interview with Steve Wilson.
box 129, folder 11
Honk If Yer Horny, v. 3, no. 69.
Hollywood.
1992
Scope and Contents
This issue features photos of the band by Jeffoto and lyrics by Canya Fuck'er
(Pleasant Gehman) and other band members to songs such as "Oh My Darlin' 69" and
"Everybody's Fuckin' My Baby."
box 129, folder 11
Honk If Yer Horny: A Touch of Class.
Hollywood.
1994-1995
Scope and Contents
This is a fifteen month triple XXX rated pin-up calendar which includes "country
music without the o" history for almost every day of each month. All photos by
Jeffoto. Text and layout by Pleasant Gehman.
box 129, folder 12
Horseshit, no. 1. Hermosa Beach.
1965
box 129, folder 12
Horseshit, no. 2. Hermosa Beach.
1967
box 129, folder 12
Horseshit, no. 3. Hermosa Beach.
1968
box 129, folder 12
Horseshit, no. 4. Hermosa Beach.
1970
box 129, folder 13
Hot City. West Hollywood.
1996 Fall
box 152, folder 2
Huckster's Pitch, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
circa 1985
box 129, folder 14
Humble Propaganda. Reseda.
circa 1999
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Henry Rollins.
box 129, folder 15
Hup, no. 1. San Francisco.
1987
Scope and Contents
Art and stories by R. Crumb.
box 129, folder 15
Hup, no. 2. San Francisco.
1987
Scope and Contents
Art and stories by R. Crumb.
box 129, folder 16
Hustler, v. 3, no. 6. Columbus.
1976 December
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Charles Bukowski.
box 129, folder 17
Image, v. 13, no. 1-2. St.
Louis.
1985
box 129, folder 18
The Inch. Sacramento.
2007 November
Scope and Contents
This is a little magazine associated with the Poems-For-All series. This issue
features Phil Goldvarg: Zapatista Poet and includes a tribute to Queen of Bohemia,
Philomene Long (1940-2007).
box 130, folder 1
I Want A Poem To Be Hard Like A Bullet. Fort
Worth.
1992
Scope and Contents
This is a Todd Moore fanzine by Robert W. Howington.
box 130, folder 2
In Remembrance. Studio City.
1987
Scope and Content
According to Editor Jenny Soup, this publication is a grave collection of
poetry
,
collage, and reviews.
box 130, folder 2
In Remembrance, no. 6. Studio
City.
undated
box 130, folder 2
In Remembrance, no. 7. Studio
City.
undated
box 130, folder 3
Infinite Degree of Freedom, no. 2.
Denver.
1989
box 130, folder 4
Inkshed, no. 20. Hull.
1991 Spring
box 130, folder 5
Insomnia, v. 2, no. 1. Whittier.
1993 Winter
box 130, folder 5
Insomnia, v. 2, no. 2. Whittier.
1993 Spring
box 130, folder 5
Insomnia, v. 2, no. 3. Whittier.
1993 Summer
box 130, folder 5
Insomnia, v. 3, no. 2. Whittier.
1994 Spring
box 130, folder 5
Insomnia, v. 3, no. 3. Whittier.
1994 Summer
box 130, folder 5
Insomnia, v. 4, no. 1. Whittier.
1995 Spring
box 130, folder 6
Instant Classics, v. 1. New
York.
1989
box 130, folder 7
Instant Pussy, no. 4.
Albuquerque.
2006 March
Scope and Contents
This zine by Misti Rainwater-Lites combines porn and
poetry
. In her letter from the
editor she writes, "This issue contains a poem about a punk rock guy (Mr. Spent
Meat) getting sucked off by Courtney Love. It doesn't get much more exciting than
that."
box 130, folder 7
Instant Pussy, no. 12.
Albuquerque.
2006 December
box 130, folder 8
InterBang, v. 1, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
1996 February
box 130, folder 8
InterBang, no. 7. Venice.
1998 Summer
box 130, folder 9
Intimate Apparel. Oakland.
1990
Scope and Contents
The Figurative Art of Beatrice Wood catalogue.
box 130, folder 10
Invisible City, no. 3. San
Francisco.
1983
Scope and Contents
This publication features writing from Robert Crosson, John Thomas, and Paul
Vangelisti.
box 343, folder 6
Io, no. 2. Cape Elizabeth.
1971
Scope and Content
This is a reprint of an issue originally published in Amherst in 1966.
box 130, folder 11
Itchy & Scratchy Comics, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1993
box 130, folder 12
The Ja Ja Circle. Denver.
2001 April
Scope and Contents
This Marija Cerjak Society Flesh Poetics magazine published by Motchka Press
documents the Underground 2001.
box 130, folder 13
The Jacaranda Review, v. 3, no. 2.
Denver.
1988 Fall/Winter
Scope and Contents
This publication, funded by the Graduate Students Association and the Department of
English at the University of California, Los Angeles, includes an extensive L.A.
Poetry
Supplement.
box 130, folder 14
The Jackleg, v. 1. Los Angeles.
1995
box 130, folder 15
Ja'p, v. 1, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1987 October/November
Scope and Contents
This Journal of Quantum 'Pataphysics is edited and published by Nigey Lennon and
the Los Angeles Institute of Quantum 'Pataphysics.
box 131, folder 1
Joseph Stella. Washington, D.C.
1990 Fall
Scope and Contents
This
Joseph Stella: Paintings and Works on Paper
catalog is published by the Pensler Galleries.
box 131, folder 2
Journal For The Protection Of All Beings,
no. 1. San Francisco.
1961
Scope and Contents
This "Love-Shot" issue is edited and signed by Michael McClure, Lawrence
Ferlinghetti, and David Meltzer.
box 131, folder 2
Journal For The Protection Of All Beings,
no. 2. San Francisco.
1968
Scope and Contents
This "On The Barricades: Revolution & Repression" issue was published on
Bastille Day.
box 343, folder 7
Jóvenes en Resistencia zines. Los
Angeles.
circa 2013
box 131, folder 3
Kamini Press Catalogue.
Stockholm.
2012 January
box 131, folder 4
The Kerouac Connection, no. 30. Menlo
Park.
2000 Fall
box 131, folder 5
The Kerouac Rag, no. 1. Torquay.
1999-2000 Winter
box 131, folder 6
Key-Z Productions Catalog.
Eugene.
1998
Scope and Contents
Key-Z Productions is dedicated to the work of Ken Kesey and the Merry Band of
Pranksters.
box 131, folder 6
Key-Z Productions Catalog.
Eugene.
1999
Scope and Contents
Key-Z Productions is dedicated to the work of Ken Kesey and the Merry Band of
Pranksters.
box 131, folder 7
Kill Poet broadsides. San Diego.
undated
Scope and Contents
This folder contains a series of signed
Viva La Poem
broadsides for the following writers: Cat Benitez, Amelie Florence, Elly Portnoy,
Brad Burjan, David Smith, Kalamity J, Jason Neese, and Jamie Neese.
box 131, folder 8
Kombat. Indianapolis.
1995 Fall
box 131, folder 9
The Kyoto Review, no. 7. Kyoto.
1976 Spring
box 131, folder 10
L.A. Driver, v. 1, no. 2. North
Hollywood.
1989 Fall
box 131, folder 10
L.A. Driver, v. 3, no. 1. North
Hollywood.
1991-1992 Winter Solstice
box 131, folder 11
L.A. Star. Los Angeles.
1992 March
Scope and Contents
This unauthorized newspaper features Justice Howard on its cover and includes an
interview with Llana Lloyd, "Glitter Goddess" of the Sunset Strip.
box 193, folder 10
L.A. Weekly, v.11, no. 32. Los
Angeles.
1989 July 14-20
box 153, folder 4
L.A. Weekly, v.16, no. 32. Los
Angeles.
1996 July 5-11
Scope and Content
This issue features the "found" Bukowski poems.
box 193, folder 10
L.A. Weekly, v. 30, no. 51. Los
Angeles.
2008 November 7-13
box 131, folder 12
Laguna Poets Series, no. 81. Laguna
Beach.
1998
Scope and Content
This issue features Rick Lupert's
Lizard King of the
Laundromat
and is inscribed to Griffin by Lupert.
box 131, folder 12
Laguna Poets Series, no. 122. Laguna Beach.
1999
Scope and Content
This issue features Doug Knott's
Holding Pattern and
is inscribed to Griffin by Knott.
box 131, folder 12
Laguna Poets Series, no. 207. Laguna
Beach.
2001
Scope and Content
This issue features Paul Suntup's
A Boy and His
Blowtorch
and is inscribed to Griffin by Suntup.
box 131, folder 13
Lame Brain, v. 1, no. 5.
Chicago.
1986 October
box 131, folder 14
Left Bank Distribution Catalog.
Seattle.
1997
box 131, folder 15
Lemon Fingers Emerge, no. 2. Long
Beach.
undated
Scope and Contents
This is a collection of Los Angeles area
poetry
.
box 131, folder 15
Lemon Fingers Emerge, no. 3. Long
Beach.
undated
Scope and Contents
This is a collection of Los Angeles area
poetry
.
box 131, folder 16
Leon Golub -- New Paintings Catalog. New
York.
1963
Scope and Contents
This catalog is from Golub's exhibition at the Allan Frumkin Gallery.
box 131, folder 17
Letra Nova. Anaheim.
1994
box 131, folder 17
Letra Nova, no. 5. Anaheim.
1995 May-June
box 131, folder 18
The Liar, no. 6. North
Vancouver.
1990
box 153, folder 5
LIFE, v. 47, no. 12. Chicago.
1959 September 21
Scope and Content
This issue features "Squaresville U.S.A. vs. Beatsville" on the Venice West
scene.
box 131, folder 19
Live Wild Or Die! Portland.
circa 1989
box 131, folder 20
Living Batch News. Albuquerque.
circa 1989
Scope and Contents
This newsletter for the Living Batch Bookstore includes a preview for The Carma
Bums, No Seat Belts Tour of Words in store show on August 24th with Ellyn Maybe,
S.A. Griffin, Mike Bruner, Doug Knott, Bobbo Staron, and Scott Wannberg. This folder
also contains two Living Batch Bookstore bookmarks.
box 131, folder 21
Loca, no. 11. Monterey Park.
circa 1989
Scope and Contents
This magazine was created by Queen Felicia Dominguez and Princess Gwynne
Garfinkle.
box 131, folder 22
Los. Los Angeles.
1992 April
box 131, folder 23
Los. Los Angeles.
1992 June
box 131, folder 23
Los. Los Angeles.
1993 June
box 131, folder 23
Los. Los Angeles.
1993 November
box 131, folder 23
Los. Los Angeles.
1994 Spring
box 131, folder 23
Los. Los Angeles.
1998 Winter
box 131, folder 24
Los Angeles. Los Angeles.
1993 October
Scope and Contents
This issue features a story on the pulse of Beat culture in present day Los
Angeles.
box 132, folder 1
Los Angeles 1956. Los Angeles.
circa 1990
box 132, folder 2
Los Angeles Independent, v. 66, no. 16. Los
Angeles.
1998 October 21
Scope and Contents
This newspaper features a cover story on the closing of The Onyx Cafe.
box 193, folder 9
Los Angeles Reader, v. 16, no. 23. Los
Angeles.
1994 March 18
box 193, folder 9
Los Angeles Reader, v. 16, no. 25. Los
Angeles.
1994 April 1
box 132, folder 3
Los Angeles Theatres, v. 1, no. 9. Los
Angeles.
1993 September 30-October 14
box 132, folder 4
Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles.
1981 January 18
Scope and Contents
This folder contains a clipping of Yoko Ono's "In Gratitude" letter and a copy of
"A Love Letter From John And Yoko To People Who Ask Us What, When, And Why."
box 153, folder 6
Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles.
1997 April 6
Scope and Content
The death of Allen Ginsberg is featured on the front page.
box 153, folder 7
Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles.
2013 November 24
Scope and Content
The death of Wanda Coleman is featured on the front page.
box 132, folder 5
Los Angeles Times Magazine. Los
Angeles.
1987 March 22
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a feature on Charles Bukowski.
box 343, folder 8
Lost Glove, v. 1, no. 1.
Cambridge.
1977
box 132, folder 6
Louis Stern Fine Arts. West
Hollywood.
1999
Scope and Contents
This is a catalog for
Pol Bury: Fountains and Other
Intriguing Works
.
box 132, folder 7
Love Works. Los Angeles.
1998 Summer
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 1-2. San
Pedro.
1995 November
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 3-4. San
Pedro.
1997 April
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 5, no. 8. San
Pedro.
1999 August
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 5, no. 7. San
Pedro.
1999 September
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 6, no. 4. San
Pedro.
2000 April
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 6, no. 8. San
Pedro.
2000 August
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 7, no. 3. San
Pedro.
2001 March
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 8, no. 7. San
Pedro.
2002 July
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 12, no. 1. San
Pedro.
2006 January/February
box 132, folder 8
Lummox Journal, v. 12, no. 6. San
Pedro.
2006 November/December
box 132, folder 9
Mad Blood, no. 3. Evergreen.
2004 June
Scope and Contents
Griffin's collage,
Wash Before Using is on the cover
and five more collages are featured inside.
box 132, folder 9
Mad Blood, no. 5. Evergreen.
2006 August
box 132, folder 10
Magazine, v. 13, no. 1. Venice.
1983 Winter
Scope and Contents
This is a publication of the Beyond Baroque Foundation.
box 132, folder 10
Magazine, v. 14, no. 1. Venice.
1983/1984 Winter
Scope and Contents
This is a publication of the Beyond Baroque Foundation.
box 132, folder 11
A Magazine Of Paragraphs, v. 1, no. 3.
Holyoke.
1987 Winter
box 132, folder 12
Maintenant, no. 4. New York.
2010 Spring
box 132, folder 13
Malpais Review, v. 2, no. 3.
Placitas.
2011-2012 Winter
box 132, folder 14
Malpais Review, v. 2, no. 4.
Placitas.
2012 Spring
box 133, folder 1
Malpais Review, v. 3, no. 2.
Placitas.
2012 Autumn
box 133, folder 2
Malpais Review, v. 3, no. 3.
Placitas.
2012-2013 Winter
box 133, folder 3
Malpais Review, v. 4, no. 3.
Placitas.
2013-2014 Winter
box 343, folder 9
Malpais Review, v. 5, no. 4.
Placitas.
2015
box 343, folder 9
Malpais Review, v. 6, no. 1.
Placitas.
2015
box 344, folder 1
Malpais Review, v. 6, no. 2.
Placitas.
2015
box 133, folder 4
Mano-Mano/2. Denver.
1971 July
Scope and Contents
This is issue no. 10 of Bowery Press and is dedicated to Kenneth Patchen.
box 133, folder 5
Manroot, no. 6/7. San Francisco.
1972 April
box 133, folder 6
Marc Snyder: In Black and White. North
Canton.
2005 October 24-November 12
Scope and Contents
This catalog is from Snyder's exhibition at the Kent State University Stark Main
Hall Gallery.
box 133, folder 7
Martin the Satanic Racoon, no. 2.
Hollywood.
1999
box 133, folder 8
The Mas Tequila Review, no. 8.
Albuquerque.
2014 Winter
box 133, folder 9
The Mask Returns, no. 1.
Milwaukie.
1992 October
box 133, folder 10
The Match! no. 89. Tucson.
1994 Summer
Scope and Contents
This anarchist journal's cover headline reads, "Situation -- Hopeless."
box 133, folder 11
Memoirs of the Coffee Shop Society, v. 1.
Costa Mesa.
1989 January
Scope and Contents
These written words by Steven La Ponsie are presented by Bacon and Eggs
Publishing.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 1.
Denver.
2002 May
Scope and Content
This is a sample issue with a note on the inside cover from the secret 6.
Biographical / Historical
The Mercury Reader is a collective endeavor by The Denver Poets Guild to promote,
present and preserve the
poetry
and art of Denver.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 3.
Denver.
2002 July
Biography/History
This issue and those thereafter are marked as "a denver poet guild/temple of man
production."
Scope and Content
This inside cover of this issue features a reproduction of a cartoon of Jimmy
Morris, Tony Scibella, Steve Wilson and Stuart Perkoff at the Ogden Bookstore by
John Fish, 1971. The inside cover also includes a letter from the gang of 5.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 4.
Denver.
2002
Scope and Content
This is the slam issue.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 5.
Denver.
2002 August
Scope and Content
This is the Denver Poet's Day issue.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 6.
Denver.
2002 Sept
Scope and Content
This issue is edited by Stan Astrovsky and the inside cover features a black ace
and a letter from the gang of 4. The black ace appears on all issues hereafter.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 7.
Denver.
2002 October
Scope and Content
This
poetry
seance issue is edited by Wally Mason and features poems of or to dead
persons.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 8.
Denver.
2002 November
Scope and Content
This issue features a photo of Wanda Witwiky's colt named Black Ace in the winner's
circle after winning the three year old championship at Centennial Race Course.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 10.
Denver.
2003 August
Scope and Content
This is the Poet's Day issue.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader, no. 14.
Denver.
2004 June
Scope and Contents
This is a Mermaid Springs Special Edition.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader. Denver.
2003 Halloween
Scope and Contents
This is the
Poetry
Seance Issue.
box 133, folder 12
The Mercury Reader. Denver.
2003 November
Scope and Contents
This is the Tony Scibella Memorial Issue. Griffin's
Lady broadside is printed on neon green paper and inserted in the center
of this publication.
box 134, folder 1
Metro Bookmark. Los Angeles.
1997 April
Scope and Contents
These series includes the following poets: Sesshu Foster, Adrienne Su, Patty Sue
Jones, Laura Stickney, J. Raul Plasencia, Leo Padilla, Terry Wolverton, Ruben
Martinez, and Janet Sternburg.
Biographical / Historical
This series of seven bookmarks was commissioned by the Metropolitan Transportation
Authority to celebrate National
Poetry
Month and encourage people to use Metro Bus
and Metro Rail when traveling to their public libraries. This set was sent to
Griffin by Eric Brown.
box 134, folder 2
Mezzotints By Sir Frank Short.
London.
1974 February 14-March 1
Scope and Contents
This is the catalog for the
Mezzotints by Sir Frank Short
after Four Paintings by G.F. Watts
exhibition at Hartnoll & Eyre.
box 134, folder 3
MICA, no. 3. Santa Barbara.
1961 June
Scope and Contents
This issue was edited and published by Helmut Bonheim and Raymond Federman.
box 134, folder 4
The Mile High Underground, v. 1, no. 6.
Denver.
1967 Fall
Scope and Contents
This issue is edited by James Ryan Morris. The cover design is by Tony
Scibella.
box 134, folder 5
Miscellaneous Man, v. 1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1968 Summer
Scope and Contents
The New Los Angeles Quarterly of Literature & Art is edited by William J.
Margolis with Associate Editor Tony Scibella. The Miscellaneous MANifesto is printed
on the inside cover with a dedication to The Lady. The table of contents is signed
by contributor John Thomas, 1968.
box 134, folder 6
MOCA Cleveland. Cleveland. Santa
Monica.
2003
Scope and Contents
This catalogue for the
Yoshitomo Nara: Nothing Ever
Happens
exhibition was published by the Museum of Contemporary Art
Cleveland and Perceval Press, Los Angeles. Contributors include Billie Joe
Armstrong, Carrie Brownstein, John Doe, Leonard Nimoy, and Deborah Harry.
box 134, folder 7
Modern Man, v. 11, no. 3-123.
Skokie.
