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 <title>New New York School Books at Division Leap</title>
 <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/categoryrss/New York School" rel="self"/>
 <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com"/>
 <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
 <author>
   <name><![CDATA[Division Leap]]></name>
   <email>orders@divisionleap.com</email>
 </author>
 <id>urn:uuid:60a76c80-d399-11d9-b91C-0003939e0af</id>
 

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Wallace Berman: Photographs. - Berman, Wallace.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/19348"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a1</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to., 151 &#91;1] pp. Bound in pictorial boards; no dust jacket as issued. A fine copy still sealed in the publisher's shrinkwrap.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Berman, Wallace.

        
        <br/>Santa Monica:Rose Gallery,2007.

        <br/>Price: $85.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Present. - Graham, Paul.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18698"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a2</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to, 114 pp., bound in foil embossed full cloth. No Dust jacket as issued. Upper tip of rear board bumped, otherwise a clean, tight, very good copy. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Graham, Paul.

        
        <br/>London:Mack,2012.

        <br/>Price: $100.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Archeology. - Louis, Adrian C.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/19485"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a3</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		5 1/2 x 8 1/2" broadside, printed in two colors. One of 50 copies printed in conjunction with the publication of the book of the same name from Tavern Press. New from the publisher.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Louis, Adrian C.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Tavern Books,2011.

        <br/>Price: $4.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	I Remember Christmas. - Brainard, Joe.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/19501"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a4</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo, &#91;24] pp., saddle-stapled in red card wraps with a dust jacket illustrated by Brainard, along with 5 internal drawings, also by Joe. Fine in a near fine jacket which is rather toned along the spine.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Brainard, Joe.

        
        <br/>New York:Museum of Modern Art,1973.

        <br/>Price: $100.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The 1967 Game Calendar. - Brainard, Joe & Kenward Elmslie.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/19502"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a5</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to, offset printed on rectos only; saddle-stapled wraps. Great collaboration between Brainard and Elmslie in the form of a girlie calendar - each bold and scantily clad woman matched with a four line poem. Some toning and soiling to wraps, with a few small droplet stains; very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Brainard, Joe & Kenward Elmslie.

        
        <br/>Np:1967.

        <br/>Price: $125.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Poetry Project Newsletter No. 81,  March 1981. - McKay, Bill, editor &#91;Bernadette Mayer, Michael Scholnick, Barbara McKay, Bob Rosenthal, Cliff Fyman, Ted Berrigan, .
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15396"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a6</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 6 leaves mimeographed at recto and verso and stapled once at the upper left hand corner.  Single issue of the long-running newsletter, which has been and remains a vital  means of communication for New York poetry and an important chronicle of some of the more ephemeral events at the Poetry Project. This issue features poems by Bernadette Mayer, Michael Scholnick, Barbara McKay, Bob Rosenthal, & Cliff Fyman, as well as a 2 pp. piece by Ted Berrigan entitled "Old Age & Decrepitude," with notes on books he liked that year, Eileen Myles, etc. Also, the usual reviews and notes. 1" droplet stain to rear cover, some toning, but very good.  Clay & Phillips, p. 189.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>McKay, Bill, editor &#91;Bernadette Mayer, Michael Scholnick, Barbara McKay, Bob Rosenthal, Cliff Fyman, Ted Berrigan, .

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1981.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Poetry Project Newsletter #100 October 1983. - &#91;Ted Berrigan, Robert Creeley, Anselm Hollo, Reed Bye, Bernadette Mayer, Mitch Highfill, Kimberly Lyon].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15503"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a7</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 7 pp. Saddle-stapled wraps. Single issue of the long-running newsletter, which has been and remains a vital means of communication for New York poetry and an important chronicle of some of the more ephemeral events at the Poetry Project. Ex libris Jackson Mac Low, with his mailing address at rear. This issue prints a tribute to the recently deceased Ted Berrigan by Anselm Hollo, and the poem "For Ted Berrigan" by Robert Creeley. It a slo prints a tribute to the recently deceased Edwin Denby by Reed Bye, and reviews by Bernadette Mayer, Kimberly Lyons, and Mitch Highfill.  This copy shows some creasing, with a couple of small stains to cover; good only.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>&#91;Ted Berrigan, Robert Creeley, Anselm Hollo, Reed Bye, Bernadette Mayer, Mitch Highfill, Kimberly Lyon].

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1983.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Poetry Project Newsletter No. 83 May 1981. - Masters, Greg, editor &#91;Ted Berrigan, Eileen Myles, Lewis Warsh, Ron Padgett, Bernadette Mayer, James Schuyler, Gary Lenhart, Vincent Katz, Alice Notley, Steve Levine, Bob Rosenthal, Daniel Krakauer, Lorna Smedman, Allan Kornblum, Rochelle Kraut, Paul Viol
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15504"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a8</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 32 pp. Stapled once at the upper left hand corner. Single issue of the long-running newsletter, which has been and remains a vital means of communication for New York poetry and an important chronicle of some of the more ephemeral events at the Poetry Project. This is a large issue more heavily devoted to poetry than other issues, including  poems by Gary Lenhart, Vincent Katz, Alice Notley, Steve Levine, Bernadette Mayer, Bob Rosenthal, Daniel Krakauer, Lorna Smedman, Allan Kornblum, Rochelle Kraut, Paul Violi, Yuki Hartman, Helena Hughes, Ron Padgett, Elio Schneeman, Nellie Villegas, Peter Schjeldahl, Tom Weigel, Carl Solomon, Simon Pettet, John Godfrey, Ed Friedman, Eileen Myles, Rose Lesniak, Lewis Warsh, Michael Scholnick, Susie Timmons, Bob Holman, Jeff Wright, Cliff Fyman, Steve Carey, Ted Berrigan (Shelly" and "Another New Old Song"), & James Schuyler. Some moderate toning and creasing but very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Masters, Greg, editor &#91;Ted Berrigan, Eileen Myles, Lewis Warsh, Ron Padgett, Bernadette Mayer, James Schuyler, Gary Lenhart, Vincent Katz, Alice Notley, Steve Levine, Bob Rosenthal, Daniel Krakauer, Lorna Smedman, Allan Kornblum, Rochelle Kraut, Paul Viol

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1981.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Poetry Project Newsletter No. 86 December 1981. - Masters, Greg, editor &#91;Tim Dlugos, Clark Coolidge, Alice Notley, Johnny Stanton, Michael McClure].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15505"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a9</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. &#91;14] pp. Stapled once at the upper left hand corner. Single issue of the long-running newsletter, which has been and remains a vital means of communication for New York poetry and an important chronicle of some of the more ephemeral events at the Poetry Project. This is a large issue more heavily devoted to poetry than other issues, including  poems by Tim Dlugos, Clark Coolidge, Alice Notley, Johnny Stanton, and Michael McClure. A good only copy with considerable creasing, toning, and some soiling at rear.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Masters, Greg, editor &#91;Tim Dlugos, Clark Coolidge, Alice Notley, Johnny Stanton, Michael McClure].

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1981.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Poetry Project Newsletter No. 102 December 1983. - Warsh, Lewis & Susan Noel, David Borchardt, Lorna Smedman.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15506"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a10</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 7 pp. Saddle-stapled wraps. Single issue of the long-running newsletter, which has been and remains a vital means of communication for New York poetry and an important chronicle of some of the more ephemeral events at the Poetry Project. Ex libris Jackson Mac Low, with his mailing label at rear. This issue prints poems by Lewis Warsh, Susan Noel, and a cartoon strip by David Borchardt & Lorna Smedman. Some noticeable strips of toning but very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Warsh, Lewis & Susan Noel, David Borchardt, Lorna Smedman.

