Difference between revisions of "Westside Angst"

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'''Westside Angst''' (2001-) is a zine by Adelaide, South Australia based [[zinester]] and writer [[Ianto Ware]], featuring personal writing, illustrations and hand-crafted covers.  
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'''Westside Angst''' (2001-) is a zine by Adelaide, South Australia based [[zinester]] and writer [[Ianto Ware]], featuring personal writing, illustrations and hand-crafted covers. '''Westside Angst''' has been said to be identifiable by distinct phases; comical, personal, 'pseudo academic', and romantic.  
  
Issue 10, which came with a collectable wooden spoon, took an average of seven minutes per copy to assemble.  The longest issue, No. 7, clocked in at 23,121 words - longer than the honours thesis the author had, at that point, only just finished writing. '''Westside Angst''' has been said to be identifiable by distinct phases; comical, personal, 'pseudo academic', and romantic.  
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Ianto Ware also produces the zines [[The little nerd band that could]] and [[Das Papierkreig]].
  
Ianto Ware also produces the zines [[The little nerd band that could]] and [[Das Papierkreig]].
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==Issues==
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*Issue 7, the longest issue to date, clocked in at 23,121 words - longer than the honours thesis the author had, at that point, only just finished writing.
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*Issue 10 (July 2005) 'The quarter-life crisis issues', came with a collectable wooden spoon, and 'took an average of seven minutes per copy to assemble'.
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 05:44, 16 February 2009

Westside Angst (2001-) is a zine by Adelaide, South Australia based zinester and writer Ianto Ware, featuring personal writing, illustrations and hand-crafted covers. Westside Angst has been said to be identifiable by distinct phases; comical, personal, 'pseudo academic', and romantic.

Ianto Ware also produces the zines The little nerd band that could and Das Papierkreig.

Issues

  • Issue 7, the longest issue to date, clocked in at 23,121 words - longer than the honours thesis the author had, at that point, only just finished writing.
  • Issue 10 (July 2005) 'The quarter-life crisis issues', came with a collectable wooden spoon, and 'took an average of seven minutes per copy to assemble'.

External Links