1961 September
Scope and Contents
An article on Venice West appears on page 38.
box 134, folder 8
The Moment, no. 2. Woodland
Hills.
1987 March
Scope and Contents
The masthead describes this publication edited by Chris Behling, Kevin Bartnof and
Eric Lyden as "A Randomly Published L.A. Journal Of The Arts."
Biography/History
This Gonzo type Los Angeles DIY Xerox
poetry
/lit zine from the late 1980s-mid 1990s
was edited and published by San Fernando Valley poets Kevin Bartnof, Chris Behling
and Eric Lyden. Like
Shattersheet just before it,
The Moment included listings of venues and
readings. When Griffin met editor Eric Lyden at a Poeccentric Lounge reading in
downtown L.A., Lyden recruited him to submit
poetry
and Griffin then volunteered to
work on staff doing whatever was needed.
box 134, folder 8
The Moment, no. 4. Woodland
Hills.
1987 July
Scope and Contents
This issue focuses on L.A.'s homeless population.
box 134, folder 8
The Moment, no. 5. Woodland
Hills.
1987 November
box 134, folder 8
The Moment, no. 6. Woodland
Hills.
1988 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features Henry Rollins "one tough guy" on the cover.
box 134, folder 9
Momentum, v. 1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1974 March
Scope and Contents
This issue published by Century City Educational Arts Project includes work by
Linda King, Lee Mallory, and William Mohr.
box 134, folder 10
Monterey
Poetry
Review
, v. 1, no. 2. Santa
Cruz.
2005 Summer
box 134, folder 11
Moody Street Irregulars, no. 15. Clarence
Center.
1985 Spring
Scope and Contents
This is the Music Issue II of this Jack Kerouac newsletter.
box 134, folder 11
Moody Street Irregulars, no. 16-17. Clarence
Center.
1986 Summer
Scope and Contents
This is the
On the Road Issue of this Jack Kerouac
newsletter.
box 134, folder 11
Moody Street Irregulars, no. 18-19. Clarence
Center.
1987 Fall
Scope and Contents
This is the Ketchup Too! Issue of this Jack Kerouac newsletter.
box 134, folder 11
Moody Street Irregulars, no. 20-21. Clarence
Center.
1989 Spring
Scope and Contents
This is the 10th Anniversary Memorial Issue of this Jack Kerouac newsletter with
tributes for George Montgomery, John Clellon Holmes, Jack Kerouac, and Ed Chaput.
This folder also contains correspondence from Editor Joy Walsh to Griffin.
box 134, folder 11
Moody Street Irregulars, no. 27. Clarence
Center.
1992 Spring
Scope and Content
This "Special
Poetry
Issue" features
Visions of
Kerouac
on the cover.
box 134, folder 12
Moravagine 2, no. 4. Denver.
1984
Scope and Contents
This issue is edited by John Macker.
box 134, folder 13
Mountain Cat, no. 2. Denver.
1980
Scope and Contents
This issue is edited by Jess Graf.
box 134, folder 14
Mouseion, no. 4. Bournemouth.
2005 May
box 134, folder 15
Mr. Kite's Leaf, v. 1, no. 1. Pacific
Palisades.
1988 February 29
Scope and Contents
The Lost Tribe and The Ringling Sisters are previewed as upcoming shows at the
Hippodrome.
box 134, folder 16
The Museum of Modern Art Bulletin, v. 25,
no. 1. New York.
1957
Scope and Contents
This bulletin is for sculptor David Smith's exhibition at the MOMA.
box 134, folder 17
The Musophobist, v. 1, no. 1.
Tilton.
2012 May 6
box 134, folder 18
MUST, no. 1. Painted Post.
2009
box 134, folder 18
MUST, no. 2. Painted Post.
2009
box 134, folder 18
MUST, no. 3. Painted Post.
2009
box 134, folder 18
MUST, no. 5. Painted Post.
2009
box 134, folder 18
MUST, no. 6. Painted Post.
2009
box 134, folder 19
Mute On The Floor, v. 4, no. 1. San
Francisco.
1992
box 134, folder 20
My Rules: Photozine. Beverly
Hills.
1982
Scope and Contents
Glen E. Friedman self-published this photozine which documents the Los Angeles punk
scene and features Darby Crash of the Germs on the cover.
box 134, folder 21
Neal Cassady, v. 1. Vashon.
1995
Scope and Contents
This biography was compiled by Tom Christopher and covers 1926-1940.
Biography/History
Neal Cassady is a writer, performance artist, legendary driver, and American myth.
Cassady was a central character in
On The Road and
other titles by Jack Kerouac. Cassady was also a central character in
Howl by Allen Ginsberg and one of Ginsberg's lovers during
most of Cassady's life. Additionally, Cassady was a central character in
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test by Tom Wolfe. Cassady
drove the car with Jack Kerouac and then drove the bus with Ken Kesey. Cassady is
the author of The First Third (City Lights).
box 134, folder 21
Neal Cassady, v. 2. Vashon.
1998
Scope and Contents
This biography was compiled by Tom Christopher and covers 1941-1946.
box 134, folder 22
The Neverending Page, v. 1, no. 14.
Huntington Beach.
1996
box 135, folder 1
New Magazine, v. 8, no. 1.
Venice.
1977 January
Scope and Contents
This is a Beyond Baroque publication published by George Drury Smith. Exene
Cervenka served on the editorial staff for this
Poetry
-In-The-Schools-Issue. The
cover features a young school girl smoking a cigarette.
box 135, folder 1
New Magazine, v. 8, no. 7.
Venice.
1977 December
Scope and Contents
This Beyond Baroque publication published by George Drury Smith features "The House
Sitter" and "A Weekend" by Nellie Hill.
box 135, folder 1
New Magazine, v. 8, no. 3.
Venice.
1977 May
Scope and Contents
This Beyond Baroque publication published by George Drury Smith features a piece on
journal writing by Holly Prado which she presented at the conference, "The Diary,
the Journal, the Autobiography."
box 135, folder 2
The New Censorship, v. 2, no. 3.
Denver.
1991 June
Scope and Contents
This issue is devoted to the poems and drawings of Charles Bukowski.
box 135, folder 2
The New Censorship, v. 2, no. 12.
Denver.
1992 March
Scope and Contents
This issue features a short story set in Los Angeles by Thomas R. Peters, Jr.,
owner of the Beat Book Shop in Boulder.
box 135, folder 2
The New Censorship, v. 3, no. 1.
Denver.
1992 April
Scope and Contents
This second anniversary issue features poems and drawings by Charles Bukowski. The
cover is signed by Bukowski.
box 135, folder 3
A New Iron Column, no. 3.
Anaheim.
1984 Fall
Scope and Contents
ANIC is a Black Banner publication of The Creative Anarchists of America.
box 135, folder 4
The New Jerker. Los Angeles.
1995 October 2
Scope and Contents
This parody of The New Yorker was created by David Lovins of the Onyx Cafe
scene.
box 135, folder 5
The New Press, v. 9, no. 3.
Flushing.
1993 Summer
Scope and Contents
The cover features Lawrence Ferlinghetti reading in New York.
box 153, folder 8
The New York Times, v. 146, no. 50,754. New
York.
1997 April 6
Scope and Content
The death of Allen Ginsberg is featured on the cover.
box 153, folder 9
The New York Times, v. 146, no. 50,874. New
York.
1997 August 4
Scope and Content
The death of William S. Burroughs is mentioned on the front page.
box 135, folder 6
Next...Calendar. Long Beach.
1998 November and December, 1999 January -
July
Scope and Content
Duplicate calendars may be found in
The
Next...Magazine
correspondence file.
box 135, folder 7
Next...Magazine, v. 1, nos. 1-12. San
Clemente and Long Beach.
1994 March - 1995 February
Biography/History
This
poetry
periodical created by G. Murray Thomas and the late Lawrence Schultz
focused on Southern California
poetry
and performance, specifically Slam
poetics.
box 135, folder 8
Next...Magazine, v. 2, nos. 1-12. Long
Beach.
1995 March - 1996 February
Scope and Content
April issue features an interview with poet D Knowledge. June issue features an
interview with Pleasant Gehman on travel, dive bars, punk rock, and
poetry
. December
issue features Pleasant Gehman's White Trash Apocalypse Tour Diary.
box 135, folder 8
Next...Magazine, v. 2, no. 8. Long
Beach.
1995 October
box 135, folder 9
Next...Magazine, v. 3, nos. 1-5, 7-10, 12. Long Beach.
1996 March - July, September-December, 1997
February
Physical Location: Volume 3, Issues 6 and 11 are
located in the Writings About Griffin subseries.
Scope and Content
May issue features a D Knowledge interview with The Watts Prophets. October issue
features Ellyn Maybe interviewed by Boomer Maverick. Ellyn discusses her first
reading in November of 1988 at Midnight Special Bookstore. She signed up as Ellyn
"Maybe I'll read."
box 135, folder 10
Next...Magazine, v. 4, nos. 1-12. Long
Beach.
1997 March - 1998 February
Scope and Content
February issue features Beyond Baroque Director Fred Dewey on the cover with the
Beyond Baroque Archives.
box 135, folder 11
Next...Magazine, v. 5, nos. 1-8. Long
Beach.
1998 March - October
Scope and Content
June issue features an interview with four-time National Slam Champion Patricia
Smith. July issue features an interview with Henry Rollins. August issue features an
interview with Miranda July. September issue features an interview with Jerry
Quickley. October issue is the final one.
box 344, folder 2
Next...Magazine. Long Beach.
1999 March - July, September - December
box 135, folder 12
Niggermancer, no. 4. Los
Angeles.
undated
Scope and Contents
The goddess on the cover of this Mark Durham publication announces, "It's the end
of grey, baby."
box 136, folder 1
Night, no. 44. New York.
1999
box 136, folder 1
Night, no. 45. New York.
2000
box 136, folder 2
Nightflight. Los Angeles.
1995
Scope and Contents
This
L.A. Weekly publication is a guide to Los
Angeles at night.
box 136, folder 3
NK, no. 1. Kittredge.
2009 June
box 136, folder 4
No Shit, no. 11. Hollywood.
1986 October
Scope and Contents
This issue features cover art and cartoons by Alexis Arquette.
box 136, folder 4
No Shit, no. 17. Hollywood.
1987 November 28-January 31
Scope and Contents
This issue features interviews with Guns N' Roses, Faith No More, and Stiv Bator
from The Lords of the New Church.
box 136, folder 5
NoHo Magazine, v. 1, no. 6. Granada
Hills.
1993 June
box 136, folder 5
NoHo Magazine, v. 1, no. 12. Granada
Hills.
1993 December
box 136, folder 6
Nomad, no. 2. Culver City.
1959 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features Jack Micheline's "To Be A Poet Is To Live And Die" and "Bowery
Black."
box 136, folder 7
Nuthing Sacred, no. 1.
Hollywood.
1991 May
Scope and Contents
Jay Sosnicki's "No Bullshit Magazine of People and Perception" announces "
The Moment is gone. So it's up to us to pick up the slack.
Nuthing Sacred will be published bi-monthly to air
voices of L.A. poets. No pay. Labor of love." This folder contains correspondence
from Sosnicki to Griffin and three
Nuthing Sacred
stickers.
box 344, folder 3
Oakland Review, no. 2. Oakland.
circa 2016
box 136, folder 8
Obras, v. 11, no. 4. Venice.
1980 Winter
Scope and Contents
This Beyond Baroque Foundation publication is the Los Angeles Cross Cultural Issue
edited by Manuel "Manazar" Gamboa, designed by Jack Skelley, and copyedited by Lydia
Vidana. Contributors include Wanda Coleman, Doris Davenport, Blake Latimer, Odie
Hawkins, Susan Anderson, Trinidad Krystal, and Luis Rodriguez.
box 136, folder 9
Off the Beaten Path, v. 2. Eagle
Rock.
2009 December
Scope and Contents
This publication contains tales from The Adventurers' Club of Los Angeles.
box 136, folder 10
OK Magazine. Los Angeles.
1979 Spring
Scope and Contents
This publication is created by the Nihilist Press and features work by the
Cooperative Nihilist Housing Project.
box 136, folder 10
OK Magazine. Los Angeles.
1979 Summer
Scope and Contents
This publication is created by the Nihilist Press and features punk rock art by
James Stark and a preview of the Nihilist Festival of the Arts coming to Los Angeles
in December.
box 136, folder 11
OnTarget, no. 1. Glendale.
circa 1990s
Scope and Contents
This publication of "
poetry
, small..er..short stories, conspiracies" is presented
by The Grassy Knoll Coffeehouse and edited by Anderson Stone. It begins with a From
The Knoll letter by Stewart Eddins, Co-Proprietor of The Grassy Knoll.
box 136, folder 11
OnTarget, no. 3. Glendale.
circa 1990s
Scope and Contents
This issue contains a piece of correspondence from Anderson Stone who mentions the
journal's distribution at The Grassy Knoll, the Onyx, and the Onyx/Echo
coffeehouses.
box 136, folder 11
OnTarget, no. 6. Glendale.
circa 1990s
Scope and Contents
This issue includes work from Pam Ward, Estrellita Mendez, Gina East, and Scott
Wannberg.
box 136, folder 11
OnTarget: The Monthly.
Hollywood.
1995 January
Scope and Contents
This issue includes work by Eric Brown and Erica Erdman.
box 136, folder 11
OnTarget: The Monthly.
Hollywood.
1995 February-March
box 136, folder 11
OnTarget: The Monthly.
Hollywood.
1995 November
Scope and Contents
This issue publicizes the dial a poem Daily WORD (213) 980-DIAL and suggests
readers attend the Ellyn Maybe and francEyE reading on December 15 at Beyond
Baroque.
box 136, folder 12
One Dog Press. Davis.
1996 December
Scope and Contents
This is the Sacramento Valley's home-grown
poetry
monthly.
box 136, folder 13
One Hundred Suns, no. 2. Long
Beach.
1994 Spring
Scope and Contents
This is a photocopy of this issue's cover.
box 136, folder 14
One Little Ball. Los Angeles.
1993 Spring
box 136, folder 15
Onion, no. 1. Sepulveda.
1975 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue of
poetry
and short writing was published by The Sepulveda
Unitarian-Universalist Society.
box 136, folder 16
Onthebus, no. 6 and no. 7.
Sepulveda.
1991 Winter/Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features
poetry
and letters from Charles Bukowski, an interview with
Joyce Carol Oates, and poems by Wanda Coleman.
box 137, folder 1
Open City, no. 259. San
Francisco.
undated
Scope and Contents
This Bring Back the Sixties! 35th Anniversary Issue includes R. Crumb's
I Remember the Sixties insert. The cover is signed by
editor/publisher John Bryan.
box 137, folder 2
Orange Mosquito, v. 3, no. 1.
Pasadena.
1995
box 137, folder 3
Oui, v. 10, no. 9. New York.
1981 September
Scope and Content
This issue includes a profile on Charles Bukowski and is signed "Good Job U
Motherfucker" to the author from Bukowski.
box 137, folder 3
Oui, v. 13, no. 4. New York.
1984 April
Scope and Contents
"The Lion" by Charles Bukowski appears on page 70.
box 137, folder 3
Oui, v. 13, no. 6. New York.
1984 June
box 137, folder 4
Oui, v. 13, no. 7. New York.
1984 July
Scope and Contents
"The Fight" by Charles Bukowski appears on page 82.
box 137, folder 4
Oui, v. 13, no. 10. New York.
1984 October
Scope and Contents
"What Happened To The Loving And Laughing Girl In The Gingham Dress" by Charles
Bukowski appears on page 72.
box 137, folder 4
Oui, v. 14, no. 1. New York.
1985 January
Scope and Contents
"I Meet The Master 2" by Charles Bukowski appears on page 72.
box 137, folder 4
Oui, v. 14, no. 8. New York.
1985 August
Scope and Contents
"The Action" by Charles Bukowski appears on page 74.
box 137, folder 5
Ouija Madness, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
circa 1981
Scope and Content
This issue includes an interview with The Unclaimed, "The Hong Kong Cafe 1979" by
Allison Anders, and art by Vinzula Kara.
box 137, folder 5
Ouija Madness, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
circa 1982
Scope and Contents
Contributors include Wanda Coleman, Scott Wannberg, Laurel Ann Bogen, Bob Flanagan,
Jack Skelley, and Charles Bukowski.
box 137, folder 6
Out Loud. Santa Monica
Scope and Contents
This is a monthly listing of Los Angeles area
poetry
events edited and published by
Carrie Etter via Midnight Special Bookstore.
1989 May, November. 1990 February, May, July - November. 1991 January, February,
April, July. 1992 June. 1993 June.
box 137, folder 7
Ovundum, v. 1. Huntington Beach.
1988 December
Scope and Contents
Andy Takakjan's publication of
poetry
, fiction, and essays appears monthly. This
issue's focus is "Words and Things" by Alexander Laurence.
box 137, folder 7
Ovundum, v. 2. Huntington Beach.
1989
Scope and Contents
This issue's focus is "Orange" by Gil Fuhrer.
box 137, folder 7
Ovundum, v. 3. Huntington Beach.
1989
Scope and Contents
This issue's focus is "Name" by Donald Grose.
box 137, folder 8
Pangloss Papers, v. 3, no. 4. Los
Angeles.
1984 October
box 137, folder 9
Panik, v. 1, nos. 4, 11. Long Beach
1988 August and undated
box 137, folder 10
Paranoid Bachelor Guy, no. 2.
1994 August
box 137, folder 11
Passion Press, no. 1. Austin
1982 May
Scope and Contents
This publication, edited by Ed Ward, includes fiction by Stuart Z. Perkoff, and
poems by Marcia Ward and James Ryan Morris.
box 137, folder 11
Passion Press, no. 4. Denver
1983 Spring
Scope and Contents
Contributors include Larry Lake, Ed Ward, Tony Scibella, and John Macker.
box 137, folder 11
Passion Press, no. 5. Denver
1988 April
Scope and Contents
Contributors include Larry Lake, Ed Ward, Tony Scibella, and John Macker. This
issue features an In Memoriam section for The Rt. Rev. Robert Alexander, The Temple
of Man (1923-1987).
box 137, folder 12
Peace News. San Francisco.
circa 2001
Scope and Contents
This newspaper reflects on the aftermath of September 11th and features a letter to
editor/publisher John Bryan from Charles Bukowski about "Peace, Baby."
box 138, folder 1
Pearl, no. 10, 12-14. Long Beach
1990 - 1991
box 138, folder 2
Pearl, no. 16, 17, 22. Long Beach
Scope and Content
No. 16 (1992 Fall); no. 17 (1993 Spring); no. 22 (1995 Fall/Winter).
box 344, folder 4
Penguin Modern Poets, no. 5.
London.
1970
Scope and Content
This issue features Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Allen Ginsberg. It is
a reprint of an issue originally published in 1963.
box 138, folder 3
People, v. 56, no. 13. New York.
2001 September 24
box 138, folder 4
Le Petit Sphinx: The CoffeeHouse Review, v.
1, no. 1. Los Angeles.
circa 1958
Scope and Contents
This Beat publication features
poetry
, art, and a coffeehouse directory.
box 138, folder 4
Le Petit Sphinx: The CoffeeHouse Review, v.
1, no. 5. Los Angeles.
circa 1958
Scope and Contents
This issue features a photo of a young Morgan Freeman on page 24 captioned Late
Scene at the Sickitchen Art Mart and Zodiac Coffee House.
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Los Angeles.
1989 December 15
Scope and Contents
This is a multilingual publication of poems and short prose by local poets edited
by Berndt Rieger.