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1983.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Morning Line. - Berrigan, Ted &#91;Tom Clark].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15795"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a11</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Photocopied pages side-stapled in card wraps illustrated by Tom Clark. One of 250 copies of the regular edition of this late, but great, Berrigan title. Some minor toning and creasing to extremities, and some slight indenting around staples from being stacked with other stapled mags; very good. Fischer p. 56.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Berrigan, Ted &#91;Tom Clark].

        
        <br/>Santa Barbara:Am Here Books /  Immediate Editions,1982.

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Audrey Hepburn's Symphonic Salad and the Coming of Autumn. - Weigel, Tom.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15797"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a12</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		One of 350 copies. Mimeographed sheets side-stapled into wraps illustrated after photographs by Monica Weigel. Very good with some minor creasing and toning to the wraps.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Weigel, Tom.

        
        <br/>&#91;New York]:A Telephone Book,1980.

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	In Advance of the Broken Arm. - Padgett, Ron &#91;Joe Brainard, Ted Berrigan].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15965"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a13</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed sheets side-stapled into card wraps. With a cover and illustrations throughout by Joe Brainard. One of 200 numbered copies signed by Padgett at the colophon. Padgett's first published book, and an essential publication from the Tulsa crew, written by Padgett, beautifully illustrated by Brainard, and edited by Berrigan. An early C press title. Not in Clay & Phillips. Faint vertical crease to front panel, some indenting and a three light scratches to rear panel; about very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Padgett, Ron &#91;Joe Brainard, Ted Berrigan].

        
        <br/>New York:C Press,1964.

        <br/>Price: $150.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	I Should Run For Cover. . . But I'm Right Here. - Schiff, Harris &#91;Rudy Burckhardt).
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15970"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a14</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		One of four hundred copies. 4to. Sheets mimeographed on recto only and side-stapled in card covers illustrated by Rudy Burckhardt. The first separate edition of this long poem, dedicated to Ted Berrigan, that first appeared in Chicago. Some rusting to staples, and soiling to the wraps, especially to the upper left hand corner, still a very good copy.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Schiff, Harris &#91;Rudy Burckhardt).

        
        <br/>Lenox, MA & NY:Angel Hair Books,1978.

        <br/>Price: $75.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Charges. - &#91;Mimeograph Revolution] Wright, Jeff.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/15971"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a15</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Sheets mimeographed on recto's only and side-stapled into glossy card covers illustrated by Jim Moser. One of 250 copies printed. This copy is beautifully inscribed by Wright at the title page to one "St. Joan". Some light rusting to the staples, light toning to the wraps and some minor indenting from being stacked with other mimeos else very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>&#91;Mimeograph Revolution] Wright, Jeff.

        
        <br/>New York:Remember I Did This For You Books,1979.

        <br/>Price: $75.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Phil Honey, It's Time We Settled Down. - Owen, Maureen, ed. &#91;Joel Lewis, Bill Kushner, Janet Lagos, Don Yorty et al.].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/16027"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a16</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed sheets side-stapled into covers illustrated after a collage by Ann Kregal and Vittoria Repetto. One of 250 copies printed. A one shot magazine issued by Maureen Owen's Tuesday Night Workshop during the years 1981 and 1982. With Contributions from a host of poets, including Joel Lewis, Bill Kushner, Janet Lagos, & Don Yorty. Bump to head of spine, small stain at lower staple, else very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Owen, Maureen, ed. &#91;Joel Lewis, Bill Kushner, Janet Lagos, Don Yorty et al.].

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1982.

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Drastic Measures. - Nolan, Pat.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/16068"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a17</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed sheets side-stapled in card wraps illustrated by Sherry Margolin. One of 350 copies. Very good with a faint 1" dampstain to rear panel.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Nolan, Pat.

        
        <br/>Guilford, CT:Telephone Books,1981.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Polar Ode. - Myles, Eileen & Anne Waldman.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/16150"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a18</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed sheets side-stapled in wraps. Front cover illustrated in b/w after a drawing by Steve Levine. One of a limited edition of 350 copies. Near fine with some light spotting. The first edition of this outstanding collaborative work, completed by both poets for a 1978 reading at Zu. Myles' second published book.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Myles, Eileen & Anne Waldman.

        
        <br/>New York:Dead Duke Books,1979.

        <br/>Price: $125.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Gandhabba Volume 1, Number 3. - Savage, Tom, ed.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17069"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a19</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 97 pp. Stab-stapled in card covers. The third issue of Tom Savage's little magazine of the Mimeograph Revolution. This issue features contributions from Jim Brodey, Bernadette Mayer, Gerard Malanga, Bob Heman, Bruce Andrews, Jackson Mac Low et al. Near fine in wraps with a tiny stain to back cover and tiny bump to top edge.   
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Savage, Tom, ed.

        
        <br/>New York:Nalanda University Press,1985.

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Correspondence 1979-1983. - Hompson, Davi Det & John Bennett, Peter Huttinger.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17820"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a20</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 114 pp. Spiral-bound wraps. A collection which documents correspondence, mail art, and collaborative works made by Davi Det Hompson and John Bennett fom 1979-1983, compiled with the assistance of Peter Huttinger. Bennett is one of the most important experimental poets (and publishers) in America. Davi Det Hompson is the subject of an upcoming exhibition at Division Leap.  New and offered at the publication price.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Hompson, Davi Det & John Bennett, Peter Huttinger.

        
        <br/>Np:Luna Bisonte Prods,2011.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The World Number 7. - Waldman, Anne, ed. &#91;Sam Abrams, Jack Anderson, Ted Berrigan, Steve Carey, Tom Clark, Scott Cohen, Thomas M. Disch, Lee Harwood, Geore landow, Clarence Major, Joel Oppenheimer, Frank O'Hara, Ron Padgett, John Perreault, Peter Schjeldahl, David Shapiro, Joe
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17847"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a21</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Small 4to. Saddle-stapled wraps (illustrated by Bill Beckman). Early issue, and one of the scarcer issues of the long-running little magazine, the main publication of the Poetry Project, which has endured under various editors even to the present day. This issue is one of the few in a smaller format, and includes contributions by Sam Abrams, Jack Anderson, Ted Berrigan, Steve Carey, Tom Clark, Scott Cohen, Thomas M. Disch, Lee Harwood, Geore landow, Clarence Major, Joel Oppenheimer, Frank O'Hara, Ron Padgett, John Perreault, Peter Schjeldahl, David Shapiro, Joel Sloman, M. G. Stephens, Kathleen Torregian, Sotere Torregian, Lewis warsh, Tom Weatherley, Jr. and Donald Weingarten. Near fine with some very faint offsetting to rear cover.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Waldman, Anne, ed. &#91;Sam Abrams, Jack Anderson, Ted Berrigan, Steve Carey, Tom Clark, Scott Cohen, Thomas M. Disch, Lee Harwood, Geore landow, Clarence Major, Joel Oppenheimer, Frank O'Hara, Ron Padgett, John Perreault, Peter Schjeldahl, David Shapiro, Joe

        
        <br/>New York:The Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1967.

