Perfect Mix Tape Segue: A month on the road with $100 and a t-shirt

Pamphlet

Main Details

Title Perfect Mix Tape Segue: A month on the road with $100 and a t-shirt
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Joe Biel
Physical Properties
Format:Pamphlet
Pages:40
Dimensions(mm): Height 137,Width 102
Category/GenreTravel writing
ISBN/Barcode 9781934620625
Audience
General
Edition Issue of Ongoing Zine; Each Is ed.

Publishing Details

Publisher Microcosm Publishing
Imprint Microcosm Publishing
Publication Date 27 October 2009
Publication Country United States

Description

Three years after the fact, Joe busts out a zine tour based zine about Cocoon: The Road Trip from 2004. A collection of hand drawn maps, photos by Dave Roche, and traveling anecdotes from the road, the zine presents a pretty strong case for the idea that zine making and zine tours really are not that hard to put together and can be kind of cool sometimes. Look at all of the great, zany experiences that you, yourself could experience on the road! More than that it's a look at friendship and the motivators and hard times that one experiences by pushing yourself into more trying and difficult situations.

Author Biography

Joe Biel is the founder of Microcosm Publishing and creator of the documentary about the DIY music scene,If It Ain't Cheap, It Ain't Punk. He is the coauthor of 13 Years of Good Luck and the author ofBipedal, By Pedal!; all volumes of the The CIA Makes Science Fiction Unexciting series and The Perfect Mix Tape Segue series; andYou Can Work Any Hundred Hours a Week You Want (In Your Underwear)!! He lives in Portland, Oregon.

Reviews

"I commend this writer for sharing such a personal and underlying political story. --"Profane Existence" #47 "Offering thoughtful writing on a more obviously male health topic, Biel, the founder of Microcosm Publishing, devotes an issue of his personal zine to his vasectomy. He explains how he chose sterilization after seeing a number of his friends from his Ohio town (many of whom grew up in abusive homes) accidentally conceive children. He decided he never wanted to be in that position and could live without having biological children. He had the surgery when he was 25 and married. Biel also reports on the procedure and his recovery." --"Library Journal" "You have to admire the length to which Joe will go to back up his life choices. Highly recommended for anyone interested in babylessness. --"Best Zine Ever" #3 "Biel's writing is clear and specific. By giving us more than rhetoric and detailing his own experience, he personalizes the issue, making for engaging reading. He moves easily from the personal to the political and makes the connections fluidly, without preaching or talking down to his audience. The layout here is simple cut-and-paste, the text interspersed with images of cycling and assorted sundries. This is a quality personal zine carried by the strength of the writing and of particular interest to those interested in discussion of child-free issues. --"Lunar Circuitry" "Joe Biel runs Microcosm Publishing, and he says here that he thought, a few years ago, that he was done writing zines of his own. He felt content at the time to let other people articulate his feelings for him. But as he discovered -- and as I myself once discovered -- zining isn't something that you can necessarily choose to give up. To paraphrase a line from his wife's zine: 'If you're still into punk at twenty-five, then you're in it for life.' Not that authoring a diary zine is all too punk, but you see where I'm headed. In this particular issue of this particular zine (the title of which I adore), Joe writes about getting a vasectomy. What begins with stories of his high school friends' inadvertant pregnancies ends with Joe having his something or other clipped at Planned Parenthood. It's entirely pragmatic how he approaches the decision -- so much that I'm thinking of going under the knife myself. Lets all hope that vasectomies become the new trend in body modification. My only complaint with this zine is that all of the clip art and backgrounds depict people on bicycles. But the only mention in the text of a bike is how Joe had to wait a couple weeks before riding his. I realize that this is probably just because Joe digs bicycles and digs these pictures of them. But given the subject matter, the juxtaposition made me squirm. I'm reminded of a story I saw on Dateline once, about how a bike seat can lead to sterility or impotence. But anyway . . ." --Marc Parker, "Zine Thug"