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Los Angeles.
1990 January 5
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Los Angeles.
1990 January 26
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Los Angeles.
1990 February 9
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Los Angeles.
1990 March 16
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Los Angeles.
1990 March 23
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Eagle Rock.
1990 May 4
Scope and Content
For this issue, the masthead changed to "
Poetry
and Prose Each Week For L.A.
Coffeehouses." Additionally, the editor of record is now Rafael FJ Alvarado.
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Eagle Rock.
1990 May 11
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 July 13
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 July 27
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 August 10
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 August 24
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 September 7
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 September 14
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 September 21
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. Glendale.
1990 September 28
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. El Monte.
1991 February 22
Scope and Contents
For this issue, the masthead reads, "Seminal Life Press presents . . ." and the
editor is now Brian Ha.
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. El Monte.
1991 March 1
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. El Monte.
1991 March 8
box 138, folder 5
A Piece Of Paper. El Monte.
1991 June 28
box 138, folder 6
Phony Lid Publications. Los
Angeles.
2001 Summer/Fall
Scope and Contents
This catalog announces the release of Griffin's collection of poems,
Unborn Again.
box 138, folder 7
Picturing Gotham. New York.
1996
Scope and Contents
This Hirschl & Adler Galleries catalog is for this exhibition of
New York City through the Eyes of Its Artists.
box 138, folder 8
Playboy, v. 19, no. 12. Chicago.
1972 December
Scope and Contents
This issue features
poetry
by Lawrence Durrell and Robert Graves and an interview
with Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko.
box 138, folder 9
Poesflesh, v. 1, no. 2.
Pittsburgh.
1991 October
box 138, folder 10
Poesy, no. 18. Santa Cruz.
2002 Fall
box 138, folder 10
Poesy, no. 29. Santa Cruz.
2005 Summer
box 138, folder 10
Poesy, no. 32. Santa Cruz.
undated
box 139, folder 1
Poetry
, v. 60, no. 11. Chicago.
1942 May
box 139, folder 1
Poetry
, v. 67, no. 5. Chicago.
1946 February
box 139, folder 1
Poetry
, v. 81, no. 6. Chicago.
1953 March
box 139, folder 1
Poetry
, v. 84, no. 1. Chicago.
1954 April
box 139, folder 1
Poetry
, v. 84, no. 2. Chicago.
1954 May
box 139, folder 2
Poetry
, v. 84, no. 4. Chicago.
1954 July
box 139, folder 2
Poetry
, v. 84, no. 6. Chicago.
1954 September
box 139, folder 2
Poetry
, v. 85, no. 1. Chicago.
1954 October
box 139, folder 2
Poetry
, v. 85, no. 2. Chicago.
1954 November
box 139, folder 2
Poetry
, v. 85, no. 3. Chicago.
1954 December
box 139, folder 3
Poetry
, v. 85, no. 5. Chicago.
1955 February
box 139, folder 3
Poetry
, v. 85, no. 6. Chicago.
1955 March
box 139, folder 3
Poetry
, v. 86, no. 1. Chicago.
1955 April
box 139, folder 3
Poetry
, v. 86, no. 2. Chicago.
1955 May
box 139, folder 3
Poetry
, v. 86, no. 3. Chicago.
1955 June
box 139, folder 4
Poetry
, v. 91, no. 3. Chicago.
1957 December
box 139, folder 4
Poetry
, v. 99, no. 1. Chicago.
1961 October
box 139, folder 5
The
Poetry
Conspiracy
, v. 6.8. San
Diego.
1996
box 139, folder 6
Poetry
Flash
, no. 242. Berkeley.
1993 May/June
Scope and Contents
This
Poetry
Review and Literary Calendar for the West features an interview with
Jessica Hagedorn and a preview of literary cabaret BEAT.
box 139, folder 7
Poetry
LA
, no. 2. Los Angeles.
1981 Spring/Summer
Scope and Contents
This publication is signed by Laurel Ann Bogen.
box 139, folder 8
Poetry
News
, no. 6. Venice.
1981 March
Scope and Contents
This Beyond Baroque Foundation publication presents a calendar and reviews of
Southern California readings and publications. Contributors include Dennis Cooper,
Alexandra Garrett, and Amy Gerstler.
box 139, folder 8
Poetry
News
, no. 10. Venice.
1981 July
box 139, folder 8
Poetry
News
, no. 14. Venice.
1981 November
box 139, folder 9
Poetry
Sheet
, no. 9. Eugene.
1985
Processing Information
These were removed from publisher Regan Lee's correspondence with Griffin for
placement within this series.
box 139, folder 9
Poetry
Sheet
, no. 10. Eugene.
1985
box 139, folder 9
Poetry
Sheet
, no. 11. Eugene.
1986
box 139, folder 10
Poets & Writers, v. 16, no. 1. New
York.
1988 January/February
box 140, folder 1
Poets & Writers, v. 18, no. 5. New
York.
1990 September/October
box 140, folder 1
Poets & Writers, v. 19, no. 1. New
York.
1991 January/February
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Clarence Major.
box 140, folder 1
Poets & Writers, v. 19, no. 2. New
York.
1991 March/April
box 140, folder 2
Poets & Writers, v. 19, no. 4. New
York.
1991 July/August
box 140, folder 2
Poets & Writers, v. 21, no. 6. New
York.
1993 November/December
Scope and Contents
This issue includes the feature "Zora Neale Hurston and Eatonville: A Friendship of
100 Years."
box 140, folder 3
poetsfeet, v. 3, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1991 March
box 140, folder 4
Point, v. 2, no. 1. Denver.
1991 Winter
box 140, folder 4
Point, v. 2, no. 2. Denver.
1991 Spring
box 140, folder 5
Poison Ivy. Los Angeles
1994 Summer - 1995 Summer/Fall
Scope and Contents
The premiere issue of this literary magazine by women is edited and published by
Leslie Price. 1995 Summer/Fall issue features interviews with Wanda Coleman and
Pleasant Gehman.
box 140, folder 6
Potpourri & Roses, v. 1, no. 7. Los
Angeles.
1999 June/July
box 140, folder 7
Presa, no. 1. Rockford.
2005 Fall
box 140, folder 7
Presa, no. 2. Rockford.
2006 Winter
box 140, folder 8
ProFUN Magazine. Los Angeles.
undated
Scope and Contents
"Poster Wars" by Eddie Rivera and Benjamin Krepack chronicles the arrest of two
members of The Intelligence in Chinatown for posting band flyers. This article
focuses on the LAPD abuse of punks and mentions venues such as Madame Wong's and the
Hong Kong Cafe.
box 152, folder 3
Publik Enema, no. 3. Long Beach.
undated
box 140, folder 9
PUG, no. 0. Hollywood.
1994
Scope and Content
This collection of "art werk" by Louie Metz is signed to Griffin by Metz.
box 140, folder 10
Pulse, no. 1. Tucson.
1968 November
Scope and Contents
According to editor Norman Moser, this broadside will be published every few weeks
via Illuminations Press.
box 140, folder 11
Puppet Terror, v. 1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
2002 Spring
Scope and Contents
This magazine edited by Pleasant Gehman, Iris Berry, and Shawna Kenney is for
anyone who's ever been terrorized by or terrorized others with puppets.
box 140, folder 12
Pure Filth, no. 3. Los Angeles.
1991 January
Scope and Contents
This L.A. punk rock magazine features
poetry
by Justice Howard and Billy Childish
as well as interviews with Jack Baker and The Mummies.
box 140, folder 13
Rabble-A Pamphlet Series, no. 2.
1998 January
Scope and Contents
This pamphlet contains a novel excerpt by Linda Janakos and poems by Doren
Robbins.
box 140, folder 14
RALPH, no. 23. Vancouver.
1994 December
Scope and Contents
This coffee, jazz, and
poetry
zine was written and silk screened one page at a time
on 1950s Gestetner duplicating machines by Ralph Alfonso. This folder also contains
a letter to Griffin from Alfonso with a black and white photo of Alfonso and
friends.
box 140, folder 14
RALPH, no. 45. Vancouver.
1997 April-March
box 140, folder 14
RALPH, no. 48. Vancouver.
1998 January
box 140, folder 14
RALPH, no. 49. Vancouver.
1998 March
box 140, folder 14
RALPH, no. 51. Vancouver.
1999
box 140, folder 14
RALPH, no. 52. Vancouver.
1999
box 153, folder 10
Rampike. Toronto.
1990
Scope and Content
The cover features "10 Gauge City" by William S. Burroughs.
box 141, folder 1-2
Rats With Keys. Los Angeles.
circa 1984-1993
Biographical / Historical
According to Griffin, this zine was created and distributed randomly by Eric Brown
and a group referred to as the Nadeau crowd because many of them lived in a house at
the end of Nadeau Court in South Central Los Angeles. Many members were UCLA or USC
film students, artists, and writers.
Rats was a DIY
zine created by the group. Everyone contributed anonymously. Griffin, Scott
Wannberg, and Mike M. Mollett were a few of the contributors. The Nadeau crew
ultimately evolved into the core of Los Angeles Cacophony when Rev Al arrived on the
scene.
Scope and Contents
These folders contain thirteen issues of this anonymous zine.
box 141, folder 3
Rattle, v. 2, no. 1. Sherman
Oaks.
1996 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Aleida Rodriguez and begins with Charles
Bukowski's "The Laughing Heart."
box 141, folder 4
The Rattler, no. 1. Hollywood.
1982 May
Scope and Contents
This publication edited by Heather Susan Haley includes contributions from Irene
Carlson, Exene Cervenka, Michael Pace, and Sadie Woods.
box 141, folder 4
The Rattler, no. 2. Hollywood.
1983 May
Scope and Contents
This issue includes work by the following: Exene Cervenka, John Doe, Michael Hyatt,
Doug Knott, Mike M. Mollett, Suzanne Gardner, and Gary Leonard.
box 141, folder 4
The Rattler, no. 3. Los Angeles.
circa 1985
Scope and Contents
This issue includes the following contributors: Robin Carr, Vicki Jade, Victor
Noel, Thea Other, and Anni Jackson. There is a
Cult of the
Face
broadside within an envelope inscribed "For You" which is tucked
inside this issue. The broadside attribution is Piepol/Nexus, copyright 1985.
box 141, folder 5
Rattlesnake Review, no. 19. Pollock
Pines.
2008
box 141, folder 6
Read, no. 18. Los Angeles.
1989
box 141, folder 7
Read A Banned Book. Chicago.
1998
Biographical / Historical
This catalog was created for the the seventeenth annual celebration of the freedom
to read in honor of Banned Books Week 1998.
box 141, folder 8
Readymaid. Los Angeles.
1999
box 153, folder 11
Real Deal Magazine, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1989
Scope and Content
This folder also contains "The Real Deal Man Questionnaire" which includes
questions about jail time, killing and raping women, homosexuality and racial
slurs.
box 141, folder 9
The Realist, no. 100. Venice.
1986 January-February
Biographical / Historical
This publication is edited by Paul Krassner and published bi-monthly. However,
according to subscription information, "It may go monthly but don't time your
menstrual periods by us yet."
box 141, folder 9
The Realist, no. 101. Venice.
1986 May-June
box 141, folder 9
The Realist, no. 111. Venice.
1990 Winter
box 141, folder 9
The Realist, no. 114. Venice.
1990 Fall
box 141, folder 9
The Realist, no. 120. Venice.
1992 Summer
box 141, folder 10
The Realist, no. 141. Venice.
1999 Spring
box 141, folder 10
The Realist, no. 142. Venice.
1999 Autumn
box 141, folder 10
The Realist, no. 143. Venice.
2000 Spring
box 141, folder 11
Real Life Comix, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
circa 1985
Scope and Contents
The inside cover is signed by Bob Clark.
box 141, folder 12
Real Life In A Big City, no. 20. Los
Angeles.
1989 September
Scope and Contents
This issue features the infamous Sophia Loren side-eye photo with Jayne Mansfield's
cleavage on the cover.
Biographical / Historical
This zine is published monthly by editrix Debi Dip.
box 141, folder 12
Real Life In A Big City, no. 27. Los
Angeles.
1990 June
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with the Miracle Workers
box 141, folder 12
Real Life In A Big City, no. 38. Los
Angeles.
1991 May
Scope and Contents
The Complaint Department's focus in on Club Lingerie. This rant is entitled, "How
To Get Kicked Out Of A Club You Don't Want To Be At Anyway."
box 141, folder 13
Real Stuff, no. 2. Seattle.
1991 March
Scope and Contents
This Dennis P. Eichhorn comic includes reader correspondence from Charles
Bukowski.
box 193, folder 12
The Real World Press, v. 1, no. 1. Santa
Cruz.
1993 August 25
Scope and Content
This folder includes correspondence from publisher Daniel Yaryan, producer of
Sparring With Beatnik Ghosts.
box 193, folder 12
The Real World Press, v. 1, no. 2. Santa
Cruz.
1993 October
box 193, folder 12
The Real World Press, v. 1, no. 3. Santa
Cruz.
1993 November
box 141, folder 14
Red Dancefloor, v. 1, no. 4. Canoga
Park.
1991 March
Scope and Contents
This issue features poets from the Iguana Cafe, also known as Iguanaland, a Los
Angeles venue, bookstore, and cafe where the
poetry
community hosts readings,
performances and open mike nights.
box 141, folder 15
Red Hot Mama, no. 2. Fullerton.
1998 Summer
box 142, folder 1
Redtape, no. 7. New York.
1992
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to David Wojnarowicz and features work from Wojnarowicz,
Julie Ducet, Holly Anderson, Maggie Estep, and Gregory Corso.
box 142, folder 2
Remark, no. 53. Kircubbin.
2007 April
Biographical / Historical
Remark was started by Justin Barrett in 1988 and
taken over by Kathleen Paul-Flanagan in 2005.
box 142, folder 3
Renaissance, v. 1, no. 2. San
Francisco.
1962
Scope and Contents
This magazine is edited by John Bryan.
box 142, folder 3
Renaissance. St. Augustine.
undated
box 142, folder 4
RE/Search, no. 8/9. San
Francisco.
1984
Scope and Contents
This issue published and edited by Andrea Juno and V. Vale is focused on the work
of J.G. Ballard.
box 142, folder 4
RE/Search, no. 13. San
Francisco.
1991
Scope and Contents
This issue published and edited by Andrea Juno and V. Vale is focused on the work
of "Angry Women" such as Kathy Acker, Diamanda Galas, Bell Hooks, Sapphire, Annie
Sprinkle, Lydia Lunch, and Wanda Coleman.
box 142, folder 5
REVUE, v. 2, no. 3. Loveland.
1992 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features "Into the Light: The Intrinsic Nature of Angelo de Benedetto"
by Marcia Ward. This article is signed to Griffin by Ward.
box 142, folder 6
Richmond Guide. Richmond.
1972
Scope and Contents
This is the Richmond (Surrey) Chamber of Commerce Yearbook.
box 142, folder 7
Richmond Rockets Girls.
Richmond.
2012
Scope and Contents
This is the swimsuit calendar signed to Griffin by many of the dancers who appear
within.
box 142, folder 8
The Rise And The Fall Of The Harbor Area,
no. 7. San Pedro.
2006 May-August
Scope and Contents
This issue features an early history of San Pedro Punk as well as Hank's Ghetto,
poems by Charles Bukowski.
box 142, folder 8
The Rise And The Fall Of The Harbor Area,
no. 9. San Pedro.
2007 January-April
Scope and Content
This issue features an interview with Keith Morris as well as Hank's Ghetto, poems
by Charles Bukowski.
box 142, folder 9
The Rise And The Fall Of The Harbor Area,
no. 11. San Pedro.
2007 December
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Joel Morales of Dios Mal Os as well as Hank's
Ghetto, poems by Charles Bukowski.
box 142, folder 9
The Rise And The Fall Of The Harbor Area,
no. 13. San Pedro.
2009 May-August
Scope and Contents
This issue features an interview with Todd Congelliere of Recess Records as well as
Hank's Ghetto, poems by Charles Bukowski.
box 142, folder 10
Rising. London.
undated
Scope and Content
Nos. 19, 21, 22.
box 143, folder 1
River Visions. Los Angeles.
2000 June
Scope and Contents
This catalog is presented by The Arroyo Arts Collective for an exhibit of
photographs, documentation and video of the April 29-30 artists' installations along
the Los Angeles River. The L.A. Mudpeople entertaining children appear on page
15.
box 143, folder 2
Rocks Off, v. 2. Los Angeles.
circa 1988
box 143, folder 3
Rocky Mountain Arsenal of the Arts, v. 4,
no. 1, 3-5. Denver.
1989 Spring - 1990 September/October
box 143, folder 4
Rohwedder, no. 3. Los Angeles.
1988 Spring
Scope and Contents
This is the Latin America issue.
box 346
Rolling Stone, no. 215. San Francisco.
1976 June 17
Scope and Content
This issue features a story on Bukowski.
box 153, folder 12
Rolling Stone, no. 717. New York.
1995 September 21
Scope and Content
This issue memorializes the death of Jerry Garcia (1942-1995).
box 152, folder 4
Rolling Stone. Hamburg.
1996 October
Scope and Content
This issue includes a feature story on Charles Bukowski.
box 152, folder 5
Ronald A. Wilford Presents Marcel Marceau and His
Partner Pierre Verry
. New York.
1977
box 143, folder 5
Rosebud Forum, v. 1, no. 4.
Denver.
1987 Winter/Spring
box 143, folder 6
Rough Draft, no. 51. San
Francisco.
1990 December
Scope and Contents
This is the official organ of the San Francisco Cacophony Society.
box 143, folder 7
Royal Vagrant Review, v. 1, no. 2.
Chattanooga.
1997
box 143, folder 8
RR, no. 1. Gardiner.
1991
Scope and Contents
This zine was mailed to Griffin by its creator, mail artist R. Saunders.
box 143, folder 9
The Rusty Truck, no. 1. Poplar
Bluff.
2010 Winter
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed to Griffin by F.N. Wright.
box 152, folder 6
The Sacramento Bee. Sacramento.
2011 August 23
Scope and Content
Griffin's son, Spencer, is featured on the front page of the "Living Here"
section.
box 143, folder 10
St. Vitus's Dance, v. 1, no. 3.
Albuquerque.
2003
Scope and Contents
This magazine is edited by Theron Moore and Todd Moore. It is dedicated to S.A.
Griffin and
The Outlaw Bible of American
Poetry
.
box 143, folder 10
St. Vitus's Dance, v. 2, no. 1.
Albuquerque.
2004
Scope and Content
This issue includes work from the following writers: Tony Scibella, Gerald Locklin,
RD Armstrong, Todd Moore, and Theron Moore.
box 344, folder 5
sam i am newsletter, v. 3, no. 3 and 4.
Encino.
1990
box 143, folder 11
San Antonio Museum of Art. San
Antonio.
1988
Scope and Contents
This catalog was created for
The Poetic Object
exhibition. It is inscribed to Griffin from Lorraine Perrotta.
box 143, folder 12
San Fernando
Poetry
Journal
, v. 12, no. 3.
Northridge.
undated
box 143, folder 13
San Francisco Review, v. 1, no. 8. San
Francisco.
1961 March
Scope and Contents
Three poems by Charles Bukowski appear in this issue.
box 143, folder 14
San Joaquin Review, v. 1, no. 1.
Fresno.
1993 Spring
box 152, folder 7
Santa Cruz Weekly, v. 3, no. 41. Santa
Cruz.