        <br/>Price: $75.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	United Artists One &#91;1]. - Mayer, Bernadette & Lewis Warsh, eds. &#91;Clark Coolidge, Paul Metcalf].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17866"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a22</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed from typescript; stab-stapled in card covers. Debut issue of the late, but excellent, New York School little magazine of the Mimeograph Revolution. This issue includes work by the editors, Clark Coolidge, and Paul Metcalf. Some light foxing to upper portion of front cover; near fine.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Mayer, Bernadette & Lewis Warsh, eds. &#91;Clark Coolidge, Paul Metcalf].

        
        <br/>Lenox, MA:United Artists,1977.

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	United Artists Eleven &#91;11]. - Mayer, Bernadette & Lewis Warsh, eds. &#91;Alice Notley, Ted Berrigan & Allen Ginsberg, Fanny Howe, Greg Masters, Jack Collom, Bill Kushner, Russell  Banks, Edwin Denby].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17869"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a23</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed from typescript; stab-stapled in card covers. 11th issue of the late, but excellent, New York School little magazine of the Mimeograph Revolution. This issue includes work by the editors along with Alice Notley, Ted Berrigan & Allen Ginsberg, Fanny Howe, Greg Masters, Jack Collom, Bill Kushner, Russell  Banks, and Edwin Denby. Rusting to the staples with some indenting from mimeo stack, a couple of light pencil checks to cover along with a couple of small stains, still very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Mayer, Bernadette & Lewis Warsh, eds. &#91;Alice Notley, Ted Berrigan & Allen Ginsberg, Fanny Howe, Greg Masters, Jack Collom, Bill Kushner, Russell  Banks, Edwin Denby].

        
        <br/>New York:United Artists,1980.

        <br/>Price: $30.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	United Artists Fifteen &#91;15]. - Mayer, Bernadette & Lewis Warsh, eds.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17871"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a24</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed from typescript; stab-stapled in card covers. 15th issue of the late, but excellent, New York School little magazine of the Mimeograph Revolution. This issue includes work by the editors along with Michael Scholnick, Bill Berkson, Alice Notley, Eileen Myles, Edwin Denby, George Schneeman, Fanny Howe, Russell banks, Harris Schiff, Ed Friedman, Clark Coolidge, and Jim Brodey. Wraps creased and soiled, with a couple of pencil marks to cover; good only.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Mayer, Bernadette & Lewis Warsh, eds.

        
        <br/>New York:United Artists,1982.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Telephone #11. - Owen, Maureen, ed. &#91;Joe Brainard, Bruce Andrews, Guy R. Beining, Alan Bernheimer, Stephen Bett, Larry Clark, Ed Friedman, Susan Howe, Trevor Winkfield, Ray DiPalma, Red Grooms, Anselm Hollo, Ronald Koertge, Ruth Krauss, Tom Mandel, Opal L. Nations, Bob Pe
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17883"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a25</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Folio. Saddle-stapled wraps. Very good with some minor rubbing to spine ends and a touch of soiling. Eleventh issue of the little magazine, and a stellar issue featuring several prose pieces by Joe Brainard (reproduced from holograph), Bruce Andrews, Guy R. Beining, Alan Bernheimer, Stephen Bett, Larry Clark, Ed Friedman, Susan Howe, Trevor Winkfield, Ray DiPalma, Red Grooms, Anselm Hollo, Ronald Koertge, Ruth Krauss, Tom Mandel, Opal L. Nations, Bob Perelman, Rochelle Ratner, Charlie Vermont et al.   
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Owen, Maureen, ed. &#91;Joe Brainard, Bruce Andrews, Guy R. Beining, Alan Bernheimer, Stephen Bett, Larry Clark, Ed Friedman, Susan Howe, Trevor Winkfield, Ray DiPalma, Red Grooms, Anselm Hollo, Ronald Koertge, Ruth Krauss, Tom Mandel, Opal L. Nations, Bob Pe

        
        <br/>New York:Telephone Books Press,1975.

        <br/>Price: $40.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Mag City #8. - Masters, Greg & Gary Lenhart, Michael Scholnick, editors. Rene Ricard, Helena Hughes, Greg Masters, Alice Notley, Michael Scholnick, Elinor Nauen, Ted Greenwald, Tom Weigl, Norman Fischer, Amiri Baraka, Mark Fisher, Bob Rosenthal, Maureen Owen, Cliff Fyma
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17899"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a26</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed sheets side-stapled in card covers illustrated by Monica Weigl. Whole number of this excellent third generation New York School little magazine, featuring contributions from Rene Ricard, Helena Hughes, Greg Masters, Alice Notley, Michael Scholnick, Elinor Nauen, Ted Greenwald, Tom Weigl, Norman Fischer, Amiri Baraka, Mark Fisher, Bob Rosenthal, Maureen Owen, Cliff Fyman, Gary Lenhart, Rochelle Kraut, and Ted Berrigan. Some overall soiling to the rear cover only otherwise very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Masters, Greg & Gary Lenhart, Michael Scholnick, editors. Rene Ricard, Helena Hughes, Greg Masters, Alice Notley, Michael Scholnick, Elinor Nauen, Ted Greenwald, Tom Weigl, Norman Fischer, Amiri Baraka, Mark Fisher, Bob Rosenthal, Maureen Owen, Cliff Fyma

        
        <br/>New York:Mag City,1979.

        <br/>Price: $25.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Out There 3. - Hackman, Neil, ed. Ted Berrigan, Joe Brainard, Bernadette Mayer, Tom Veitch, Andrei Codrescu, John Wieners et al.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17913"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a27</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 78 pp. Side stapled in blue card covers with a metal spinner embedded on cover. Third issue of the little magazine, with contributions from Ted Berrigan, Joe Brainard, Bernadette Mayer, Tom Veitch, Andrei Codrescu, John Wieners et al. This issue is notorious for the spinner multiple on cover, which is usually found rusted or not working; this spinner is unusually in near fine condition, and can easily be spun, though it has offset slightly onto the first page. The wraps are near fine with toning to margins.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Hackman, Neil, ed. Ted Berrigan, Joe Brainard, Bernadette Mayer, Tom Veitch, Andrei Codrescu, John Wieners et al.

        
        <br/>Chicago:Out There Press,1974.

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Basketball Article. - Mayer, Bernadette & Anne Waldman.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/17983"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a28</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Mimeographed; stab-stapled in photographically illustrated card covers. The second edition, one of 200 copies. An article originally written for, and rejected by, Oui Magazine. One of the scarcer titles from the press, even in the second edition. Near fine with a short crease to upper tip of rear wrap and some minor indenting around staples.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Mayer, Bernadette & Anne Waldman.

        
        <br/>Lenox, MA:Angel Hair Books,1978.

