Lingua: Inglese
Editore: One Magazine, Los, 1957
Da: Works on Paper, DeKalb, IL, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Stappled Wrappers. Condizione: Near Fine. Eve Elloree [ Cover ] (illustratore). 1st Edition. A near fine copy of this issue. The text is wholly unmarked, pristine, and the binding is bright and fresh in appearance, with no rust at the two saddle staples. Slight abrasion to front cover spine seam at the crown. 31 pp. Contents include: "editorial" by Ann Reid; poems by Kirby, Phoenice . through Hard; "Some Historical Incidents" by Starr; "Tangents: News & Views" by MacIntire; "The Echo of a Voice: A Story" by Umo; "Mattachine Society Convention, " by Russell; "Letters to the Editor.".
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: One Magazine, Los Angeles, 1954
Da: Works on Paper, DeKalb, IL, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Stappled Wrappers. Condizione: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A very good copy of this issue. The text is wholly unmarked, pristine, and the binding is bright and fresh in appearance, with no rust at the two saddle staples. 31 pp. Contents include: "Miami Hurricane" by Lynn Pedersen; "Research Council Progress Report;" "Fete," a poem by Clifford Alexander; "A Gentleman's Pleasure" by James Barr; "The Snare," a story by Jody Shotwell; "From Here to Eternity Hurts Homosexuals" by Gilbert Williams; "The Length of a Match," a poem by Alden Kirby; "The Homosexual" by D. Mauroc; "Lenny's Hideaway" by Jane Arriety; "Letters.".
Editore: ONE, Inc, Los Angeles, 1972
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 16p. including covers, 8.75x11 inches, essays, articles, reports, fiction, poetry, illustrations & photos, very good magazine in stapled glossy pictorial wraps. The groundbreaking homophile digest magazine grows up. This is the first issue in the larger format. The twentieth anniversary of the organization.
Wraps. Condizione: Near Fine. Cover photo courtesy of the Alger Gallery, Los Angeles (illustratore). 5-1/2 x 8-1/2" stapled photo-illustrated wraps printed in black and white, [32] pages plus a bifolio order form on green cardstock stapled in between pp. 16-17. Very slightly age-toned, a trifle rubbed, else fine. The first U.S. pro-gay publication, issued by ONE, Inc., an early gay-rights organization (itself an offshoot of the Mattachine Society), notable for admitting women as well as men into its ranks. The cover story for this issue (teased as "homo beatniks" on the cover itself) was "The Homosexual and the Beat Generation" by Wallace de Ortega Maxey.
Editore: One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1960
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Readers on Writers. Poems. Some of My Best Friends Are Jews by Jay Wallace. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Editore: One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, ink date on cover else very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Fall fund-drive letter laid-in. Cover story "Poems of Other Love" with photo of Alden Kirby, Umo's "The Echo of a Voice". Special focus on gay and lesbian poetry. Also a report on The Mattachine Society Convention. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Editore: One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1958
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Cover story: "Homosexuals Without Masks" by Alice Horvath. Also an essay on Dr. Mary Walker who lived as a man during the Civil War. ONE, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Editore: One, Inc, Los Angeles, 1957
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 32p., including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Cover story "Poems of Other Love" with photo of Alden Kirby, Umo's "The Echo of a Voice". Special focus on gay and lesbian poetry. Also a report on The Mattachine Society Convention. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Editore: One Inc, Los Angeles, 1959
Da: Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
Magazine. 32p. including covers, 5.5x8.5 inches, very good digest-size magazine in stapled pictorial wraps. Beach Party Annette! Also: Cynosure by Epsilon. A Place to Park by Elloree. One, Inc., which took its name from Thomas Carlyle's statement that "A mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one," was founded in LA in 1952 as a homophile organization with connections to the Mattachine Society. As the first pro-gay journal of its kind, it serves as an important source for pre-Stonewall homophile studies. In 1954 the US Post Office declared it obscene, leading to a four-year legal battle (chronicled in its pages) that concluded with a favorable decision as part of Roth vs. United States. Aside from its articles covering topics ranging from the Beatniks and Gay marriage to homosexuality and national security, One Magazine also featured poetry and short fiction by numerous prominent authors.
Editore: New York: Crank Books / Interim Books, 1964
Da: Philip Smith, Bookseller, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st edition. VG+. 8vo, ~80pp (mimeographed), stapled wrappers. Number 73 of 250 numbered copies of this mimeographed underground literary magazine (originally intended as a one-shot, but which was continued as a series). Unmarked copy, light wear and typical toning of mimeo stock, binding glue staining to inside covers. Not Signed.