2012 February 8-14
Scope and Content
Wanda Coleman's appearance at
Sparring With Beatnik
Ghosts
is featured on page 25.
box 153, folder 13
Santa Monica Mirror, v. 1, no. 22. Santa
Monica.
1999 November 17-23
Scope and Content
The front page of the Life & Arts section features an interview with Scott
Wannberg.
box 143, folder 15
Satan Gone Wild, no. 1.
Watertown.
2004
Scope and Contents
The cover of this comic is signed "Satan Loves S.A. Griffin" by Robert Steven
Rhine.
box 143, folder 16
Saturday Afternoon Journal, no. 13. Los
Angeles.
1998
Scope and Contents
This Flashback themed book is dedicated to "William S. Burroughs, Jerry Garcia,
Allen Ginsberg, Herbert Huncke, Timothy Leary, Michael O'Donoghue, Jerry Rubin,
Terry Southern, Frank Zappa, and especially Richard M. Nixon, without whom none of
this would have been necessary."
box 143, folder 17
Sauls. Santa Monica.
1984
Scope and Contents
This catalogue is for an exhibition of painting, sculpture and drawings at the
Gille Mansillon Gallery. It is signed to Griffin "with love and specially for lovely
wife."
box 143, folder 18
Savages, no. 1.5. San Diego.
1991 August 18
box 143, folder 19
Scavenger, no. 4. La Jolla.
circa 1960
Scope and Contents
This art and
poetry
magazine was produced and edited by Michael Dormer, Lee
Teacher, and Jeanie Dormer. It was published by the Pour House, which is featured on
the back cover as San Diego's first and finest coffee house.
box 143, folder 20
Scraps of Paper, no. 5. Fremont.
1998 Winter
box 143, folder 21
Scream, v. 4, no. 1, whole number 6.
Raleigh.
1989
Scope and Contents
This magazine features "Bukowski the Great" by Carroll Credle and two poems by
Bukowski. This folder contains two copies, both of which are signed by Bukowski on
the title page.
box 144, folder 1
Sculpture Gardens Review, v. 1, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
1989
box 144, folder 2
Second Coming, v. 5, no. 1. San
Francisco.
1977
Scope and Contents
Edited and published by A.D. Winans, this special Charles Bukowski, A.D. Winans, Ed
"Foots" Lipman issue is dedicated to the memory of the late Ed Lipman.
box 144, folder 3
Second Coming, v. 18, no. 3.
undated
Scope and Contents
This broadside serial features "the boll-weevil blues" by Tom House.
box 144, folder 4
The Seed, v. 1, no. 4.
2006
box 144, folder 5
Social Comment Comics, no. 1.
1999
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed by Jim Caron.
box 144, folder 6
Sewage, no. 3. San Diego.
1991 December 13
box 144, folder 7
Sex & Guts, no. 3. Glendale.
2001
Scope and Contents
This magazine of "cruel and unusual entertainment" is edited by Gene Gregorits and
Lydia Lunch and signed by Gregorits.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 1. North
Hollywood.
1985 September
Biography/History
Griffin designed the layout/atomic clock for this "hands on" DIY Xerox
newsletter/calendar. He describes his duties as "whatever they needed" from cut
& paste up to inputting on the text, editing, distribution and collection,
collating and folding.
Scope and Content
This premiere newsletter/calendar includes a letter from Shatterproof Press which
states its desire to provide a complete guide to
poetry
events in Los Angeles since
its "
poetry
scene has become as large and varied as that of New York or San
Francisco."
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 2. North
Hollywood.
1985 October
Scope and Content
This issue features a piece on L.A. rock poets such as Exene Cervenka, John Doe,
Chris D., Drew Steel, and Henry Rollins.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 3. Canoga
Park.
1985 November
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 4. Canoga
Park.
1985 December
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 5. Canoga
Park.
1986 January
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 6. Canoga
Park.
1986 February
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 7. Canoga
Park.
1986 March
Scope and Content
Laurel Ann Bogen's review of Henry Rollins'
Two Thirteen
Sixty One
is divided into the following parts: Part I - I AM NOT AFRAID OF
HENRY ROLLINS and Part II - THIS IS NOT ART.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 13. Canoga
Park.
1986 October
Scope and Content
This issue includes an announcement for The Lost Tribe performance at X=Art Gallery
in West Hollywood.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 14. Canoga
Park.
1986 November
Scope and Content
The back cover features "The Luck of the Way" by Charles Bukowski.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 15. Canoga
Park.
1986 December
Scope and Contents
"On
Poetry
, The Proletariat & Al's Bar" is a review of Jack Hirschman and
Richard Meltzer. Charles Bukowski's "nothing's free, not even the sun..." appears on
page 10.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 16. Canoga
Park.
1987 January
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 18. Canoga
Park.
1987 March
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a flyer for a
Shattersheet
Reading Series event at BeBop Records in Reseda and a Charles Bukowski's "their
night" on the back cover.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 20. Canoga
Park.
1987 May
Scope and Contents
This newsletter includes flyers for readings at Bono Fortuna restaurant in Santa
Monica, Beyond Baroque in Venice, and Bebop records in Reseda.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 21. Canoga
Park.
1987 June
Scope and Contents
Scott Wannberg's "ballad of wounded dog" appears on page 11.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 25. Canoga
Park.
1987 October
Scope and Contents
A directory of venues across Los Angeles appears on page 7 and Wanda Coleman's
"Stone Rock Lady" is printed on the back cover.
box 144, folder 8
Shattersheet, no. 26. Canoga
Park.
1987 November-December
Scope and Contents
This newsletter includes a piece about the Shatterproof Press
Poetry
Gathering in
Elysian Park during which and award was presented to Griffin for "precise management
of THE ATOMIC CLOCK and his excellent leadership in the fight to control
BULLSHIT."
box 144, folder 9
Shithappy, no. 1. Los Angeles.
circa 1990s
Biographical / Historical
This anarchist punk zine is created by Adam Bregman who found inspiration to create
this publication after his column in his high school paper was censored because he
advocated that the students organize and revolt against the school
administration.
box 144, folder 9
Shithappy, no. 2. Los Angeles.
circa 1990s
Scope and Content
This issue features "Riot L.A!," "Masturbation is Liberation," and "Destroying the
Workplace."
box 144, folder 9
Shithappy, no. 3. Los Angeles.
circa 1990s
box 144, folder 9
Shithappy, no. 3. Los Angeles.
circa 1990s
Scope and Contents
This issue includes Bregman's "I Ran For Mayor Of L.A." and "The Bears."
box 144, folder 9
Shithappy, no. 4. Los Angeles.
circa 1990s
Scope and Contents
This issue contains "A Long Convoluted Guide To L.A." complete with illustrations
and clip art.
box 144, folder 10
Shocking Illustrated. Los
Angeles.
undated
box 153, folder 14
SHOW, v. 3, no. 7. New York.
1963 July
Scope and Content
This issue features "Visions of Gerard" by Jack Kerouac.
box 144, folder 11
(sic). Los Angeles.
1991
Biographical / Historical
The creator of this publication ceased publishing after he found out about
Griffin's publication of the same name.
box 153, folder 15
SIC, no. 2. Venice.
2011 May
Scope and Content
This broadside was published by Rafael FJ Alvarado at Beyond Baroque.
box 144, folder 12
Sidewalk Visions, v. 1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1989-1990 Winter
Biographical / Historical
This publication is funded by a grant from the City of Los Angeles, Cultural
Affairs Department.
Scope and Contents
This publication consists of
poetry
and prose by Los Angeles' homeless.
box 144, folder 12
Sidewalk Visions, v. 1, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
1990 Spring
box 144, folder 13
The Silt Reader, no. 1. Orange.
2000
Scope and Content
This publication is edited by Robert Roden and Barton M. Sauders and published by
Temporary Vandalism Recordings.
box 144, folder 13
The Silt Reader, no. 6. Orange.
2004
box 144, folder 14
Simone Gad. Fresno. Santa
Monica.
1992
Scope and Contents
This catalog documents two of Gad's solo exhibits:
TV Trays
and Chairs
at the Fresno Museum of Contemporary Art and
Self Portraits and Movie Stars at the Robert Berman/B-1
Gallery.
box 144, folder 15
Siren's Silence, v. 1, no. 4.
Philadelphia.
1997 December/January
box 144, folder 16
Six-Pack, no. 3. Bear.
circa 2004-2005
Scope and Contents
This pack includes signed work by the following poets: Ronald Baatz,
justin.barrett, Richard Krech, Adrian Manning, R. Reed Nesbitt, and F.N. Wright.
Biographical / Historical
These Bottle of Smoke Press packs of six miniature broadsides were designed and
letterpressed by Bill Roberts for friends of the press.
box 144, folder 16
Six-Pack, no. 4. Bear.
circa 2004-2005
Scope and Content
This pack includes signed work by the following poets: Gary Aposhian, Geoffrey M.
Barber, Karl Koweski, t.l. kryss, Ann Menebroker, and Charles Plymell.
box 144, folder 16
Six-Pack, no. 4. Bear.
circa 2004-2005
Scope and Contents
This pack includes signed work by the following poets: Christopher Cunningham,
Henry Denander, Nathan Graziano, C. Allen Rearick, Mark Terrill, and Scott
Wannberg.
box 144, folder 17
Slut Mag, no. 4. New York.
1991 Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed by Justice Howard and includes The Official
Slut Mag Bookmark and Ruler.
box 144, folder 18
Small Press Review, v. 38, no. 3-4
(398-399). Paradise.
2006 March-April
box 144, folder 19
Smegma, no. 3. New York.
1979
Scope and Contents
This magazine printed by Tower Press is focused on sex and includes a sheet of
Smegma stickers.
box 144, folder 20
The Smith, no. 28. New York.
1973
Scope and Contents
This special issue contains
Only Just Above The
Ground
by Stuart Z. Perkoff. It is inscribed to John Thomas: "Dear John,
More words to add to the pile. Love, Stuart."
box 144, folder 21
Smut, v. 1, no. 1. Canoga Park.
undated
Scope and Contents
This issue features
poetry
by Juliette Torrez and short story "Muffdivers" by
Sushi.
box 144, folder 22
Sonic Soul's Retina, no. 10.
Phoenix.
1996 January-February
box 144, folder 22
Sonic Soul's Retina, no. 17.
Baltimore.
1997 March-April
box 145, folder 1
Spazz, v. 1, no. 6. Reseda.
1993 September
box 145, folder 1
Spazz, v. 1, no. 12. Reseda.
1994
box 145, folder 2
Specimen 73. Pasadena.
1973
Scope and Contents
This catalog edited by Paul Vangelisti features 12 poets for the season 1973-1974.
According to Vangelisti's introduction, "Their work sustains what I find are the
most serious questions about the craft and song implicit in the words we inhabit
here in Los Angeles. Poets include the following: Stuart Z. Perkoff, Charles Wright,
Holly Prado, Charles Bukowski, Alvaro Cardona-Hine, Ronald Koertge, Barbara Hughes,
Jack Hirschman, Robert Peters, Gerda Penfold, Paul Vangelisti, and John Thomas.
box 145, folder 3
Spiegelman's Mailart Rag, v. 1, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
1985 September
box 145, folder 3
Spiegelman's Mailart Rag, v. 1, no. 4. Los
Angeles.
1986 December
Scope and Contents
This cover of this issue includes a note from Lon Spiegelman to Griffin.
box 145, folder 4
Spillway, v.1, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1993 Summer
Biographical / Historical
Spillway: A New Direction in
Poetry
was published by
Bombshelter Press. Jack Grapes founded this press with the goal of publishing poems
by Beyond Baroque Workshop members.
box 145, folder 4
Spillway, no. 6. Los Angeles.
1997 Fall/Winter
box 145, folder 5
Squawk, no. 44. Cambridge.
1991
Scope and Contents
This magazine of the Naked City Coffeehouse features an interview with Marian
Streetpeople.
box 145, folder 6
Staplegun Press. Birmingham
1999 - 2002
Scope and Content
No. 7. (Summer/Fall 1999), no. 9. (Spring/Summer 2000), no. 11 (Spring 2001), no.
12 (Summer 2001), no. 14 (Summer 2002).
box 193, folder 13
Star. Tarrytown.
1989 May 2
box 145, folder 7
Stew Art, no. 2. San Diego.
1991 November 11
Scope and Contents
This punk feminist zine describes itself as "a special little space for poems, art,
and miscellaneous thought."
box 145, folder 8
Stick, v. 1, no. 1-2 Golden
1989 January, 1990 January
box 145, folder 9
Sticky Green's Zine. nos. [1] - 3, Los
Angeles
undated
box 145, folder 10
Stiletto, no. 1. Kansas City.
1989 April
Scope and Contents
This issue includes the work of Diane DiPrima, William Burroughs, Denise Low,
Andrei Codrescu, Gloria Vando, Michael Rapier, Anne Waldman, and David Ray. It is
illustrated with drawings from the late James Dean Pruner and contains an in
memoriam piece for Pruner by Tony Allard.
box 146, folder 1
Still Breathing, v. 1-3. Los Angeles
1996-1997
Scope and Contents
This zine by Robin Rumack is published by Madhouse Publishing and features poems,
wit, art, sarcasm, short stories, essays, a review or two, and guest artists.
box 344, folder 6
Street Art and Contemporary Art. Beverly
Hills.
2015 September 30 and October 1
box 146, folder 2
A Student's Guide to Protesting. San
Francisco.
1993 August
box 146, folder 3
STUFF, no. 2. Pittsburgh.
1998 November
box 146, folder 4
Stupid Comics, v. 1, no. 2.
Orange.
2003 October
Scope and Content
Both copies of this comic book are accompanied by a DJ Z-Trip compact disc entitled
For Those About To Vote We Salute You. The liner
notes explain that this mix was originally performed live at the Root Down in Los
Angeles shortly before the start of the war.
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Two Compact Discs (CDs).
FILE CONTAINS AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS: Audiovisual materials in this collection will
require assessment and possible digitization for safe access. To review these
audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your
visit.
box 146, folder 5
Subculture Magazine, no. 4.
Whittier.
1994 September/October
Scope and Contents
This bimonthly journal dedicated to Latino culture, music and lifestyle is
published and edited by Steve Martinez and includes features on El Grito, Joe
Servantez, JV the "Nayba'Hood Queen," and Proposition 187, the "Save Our State"
initiative.
box 146, folder 6
Suitcase, v. 1, no. 1-2. Los
Angeles.
1995
Scope and Contents
This "journal of transcultural traffic" is signed to Griffin by
founder/editor/designer Babak Nahid.
box 146, folder 7
Sulfur, v. 2, no. 1, issue 4.
Pasadena.
1982
box 146, folder 7
Sulfur, v. 10, no. 2, issue 27.
Pasadena.
1990
box 146, folder 8
Sunset Palms Hotel, v. 1, no. 2. Santa
Monica.
1973 Summer
Biographical / Historical
Michael C. Ford's Mt. Alverno Press published nine issues of Sunset Palms Hotel
between 1973 and 1983.
Scope and Contents
Michael C. Ford edited this issue with Bill Yaryan and Colman Andrews. This issue
features "more used cars and more racket gals exposed." The title page features the
following words from James Jameson: "The Sunset Palms hotel/ Or the Hollywood Psalms
hotel/ Or the smell of hell motel/ Go tell your name/ Los Angeles."
box 146, folder 8
Sunset Palms Hotel, v. 1, no. 3. Santa
Monica.
1973 Winter
Scope and Contents
This charted and uncharted territories issue includes travelogues by the following:
Ahmos Zu Bolton III, Eloise Klein Healy, Manuel Bandeira, Douglas Blazek, and Ronald
Koertge.
box 146, folder 8
Sunset Palms Hotel, v. 2, no. 4. Santa
Monica.
1974 Spring
Scope and Contents
This Electric Academic issue includes poems from the following guests: Luis Campos,
Wanda Coleman, Eloise Klein Healy, Tom Waits, Alison Sky, and Ronald Koertge. This
issue features pen and ink drawings on the cover and within by Charles
Bukowski.-
box 146, folder 8
Sunset Palms Hotel, v. 2, no. 5. Santa
Monica.
1974 Summer
Scope and Contents
This Murder in the Academy issue is dedicated to Stuart Z. Perkoff and includes
work by Harry E Northup, Liza Williams, Michael McClure, Miriam Simos, and William
Pillin.
box 146, folder 8
Sunset Palms Hotel, v. 3, no. 6. Santa
Monica.
1975 Summer
Scope and Contents
This Silent Movies issue is dedicated to the memory of Lawrence Lipton and includes
work by Bob Greenfield, F.A. Nettlebeck, Bill Morrison, Gerald Locklin, Charles R.
Hockett, Brad Darby, and Lyn Lifshin.
box 146, folder 9
Sushi By The Pool, no. 2. Canoga
Park.
undated
box 146, folder 10
Swill. Claremont.
undated
Scope and Contents
Swill is a publication produced by students of
Pomona College.
box 146, folder 11
Synaesthesia, no. 4. Hickory.
1991
box 146, folder 12
The Tale Of: "God To The Rescue Of The
Earth!"
no. 1. Los Angeles.
1991 January 20
box 146, folder 13
Tales From The Zone. Los
Angeles.
1991 - 1999
Biographical / Historical
This is the official newsletter of the L.A. Cacophony Society. According to the
front page, the Society's members state the following: "We are the new merry
pranksters providing an escape hatch for people caught up in the grid of modern
life. The Cacophony Society has no rules and no leaders. You may already be a
member!"
Scope and Content
1991 (January and July/August), no. 4 (undated), no. 6 (1991 December), no. 10
(1992 April), no. 14 (1992 August), no. 16 (1992 October), no. 20 (1993 February),
no. 29 (1993 November), no. 30 (1993 December), no. 32 (1994 February), no. 43 (1995
January), no. 47-48 (1995 May-June), no. 56 (1996 February), no. 63 (1996 October),
no. 64 (1996 November), no. 71 (1996 June), no. 86 (1998 September), no. 87 (1998
October), no. 98 (1999 September).
box 147, folder 1
A Taste Of Justice, v. 1, no. 1.
Hollywood.
1990 Summer
Scope and Contents
Poems by Justice Howard.
box 147, folder 1
A Taste Of Justice, v. 1, no. 2.
Hollywood.
1990 Fall
Scope and Contents
"Memoirs While Reaching Up To Play Handball On The Curb" by Justice Howard.
box 147, folder 2
Tears In The Fence, no. 44-46, 48-49.
Blandford Forum
circa 2007-2009
box 147, folder 5
Testicle Pressure, v. 8, no. 1. Rego
Park.
1994 August
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One audiocassette.
FILE CONTAINS AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS: Audiovisual materials in this collection will
require assessment and possible digitization for safe access. To review these
audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your
visit.
Scope and Contents
This zine is accompanied by a Propulsion Records Exploitation audiocassette.
box 147, folder 6
Theatre Historical Society of America, no.
14. Elmhurst.
1987
box 147, folder 6
Theatre Historical Society of America, no.
30. Elmhurst.
2003
box 147, folder 7
the-hold.com, no. 35. Deptford.
2000 August
Scope and Contents
This issue is dedicated to Michael McNeilley.
box 147, folder 8
Third Lung Review, no. 3, 4, 6, 10, 12, 13,
15, 17-19. Conover
1988-90, 1994-97
Biography/History
Third Lung Review began as an annual publication
that coincided with the Third Lung Press
Poetry
Contest.
box 148, folder 1
This Is Important, no. 10. Los
Angeles.