        <br/>Price: $125.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Mag City #6. - Scholnick, Michael (ed.) and Gary Lenhart, Gregory Masters, Alice Notley, Ted Berrigan, Jim Brodey, Larry Fagin, Pat Nolan, Rene Ricard, John Godfrey, Jamie MacInnis, Tom Weigel, Elinor Nauen, Bob Rosenthal, Steve Carey, Tom Savage, Tim Dlugos, Michael La
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18035"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a29</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. 78 pp. Side-stapled in card covers illustrated by Yvonne Jacquette. Whole number 6 of this excellent East Village third generation New York School magazine. This issue features contributions from Alice Notley, Ted Berrigan, Jim Brodey, Larry Fagin, Pat Nolan, Rene Ricard, John Godfrey, Jamie MacInnis, Tom Weigel, Elinor Nauen, Bob Rosenthal, Steve Carey, Tom Savage, Tim Dlugos, Michael Lally, Bob Holman, Gregory Masters, Ralph Hawkins, Yvonne Jacquette, and Joseph Chassler. A fine copy. Clay & Phillips pp. 232-3.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Scholnick, Michael (ed.) and Gary Lenhart, Gregory Masters, Alice Notley, Ted Berrigan, Jim Brodey, Larry Fagin, Pat Nolan, Rene Ricard, John Godfrey, Jamie MacInnis, Tom Weigel, Elinor Nauen, Bob Rosenthal, Steve Carey, Tom Savage, Tim Dlugos, Michael La

        
        <br/>New York:Mag City,1979.

        <br/>Price: $30.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Awake in Spain. - O'hara, Frank.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18053"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a30</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to, stab-stapled, mimeographed on rectos only; no blue paper folder, as sometimes found, though Smith indicates no priority. Very good with a touch of toning to extremities and faint smudging to rear panel. Smith D2a.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>O'hara, Frank.

        
        <br/>New York:The American Theatre for Poets,1960.

        <br/>Price: $75.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Pink Tie. - Williams, Tyrone.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18068"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a31</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo, 30 pp, saddle-stapled wraps. One of 160 copies. Designed by Brent Cunningham & Neil Alger. The eighth book from Hooke Press. "n this deeply moving eulogy for his longtime friend, Peter Ross, who committed suicide in 2002, Tyrone Williams has written more than a simple remembrance.  Describing a friendship inextricable from the conditions of both their lives, he takes a hard, reflective look at the inherent contradictions involved in being midwestern, politically radical, artistic, and male.  Falling into a non-genre somewhere between eulogy, autobiography, cultural philosophy, and poetic rumination, the book is perhaps most consistently concerned with seeking out what writing and art are good for in the face of such a tragic event.  While it has no answer, it radiates the belief that poetic thinking, if it is to have any meaning at all, must continually try to address circumstances commonly considered too real for words."  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Williams, Tyrone.

        
        <br/>Oakland:Hooke Press,2011.

        <br/>Price: $10.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Joanne Oldham: Good Morning #1. - Oldham, Joanne.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18139"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a32</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo., 40 pp., saddle-stapled wraps. Illustrated in color. Edition of 500. New. The entire first issue of Good Morning #1 is devoted to work by Joanne Oldham, mother of Will Oldham - aka Bonnie Prince Billie. Her work has graced the covers of several Bonnie Prince Billie releases, including the terrifying and iconic cover to "I See a Darkness." This is the first publication devoted to her work, and includes collages, paintings and drawings done over the last 25 years, along with excerpts from a memoir of growing up in the South in the 50's. With a foreward by Sammy Harkham.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Oldham, Joanne.

        
        <br/>Los Angeles:Family,2012.

        <br/>Price: $12.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Research Notes: Selected Footnotes from a Recent History of Writing & Drawing. - Lehni, Jurg & Alex Rich.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18145"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a33</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to., 20 pp., saddle-stapled wraps. Second edition, one of 500 copies. New. From the publisher: "In an attempt to celebrate how we find ourselves doodling while on the phone, testing pens in stationery shops, our belief in folklore, the need to misuse technology or whose idea it was to fly aero planes in formation to write messages across our skies. The research notes selected from the archive A Recent History of Writing & Drawing hopefully provide references to things old, new and maybe forgotten which together can offer an alternative understanding of our habit to document thoughts and ideas. Upending assumptions that any one kind of communication is more authentic, more direct or more valid that any other, A Recent History of Writing & Drawing finds meaning, texture and poetry in the most unlikely places." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Lehni, Jurg & Alex Rich.

        
        <br/>Zurich:Nieves,2011.

        <br/>Price: $14.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Penniless Greenery. - Johnson, Mark.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18150"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a34</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Xeroxed leaves stab-stapled &#91;with magenta staples] in card covers illustrated by Division Leap's own Kate Schaefer. One of 75 copies. New. Penniless Greenery samples pieces from Johnson's ongoing longer work "COCKTAIL ANECDOTES FINALLY". The Editions Plane publishing project is edited by Charles Seluzicki and James Yeary.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Johnson, Mark.

        
        <br/>Portland, OR:Editions Plane,2012.

        <br/>Price: $6.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Bean Spasms. - Berrigan, Ted & Ron Padgett, Joe Brainard.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18152"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a35</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to., 202 pp., pictorial boards. First edition of this classic New York School collaboration. This is worn, shaken copy, with some splitting along the gutters, and a 1" chunk of the backstrip missing at head of spine, and a heavy crease to the title page, along with rubbing and other wear. A shabby, good only copy, but somewhat elusive in the hardcover, which is much less common than the wrappered issue.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Berrigan, Ted & Ron Padgett, Joe Brainard.

        
        <br/>New York:Kulchur Press,1967.

        <br/>Price: $150.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Diet Book for Junkies. - Bibbs, Hart Leroi &#91;Hart Leroy Bibbs] &#91;Drugs].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18165"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a36</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Tabloid, &#91;8] pp., offset printed on newsprint. Folded once, with some faint marginal toning and a tiny hole to cover at fold; near fine. The scarce self-published first edition of this work, later translated into French in 1969 by Claude Pelieu. The prose piece is illustrated with five black and white photographs. Bibbs was an underground beat artist and African American who spent much of his time as an expatriate in Paris, and was a noted photographer as well as a poet; drug themes are widespread in his work. He was a collaborator of Ted Joans Scarce.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Bibbs, Hart Leroi &#91;Hart Leroy Bibbs] &#91;Drugs].

        
        <br/>Np:Hart Leroi Bibbs,nd.

        <br/>Price: $300.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Ted Berrigan and Dick Gallup Reading St. Mark's Church March 28. - Berrigan, Ted & Dick Gallup &#91;George Schneeman].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18170"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a37</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8.5 x 11", printed in black and white on recto only. Two old fold lines, probably from mailing, else near fine. Poster for a poetry reading at St. Mark's, illustrated almost certainly by George Schneeman with cavorting nudes - the poster is similar to the infamous 1983 large New York School group sex poster which was created for the New Year's reading that year. Scarce.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Berrigan, Ted & Dick Gallup &#91;George Schneeman].

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,nd.

        <br/>Price: $100.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Edwin Denby is Having a Reading. . . - Denby, Edwin and Katie Schneeman, Tessie Mitchell.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18171"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a38</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8.5 x 11", printed in black and white on recto only. Two old fold lines, probably for mailing, and a strip of toning to upper margin; very good. The poster for a poetry reading by Denby at St. Mark's, illustrated with characters from Archie Comics, and stamped "approved reading." Artist unknown. Scarce.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Denby, Edwin and Katie Schneeman, Tessie Mitchell.

        
        <br/>New York:Poetry Project at St. Mark's,nd.

