Review: Celluloid Lunch #6
Thick as a car manual, band interviews, record reviews, shorter prose and poetry make up the bulk of this Montreal fanzine.
Over 15,000 Zine Reviews & Growing!
Thick as a car manual, band interviews, record reviews, shorter prose and poetry make up the bulk of this Montreal fanzine.
The whimsical storytelling of Casey Harrison’s Borderline transports the reader into a world of pure fantasy that is matched by its gorgeous, ethereal illustrations.
“Sessility” describes a lack of mobility in organisms. The inability to move under their own metabolic processes. In Sessile, our narrator finds themselves unable to move on.
Good Lord My Daughter’s A Goddamn Radical! is fun and sassy, mocking false green promises by corporations, the gender pay gap, and Margaret Thatcher.
Carlos Gonzalez’ sense of humour is consumed by a world of rot and body horror; puerile, but also quite unique.
Henry Hardwicke Carruthers provides a wry, meticulous and absurdist satire of the absurdist scandal plaguing Boris Johnson.
Where the Rent Went Comic Zine, Andrew Neal, meetingcomics.com, $5 A cast of chaotic punks living in the city and […]
Mythic Art zine, Emma Hambly and Niko Dalcin, 48 pgs, We Are Ban/She, wearebanshe.com, $3 This collaboration by artistic duo […]
A Consuming Passion Zine, Jennie Robertson, 28 pgs, etsy.com/shop/SelkiePubZines, $6.66 “My story is messy and imperfect; some of my choices […]
Range Litzine, Katie Borak, 40 pgs, Antiquated Future, antiquatedfuture.com, $8 Erasure poems are a type of found poetry, an […]
Body of Water Chapbook, Alexis Wolf, 84 pgs, Two Plum Press, twoplumpress.com, $10 The loss of public swimming during […]
Not My Small Diary #20: The Power of Music Comic, edited by Delaine Derry Green, 136 pgs, My Small […]