1985
Biographical / Historical
Illuminati is Peter Schneidre's small press handle. According to Griffin, Schneidre
published hundreds and hundreds of quality titles in his time.
Scope and Contents
This issue is edited by F.A. Nettelbeck and published by Illuminati. It contains
work by John Levin, Susan Osterman, Jack Micheline, Ron Androla, Mitchell Rhodes,
and Todd Moore.
box 148, folder 2
Thought, no. 1.
2000 April
Scope and Contents
This publication features an excerpt from a history paper written by a cat on
LSD.
box 148, folder 3
Thought For Food, editions 3 and 4. Los
Angeles.
circa 1989
Scope and Contents
This zine was created by Exene Cervenka.
box 148, folder 4
Time, v. 73, no. 6. Chicago.
1959 February 9
box 148, folder 4
Time. New York.
2001 September 11
box 148, folder 5
Tits & Clits, no. 7.
Berkeley.
1987 November
Scope and Contents
This comic was created by Joyce Farmer and Mary Fleener.
box 344, folder 7
TO, v. 1, no. 1. Narberth.
1992
box 344, folder 7
TO, v. 1, no. 2. Narberth.
1993
box 148, folder 6
Tobey C. Moss Gallery. Los
Angeles.
2005
Scope and Contents
This catalog is the
From George Herms With Love
exhibition of Assemblage, Collage, and Prints from the last of the Los Angeles
"Beat" Culture. This catalog is signed by George Herms.
box 148, folder 7
Toltec
Poetry
Review
. North
Hollywood.
1990 July/August - November/December
Scope and Contents
This program/journal focuses on "Free, Positive, Constructive, and Supportive"
poetry
workshops at the Lankershim Arts Center.
box 148, folder 8
Too Much Coffee Man Full Color Special, no.
1. Austin.
1996 July
box 148, folder 9
Tortilla, v. 2. Maywood.
1994 Winter
Biographical / Historical
Tortilla is a non-profit publication created and
funded by Aida Salazar. It is published and distributed quarterly,
Scope and Contents
This is a Chicano/Lation based publication with contributors such as Eddie Torres,
La Malinche, Sly, Ricardo Nathaniel Santos, Heather Gonzalez, Alma Rosa Alvarez, and
Ruth Razo.
box 148, folder 10
Traffic Report. Santa Monica.
1998 April
Scope and Contents
This 18th Street Art Complex publication includes a feature on Self Help Graphics
and work by Luis Alfaro, Pleasant Gehman, Gustavo Alberto Garcia Vaca, Barbara J.
Genovese, Ellyn Maybe, and Eric C. Wat.
box 148, folder 11
Transit, no. 1. North Coventry.
1993 Spring
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication includes writing by
Charles Bukowski, Jack Micheline, Charles Plymell, and John Montgomery.
box 148, folder 11
Transit, no. 2. North Coventry.
1993 Summer
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication includes writing by
Charles Bukowski, Jack Micheline, Jack Kerouac, and Anne Waldman.
box 148, folder 11
Transit, no. 3. North Coventry.
1993 Late Summer
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication is a Jack Kerouac
Special issue.
box 148, folder 11
Transit, no. 4. North Coventry.
1993 Autumn
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication is the Carolyn Cassady
interview issue.
box 148, folder 11
Transit, no. 5. North Coventry.
1994 early
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication includes writing from
Charles Bukowski, Jack Kerouac, and Philip Whalen.
box 148, folder 11
Transit, no. 7. North Coventry.
1996 November
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication features writing by
Diane di Prima, A.D. Winans, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Anne Waldman, and Edie Kerouac
Parker.
box 148, folder 12
Transit, no. 9. North Coventry.
1999 Winter
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication features writing by
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Diane di Prima, Gerald Nicosia, Janine Pommy Vega, and Linda
King.
box 148, folder 12
Transit, no. 10. North Coventry.
2002 Spring
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication features writing by
Charles Bukowski, Michael McClure, Anne Waldman, Aram Saroyan, Charles Plymell, A.D.
Winans, Jack Kerouac, Neal Cassady, and Billy Childish.
box 148, folder 12
Transit, no. 11. North Coventry.
2002 Summer
Scope and Contents
This
Beat Scene publication features writing by
Michael McClure, Joanne Kyger, Janine Pommy Vega, Charles Plymell, and Lawrence
Ferlinghetti.
box 148, folder 14
Tsunami, v. 2, no. 2. Venice.
1989 Spring
Scope and Contents
Tsunami is published by Earthquake Press and
includes writing from Amy Uyematsu, Cherry Jean Vasconcellos, Marcia Cohee, and
Denise Dumars.
box 148, folder 14
Tsunami, v. 3, no. 1. Venice.
1990 Winter
Scope and Contents
This issue features "The Next Wave" in which the editors discuss the last fifteen
years of
poetry
in Los Angeles.
box 148, folder 14
Tsunami, v. 3, no. 2. Venice.
1990 Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue features work from Paula Thompson, Regina Rocca, Laurel Ann Bogen,
Michael C. Ford, Lisa D. Chavez, and Ellyn Maybe.
box 148, folder 15
Turning The Tide, v. 27, no. 1. Culver
City.
2014 January-March
Biographical / Historical
This journal is published by the Inter-Communal Solidarity Committee.
box 193, folder 15
TV Click. Portland.
1989 October 15-21
box 152, folder 8
Twin Palms Publishers. Santa Fe.
1993
box 148, folder 16
Under Pant, v. 2.
1999
Scope and Content
Poems and illustrations by Paddy Campanaro.
box 148, folder 17
The Understated, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
2002 March
box 148, folder 18
The ULC News, v. 36, no. 5.
Modesto.
1998 Fall
Scope and Contents
This Universal Life Church (ULC) newsletter is published quarterly from the ULC's
international headquarters in Modesto, California.
box 149, folder 1
The Unquiet Desperation, v. 1, no.
13.
2007 May
box 149, folder 3
UnTV, no. 1. Glendale.
1992 Fall
box 149, folder 4
Up On The Roof, v. 1, no. 4.
Denver.
undated
Biographical / Historical
Up On The Roof is the magazine of the Urban Peak
Creative Writing Workshop.
box 149, folder 5
Urban Explorer, v. 2, no. 1. Culver
City.
1994 January
Scope and Contents
This issue includes a feature on Abbot Kinney's Venice.
box 149, folder 6
URTHKIN, no. 1. Los Angeles.
1978 March
Biographical / Historical
This issue is edited and published by Larry Ziman and typed by Gertrude Dwyer.
box 149, folder 7
Vacancy, no. 3. Valparaiso.
2006 Summer
box 149, folder 8
Vagabond, v. 1, no. 2. Rosemead.
1999 Spring
box 149, folder 9
Vagabond White Paper, no. 5. Santa
Monica.
circa 1983
Scope and Contents
This issue features Bern Porter interviewed by Phil Nurenberg. It is signed by
Nurenberg, "a fan of The Tribe," to Mister and Missus Mike Bruner.
box 149, folder 10
Veins, v. 1, no. 1.
Philadelphia.
1994 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue features "Remnants of Labor Day" and "Anything Baby" by L.A.'s Punk
Hostage Press pioneer Iris Berry.
box 149, folder 11
Venice Thirteen, v. 1, no. 1.
Venice.
1994 Spring
Biographical / Historical
This is a communal project printed by Bayrock Press which contains the work of
thirteen members of the Venice
Poetry
Workshop.
Scope and Contents
This issue is signed by Luis Campos.
box 149, folder 12
Verve, v. 2, nos. 1-3; v. 3 nos. 1-4. Simi
Valley
1990 Spring - 1991 Winter
box 149, folder 14
Vice Versa, v. 4, nos. 1-3; v. 5, nos. 1-3.
Chicago
1989-1990
Biographical / Historical
This "zine of the times" published
poetry
and short stories.
box 149, folder 15
Village View, v. 6, no. 31. Los
Angeles.
1992 March 6-12
Scope and Contents
This issue features a cover story on Harry Crews.
box 149, folder 16
Violent Virgins, no. 16.
Pittsburgh.
undated
Scope and Contents
This issue features poems in dialogue by Rane Arroyo and Paul Weinman.
box 150, folder 1
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 1.
Newhall.
1983 Spring
Scope and Contents
This is a new quarterly published by Los Angeles Poets' Press (LAPP). According to
the editorial poem, this publication is "a magazine of poetic persuasions &
uncharted visual adventures." The Coordinating Editor for this issue is Luis
Campos.
box 150, folder 1
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 2.
Newhall.
1983 Summer
Scope and Contents
This issue features Coordinating Editor Richard J. Weekly.
box 150, folder 1
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. A.
Newhall.
1984 June
Scope and Contents
This issue is edited by Richard J. Weekly and features poems by John "Jack"
Brander. It is signed to Griffin by Brander.
box 150, folder 1
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 4.
Newhall.
1984 June
Scope and Contents
This issue's Coordinating Editor is Tina Megali.
box 150, folder 1
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 5.
Newhall.
1984 Fall
Scope and Contents
This issue's Coordinating Editor is Richard J. Weekley.
box 150, folder 2
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 8.
Newhall.
1986 Spring
Scope and Contents
Coordinating Editors for this issue are Richard J. Weekley and Tina Landrum
Megali.
box 150, folder 2
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 9.
Newhall.
undated
Scope and Contents
Coordinating Editor for this issue is Jerry Danielsen.
box 150, folder 2
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 10.
Newhall.
1987
Scope and Contents
This issue is edited by Richard J. Weekley, Rina Landrum Megali, and Jerry
Danielsen with assistance from Spiritual Advisor Heidi York.
box 150, folder 2
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 11.
Newhall.
1987
Scope and Contents
Coordinating Editor for this issue is Jerry Danielsen.
box 150, folder 2
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 12.
Newhall.
1988 Spring
Scope and Contents
Coordinating Editors for this issue are Richard J. Weekley and Tina Megali. The
cover features a graphic for "Wind and Water and Stone" by Octavio Paz.
box 150, folder 3
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 13.
Newhall.
1989 Winter
Scope and Contents
The Coordinating Editor for this issue is Tina Megali.
box 150, folder 3
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 14.
Newhall.
1989
Scope and Contents
The Coordinating Editor for this issue is Heidi York.
box 150, folder 3
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 15.
Newhall.
1990 Winter
Scope and Contents
The Coordinating Editor for this issue is Jerry Danielsen.
box 150, folder 3
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 16.
Newhall.
1990 Spring
Scope and Contents
Richard J. Weekley is the Coordinating Editor for this issue dedicated to William
Stafford.
box 150, folder 4
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 17.
Newhall.
1990 Fall
Scope and Contents
The Coordinating Editor for this issue is Donald McLeod.
box 150, folder 4
VOL. NO. Magazine, no. 18.
Newhall.
1991 Fall
Scope and Contents
The Coordinating Editor for this "Between a Poet & a Hard Spot" issue is Donald
McLeod.
box 150, folder 5
Warner Grand Theatre. San Pedro.
2001 January
Scope and Contents
This program was published for the 70th Anniversary Celebration of the theatre.
box 150, folder 6
Water Row Books Catalogue, no. 72.
Sudbury.
1997
Biography/History
Water Row Books is a bookseller and publisher specializing in Beat books, graphix,
used/new/rare, and avant-garde literature since 1982.
box 150, folder 6
Water Row Books Catalogue, no. 73.
Sudbury.
1998
box 150, folder 7
Weak, no. 3. Santa Cruz.
undated
box 344, folder 8
West Coast
Poetry
Review
, issue 12, v. 3,
no. 4. Reno.
1974
box 150, folder 8
Westways, v. 100, no. 1. Santa
Ana.
2008 January/February
Scope and Contents
This issue's cover feature is on L.A.'s historic movie palaces.
box 150, folder 9
Whoreson Dog, no. 1. Pasadena.
1993 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue edited by Mark Thorpe and Dennis Nishi includes the following writers:
Lyn Lifshin, Marael Johnson, Gerald Locklin, Bill Mohr, Todd Moore, Belinda
Subraman, Bayla Winters, Michael C. Ford, and Charles Bukowski.
box 150, folder 10
Wicked Mission, no. 3. Moreno
Valley.
undated
box 150, folder 10
Wicked Mission, no. 3.5. Moreno
Valley.
undated
box 150, folder 11
Wildflowers, v. 10. Woodstock.
2009 Summer Solstice
Scope and Contents
This Woodstock mountain
poetry
anthology includes work by Lee Ann Brown, Andy
Clausen, Hettie Jones, Louise Landes Levi, Thurston Moore, Marc Olmsted, and Janine
Pommy Vega. This issue is signed by Olmsted.
box 344, folder 9
William Blake: Book Illustrator, v. 1.
Normal.
1972
box 150, folder 12
WIRE, v. 10. Highland Park.
1990 Fall/1991 Winter
Scope and Contents
This issue In Memoriam: Lorri Jackson (1962-1990) and Thomas McGrath
(1916-1990).
box 151, folder 1
The Word. Richardson.
1997 January
box 151, folder 2
Words Dance, no. 13.
2013 Summer
Scope and Contents
This
poetry
mag edited by Amanda Oaks and includes writing by A. Razor, Carrie
Rudzinski, John Dorsey, and Shinji Moon.
box 151, folder 3
Work, no. 1. Granada Hills.
circa 2004
Scope and Contents
This zine is signed to Griffin by Xerox cover artist Rob Zabrecky.
box 151, folder 4
The Wormwood Review, v. 29, no. 1, issue
113. Stockton.
1989
box 151, folder 4
The Wormwood Review, v. 30, no. 1, issue
117. Stockton.
1990
box 151, folder 5
The Wormwood Review, v. 36, no. 3, issue
143. Stockton.
1996
Scope and Contents
This issue features Gerald Locklin's
The Last
Round-Up
.
box 151, folder 6
Xylophone, no. 2.
circa 1989
Scope and Contents
Correspondence from Tony to Griffin is inserted into this issue.
box 151, folder 7
Young and Stoned, no. 2. Los
Angeles.
undated
box 151, folder 8
Zap Comix, no. 8. San Francisco.
1975
Scope and Contents
This issue features cover art by R. Crumb.
box 151, folder 8
Zap Comix, no. 10. San
Francisco.
1982
Scope and Contents
This issue features illustrations by R. Crumb.
box 151, folder 8
Zap Comix, no. 11. San
Francisco.
1985
Scope and Contents
This issue features illustrations by R. Crumb.
box 151, folder 9
Zeal Magazine, v. 1, no. 2. Long
Beach.
1999 Spring
Scope and Contents
This issue includes features on Wicca, the one day heroin detox phenomenon, and
Russians in L.A.
box 151, folder 9
Zeal Magazine, v. 1, no. 4. Long
Beach.
1999 Fall
box 151, folder 10
Zen Baby, no. 19. Santa Cruz.
circa 2008
Scope and Contents
This zine by Christopher Robin features a photo of Griffin on the inside of the
back cover with the following caption: "S.A. Griffin Gets Kinky ZB Zine &
Stumpfucker Calvacade."
box 151, folder 11
Zendik Farm. Boulevard.
circa 1988-1990
Scope and Contents
This is the official publication of the Zendik Farm Arts Commune. This folder
contains three issues.
box 151, folder 12
Zip Code, no. 1-3. Northampton
1989
box 151, folder 13
Zomoid, v. 1, no. 7. Los
Angeles.
1984
box 151, folder 13
Zomoid, v. 3, no. 3. Los
Angeles.
1984
box 151, folder 14
Zygote In My Coffee, no. 2.
Kettering.
2006 Fall
box 151, folder 14
Zygote In My Coffee, no. 100.
Kettering.
2008
box 151, folder 15
ZYZZYVA, v. 15, no. 1. San
Francisco.
1999 Spring
box 154, box 155, box 156, box 157, box 158, box 159
Manuscripts
circa 1965-2012
Scope and Content
These manuscripts, which are organized alphabetically by author, include
poetry
submissions by writers such as Wanda Coleman, Laurel Ann Bogen, francEyE, and Todd
Moore sent to Griffin for consideration for
The Outlaw Bible of
American
Poetry
and periodicals Griffin published, as well as drafts and
galleys of materials published by Rose of Sharon Press. Some folders include
correspondence to Griffin and ephemera shared with him.
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
SUBSERIES CONTAINS DIGITAL MATERIALS: Special equipment or further processing may be
required for viewing. To access digital materials you must notify the reference desk
in advance of your visit.
box 154, folder 4
Alvarado, Rafael FJ
1989-1993
box 154, folder 10
Bender, Skie
1988 August
Scope and Contents
This folder also includes manuscripts by Kathi Georges and Tony Vaughan.
box 154, folder 11
Bennett, John
2000 January
box 154, folder 12
Bogen, Laurel Ann
2000, undated
box 154, folder 14-15
Brewer, Jack
1991, undated
Biography/History
Griffin met Jack Brewer at an X=Art show that they were both booked on and have
remained friends. For many years Brewer would improvise on guitar while Griffin
worked the words. Brewer created The Lofty Canaanites sometime in the early 2000s,
an improvisational punk/jazz band with Joe Baiza, Steve Reed, and Bob Lee with
Brewer and Griffin as the front men. Bob Lee was replaced by Brian Christopherson
for future incarnations.
box 154, folder 16
Brown, Eric
1992, undated
box 154, folder 18-20
Bruner, Michael Lane
undated, 1992, 1996, 2005
Biography/History
Michael Lane Bruner is a friend of Griffin's who he met at The Water Espresso
Gallery during the early 1980s in Hollywood. Bruner, Griffin, Doug Knott, and Mike
M. Mollett created The Lost Tribe. Later, with Bobbo Staron and Scott Wannberg, they
reformed as The Carma Bums. Still working together, most recently as The Lost Bums
(Bruner, Griffin, Knott, and Mollett) they created a CD of readings and spontaneous
raps produced by Bruner
The Lost Bums: Ozark
Revelations
(2016) and forthcoming
The Hideous
Bible
(Rose of Sharon). Griffin published and edited Bruner's book
Natural Geographics (Rose of Sharon) in 2014. Bruner is
now the head of admissions at Georgia State University. While working towards his
double Masters at the University of Washington, Seattle in 1994, Bruner would bring
The Carma Bums into the new frontier of the Internet via the tech department at the
university resulting in The Carma Bums International Superhighway Tour of Words,
considered the first
poetry
website of its kind featuring original writing, graphic
images, and hyperlinks.
box 154, folder 24
Cherkovski, Neeli
1988
Scope and Contents
This folder contains a copy of "Charles Bukowski Notes On A Dirty Old Man" with
Cherkovski's annotations and edits. This document is signed by Cherkovski.
box 154, folder 27-28
Cohee, Marcia
1993, undated
box 155, folder 1
Cohol, Alan
1988
Scope and Contents
This folder also contains a manuscript by Jerry Gordon.
box 155, folder 2
Coleman, Wanda
undated
Scope and Content
In addition to "South Central Death Trip," this folder contains four "unpublished"
poems.
box 155, folder 12
Field, Edward
1998
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
box 155, folder 15
Ford, Michael C.
circa 1989
box 155, folder 18-21
francEyE
1989, 1998, 2006, 2008
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Folder 21 contains one 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
Folder 18: francEyE or Frances Dean Smith included correspondence and photos with
her poems (1998).
Folder 19: "Hermosa Beach Reading" manuscript (1989).
Folder 20: Book manuscript for Rose of Sharon Press (2006).