        <br/>Price: $85.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Three Thursdays: Poetry Readings at the Museum of Modern Art. - Ashbery, John and Kenward Elmslie, Barbara Guest, Kenneth Koch, Rochelle Owens, Robert kelly, Armand Schwerner, Anne Waldman, John Giorno, Bernadette Mayer, John Perreault.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18174"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a39</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Approximately 8 x 8", offset printed in three colors on card stock on both recto and verso. Addressed and mailed; a near fine, unfolded copy.The announcement for this excellent series of 1973 readings at MOMA, which featured an excellent sampling of both first and second generation New York School poets. The card notes that funding for the readings was made possible by the Kulchur Foundation.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Ashbery, John and Kenward Elmslie, Barbara Guest, Kenneth Koch, Rochelle Owens, Robert kelly, Armand Schwerner, Anne Waldman, John Giorno, Bernadette Mayer, John Perreault.

        
        <br/>New York:The Junior Councile of the Museum of Modern Art,&#91;1973].

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Claire Falkenstein. - Falkenstein, Claire.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18176"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a40</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to., 199 pp., bound in full grey cloth pictorially stamped in black and housed in a pictorial dust jacket. Profusely illustrated in color. New. At long last, the first monograph published on this important-as-hell sculptor and designer, who had deep ties to the Pacific Northwest - she was born and raised in Coos Bay, Oregon, where her father managed a lumber mill. She later studied at Mills College with Archipenko, and subsequently lived in Paris and Los Angeles. She was known for utilizing cheap and affordable materials in her sculptures, which one critic characterized as being like a Jackson Pollock in 3-D. With essays by Susan M. Anderson, Michael Duncan, and Maren Henderson.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Falkenstein, Claire.

        
        <br/>Los Angeles:The Falkenstein Foundation,2012.

        <br/>Price: $65.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Contra Mundum. - The Mandrake &#91;Rupert Deese, Elad Lassry, Anthony Pearson and Frances Stark, and critics Aaron Kunin, Matthew Taylor Raffety, Evan Calder Williams].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18178"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a41</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. 216 pp., 241 black and white illustrations. New. This inaugural volume from Oslo Editions gathers edited transcripts from a series of talks held at the Mandrake, an artist-run bar in Los Angeles, on the theme of Òcontra mundumÓ or Òagainst the world.Ó Taking its cue from Evelyn WaughÕs 1945 novel Brideshead Revisited, the contributors consider the collective potential of (anti)sociality and the possibility of building your own world. Subjects include the furniture of Donald Judd, private issue New Age records, the animal as a subject in Hollywood, self-banishment in Shakespeare, zombie films, pirates and piracy, and Mark E. Smith, legendary vocalist for post-punk band, the Fall. Featuring contributions from artists Rupert Deese, Elad Lassry, Anthony Pearson and Frances Stark, and critics Aaron Kunin, Matthew Taylor Raffety, and Evan Calder Williams. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>The Mandrake &#91;Rupert Deese, Elad Lassry, Anthony Pearson and Frances Stark, and critics Aaron Kunin, Matthew Taylor Raffety, Evan Calder Williams].

        
        <br/>Np:Oslo Editions,2010.

        <br/>Price: $18.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Curve of Forgotten Things. - Geffriaud, Mark & Francesco Pedraglio, Gavin Everall.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18184"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a42</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo., 68 pp., 3 b&w illus. Wraps. New. Another fascinating narrative experience from the seminal Time Machine series, edited by Francesco Pedraglio. Paris-based artist Mark Geffriaud takes the reader and writer on two opposite journeys, from the preface and in reverse from the Òpostface.Ó Where the sections meet halfway, the reader finds a discussion with an anthropologist about a ceremonial dialogue between two people of a Jivaroan tribe, in which the two participants barely listen to each other but speak almost from the otherÕs point of view, creating a rhythm, and a game. The slippages, gestures, duality and rhythms are replayed in the framing sections in which two voices appear, drift apart into two columns, run parallel then syncopated, before slowly merging again. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Geffriaud, Mark & Francesco Pedraglio, Gavin Everall.

        
        <br/>London:Book Works,2012.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Peaches & Bats 10. - Lohmann, Sam, ed.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18258"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a43</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo., 64 pp., saddle-stapled in letterpress printed wraps. New. The tenth issue of this excellent poetry zine out of Portland - one of our favorite current poetry magazines -   and probably the last issue for awhile, as Sam tells us he is putting it on hiatus. With contributions from Andrew Bartels, Andrew Durbin, Kristin Fialko, Whit Griffin, Endi Bogue Hartigan, Laura Henriksen, Jac Nelson, Denise Newman, Elizabeth Pusack, Morgan Ritter, Judah Rubin, Jared Stanley, Sara Sutter, Dan Thomas-Glass, David Weinberg, Karen Weiser, & McCloud Zicmuse. Come to the Peaches & Bats release party at Division Leap this thursday, September 20 at 7 pm.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Lohmann, Sam, ed.

        
        <br/>Portland, Oregon:Peaches & Bats,2012.

        <br/>Price: $5.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Mimeo Mimeo No. 7: The Lewis Warsh Issue. - Warsh, Lewis.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18262"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a44</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to., 202 pp., wraps. MIMEO MIMEO #7: THE LEWIS WARSH ISSUE is the first magazine ever devoted in its entirety to poet, novelist, publisher, teacher, and collage artist Lewis Warsh. Warsh was born in 1944 in the Bronx, co-founded Angel Hair Magazine and Books with Anne Waldman in 1966, and went on to co-found United Artists Magazine and Books with Bernadette Mayer in 1977. He is the author of over thirty books of poetry, fiction and autobiography, the Director of the MFA program in Creative Writing at Long Island University in Brooklyn, and as youÕll soon discover, so much more. Includes an introduction by Daniel Kane, an interview conducted by Steve Clay, 10 new stories, 5 new poems, dozens of photographs and collages, and an anecdotal bibliography. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Warsh, Lewis.

        
        <br/>Austin, TX:Mimeo Mimeo,2012.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Squeezed Light. - Wolsak, Lissa.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18272"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a45</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. 288 pp. Trade paperback. New. "SQUEEZED LIGHT includes all of Wolsak's previously published poetry to date, her essay in poetics "An Heuristic Prolusion," an interview with the author, and an introductory essay by George Quasha with Charles Stein. Lissa Wolsak, a poet who seemingly emerged fully-formed in the mid-1990s, now offers access to the realized body of her work in this collection. Neither easily classified nor directly traceable to a particular school or lineage, she stands instead within her own continuously evolving context--one as free of convention and fashion as it is independent of thought outside the work itself."  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Wolsak, Lissa.

        
        <br/>Barrytown, NY:Station Hill of Barrytown,2012.

        <br/>Price: $21.95
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Born 2. - Cobb, Allison.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18274"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a46</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. 99 pp. Trade paperback. New. Portland writer. "Allison Cobb's BORN TWO brings monsters out of memory and an unexpected sweetness out of the firestorms of language. Hers is the mind of poetry, driven by history and lured by love, caught in the act of the need to know. Like a child after family secrets, Cobb turns up more truths than the ones she seems to be seeking. Childlike, too, are her characters, whose adventures carry them nearer and nearer the beautiful, erotic, and tragic world of knowledge."ÑSusan Tichy"For this new century, a poetry of minus signs. Like many of her generation, Allison Cobb's curious about the wheres, whens and whys of our predicament. Through compression, cubtraction, amputation and dispersal, she manages to scrape a hole across the ice on the windshield. BORN TWO peels away the myths of the American West to reveal the twitchy nerve beneath."ÑKevin Killian 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Cobb, Allison.

        
        <br/>Tucson, AZ:Chax,2004.

