I highly recommend little magazine collectors getting their hands on contemporary accounts of the landscape. Secret Location is wonderful, but so are the various roundtables and newspaper accounts of the time that attempted to come to turns with the Mimeo Revolution as it was happening.
Take Works: A Quarterly of Writing, which in 1969 included a small press section in its Spring issue. The presses represented included: Open Skull, Something Else, Unicorn Press, Black Sparrow, Ox Head, Angel Hair, New Rivers, TwoWindows. A mix of Mimeo Revolution as defined by Secret Location and the more traditional small press, but not the fine press.
Works is in the small press camp. By and large the editors look down on mimeo as beneath them while at the same time viewing the fine press as too lofty and removed from the general reader. That is the small press in a nutshell. In the middle and wallowing in mediocrity.
Here is Alan Brilliant of Unicorn Press in full wallow:
Another development is lack of taste: thousands of poets and the mimeograph revolution has resulted in a deluge of words, ugly to read and see, literally an onslaught of verbiage. Little magazines, especially the mimeos, have become the television sets of poetry readers. Meanwhile, limited editions, swank designs, elegant printing, signed and numbered colophons have replaced the poem itself. Between the Scylla of dilettantism and the Charybdis of muck, the small press publisher must sail his fragile craft. The future looks black of the unpretentious.
Stuck in the middle with you. I would rather stick wax in my ears than be subjected to Brilliant's elevator music. Pure torture that is for the dogs. But Brilliant is right without knowing it. Mimeo is without a doubt a cool medium. In addition it introduces some much needed noise into the system. I am all for feedback. What is yours?
JB

MIMEO MIMEO #8: CURATORS' CHOICE features 16 bibliophiles on 6 highlights from their personal or institutional collections. Contributors include Steve Clay, Wendy Burk, Tony White, Brian Cassidy, Thurston Moore, J.A. Lee, Michelle Strizever, Adam Davis, Michael Basinski, Joseph Newland, Alastair Johnston, Tate Shaw, Michael Kasper, Steve Woodall, Molly Schwartzberg, Nancy Kuhl, James Maynard, and the Utah posse (Becky Thomas, Marnie Powers-Torrey, Craig Dworkin, Emily Tipps, Luise Poulton, & David Wolske)
MIMEO MIMEO #7: THE LEWIS WARSH ISSUE is the first magazine ever devoted in its entirety to poet, novelist, publisher, teacher, and collage artist Lewis Warsh. Warsh was born in 1944 in the Bronx, co-founded Angel Hair Magazine and Books with Anne Waldman in 1966, and went on to co-found United Artists Magazine and Books with Bernadette Mayer in 1977. He is the author of over thirty books of poetry, fiction and autobiography, the Director of the MFA program in Creative Writing at Long Island University in Brooklyn, and as you’ll soon discover, so much more. Includes an introduction by Daniel Kane, an interview conducted by Steve Clay, 10 new stories, 5 new poems, dozens of photographs and collages, and an anecdotal bibliography.
OUT OF PRINT
MIMEO MIMEO #6: THE POETRY ISSUE is devoted to new work by eight poets who have consistently composed quality writing that has influenced and inspired generations since the golden era of the mimeo revolution. Contributors include Bill Berkson, John Godfrey, Ted Greenwald, Joanne Kyger, Kit Robinson, Rosmarie Waldrop, Lewis Warsh, and Geoffrey Young. Cover art by George Schneeman.
OUT OF PRINT
MIMEO MIMEO #3: THE DANNY SNELSON ISSUE examines the relationship between structuralism and the poetries of the mimeo era by presenting a detailed analysis of Form (a Cambridge-UK magazine published in 1966) and Alcheringa (a journal published by Boston University in 1975), two exemplary gatherings that illuminate the historical, material and social circumstances under which theory informed art (and vice versa) in the early works of some of today's most celebrated experimental writers. Also includes a special insert, The Infernal Method, written, designed and printed by Aaron Cohick (NewLights Press).
OUT OF PRINT
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