Folder 21: Galleys for
Call and digital text proof
(2008).
box 155, folder 22
Freedman, Allen J.
undated
box 155, folder 26
Nelson, Gary
undated
Scope and Contents
This folder also contains a photo for Griffin signed by Nelson.
box 155, folder 28
Gehman, Pleasant
1994, 1998
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
In addition to her bio, this folder contains submissions such as "White Trash
Apocalypse" and "The Girl Next Door."
box 156, folder 4
Griffin, Spencer Lane
1997
Scope and Contents
This folder contains galleys for
When Is The
Future?
box 156, folder 6
Herrmanson, Briggs
undated
box 156, folder 18-23
Knott, Doug
1986-1988, 1991-1993, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2007-2008,
2011-2012
box 156, folder 24
Koertge, Ron
1998
Scope and Contents
This folder contains photocopies of Venice West photos. The annotations on the
photocopies are by Griffin.
box 157, folder 4
Lewis, Ben Porter
1998, undated
box 157, folder 5
Lewison-Snyder, Juanita
2010
box 157, folder 15
Mason, Keith Antar
1998
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
box 157, folder 18
Maxwell, Ann Marie
1991, circa 2001
Scope and Contents
This folder contains Maxwell's manuscript,
Affair with a
Viper: The Unexpurgated, True Story of Neal Cassady & Anne Murphy
.
box 157, folder 19
Maybe, Ellyn
undated
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
box 157, folder 22
Meloan, Mike
undated
Scope and Contents
This folder contains a story Meloan read at John Martin's retirement party/Charles
Bukowski's birthday party in Linda Bukowski's backyard in San Pedro.
box 157, folder 23
Mickenburg, Risa
circa 1997
box 157, folder 25
Mollett, Mike M.
circa 1994
box 157, folder 27
Moore, Todd
undated
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One 3.5 inch floppy disk.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Contents
In addition to poems, this folder contains a floppy disk labeled
Outlaw Bible and a photo of Moore outside in front of wall
tagged
DILLINGER.
box 157, folder 36
Nicosia, Gerald
undated
Scope and Contents
This folder contains his play about Jack Kerouac, "Jack in Ghost-Town."
box 158, folder 1
Northup, Harry E.
1978, 1991, undated
box 158, folder 4
Pliura, Vytautas
1993, 1998
box 158, folder 5
Plymell, Charles
circa 1999
Scope and Contents
This folder includes Plymell's "Cool Hobohemian's 1950's Bennies From Heaven Poem"
printed on the back of an image of Plymell in Kansas in 1952. This image is
inscribed to Griffin and signed by Plymell.
box 158, folder 9
Pommy Vega, Janine
1999
Scope and Contents
This folder also includes work by Andy Clausen.
box 158, folder 10
Prado, Holly
1998, undated
box 158, folder 11
Ridenour, Alan
undated
Scope and Contents
Ridenour signed his "Class Clown" poem, Reverend Al.
box 158, folder 12
Rios, Frank T.
2002, undated
Scope and Contents
This folder includes collages and a
Memoirs of a Street
Poet
flyer for his book release and reading at Sponto Gallery.
box 158, folder 13
Robbins, Doren
circa 1998
box 158, folder 14
Robertson, Bill
2009
Biography/History
Robertson knew francEyE and began communication with Griffin after she passed in
order to obtain copies of her book
Call, which
Griffin edited and published on his Rose of Sharon Press.
box 158, folder 17
J.S.
undated
Scope and Contents
Manuscripts include a poem and academic pieces on Tony Scibella and John Fante.
box 158, folder 19
Schmeeckle, Roger
1989
Scope and Contents
Materials include his poem inspired by The Carma Bums.
box 158, folder 23
Sic
1998-1999
Processing Information
Five Norton AntiVirus floppy disks for Windows 95 and one America Online for
Windows disk labeled and moved to the Digital Archivist's media library.
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Fifty-seven 3.5 inch floppy disks and four iomega Macintosh formatted Zip
Disks.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Biography/History
(Sic) Random Vice & Verse was a small press
broadside, cum magazine published and edited by Rafael FJ Alvarado and S.A. Griffin.
Originally a broadside, in time becoming an alt lit
poetry
, art, lit, music magazine
in 1998 with hook or crook distribution around the country. Alvarado and Griffin had
a falling out over the magazine after the 8th issue when Griffin gave it all to him.
Griffin completed the editing for the 9th issue without credit before his
departure.
Scope and Contents
Materials include poems, art work, Zip disks and floppy disks.
box 159, folder 5-6
Stevens, Blakeslee
1990-1992, 1994-1995, 1999, undated
box 159, folder 12
Thomas, John
1990
Scope and Contents
This folder contains a piece Thomas wrote about the popularity of his
poetry
among
the "idle rich."
box 159, folder 14
Tomas
undated
Scope and Contents
This folder contains "A Black Man With A Message" poem.
box 159, folder 16
Trendle, Tammy
circa 2006
Scope and Contents
This folder includes annotated proofs of
Interchangeable
Goddesses
, published by Griffin's Rose of Sharon Press.
box 159, folder 17
Trzyna, Christine
undated
box 159, folder 18
Various submissions
undated
box 159, folder 22
Walsh, Joy
1987
Scope and Contents
This folder includes correspondence between Griffin and Walsh concerning
Moody Street Irregulars.
box 159, folder 23
Wannberg, Scott
1989
Scope and Contents
This folder contains typescripts and art for Wannberg's
The
Electric Yes Indeed
, published by Griffin on Shelf Life Press.
box 159, folder 24-26
Ward, Ed
1990, 1998, 2003
Scope and Contents
Folder 24: Correspondence and submissions for
SIC
and
The Outlaw Bible of American
Poetry
.
Folder 25: Correspondence and stills from the movieo,
The
First Time
.
Folder 26: Bound Xerox of Ward's manuscript, "Lucy & Eddie."
box 159, folder 30
Wilson, Jessica M.
2012
Scope and Contents
This folder contains a manuscript of "Marie Morrison," inscribed to Griffin and
signed by Wilson.
box 160, box 161, box 152, box 153
Writings about Griffin
Scope and Content
These articles about Griffin are organized alphabetically by folder title and contain
press about Griffin's work as a writer, performer, and publisher, ranging in topic
from his Rose of Sharon small press imprint to The Carma Bums and The
Poetry
Bomb.
box 152, folder 9
Alibi, v. 19, no. 17.
Albuquerque.
2010 April 29-May 5
Scope and Content
An interview with Griffin "Or How I learned to stop worrying and love The
Poetry
Bomb" appears on page 18.
box 193, folder 1
Arthur, v. 2, no. 28. Glendale.
2008 March
Scope and Content
Griffin's
Numbskull Sutra is featured on page 48 on
Thurston Moore's top 40 of 2007.
box 160, folder 1
Asheville Citizen-Times clipping
circa 2010
Scope and Contents
Poetry
Bomb preview piece with color photo of Griffin and Elsie.
box 193, folder 2
BAM, v. 20, no. 7, issue 430. Pleasant
Hill.
1994 April 8
Scope and Content
Griffin's "Open Ended It" at the Onyx Echo is featured on page 16.
box 160, folder 2
Ben Is Dead, no. 15. Hollywood.
1991 October/November
Scope and Contents
A review of the Diamond Dada show at Al's Bar with MC S.A. Griffin appears on page
8.
box 160, folder 3
Bukowski Memorial clipping
1994
Scope and Contents
Los Angeles Times color photo clipping of Griffin
pouring beer into a metal cup at the Charles Bukowski memorial outside To The Curb
bookstore in Downtown. This folder also contains a color photocopy of Griffin at
Bukowski's grave site.
box 160, folder 4
The Carma Bums clippings
1989-1995
box 152, folder 10
Chiron Review, no. 86.
2009 Spring
Scope and Content
Griffin and Lorraine Perrotta appear on the cover.
box 160, folder 15
Libercal. Los Angeles.
1984 February
Scope and Contents
Where Streets Collide is promoted on page 7.
box 160, folder 7
Conversations, v. 5. Pollock
Pines.
2009 May
Scope and Contents
A conversation between B.L. Kennedy and Griffin appears on page 69 of this
Rattlesnake Interview Series.
box 193, folder 5
Drama-Logue, v. 17, no. 18.
Hollywood.
1986 May 1-7
Scope and Content
Griffin's work for the Great Peace March is featured on the back cover.
box 160, folder 8
Duckwalking...review
2003
box 160, folder 9
Dusty Dog Reviews, no. 14-15. Mill
Valley.
1993
Scope and Contents
A review of
Heaven Is One Long Naked Dance appears
on page 3.
box 160, folder 10
Flipside, no. 85. Pasadena.
1993 July/August
Scope and Contents
A review of
Heaven Is One Long Naked Dance appears
in the Book Review section.
box 160, folder 11
HARP, no. 44. Glenwood Springs.
1993 November
Scope and Contents
John Macker's review of
Heaven Is One Long Naked
Dance
appears on page 6.
box 160, folder 12
Home Planet News, v. 14, no. 1, issue 54.
High Falls.
2006 Spring
Scope and Contents
A.D. Winans' review of
Harvey Keitel, Harvey Keitel, Harvey
Keitel
appears on page 7.
box 160, folder 13
"How to write a love poem"
circa 2007
box 160, folder 14
"Howl to the Bard" clipping
1997
box 153, folder 16
L.A. Weekly clipping
1992 September 18-24
box 160, folder 16
LIVE At My Place, v. 3, no. 4. Los
Angeles.
1988 April
Scope and Contents
Griffin is featured in a "Poets For P.E.N. Fundraiser" article on page 11.
box 193, folder 8, box 160, folder 17
Los Angeles Alternative, v. 5, no. 33. Los
Angeles.
2006 July 14-20
Scope and Contents
Griffin and Lorraine Perrotta are featured on the cover and interviewed along with
Pleasant Gehman and Ellyn Maybe about Griffin's work and the
poetry
scene in Los
Angeles.
box 153, folder 17
Los Angeles Reader, v. 12, no. 44. Los
Angeles.
1990 August 17
Scope and Content
A feature on The Carma Bums appears on page 20.
box 153, folder 18
Los Angeles Reader, v. 16, no. 18. Los
Angeles.
1994 February 11
Scope and Content
Griffin and Lorraine Perrotta are featured on the cover sharing a hot dog at
Original Tommy's, 2575 Beverly Boulevard for "Merrill Shindler's Guide to
Anti-Romantic Dining."
box 153, folder 18
Los Angeles Reader, v. 18, no. 40. Los
Angeles.
1996 July 12
Scope and Content
A feature on The Carma Bums appears on page 18.
box 152, folder 12
Los Angeles Times clipping
1994 March 21
box 160, folder 18
The Lost Tribe promo
1986
Scope and Contents
An image of The Lost Tribe appears on page 24 of this issue of
Element Magazine.
box 160, folder 19
The Miskatonic Quarterly, no. 1. Los
Angeles.
1998 Spring
Scope and Content
This issue features Griffin's recollection of his missing time experience.
box 160, folder 20
Natural Awakenings, no. 1.
2010 May
Scope and Contents
This issue previews The
Poetry
Bomb's arrival in Wilmington at Pomegranate.
box 160, folder 21
Next...Magazine, v. 2, no. 6.
1996 August
Scope and Contents
The Carma Bums are featured on the cover and and an interview with them appears on
page 8.
box 160, folder 21
Next...Magazine, v. 3, no. 11.
1997 January
Scope and Contents
An image of Griffin reading at Jazzbeat appears on page 5.
box 193, folder 11
Oakland Tribune. Oakland.
1977 July 3
Scope and Content
Griffin is featured for his role as Tony in
West Side
Story
.
box 160, folder 22
O.C. Register clipping
1993 March 11
Scope and Contents
This clipping was sent to Griffin by Lee Mallory.
box 160, folder 23
O.C. Register clipping
2001 June 5
Scope and Contents
This clipping previews Griffin's performance at The Gypsy Den Cafe and Reading Room
in Costa Mesa.
box 153, folder 19
O.C. Weekly, v. 1, no. 39. Costa
Mesa.
1996 June 7-13
Scope and Content
A feature on The Carma Bums appears on page 22.
box 160, folder 24
Outsider Writers
Interview/Online
2007
Scope and Contents
Griffin discusses
The Outlaw Bible of American
Poetry
, Bukowski, The Lost Tribe, The Carma Bums, White Trash Apocalypse,
New Word Order, Venice West, and The Lady.
box 160, folder 25
The
Poetry
Bomb clippings
2010
Scope and Contents
The New Yorker,
Los Angeles
Times
, and KCET clippings concerning Griffin's five-week U.S. tour with
Elsie, The
Poetry
Bomb which he describes as a "weapon of mass discussion."
box 160, folder 26
Poetry
Flash
clipping
1995 September
Scope and Contents
Preview for Griffin's reading at When Words Collide: The First Annual Long Beach
Spoken Word Festival.
box 160, folder 27
"
Poetry
, The Internet, and The Process of Collaboration"
2008 July 10
Scope and Contents
Griffin is interviewed by Diana Bonebrake.
box 161, folder 1
Rattlesnake Review, no. 17. Pollock
Pines.
2008 Spring
Scope and Contents
Numbskull Sutra is reviewed by B.L. Kennedy on page
40.
box 161, folder 2, box 152, folder 11
Reviews
1989, 1993, 1995, 1996, 2009
box 161, folder 3
Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses, no.
66. Tenerife.
2013
Scope and Contents
An interview with Griffin, "Small Press Legends: S.A. Griffin" appears on page
155.
box 161, folder 4
Secrets of the Luxor Pyramid
clippings
circa 1997
Scope and Contents
Reviews of Griffin's performance as Dr. Osiris.
box 161, folder 5
Small Press Review, v. 35, no. 7-8, issues
366-367. Paradise.
2003 July-August
Scope and Contents
A review of
Duckwalking Thru the Apocalypse appears
on the front page.
box 161, folder 6
Sparring With Beatnik Ghosts, v. 2, no. 2.
Santa Cruz.
2012 February 12
Scope and Contents
"Sparring Spotlight On S.A. Griffin" appears on page 45 alongside his "Occupy"
collage. This piece features Griffin's partial lists "off the top of his head" for
the following: Some Folks No Longer With Us, Artists, Bands/Musicians, Bookstores,
Cable Access, Cafes, Clubs, Libraries, Theatres as Reading Venues & Backyards
Where Things Happened, Films/Docs, Mag/Zines, Party Line,
Poetry
Workshops,
Performance, Photographers, Radio, Reading Series & Opens, Records Labels, and
Record Stores.
box 193, folder 14
The Taos News. Taos.
1989 August 24
Scope and Content
The Carma Bums are featured in the "Tempo" section.
box 161, folder 7
Taproot Reviews
circa 1993
Scope and Contents
Review of
Heaven Is One Long Naked Dance with
correspondence from Steve Hartmann.
box 161, folder 8
Unborn Again press release
2001 March 13
box 152, folder 13
The Union Prospector
2010 May 27
Scope and Content
A preview of The
Poetry
Bomb appears on page 5.
box 161, folder 9
Wajlemac, no. 9. Larkspur.
1990
Scope and Contents
Review of
A One Legged Man Standing On Hollywood Blvd.
Smoking A Cigarette
appears in the "Like
Poetry
and Fiction Man"
section.
box 162, box 163, box 164, box 165, box 166, box 167, box 168
Subject files
1973-2014
Scope and Content
The subject files on poets, musicians, performance spaces, bookstores, small presses,
and organizations contain clippings, photographs, and ephemera Griffin collected and
are organized alphabetically by subject.
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
SUBSERIES CONTAINS AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS: Audiovisual materials in this collection
will require assessment and possible digitization for safe access. To review these
audiovisual materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
SUBSERIES CONTAINS DIGITAL MATERIALS: Special equipment or further processing may be
required for viewing. To access digital materials you must notify the reference desk
in advance of your visit.
box 162, folder 1
Alfonso, Ralph
1997-1999
Scope and Content
Biography and clippings.
Biography/History
Ralph Alfonso is a writer, publisher, and musician from Montreal, Quebec, Canada
involved in the Canadian punk scene. Alonso is editor and publisher of
Ralph Magazine, a Beat, pop, and
poetry
fanzine and he
also founded Bongo Beat records and books.
box 162, folder 2
Amsterdam
1993
Scope and Content
Amsterdam hotel brochure, coffeeshop guide, maps, and city profiles.
Biography/History
Tony Scibella and S.A. Griffin took a trip to the Cannabis Cup in 1998, in
Griffin's words, "to be in the one place on Earth where smoking pot was openly
celebrated." Scibella and Griffin stayed at the Lucky Mother's Inn and had (Sic)
Vice & Verse journalist identification cards made to try to crash the Cup. They
failed to get in, but when they did make it to the free to public Cannabis Cup pot
expo with the identification displayed, many of the attendees were convinced that
they were Feds from the United States. Since neither had the money to pay for passes
to the Cup, they ended up spending the majority of their time walking around
Amsterdam stoned, or hanging at the Lucky Mother's where Scibella shared tales of
his beatnik glory.
box 162, folder 3-4
Asphodel Book Shop
1996, 2005, 2006
Scope and Content
Copies of the store's catalogue and Griffin's
Asphodel, That
Greeny Bookstore (for Tessa Lowell)
broadside.
Biography/History
This bookstore in Cleveland, Ohio was owned and operated by Jim Lowell. Lowell was
in the mimeo revolution and a friend of d.a. levy's. Lowell was arrested by
narcotics police for distributing obscene literature, and books by levy and others
were confiscated.
Griffin's broadside was created for Tessa Lowell, wife of Jim Lowell for a Rabbits
Over Clevyland event honoring d.a. levy.
box 162, folder 5
Beyond Baroque
1984, 1997, 2002, 2010, 2014
Scope and Content
Programs, Harry E. Northup's history of the literary center, clippings, Mark Savage
signed Los Angeles Poets photograph, The Ongoing Dancer Certificate for Richard
Modiano, August 2007
Beachhead, and Amelie Frank's
annotated award speech.
Biography/History
The Beyond Baroque Literary Art Center is located at 681 Venice Boulevard in
Venice, California. It was established by George Drury Smith in 1968 and has become
the premiere place for poets and
poetry
in Southern California. Griffin has been on
the advisory board since the early 1990s and a member of the curatorial board since
2010. In 2011 he became the first recipient of Beyond Baroque's Distinguished
Service Award.
box 162, folder 6
Black Ace Books/Bowery Press
Scope and Content
Bowery Ace Black Cat Bowery postcards, correspondence to Tony Scibella, copies of
typescripts, copies of Black Ace catalogues, and copies of Scibella's covers:
Later Poems (Bowery 57) and T
urning
For Home
(Bowery 33).
Biography/History
Black Ace Books: Tony Scibella's bookstore in North Hollywood, California, Denver,
Colorado, and Silver Lake. It is also the publishing imprint created by Tony
Scibella as well as the title used for the Venice West / Temple of Man
poetry
anthology,
Black Ace. Black Ace Books is presently
located on Griffith Park Boulevard in Silver Lake, owned and operated by Rose Idlet,
Scibella's former partner. Scibella and Idlet operated Black Ace Books the last few
years he was alive at the Silver Lake location. According to Marsha Getzler, Black
Ace spins off of Tony's book
Ace Is Black of Course
(Bowery 22) with illustrations by Bill Dailey.
Bowery Press (Bowery Gallery): This imprint was created by Larry Lake of Denver,
Colorado. Lake was part of Venice West and lived in L.A./Venice at one time. Lake
co-edited
Mile High Underground with James Ryan
Morris and published over 50 numbers in his Bowery series.
box 162, folder 7
Bogen, Laurel Ann
circa 1990
Scope and Content
Programs and postcards for readings and performances including an announcement for
...The Burning: New and Selected Poems, 1970-1990
signed by Bogen.