        <br/>Price: $16.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Beauty Was the Case That They Gave Me. - Leidner, Mark.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18278"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a47</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Trade paperback, 94 pp.. New from the publisher. BEAUTY WAS THE CASE THAT THEY GAVE ME is Mark Leidner's first full-length collection of poems. A collection of poems that might make you feel like a flower, like a black hole, like punishment meted out at night by a giant tractor, like you have to get on fire, then slowly walk around your old neighborhood, like the town was real, like she thinks swoon is a funnier word than mulligan, and he thinks swoon is a funny word too, but no way in hell is it funnier than mulligan, like he's searching for the Holy Grail and she has little Holy Grail-shaped pupils, like an effusion of steam, like what's cool changes, like hemisphere paint, like a blue flower, like the house you have lived above forever. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Leidner, Mark.

        
        <br/>Hadley, MA:Factory Hollow Press,2011.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Page. - Weiner, Hannah.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18280"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a48</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		New from the publisher. "Hannah Weiner's PAGE is the final, major, unpublished work of the notorious, clairvoyant poet who died in New York 1997. Completed in 1990, Page uses Weiner's combination of family, TV cartoon, and high-art diction to weave a unique view of the individual interacting with society. The reader gets the sense that the poet is just barely hanging on, tenaciously, tenuously, and touchingly. Hannah has the ability to make you sympathetic and needy, exposing your humanity to you in every phrase." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Weiner, Hannah.

        
        <br/>New York:Roof Books,2003.

        <br/>Price: $12.95
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	We Speak Silent. - Weiner, Hannah.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18282"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a49</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. 66 pp. trade paperback. New from the publisher. We Speak Silent, is Weiner's most recent work, an opus of the quirky relationships between people and their words. In We Speak Silent, Weiner becomes the vessel for the emotional spectrum of the human comedy. It confirms hers as one of the most unique and fascinating of oeuvres, a continuing adventure in language. "Includes ÒNeil Young with Lewis Warsh." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Weiner, Hannah.

        
        <br/>New York:Roof Books,1996.

        <br/>Price: $9.95
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Float. - Abel, David.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18287"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a50</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. 144 pp., wraps. New from the publisher. Portland writer. David Abel is a founding member of the Spare Room Collective, as well as the collaboration collective 13 Hats. He is an antiquarian bookseller and proprietor of Passages Bookshop across the river. He publishes the Airfoil series with Sam Lohmann, and is a Research Fellow of the Center for Art + Environment of the Nevada Museum of Art. Float is an amazing work, conceptual and indeterminate while at the same time remaining personal and down to earth. Come hear David read with Lissa Wolsak this Sunday at Division Leap.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Abel, David.

        
        <br/>Tucson, AZ:Chax Press,2012.

        <br/>Price: $17.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	One Sun Storm. - Hartigan, Endi Bogue.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18291"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a51</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Trade paperback, 81 pp. New. Winner of the 2008 Colorado Prize for Poetry. ÒEndi Bogue HartiganÕs poems are enveloping: one is immersed in experiences of ice drifts, orange peels, and the striving toward a clarity (Let us be clear, one poem reiterates) that crystallizes and then evaporates. Subjects and objects are beautifully combined and confused through repetitions both musical and mysterious; each separate thing helps to form the existence of another. A reader is drawn into a process of thinkingÑa kind of sifting and sortingÑambitious for the large world that is always beyond oneÕs grasp. One Sun Storm is not a mere collection, but a total project in which each poem is part of the whole. The passing by of the pieces of this created world engenders gratitude and awe.Ó - Martha Ronk 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Hartigan, Endi Bogue.

        
        <br/>Fort Collins:Center for Literary Publishing,2008.

        <br/>Price: $16.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Rotations: From the Eric Chavez Sonnets. - Morse, Jesse.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18294"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a52</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo., wraps. One of 100 (of 126) copies. New from the publisher.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Morse, Jesse.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore:C_L Press,2011.

        <br/>Price: $6.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Lines on Canvas or What I Know or Have Seen of His Life. - Lohmann, Sam.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18295"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a53</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. Saddle-stitched in letterpress printed wraps. Though not stated, one of about 126 copies. Published by James Yeary at his c_L press. Lines is a breathless exploration of the work of Cezanne and vision, the lines like long brush strokes - highly recommended. New from the publisher.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Lohmann, Sam.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore:C_L ,2011.

        <br/>Price: $6.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Carrier. - Abel, David.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18296"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a54</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. Saddle-stapled wraps. One of 200 copies. New from James Yeary's c_L press, a beautiful book of visual poetry by Portland poet and bookseller David Abel. "In 1982, my father and I built a cat carrier from castoff wood and surplus wire mesh, with a handle taken from an old suitcase. my two successive long-lived cats were ferried in that rustic conveyance for most of their lives. In 2012, I offered the carrier to the collaborative art collective 13 Hats for one of their monthly "box" projects, thus giving up possession of what had become a talisman. This book, devised in loving memory of my parents (and my cats), is my attempt to fashion a replacement." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Abel, David.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore:c_L,2012.

        <br/>Price: $8.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Marrowing. - Larkin, Maryrose.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18297"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a55</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo. &#91;16] pp. Saddle-stapled wraps. One of an edition of 200. New from the publisher. Marrowing is published as installment no. 4 of the amazing Airfoil chapbook series, edited and published in Portland by David Abel and Sam Lohmann. Each chapbook features a letterpress printed cover, and the series is marked by exceptional design and economy as well as by the excellence of the work that is printed.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Larkin, Maryrose.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore:Airfoil,2011.

        <br/>Price: $5.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Bell-lloc. - Piuma, Chris.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18298"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a56</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		One of 200 copies. 8vo. &#91;20] pp. Saddle-stapled in letterpress printed wraps. New from the publisher. Bell-lloc is an astonishing and extremely rewarding work - an adaption of Guillem de Torroella's 14th century poem La Faula in colloquial American, and Piuma makes it sing. I've read it several times in the past months with increasing appreciation. Bell-lloc is published as installment no. 5 of the amazing Airfoil chapbook series, edited and published in Portland by David Abel and Sam Lohmann. Each chapbook features a letterpress printed cover, and the series is marked by exceptional design and economy as well as by the excellence of the work that is printed.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Piuma, Chris.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Airfoil,2011.

        <br/>Price: $5.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Onlooking. - Lohmann, Sam.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18299"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a57</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. &#91;32] pp. Saddle-stapled in letterpress printed wraps. One of 175 copies printed. New from the publisher. Onlooking is published as installment no. 2 of the amazing Airfoil chapbook series, edited and published in Portland by David Abel and Sam Lohmann. Each chapbook features a letterpress printed cover, and the series is marked by exceptional design and economy as well as by the excellence of the work that is printed.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Lohmann, Sam.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Airfoil,2009.

        <br/>Price: $5.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Poem. - Averin, Fredrik.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18306"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a58</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		One of 500 copies. Published by the author and distributed by Division Leap. POEM is the first book form Portland artist Fredrik Averin. It is a beautiful work of concrete poetry  which explores duration, narration, book design, and the relationship of the reader to the printed (and unprinted) page. In spirit it recalls some of the experiments of Emmett Williams, while remaining entirely individual - it is like no other book we've ever read. Highly recommended.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Averin, Fredrik.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore:2012.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Enigma and Light. - Mutschlecner, David.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18335"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a59</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Paperback, 96 pp. New. Through its sparse yet expansive lyricism, this book enacts "a complex gestural nest," where thought is created in the spaces between poets and philosophers (Stein, Dante, Heidegger) and visual artists (Agnes Martin, the Gee's Bend quilters). This intertextuality bares the poem to its historical tendons, where a taxidermied swallow may thrive as a bottled ship. The poet's work is questioned and affirmed as song that exists "at the center of incredible volume." See Mutschlecner reading here this Thursday with Portland's own Endi Bogue Hartigan.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Mutschlecner, David.

