Wraps. Condizione: Fine. Cover by Brooke Whitney (illustratore). 5-1/2 x 8-1/2" stapled wraps printed in bright turquoise and black, [32] pages. Clean and bright, without flaw. Don Slater's solo project, following his break with ONE, Inc., and the magazine of the same name. The breakup was not exactly amicable: The masthead states, "TANGENTS Magazine is published monthly by the majority of legally elected voting members of ONE." Ouch!
Editore: The Tangents Group, Hollywood, 1966
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, story, articles, reviews, very good digest magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Protest On Wheels. Seashells. Safe Bet. The Jeremiah Daisy Chain Letters. Haitian Carnival. Slater's and Billy Glover's new project after the acrimonious split from One Magazine (itself a spin-off from Mattachine Society Review) which ran monthly and/or bimonthly from 1965 to 1970. Co-founded by mystery writer Joseph Hansen. Tangents had been a column in One Magazine and when the split happened Slater attempted to cull the subscriber list by sending fliers with the change of address pointing to his new offices. This fifth issue includes part three of Colton's [Hansen's] story "Snowfall" and a five page essay on gay humor by Hansen under his own name.
Editore: The Tangents Group, Hollywood, 1966
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, story, articles, reviews, very good digest magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Memorandum on the seizure of the magazine "Vennen" by the lawyers for Tangents. Slater's and Billy Glover's new project after the acrimonious split from One Magazine (itself a spin-off from Mattachine Society Review) which ran monthly and/or bimonthly from 1965 to 1970. Co-founded by mystery writer Joseph Hansen. Tangents had been a column in One Magazine and when the split happened Slater attempted to cull the subscriber list by sending fliers with the change of address pointing to his new offices.