Biography/History
Laurel Ann Bogen is a friend and an influence on Griffin as a performer and poet.
Bogen read her poem "Origami: The Unfolding Heart" at Griffin's at marriage to
Lorraine Perrotta in Griffith Park, September 9, 2000.
box 162, folder 8
Bottle of Smoke Press
Scope and Content
Letterpress items include the following: Bill R. Roberts, Editor Bottle of Smoke
business card and a prospectus: All the Wild Thoughts announcement, as well as a
promotional announcement for Gerard Malanga's "Tomboy and Other Tales."
Biography/History
Bill Roberts' small press imprint. Roberts originally worked out of Delaware and
presently works out of Wallkill, New York. Roberts has published Griffin's work in
various formats such as
Duckwalking Thru The
Apocalypse
, all issues of his Bottle anthology, coasters, and
The
Poetry
Bomb
broadside by Ellyn Maybe. Roberts' focus
is on work from the Beat era, alternative, mimeo (d.a. levy), Charles Bukowski, and
others. He makes books by hand using an old letterpress with moveable type. Griffin
used Roberts' mimeo machine to make the on-the-spot publications that resulted from
Rabbits Over Clevyland (Mac's Backs Books, Cleveland, OH, 2006) and Sal Mimeo And
The Revolution (The Book Collector, Sacramento, CA, 2007).
box 168, folder 1, box 162, folder 9-14, box 163, folder 1-6
Bukowski, Charles
Scope and Content
Box 162: Everything Bukowski including broadsides about Buk, birthday remembrances,
postcards, stickers,
Celebrating Bukowski at The
Huntington program signed by Neeli Cherkovski, signed poems, signed photographs,
signed Paget Press catalogues, Black Sparrow Press catalogues, Jeffrey H. Weinberg
Books catalogues, and
Under the Influence catalogue
with photographs by Michael Montfort.
Box 163: More Bukowski materials including Postal Worker USPS stamps, Black Sparrow
Press postcards, bookmarks, birthday cards, posters, clippings, photographs by
Michael Montfort, and clippings.
Box 168: Black Sparrow press publicity materials including Charles Bukowski
matchbooks.
Biography/History
According to Griffin, Charles Bukowski was an early, important, and lasting
influence on his work and a one-man revolution in post- World War II
poetry
. Not to
be confused with Beat era writers, Bukowski is considered the Godfather of what
might be "meat" or "confessional" poetics.
box 163, folder 7-8
Bukowski, Linda
1996, 2003, 2009
Scope and Content
Linda's color photographs of Griffin and Perrotta, a poem for Lorraine by Linda,
President Linda Lee Bukowski's The Charles Bukowski Foundation stationary, and Owner
Linda L. Beighle's Dewdrop Inn business card.
Biography/History
Linda Bukowski is Charles Bukowski's widow who oversees his literary estate. Linda
was a friend of Griffin and his wife Lorraine Perrotta, 1994-2011.
box 163, folder 9
Burroughs, William S.
1993, 1998
Scope and Content
Christopher Felver Beat postcard, UCLA Library select bibiliography, Giorno
Poetry
Systems catalogue, and
Ports of Entry: William S. Burroughs
and the Arts
LACMA mailer.
Biography/History
According to Griffin, William S. Burroughs is a cut & paste, original issue
Beat writer, innovator, and dream machine prophet of punk who is a big
influence.
box 163, folder 10
The Carma Bums
1990, 1994, 1995
Scope and Content
Mike M. Mollett's "Brief & Non-Expurgated Preliminary History of The Carma
Bums", Why We Need To Have A Meeting (Meetings), and "We Firemen Spray Gasoline"
typescript for The Carma Bums Tour of Words 1990.
Biography/History
Performance
poetry
group created by S.A. Griffin in the summer of 1989 after a trip
to Denver where he was on location as a guest star for a Perry Mason movie of the
week
Case of The All Star Assassin. The Carma Bums
were conceived to only exist on the road as part
poetry
, performance, Dada and a lot
improv / happening. The original group was Michael Lane Bruner, S.A. Griffin, Doug
Knott, Bobbo Staron, and Scott Wannberg. They invited Laurel Ann Bogen to be part of
the original group, but according to Griffin she declined, saying that she'd "done
her time sleeping on floors." They brought on Ellyn Maybe to open for them. Mike M.
Mollett joined the group in 1990. Bobbo Staron dropped out after 1992. The Carma
Bums toured the U.S. and Canada, 1989-2009. In 1994 they travelled to the University
of Washington, Seattle for a week to create The Carma Bums International
Superhighway Tour of Words. The Carma Bums mostly toured in Griffin's 1959 Cadillac
Farther. The group disbanded after Scott Wannberg's death on August 19, 2011. The
Carma Bums are the subject of the documentary
The Luxurious
Tigers of Obnoxious Agreement
.
box 163, folder 11
Cohen, Leonard
2009
Scope and Content
"Leonard Cohen: One of Those Guys" Sore Dove Press Release postcard for Robert
Humphrey's tribute to Cohen's history as a poet, novelist, songwriter, and Zen
Buddhist.
Biography/History
According to Griffin, Leonard Cohen was a powerful poetic influence about the same
time that Griffin began to read Charles Bukowski, Jack Kerouac, and the Beats.
Earlier influences would include Carl Sandburg, Edgar Allan Poe, William Ernest
Henley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Rod McKuen, and Rudyard Kipling.
box 163, folder 12-13
Coleman, Wanda
2005, 2013
Scope and Content
Poetry
Society of America program which honors Coleman, Lhasa Club reading flyer,
interviews, and memorial compilation which includes clippings and "She" poem for
Coleman by Austin Straus.
Biography/History
Wanda Coleman was a friend and early supporter of Griffin's work as both a poet and
a performer. Coleman named Griffin the Best Performance Poet for
The LA Weekly in 1989. An influence and mentor to
countless young poets and writers, Coleman was mentored by John Thomas and close to
Philomene Long at her death.
box 163, folder 14
Corso, Gregory
1959, 2001
Scope and Content
Corso's 2001
Time Magazine obituary and a clipping
from a 1959
Time Magazine which features a photograph
of "Beatniks" Corso, Ginsberg and Orlovsky.
Biography/History
According to Griffin, Gregory Corso was a big poetic influence and quite possibly
his favorite of the Beat poets. Griffin considers his Corso's poem "Bomb" one of the
most important poems of the 20th Century.
box 163, folder 15
Crews, Harry
Scope and Content
Short film script by R. Bruce Dickson based on the novel
Car by Harry Crews.
Biography/History
Harry Crews was a Southern writer and literary influence on Griffin. Griffin never
met him but got to know him through his friend Bruce Dickson who was working with
Crews on a screen adaptation of Crews's story
Car at
his death.
box 163, folder 16
Dada
Scope and Content
Articles on Dada and Futurism, postcards, and a piece on The Variety Theatre which
includes a phone list of members.
Biography/History
According to Griffin, "Dada is what makes the art wheels and process spin." Griffin
was brought into the mail art network and introduced to Dada ideas by Mike M.
Mollett.
box 163, folder 17
Death Row Last Meal Requests
Scope and Content
Last meal requests for Gary Gilmore and other prisoners who were executed.
Biography/History
This human account of what death row inmates request for their last meals was given
to Griffin by Peter Lownds.
box 163, folder 18
Drehmer, Aleathia
2007
Scope and Content
Postcards, a brochure, and business cards for the co-editor of
Zygote in My Coffee.
Biography/History
Aleathia Drehmer edited and published Durable Goods, a small, handmade
poetry
broadside / handout.
box 163, folder 19
Dutton, Doug
2008 March 30
Scope and Content
Text of Doug Dutton's remarks at Dutton's Brentwood Books' closing party.
Biography/History
Doug Dutton owned Dutton's Books in Brentwood where Scott Wannberg worked.
According to Griffin, Dutton was an avid supporter of small press and big personal
support for Wannberg.
box 163, folder 20
Exit, Deborah
Scope and Content
Reviews and Lhasa Club gig flyers and for "poet rocker" Deborah Exit.
Biography/History
Deborah Exit (Deborah Sweet) was a poet, performance artist, and producer who ran
X=Art during the 1980s in West Hollywood. X=Art was a floating performance venue
featuring musicians, artists, performance artists, and poets all on the same show.
Today Dr. Deborah Sweet is a practicing therapist.
box 163, folder 21
francEyE
2008
Scope and Content
Flyer for publication of
Grandma Stories and color
copy of Diana Bonebrake's painting
The Joy Theatre,
New Orleans 2006 which was used for the cover of FrancEyE's
Call published by Rose of Sharon Press.
Biography/History
francEyE was a poet, supporter of poets and
poetry
, and friend of Griffin's. She is
the mother of Marina Bukowski, Charles Bukowski's only child. Griffin edited and
published her book Call, the last book to be published for her while she was alive
and the only book published during her life to have color covers and be perfect
bound.
box 163, folder 22
Gehman, Pleasant
undated
Scope and Content
A White Trash Apocalypse photograph and book reviews, clippings, and flyers for
Burlesk a Go-Go, Honk if yer Horny, The Ringling Sisters, and
The Underground Guide To Los Angeles.
Biography/History
Pleasant Gehman is a poet, writer, journalist, performance artist, belly dancer,
actress, singer, L.A. punk progenitor, and friend of Griffin's. Gehman was one of
the original Go-Gos and a member of the Screaming Sirens, Ringling Sisters, and Honk
if Yr Horny. Gehman created White Trash Apocalypse in 1995 with Iris Berry and S.A.
Griffin.
box 163, folder 23
Ginsberg, Allen
1997, circa 2010
Scope and Content
Allen Ginsberg's America commemorative program, a color copy of a Ginsberg
photograph, and publicity materials for
Howl.
Biography/History
Allen Ginsberg was a Beat poet 20th century icon. In the late 1980s Griffin asked
Ginsberg what he thought
poetry
might be. After about three hours of discussion
while waiting for his plane at LAX the conclusion was: candor. Griffin believes,
"Ginsberg changed the world with his public reading of Howl, its subsequent
publication and landmark trial. There is no Beat movement without him."
box 163, folder 24
The Grassy Knoll
Scope and Content
A reading flyer and call for journal submissions and a copy of The Grassy Knoll's
quarterly journal
onTarget, edited by Anderson
Stone.
Biography/History
The Grassy Knoll was a thrift store, coffee shop, and performance venue located on
Sunset Boulevard in Silver Lake during the 1990s. Griffin read and performed
poetry
downstairs in the basement, primarily in conjunction with Anderson Stone's
poetry
serial
On Target.
box 163, folder 25
Griffin, Spencer
Scope and Content
Poems, artwork, scholastic writing assignments, and various school assignments by
Griffin's son.
Biography/History
Spencer Griffin is Griffin's only child by his second wife, Sharon Grish Griffin.
Spencer was born in Santa Monica, California on December 29, 1987 and diagnosed as
autistic by Dr. BJ Freeman (UCLA) in 1990. Griffin's brother and sister Robin and
Robert were diagnosed as "mentally retarded" when they were about 1-2 years old, and
it was later suggested that they were more than likely misdiagnosed at the time,
both of them quite possibly on the autism spectrum. When Dr. Freeman explained to
the Griffins why she considered Spencer to be autistic, Griffin believed he too must
be autistic. Sharon and S.A. have since concluded that Spencer has Asperger's.
Griffin is deeply proud of his son, who graduated from Village Glen High School in
Sherman Oaks, attended Glendale Community College and Pasadena City College, and
received his AA from American River College. Spencer received his BA from UC Davis
in 2015 with a major in linguistics. He plays guitar and writes music and
poetry
.
Griffin published
When Is The Future? (Rose of
Sharon, 1997) for him when he was ten years old.
box 164, folder 1
Herms, George
1965
Scope and Content
A
Spring Visions exhibition Stryke Gallery flyer and
color copies of collages.
Biography/History
George Herms was an assemblage artist, performance artist, and poet.
box 164, folder 2
H.I.P.
2009
Processing Information
City of Los Angeles certificates for H.I.P. may be found in Box 168, Folder 14.
Scope and Content
A Hollywood Institute of Poetics (H.I.P.) events calendar.
Biography/History
The Hollywood Institute of Poetics was created by S.A. Griffin and Rafael FJ
Alvarado. The acronym was originally meant as a joke on "hip" culture. Individuals
from H.I.P. were honored by the city of Los Angeles for their work within the
community.
box 164, folder 3
Hoffberg, Judith Ann
2009
Scope and Content
Memorial program; memorial stamp set by Creative Thing; and a color photograph of
Mike M. Mollett, Griffin, Hoffberg, and "CT" Caldera, "with a little bit of Lon
Spiegelman."
Biography/History
Judith Hoffberg was a librarian, mail artist and friend to Griffin. Hoffberg
co-founded ARLIS and supported a global community of mail artists.
box 164, folder 4-5
Holy Fools Week
Scope and Content
Correspondence, notes, address list, and Los Angeles County Registrar Fictitious
Business Name Statements.
Biography/History
A failed attempt at creating a week-long Beat happening in Wichita, Kansas,
1999-2000. Griffin partnered with San Francisco poet and performance artist James
Stauffer after the two met on the BEAT-L listserv in the mid 1990s, which was
created by Bill Gargan out of SUNY New York. Holy Fools Week was centered around
Charles Plymell, one of the major voices on the Beat-L and one of the Vortex Beats,
which included Bob Branaman, Bruce Conner, Stan Brakhage and Dave Haselwood. Griffin
and Stauffer worked on the project daily for a year and published two issues of
The Fool, a magazine created to promote and reflect
the event, but ultimately they could not raise the capital to fund the event.
box 164, folder 6-7
Homeless Writers Coalition
1990, 1994, 2000, 2001
Scope and Content
Poetry
, clippings, event flyers, Homeless Writers Forum publication, articles, and
a copy of
The Word issue #1.
Biography/History
This coalition was established in the 1990s as a creative collective of Los Angeles
homeless poets, writers and filmmakers to address the homeless in America by
promoting the creative community among the homeless. Griffin was brought onto the
board by poet Robert Chambers.
box 164, folder 8
Howard, Justice
undated
Scope and Content
A handwritten poem by Howard; a flyer for an exhibition of her photography; and a
copy of Outlaw, a profile on Howard by John Gilmore.
Biography/History
Justice Howard is a poet, writer and photographer. Howard and Griffin co-authored
Without Skin (1989), a rare chapbook that includes
photos and
poetry
with a cover by Justice Howard.
box 164, folder 9
Iguana Cafe
1989, 1993
Scope and Content
Event calendars.
Biography/History
The Iguana Café was a major gathering place in North Hollywood for musicians, poets
and the off-beat from the late 1980s until its closing in 1995. It was owned and
operated by Tom Ianello at 10943 Camarillo Street where The Carma Bums began their
1990 No Seat Belts Tour of Words. Regular performers included Tracy Theilen, Dan
Bern, and Matthew Mars. Poets that met and performed there regularly included Erica
Erdman, Amelie Frank, Carlye Archibeque, Allen J. Freedman (one of the Water
Espresso Gallery regulars), and Uncle Don Fanning.
box 164, folder 10
Kaufman, Bob
Scope and Content
One color "Bagel Shop Jazz" calendar page.
Biography/History
Bob Kaufman is a legendary San Francisco Beat poet. Kaufman was friends with San
Francisco poets Jack Micheline and A.D. Winans and influenced their work.
box 164, folder 11
Kenney, Shawna
2000
Scope and Content
Clippings and a press release for
I Was A Teenage
Dominatrix
.
Biography/History
Shawna Kenney is a writer, journalist, and author of
I Was A
Teenage Dominatrix
. A friend of Griffin's, he officiated her marriage to
Rich Dollinger in Malibu, close to where the last scene from the original
Planet of The Apes was shot. Kenney is a vegan activist
presently writing for
Vice.
box 164, folder 12
Kerouac, Jack
Scope and Content
Excerpts from
On The Road scroll typescript, flyer,
postcard, program, and article about the original manuscript.
Biography/History
Jack Kerouac is a legendary Beat writer and poet who influenced Griffin's writing
and thinking. Griffin considers
On The Road one of
the most important books he has read.
box 164, folder 13
Kerouac, Jan
1989, undated
Scope and Content
Obituary clippings; obituary memo by Doug Knott; and photocopies of her
correspondence, photos and recipes.
Biography/History
Jack Kerouac's daughter and only child, Jan Kerouac was a writer who authored
Trainsong,
Baby
Driver
, and
Parrot Fever. Griffin was
supposed to be on a panel with her at the Bancroft Library in 1995, but she was too
ill to attend and died soon after in 1996.
box 164, folder 14
Kesey, Ken
2006
Scope and Content
Clipping concerning the restoration of Kesey's 1939 International bus dubbed
Further.
Biography/History
Ken Kesey was a writer, performance artist, and progenitor of the Merry Pranksters
who influenced Griffin as a writer, thinker, and performance artist.
box 164, folder 15-18
Knott, Doug
Scope and Content
Clippings;
poetry
articles; color photographs of Griffin and Perrotta; bios for The
Carma Bums; and writings by Knott, Mike M. Mollett, and The Carma Bums.
Biography/History
Doug Knott is Griffin's friend and performance partner who was born and raised in
Florida and relocated to San Francisco and Marin before permanently moving to Los
Angeles in the early 1980s. Knott is a lawyer, poet, writer, performance artist, and
actor who performed with the following: The Lost Tribe, Wounded Theatre, Dead Beats,
The Carma Bums, and Lost Bums. Griffin met Knott at The Water Espresso Gallery in
the early 1980s. Knott created a long running series of punk variety shows for The
Lhasa Club in the 1980s, and in the 1990s he co-founded the Famous-Knott Salon with
Cheri Famous.
box 164, folder 19
Krech, Richard
Scope and Content
Poetry
by Krech and a "My Other Vehicle Is The Mahayana" bumper sticker.
Biography/History
Richard Krech of Berkeley, California is a criminal defense lawyer, poet, and
activist. Griffin published and edited
3 by Richard
Krech (Rose of Sharon, 2008), a folded broadside.
box 164, folder 20-22
The L.A. Mudpeople
Scope and Content
Photographs, flyers, and clippings.
Biography/History
This performance group founded by Mike M. Mollett in 1988.Originally called The
Mudmen, they later changed their name to The L.A. Mudmen, and today they exist as
The L.A. Mudpeople. These urban nomads describe themselves as "primal, curious and
innocent but not stupid. Non-verbal and often silent. Slow-moving and deliberate,
discovering wonderful moments in the places most people by-pass, overlook or step
thru [sic]. Mudpeople are liberated without the concept of time, hurry and stress.
Mudpeople live in contrast to a frenetic world." Over the years, the group's
membership has included aerobics instructors, artists, actors, publishers,
gardeners, teachers, access cable hosts, George and Peggy DiCaprio, and Griffin's
wife, librarian Lorraine Perrotta, who has been a member of the Mudpeople for over
20 years.
box 164, folder 23
Lennon, John
Scope and Content
A copy of "A Love Letter From John and Yoko To People Who Ask Us What, When, And
Why" and a transcript of a three-hour interview conducted with John and Yoko Ono
Lennon at the request of the RKO Radio Network.
Biography/History
Griffin considers John Lennon a working class hero.
box 164, folder 24, box 168, folder 2
levy, d.a.
