Dave Rothschild – ‘Healing’

Dave Rothschild dedicated Healing to “all the clinicians and doctors out there who have compassion and honest intention to help their patients heal.” It’s a strange book to be dedicated to doctors, sorta, what with the pictures of forests and suburban-looking parks, mostly in the fall and winter, and it’s really a zine mostly concerned …

Romy van der Burgh – ‘Through the Timeless Windows of Havana’

Romy van der Burgh’s Through the Timeless Windows of Havana is/was the first second of Let’s Explore magazine‘s occasional journal series.* The zine combines van der Burgh’s journalistic account of her late 20-teens visit with photographs she made there, and works something like one of those long photo essays from Life magazine or something, without …

11 Café Royal zines…

It was March or April, 2019, and I remembered Café Royal Books, publishers of fine zines from from the British Isles. It may have been something on Twitter, though I only followed the account while working on this review. At the website, I once again found a bewildering array of zines and somehow stumbled into …

Noah Kalina – ‘Tiny Flock’

If you appreciate good photography and dry, sly humor, and you’re not subscribed to Noah Kalina’s superlative newsletter, do yourself a favor. I subscribed awhile ago, probably about a year after it started, and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed every weekly email. It’s also how I came to hear about Tiny Flock (and Bedmounds before it).

Noah Kalina – ‘Bedmounds’

2014 was the tail end of the Obama years, which was a time in our country where there was relative domestic peace and prosperity.I could bunch up a mound of sheets and it was fun and meaningless. Back then we smiled. Back then joy was possible. Kalina, Noah. Newsletter #47: “Bedmounds.” electronic mail, MailChimp. Retrieved from …

Zach Klein, Steven Leckart, Noah Kalina – ‘Cabin Porn’

I don’t recall where I first heard about the ‘Cabin Porn‘ blog. It was probably through a podcast or blog or something, and probably related to Noah Kalina, who came onto my radar back in 2012 sometime, when his “Everyday” project update hit and got a bunch of press.* Back in mid-2019, I think, I …