        
        <br/>Boise, Idaho:Ahsaha Press,2012.

        <br/>Price: $17.50
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Sign. - Mutschlecner, David.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18336"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a60</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Paperback, 77 pp. New. David Mutschlecner's second book from Ashahta Press, SIGN, both evokes the prophecy of an endgame and posits the possibility of enduring aspiration. Contextualized within the sacred, the sparse verse of SIGN illuminates the fall of man and the repercussive realities that cloak the contemporary apocalyptic psyche, both public and personal. Steeped not so much in religion as it is in reckoning, Mutschlecner assigns gravity and a well-tempered philosophy to every word with a language that constantly contends with truth.ÒThe good and gladsome news in Mutschlecner's SIGN is that the ceremonies of innocence are not drowned. Rather they enjoy a continuous, lucent transformation in poems such as these. SIGN is a kinetic missal of new faith and new perfections.Ó Ð Donald Revell 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Mutschlecner, David.

        
        <br/>Boise, Idaho:Ahsahta Press,2007.

        <br/>Price: $17.50
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Somatic Engagement. - Kuppers, Petra, ed.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18337"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a61</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Trade paperback, 126 pp. New. Edited by community artist, scholar, and dancer Petra Kuppers (author of Disability and Contemporary Performance: Bodies on Edge and Community Performance: An Introduction), the book opens with Arnieville, a Californian protest camp of disability, homelessness, and poverty activists. From there, a series of enactments welcome trespass and incursion in the name of survival. Amy Sara Carroll on the Transborder Immigrant Tool, a GPS phone that uses poetry to lead the disoriented and thirsty to water caches and safety sites in the US-Mexican borderlands. Devora Neumark on washing Tali Goodfriend's hands in Lebanese olive oil outside the hotel where Colin Powell speaks to the Jewish National Fund, hands gliding over one another in the middle of an angry public protest. Christian Nagler on writing an experimental novel while conducting an oral history of agricultural labor practices and migration patterns at the site of the Panamerican Highway in El Salvador. Georgina Kleege on touch and blindness as she discusses Katherine Sherwood's paintings of magic and the human brain, paintings that Sherwood began after her stroke ten years ago. Eleni Stecopoulos on the healing quest as research and the complexities of cultural appropriation. Amber DiPietra and Denise Leto on the collaborative connections of breath, body, pause, pain, and form. SOMATIC ENGAGEMENT is an exploration of how relation and support play out in breaths, steps, and touch. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Kuppers, Petra, ed.

        
        <br/>Oakland & Philadelphia:ChainLinks,2012.

        <br/>Price: $16.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Ambient Parking Lot. - Lu, Pamela.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18338"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a62</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Trade paperback, 160 pp. New. Part fiction, part earnest mockumentary, AMBIENT PARKING LOT follows a band of musicians as they wander the parking structures of urban downtown and greater suburbia in quest of the ultimate ambient noise - one that promises to embody their historical moment and deliver them up to the heights of their self-important artistry. Along the way, they make sporadic forays into lyric while contending with doubts, delusions, miscalculations, mutinies, and minor triumphs. This saga peers into the wreckage of a post-9/11 landscape and embraces the comedy and poignancy of failed utopia. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Lu, Pamela.

        
        <br/>Chicago:Kenning Editions,2011.

        <br/>Price: $10.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	On Marvellous Things Heard. - Henderson, Gretchen E. &#91;G. C. Waldrep, Carrie Gundersdorf].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18339"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a63</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		One of a limited edition of 250 copies. 12mo, trade paperback, 91 pp. New. Derived in form from Aristotle's 'Minor Work' of the same title, this variation of ON MARVELLOUS THINGS HEARD explores a range of literary appropriations of music, in terms of translation and metamorphosis. Part investigation, part inventory, and part invention (in the musical sense: a composition in simple counterpoint), this poetically-driven essay assays the narrating subject as she assays the subjects of literature, of music, and of silence. Printed in an edition of 250 with color plate supplied by artist Carrie Gundersdorf and an introduction by G. C. Waldrep. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Henderson, Gretchen E. &#91;G. C. Waldrep, Carrie Gundersdorf].

        
        <br/>Chicago:Green Lantern Press,2011.

        <br/>Price: $12.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Bean Spasms. - Berrigan, Ted & Ron Padgett, Joe Brainard.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18341"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a64</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to. Trade paperback. 202 pp. New. At last, reprinted in it's glorious totality. "Collaborations by Ted Berrigan and Ron Padgett. Illustrated and Drawings by Joe Brainard. Ted Berrigan, Joe Brainard and Ron Padgett's BEAN SPASMS is the defining publication of the 1960s literary  Pop scene in New York. Originally published in 1967 by Kulchur Press in an edition of 1,000, and out-of-print for more than 40 years, BEAN SPASMS is a book many have heard about but relatively few have seen, and which - until now - has been shrouded in legend.The text is comprised of collaborations between poets Ted Berrigan and Ron Padgett, with further writings, illustrations and cover by artist and writer Joe Brainard. The three began collaborating in 1960, and kept a folder of their works titled "Lyrical Bullets" (a humorous homage to the well-known collaboration between Coleridge and Wordsworth, "Lyrical Ballads"). As Ron Padgett describes, in his introduction to this new facsimile edition, their collaborations included "plays, a fictitious correspondence, a picaresque novel, goofy interviews and poems of various types and lengths, as well as mistranslations and parodies of each other's work and the work of others." Poet friends dropping by during writing sessions would also add lines, and although Berrigan and Padgett also contributed visuals, and Brainard contributed texts, all works in the book were intentionally left unattributed. Full of wild wit and joy in experimentation, competition and collaboration, BEAN SPASMS is a classic document of the New York School." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Berrigan, Ted & Ron Padgett, Joe Brainard.

        
        <br/>New York:Granary Books,2012.

        <br/>Price: $40.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Green-Wood. - Cobb, Allison.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18342"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a65</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Trade paperback, 163 pp. New. Portland author. "Allison Cobb wanders Brooklyn's famous nineteenth-century Green-Wood Cemetery and discovers that its 500 acres - hills and ponds, trees and graves - mirror the American landscape: a place marked by greed, war, and death, but still pulsing with life. The book is a testament to what survives and an elegy for what is lost, the long dead, the landscape itself, but especially those who died in the Twin Towers and in the United States's ongoing wars." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Cobb, Allison.

        
        <br/>Queens, NY:Factory School,2010.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Green-Wood. - Cobb, Allison.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18343"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a66</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo., 163 pp., bound in gilt-stamped black boards. The scarce hardcover edition. New. Portland author. "Allison Cobb wanders Brooklyn's famous nineteenth-century Green-Wood Cemetery and discovers that its 500 acres - hills and ponds, trees and graves - mirror the American landscape: a place marked by greed, war, and death, but still pulsing with life. The book is a testament to what survives and an elegy for what is lost, the long dead, the landscape itself, but especially those who died in the Twin Towers and in the United States's ongoing wars." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Cobb, Allison.