Scope and Content
Box 164: Rabbits Over Clevyland coasters printed by Bill Roberts of Bottle of Smoke
Press, rabbit drawing by Tom Kryss, "a belated touche for d.a. levy" by Kent Taylor,
photocopy of The Buddhist Third Class Junkmail Oracle, and d.a. levy birthday bash
flyer.
Box 168: Two copies of
Speaking for the dumb which
includes poems by levy and a piece by Griffin on publishing via his small press
imprint, Rose of Sharon Press.
Biography/History
Mimeo revolutionary d.a. levy from Cleveland, Ohio influenced Griffin's thinking,
publishing, and writing. With Bree Bodnar of Cleveland, Griffin co-produced Rabbits
Over Clevyland in 2006 as tribute to not only levy, but levy's mimeo revolution
cohort and friend, poet and artist Tom Kryss. Griffin produced an on the spot mimeo
book collectively written by the poet attendees of the event in the basement of
Mac's Backs Books in Cleveland using publisher Bill Roberts's mimeo machine. The
cover features an original silk-screened rabbit created by Tom Kryss for the books
and the images were screened in Jake and Cindy Marx's front room in Cleveland. The
rabbit is Kryss's signature image, a symbol of "rabbits everywhere" reflecting
levy's ethic to "cover the city (of Cleveland) with lines (of
poetry
)" in service of
this cultural revolution.
box 164, folder 25
The Lhasa Club
1987
Scope and Content
An article on the closure of the Lhasa Club
Biography/History
The Lhasa Club (1982-1988) was a Hollywood punk / performance venue owned and
operated by Jean-Pierre Boccara and his partner Anna Mariani. Griffin produced a
number of events there and was a regular reader and performer at the club which was
connected to The Water Espresso Gallery via a common hallway. Griffin considers The
Water and The Lhasa as a home for The Lost Tribe.
box 164, folder 26
Locklin, Gerald
undated, 1998-2002, 2009
Scope and Content
Black and white photographs of Locklin, correspondence, and poems.
Biography/History
Gerald Locklin is a poet, writer, and a former Long Beach State professor who
served as the
poetry
editor for
Chiron Review since
1989.
box 164, folder 27
Long, Philomene
Scope and Content
Poetry
reading flyers, memorial cards, Beyond Baroque Memorial Tribute program,
holiday cards from Long and John Thomas, photographs of Long and Thomas, "Smaller
Than A Breadbox" by Thomas,
poetry
by Long and a copy of the
Beachhead with headline, "Venice Loses Its Poet Laureate -- Philomene
Long, RIP."
Biography/History
Philomene Long was a Venice West poet and filmmaker; Poet Laureate of Venice,
California; The Queen of Bohemia; Stuart Z. Perkoff's last lover; and John Thomas's
wife and widow. Griffin describes his friend as an escapee from the nunnery, who
lived her life dedicated to the poem.
box 165, folder 1-4
Micheline, Jack
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
One CD.
Audiovisual materials in this collection will require assessment and possible
digitization for safe access. To review these audiovisual materials you must notify
the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Content
Poems, drawings, paintings, photographs, watercolors, performance flyers,
clippings,
Jack Micheline in Amsterdam CD, J
ack Micheline: Poet Of The People typescript by A.D.
Winans, and This Cat Eats Everything postcards.
Biography/History
Jack Micheline was a poet and artist who was part of the San Francisco Beat
Renaissance. His first book,
River of Red Wine
(1958), contains a forward written by Jack Kerouac. Griffin met Micheline through
his association with The Moment and ended up producing some of his last shows in Los
Angeles.
The Outlaw Bible of American
Poetry
happened
because of Micheline's passing. A Beat poet and street poet, Micheline is also
considered an "outlaw" poet. Micheline was a friend of A.D. Winans and Bob Kaufman.
After Micheline's death, Winans worked with the city of San Francisco to name a
street after Micheline.
Give America A Break: A Tribute To
Jack Micheline
, a two LP set produced by San Francisco's Unrequited
Records (2014) includes a track by Griffin.
box 165, folder 5
Mollett, Mike M.
Scope and Content
Michael Mollett matchbook, The Wedding Ceremony of Dee Balson and Michael Mollett
program, ZTZU flyer, poems and S.A. Griffin's Nuthing Sacred interview with Mollett
and Lorraine Perrotta of the L.A. Mudpeople, and "After the Break In" by Mollett and
Michael Bruner.
Biography/History
Mollett is a poet, mail artist, Dadaist, performance artist, and Griffin's friend
and performance partner. Founder of The L.A. Mudpeople, Mike M. Mollett was a member
of The Lost Tribe, The Carma Bums and The Lost Bums. Mollett brought Griffin into
the worlds of Dada, Fluxism and mail art, which influenced Griffin's views of art
and the creative process. Griffin met Mollett at The Water Espresso Gallery
Wednesday night open readings. In 1980 Mollett established ZtZu with artist Neal
Taylor.
box 165, folder 6
Moore, Shanna
Scope and Content
Poems by Moore and a letter from Tony Scibella.
Biography/History
Shanna Baldwin-Moore is a Venice Beat poet and a collagist, one of the original
Venice Beats. A Washington state native, in 1956 after graduating high school she
migrated to Southern California where she lived and attended Pasadena City College.
Eventually Baldwin-Moore moved to Venice where she met Venice West poet James Ryan
Morris at the Carousel, a gay bar on the Venice Boardwalk where Jimmy scored drugs.
In 1961 Baldwin-Moore relocated to Seattle with Morris, where she gave birth to
their daughter Danette (Leos) Costello. According to Baldwin-Moore, Morris began
public drug debates with Timothy Leary in Seattle. The debates ultimately took
Morris to Denver around 1965 where he met Diana, whom he married. Soon after Morris
settled in Denver, many of the Venice West poets followed him there, where the
Venice West Beat scene continued to flourish. Morris died in Denver in 1978. In
1970, Baldwin-Moore moved to Hawaii, where, as of 2016, she still writes.
box 165, folder 7
Moore, Todd
Biography/History
Todd Moore was a Southwestern poet and writer originally from Illinois. Moore
dedicated much of his poetic life to writing his John Dillinger opus. During an
interview with Griffin for an Onword podcast, Moore claimed that his Dillinger opus
was about three-quarters of a million words. Moore has his own section in the
Outlaw Bible of American
Poetry
edited by Griffin. A few
years after the publication of the Outlaw Bible in 2004, Moore and fellow New Mexico
poet Tony Moffeit established what they called the "outlaw" school of poetics. In
the aforementioned podcast interview Moore stated that the
Outlaw Bible
influenced the establishment of outlaw poetics. Moore was a
cornerstone and regular contributor to The Outlaw
Poetry
Network (France) online.
Moore was a friend who, according to Griffin, had one of the biggest and most
important Bowie knife collections in the world.
Scope and Content
Correspondence, poems, flyer for a reading with Griffin in Santa Fe, and the cover
for Moore's Dillinger's Thompson.
box 165, folder 8
Morris, James Ryan
Scope and Content
Memorial reading flyer for JRM at the Temple of Man, black and white photograph of
Jimmy, and clippings concerning his funeral.
Biography/History
James Ryan Morris (aka Jimmy, JRM, Jimbo) was a Beat poet who joined Tony Scibella
and others in the 1960s as part of the Venice West Writers Group in California. In
1967, soon after Morris settled in Denver, many of the Venice West poets followed
him there, where the Venice West Beat scene continued to thrive. While in Denver,
Morris wrote and performed
poetry
, dabbled in publishing and put out The Mile High
Underground, an alternative newspaper. When Morris died in Denver in 1978, his
funeral was held at Dory Hill Cemetery near Black Hawk where Scibella and Frank T.
Rios presided at the free-form ceremony. According to the Denver Post, friends of
Morris and mourners at the ceremony said that in spite of the apparent causes, "what
killed Morris was society's declination to support writers and artists."
box 165, folder 9
Morrison, Barbara
Scope and Content
Memorial programs, a copy of Griffin's "There Was A Tree" poem for Barbara
Morrison, and a color copy of a photograph of Morrison.
Biography/History
Barbara Morrison was a friend of Griffin's and a supporter of the performance scene
and the arts in Los Angeles. Morrison, a former flight attendant who collected art
and people, lived off Sunset Boulevard at the entrance to the Mt. Olympus
neighborhood. Morrison was briefly married to performance artist and actor Bill
Morrison and she was a friend of Victoria Looseleaf and John Fleck.
box 165, folder 10
Morrison, Jim
Scope and Content
A highlighted photocopy of Morrison's An American Prayer.
Biography/History
Around 1981, Griffin spent a year of his life running with cast of
Morrison: The Rock Opera as the Rock 'n Roll DJ/Host, a
show directed and produced by Alan Graham. Graham was married to Jim Morrison's
sister Anne at the time. Dave Brock, the show's lead Morrison, still tours and
performs as Jim Morrison. The show brought Griffin into the world of Jim Morrison
and the Doors and provided him with a world-class education. The cast appeared in a
promo on an early segment of MTV backing Jamie Seagal (Janis Joplin) singing Ball
& Chain.
Morrison: The Rock Opera opened and ran
for about a week at Gazzari's on The Sunset Strip. During that year Griffin spent
much time with Jimy Graham who portrayed Jimi Hendrix in the show. After the show
broke up, Jimy became a member of The Babylon Warriors.
box 165, folder 11
Murphy, Merilene M.
Scope and Content
One memorial program for Murphy.
Biography/History
Merilene M. Murphy was a Los Angeles poet and friend of Griffin's who died from
brain cancer. Murphy supported poets and
poetry
and created Telepoetics in the early
1990s which she broadcast / linked from her house on Wilton Avenue, just south of
Franklin Avenue in Hollywood.
box 165, folder 12-17
The Onyx Cafe
Biography/History
The Onyx Cafe (Next Door to Vista Theatre), 4471 Sunset Drive, 1982-1988
The Onyx Cafe/Sequel, 1802-1804 N. Vermont Ave., 1989-1998
The Onyx Echo, 1866 Glendale Blvd., 1992-1994
The Onyx Cafe was open close to 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The Onyx was owned
and operated by John Leech who first opened it with his partner, Fumiko Robinson.
Griffin curated a number of
poetry
series at the Onyx Sequel including Angina and
Slow Train and debuted his video/performance
Act of
Kindness
there. Griffin produced and staged Open Ended It performances,
which included Jack Kerouac's Birthday Party, at the Echo. Beck was an Onyx regular
and used to open for some of the
poetry
shows. Owner John Leech said that his goal
with the Onyx was to create a venue to promote art and artists, as well as create a
meeting space. The following were some of the artist regulars: Gronk, Anthony
Ausgang, Van Arno, Louis Metz, Barry Markowitz, Stacey Lande, Andy Takakjian, Steve
LaPonsie, Manuel A Campo and Lucas Reiner. Additionally, poet Steve Abee, musician
Michael Whitmore, performance artist Mo Figuls, and artist Stacy Lande were a few
who worked there over the years. Michael Whitmore and Michael Carpenter assisted
Leech with the cafe's daily operations. Leech was a friend and surrogate father to
many who called the Onyx home. At Thanksgiving and Christmas, Leech would close the
doors and open to the regulars, providing a free feast for all. There were also many
backyard BBQs behind The Onyx on Vermont. The Onyx closed in 1998. Griffin attempted
to produce an Onyx reunion a number of times, but Leech refused to allow it.
Finally, in 2008, Leech agreed to allow Griffin to produce a ten-year anniversary
gathering on October 11, 2008 at the Tribal Cafe in Echo Park, owned and operated by
Joshua Jose, a former regular at The Onyx. When Leech passed away in March 2009, his
memorial was held at the Tribal Cafe.
Scope and Content
Flyers, photographs, posters, articles, postcards, John Leech memorial programs,
Mark Edward Gash memorial folder, artwork, some onyx names/events list, and
poetry
.
box 166, folder 1
Outlaw Bible
1997-1999
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Three 3.5 inch floppy disks.
Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access
digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit.
Scope and Content
Correspondence, royalty statements, lists of contributors, publication reading
flyers, erratum notes, introduction typescript, and floppy disks of submissions.
Biography/History
Griffin co-edited this book with Alan Kaufman. This book happened as a result of
Griffin's relationship with San Francisco Beat poet Jack Micheline. When Micheline
passed away, Griffin eulogized him in his Onword column for
Damaged Goods, a Los Angeles based underground / small press lit-
poetry
serial edited and published by Tracy Lee Williams. The piece was picked up and
published online at BookZen.com, where another friend of Micheline's, Alan Kaufman,
read it and then began an email correspondence with Griffin. During the course of
their correspondence Griffin said that he had always wanted to create an "anthology
of California poets like Jack who never got their due in life." Alan responded, "Me
too," and they were on. Kaufman had a connection with a literary agent who pitched
the project which was then picked up by Neil Ortenberg at Thunders Mouth Press in
New York. Ortenberg's only caveat was that the project had to be an anthology
covering the national scene with six weeks to create it from start to finish. The
book ended up taking over a year to execute online via email and telephone with
Griffin in Los Angeles, Kaufman in San Francisco, and Ortenberg in New York.
box 166, folder 2
Out Loud
1992-1993
Scope and Content
Three copies of this free monthly Los Angeles
poetry
calendar and an Out Loud Town
Meeting Agenda with the objective to reach a consensus on the appropriate community
response to the discontinuance of the calendar.
Biography/History
A
poetry
newsletter published and edited by Carrie Etter with listings covering
poetry
venues and events in Southern California.
box 166, folder 3
Perkoff, Stuart Z.
Scope and Content
Cover for How It Is, Doing What I Do, photograph of James Ryan Morris and Tony
Scibella, "we carry our crises within our heads" Croupier Press
Poetry
Card Series
#6, Only Just Above The Ground dedication card to Tony Scibella, Frank Rice, and
James Ryan Morris, clipping with photograph of an 18-year-old Perkoff leaving
Manhattan Selective Service headquarters with deputy marshals, and Tony Scibella's
invitation from Frank T. Rios to a 20th anniversary memorial reading for Perkoff at
Beyond Baroque.
Biography/History
Stuart Z. Perkoff is a Venice West poet. Perkoff, Tony Scibella, and Frank T. Rios
referred to the brotherhood they developed as "The Holy Three" and "The Secret Six."
Many consider Perkoff a spiritual, poetic center of Venice West.
box 166, folder 4-5
Pettibon, Raymond
1999-2000, undated
Scope and Content
Readings from Scripts by Raymond Pettibon event materials include biographies of
readers and copies of scripts, Santa Monica Museum of Art promotional mailer for
this reading, and a Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles Raymond Pettibon
exhibition program.
Biography/History
Raymond Pettibon is an artist whose work is associated with with punk rock in Los
Angeles.
box 166, folder 6
Pipeline Theater
Scope and Content
Correspondence from the Internal Revenue Service, Pipeline, Inc. History and
Narrative, list of grants received, Scott Kelman biography, and clippings.
Biography/History
Pipeline Theatre is where Griffin saw Susan Block (now sexologist Dr. Susan Block),
Wanda Coleman, and Bob Flanagan perform together. According to Griffin, this was a
seminal experience for him where Coleman and Flanagan's performance revolutionized
his thinking and showed him what was possible with the performance of
poetry
. Owned
and operated by Scott Kelman, The Pipeline would later move and reestablish itself
as the Wallenboyd at the corner of Wall & Boyd streets in downtown Los Angeles.
Kelman wrote, directed and produced performance and theatre, and also taught
performance there. Kelman taught and directed John Fleck, Kedric Robin Wolfe, The
Lost Tribe, and Deborah Oliver. Mike Bruner worked directly with Kelman as his
assistant director before Bruner moved to Louisiana for academic pursuits. Through
Griffin's performance study with Scott Kelman, he received the mantra of process:
deliberation and empathy.
box 166, folder 7
Plymell, Charles
Scope and Content
Signed photographs of Plymell, promotional post cards, poems, and clippings.
Biography/History
Charles Plymell is a Vortex Beat poet, writer, and collagist from Wichita, Kansas
considered part of the last wave of original Beats to be a part of the San Francisco
renaissance. Plymell once roomed with Neal Cassady on Gough Street in San Francisco.
Plymell is the author of
Last of The Moccasins,
Trash Kultur In America, and
Apocalypse Rose. Friends with Mike Watt, Thurston Moore and Grant Hart,
Plymell lives with his wife Pamela in Cherry Valley.
box 166, folder 8
Pop Defect
Scope and Content
Full color "Not Just Another Grrrl Group" promotional poster and a copy of Weird!,
the band's tour zine.
Scope and Content
This Indie surf punk band trio formed in Seattle, Washington in 1980 and
reestablished themselves in Los Angeles. The band was central to the Nadeau scene
during the 1990s and are the subject of the documentary
Live
With This
. They disbanded after a final gig in Seattle in November
2001.
box 166, folder 9
Punk Hostage Press
Scope and Content
Promotional book mark, Iris Berry sticker, A. Razor sticker, "Publishing ransom
notes until the punk gets it..." post cards, and a flyer for the release of Berry's
spoken word CD, "Collect Calls."
Biography/History
Punk Hostage Press was established by Iris Berry and A. Razor and is now owned and
operated solely by Berry. Punk Hostage published Griffin's
Dreams Gone Mad With Hope in March 2014. Punk Hostage has published many
authors from Los Angeles and San Francisco including Pleasant Gehman, Jack Grisham,
Rich Ferguson, Dennis Cruz, Hannah Wehr, Joel Landmine, Susan Hayden, A.D. Winans,
Danny Baker, Lee Quarnstrom, and Yvonne de la Vega.
box 166, folder 10
Rios, Frank T.
1974
Scope and Content
"The Mask" Croupier Press
Poetry
Card Series No. 2 signed by Rios.
Biography/History
Frank T. Rios is a Venice West Beat poet and collagist. Originally from the Bronx,
Rios was on the run when he hitchhiked to Venice in 1954 and stayed with a few
friends. He returned to New York, did some time, got involved in the
poetry
scene in
the Village, and then returned to Venice in 1959 where he formed a poetic alliance
and lifelong friendship with Stuart Z. Perkoff and Tony Scibella (The Holy Three,
The Secret Six). Rios lives with his wife Joyce Castagnola in Los Angeles.
box 166, folder 11
Rodriguez, Luis J.
2013-2014
Biography/History
Luis J. Rodriguez is a poet, writer, activist, Green Party candidate for California
Governor (2014), founder of Tia Chucha Press (1988), co-founder of Tia Chucha Centro
Cultural (2003), and second Los Angeles Poet Laureate (2014).
Scope and Content
Clippings and Luis J. Rodriguez For Governor campaign brochures.
box 166, folder 12
Rose of Sharon Press
1989
Scope and Content
Invoices for Scott Wannberg's The Electric Yes Indeed, S.A. Griffin's A One Legged
Man Standing Casually On Hollywood Boulevard Smoking A Cigarette, and Bobbo Staron's
My Name Is Trouble record.
Biography/History
Griffin's small press imprint was established with the publication of
Sharktalk by Doug Knott (1988). In 1989 Rose of Sharon
produced
My Name Is Trouble by Bobbo Staron, his only
foray into the recording world. Recent publications as of 2016 include
Call by francEyE (2009),
An
Interview With Ted Berrigan
by John Dorsey (2012), and
Natural Geographics by Michael Lane Bruner (2014). The
name Rose of Sharon is taken from the Song of Solomon from the Bible; the end of
The Grapes of Wrath where Rosasharn feeds the
starving stranger with "the milk of human kindness," breast milk meant for her
stillborn child; and Griffin's son Spencer, whose mother's name is Sharon.