        
        <br/>Queens, NY:Factory School,2010.

        <br/>Price: $30.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Ted Berrigan. - Berkson, Bill & George Schneeman.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18345"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a67</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		One of a limited edition of 500 copies. New. "TED BERRIGAN is a classic collaboration between Bill Berkson and George Schneeman, and a homage to the poet and painter's mutual friend produced as a unique book in real-time at George's studio on St. Mark's Place on March 5, 2006. Continuing in the tradition of New York School collaboration, Schneeman and Berkson's TED BERRIGAN is a high-quality reproduction comprised of eight spreads where image and text fuse, bleed off the page and cross the gutter. It also includes an afterword by Berkson and a note from the publisher. Handsewn, the dimensions are true to the original." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Berkson, Bill & George Schneeman.

        
        <br/>Victoria, TX:Cuneiform Press,2009.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Tether. - Abel, David.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18356"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a68</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. Saddle-stapled wraps. One of 350 copies. Cover illustration by Paul Schaap. Portland writer. David Abel is a teacher, poet, and proprietor of Passages Bookshop and the Text Garage. New from the publisher.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Abel, David.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Bare Bones Books,2012.

        <br/>Price: $7.50
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	A Book About A Book About Death. - Johnson, Ray & Bill Wilson.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18377"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a69</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. 58 pp. Offset printed and perfect bound in French wraps. One tip bumped, still a very good copy. At long last there is a full-length study about Ray Johnson's A Book About Death - one of the greatest bookworks of the 20th century. The book was written by Johnson's longtime friend and collaborator Bill Wilson. Essential, and one of our favorite books of 2011 - now out of print.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Johnson, Ray & Bill Wilson.

        
        <br/>Amsterdam:Kunstverein,2011.

        <br/>Price: $45.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The World Number 7. - Waldman, Anne, ed. &#91;Sam Abrams, Jack Anderson, Ted Berrigan, Steve Carey, Tom Clark, Scott Cohen, Thomas M. Disch, Lee Harwood, Geore landow, Clarence Major, Joel Oppenheimer, Frank O'Hara, Ron Padgett, John Perreault, Peter Schjeldahl, David Shapiro, Joe
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18380"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a70</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Small 4to. Saddle-stapled wraps (illustrated by Bill Beckman). Early issue, and one of the scarcer issues of the long-running little magazine, the main publication of the Poetry Project, which has endured under various editors even to the present day. This issue is one of the few in a smaller format, and includes contributions by Sam Abrams, Jack Anderson, Ted Berrigan, Steve Carey, Tom Clark, Scott Cohen, Thomas M. Disch, Lee Harwood, Geore landow, Clarence Major, Joel Oppenheimer, Frank O'Hara, Ron Padgett, John Perreault, Peter Schjeldahl, David Shapiro, Joel Sloman, M. G. Stephens, Kathleen Torregian, Sotere Torregian, Lewis warsh, Tom Weatherley, Jr. and Donald Weingarten. Near fine with some very faint offsetting to rear cover.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Waldman, Anne, ed. &#91;Sam Abrams, Jack Anderson, Ted Berrigan, Steve Carey, Tom Clark, Scott Cohen, Thomas M. Disch, Lee Harwood, Geore landow, Clarence Major, Joel Oppenheimer, Frank O'Hara, Ron Padgett, John Perreault, Peter Schjeldahl, David Shapiro, Joe

        
        <br/>New York:The Poetry Project at St. Mark's,1967.

        <br/>Price: $75.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Girona. - van der Vliet Oloomi, Azareen.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18392"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a71</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo., saddle-stitched wraps. New from the publisher. One of a great new series of f chapbooks from the partly local New Herring Press, which publishes "fiction, non-fiction and neither/both." Recommended. Fine.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>van der Vliet Oloomi, Azareen.

        
        <br/>Portland & Brooklyn:New Herring Press,2011.

        <br/>Price: $7.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	List. - Unferth, Deb Olin.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18393"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a72</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo., saddle-stitched wraps. New from the publisher. One of a great new series of chapbooks from the partly local New Herring Press, which publishes "fiction, non-fiction and neither/both." Recommended. Fine.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Unferth, Deb Olin.

        
        <br/>Portland & Brooklyn:New Herring Press,2011.

        <br/>Price: $7.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	May I Not Seem to Have Lived. - Cardinale, Joseph.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18394"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a73</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo., saddle-stitched wraps. New from the publisher. One of a great new series of chapbooks from the partly local New Herring Press, which publishes "fiction, non-fiction and neither/both." Recommended.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Cardinale, Joseph.

        
        <br/>Portland & Brooklyn:New Herring Press,2011.

        <br/>Price: $7.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Collected Writings. - Prince, Richard &#91;Jonathan Lethem, Kristine McKenna].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18412"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a74</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo. 216 pp. Illustrated. Bound in full purple cloth. New and still sealed in the publisher's shrinkwrap. Richard Prince: Collected Writings gathers together for the first time a selection of short works of fiction by highly regarded visual artist Richard Prince. Produced between 1974 and 2009, the thirty-five prose pieces compiled here explore everything from Franz Kline to Woodstock, and include revealing musings on the revolutionary approach to photography that's been central to Prince's art-making practice. Edited and with an introduction by Kristine McKenna, Richard Prince: Collected Writings features a fictional essay by Jonathan Lethem. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Prince, Richard &#91;Jonathan Lethem, Kristine McKenna].

        
        <br/>Santa Monica:Foggy Notion,2011.

        <br/>Price: $40.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Casual Ties. - Wevill, David.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18436"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a75</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Paperback, 112 pp. First edition thus. New from the publisher. 'By turns surreal, absurd, allegorical, and meta fictional, this genre-defying cult classic of 33 linked sketches shows us a voice searching for meaning in the landscapes of intellect and ardor. This is a book of exquisite structures, of encounters with the tricksters of self, and it ultimately reveals a portrait of an artist willing to confront the mysteries and outermost limits of his own obsessions. Out of print for nearly 30 years, this new edition offers Wevill fans and new readers alike an essential work of contemporary experimental literature." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Wevill, David.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Tavern Books,2010.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	For the Living and the Dead. - Transtromer, Tomas &#91;Deane, John F.].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18437"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a76</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Paperback, 64 pp. New from the Publisher. 'WINNER OF THE 2011 NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE. John F. Deane's translation of Tomas Transtršmer's 1989 collection For the Living and the Dead (Fšr levande och dšda) originally appeared with The Dedalus Press (Ireland) in 1994. Published in the United States for the first time, this new edition contains a revised translation as well as a new introduction and translator's note. For the Living and the Dead contains some of Transtršmer's most widely anthologized poems, including ÒVermeerÓ and ÒRomanesque Arches.Ó At long last, this important work from one of the world's most celebrated poets is back in print in a single volume." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Transtromer, Tomas &#91;Deane, John F.].

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Tavern Books,2012.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Ocean. - Millar, Joseph .
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18507"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a77</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo., saddle-stitched wraps. Illustrated by Cecilia Wang. New from the publisher. Tavern Books is an essential Portland-based publishing project led by Mike McGriff and Carl Adamshick which revives out-of-print books and modern works in translation. "This long, sequential poem offers a sustained, elliptical, and lyrical glimpse into one of the poet's epic obsessions. Fan's of Millar's poetry will recognize "Ocean" as a stylistic departure from his recent collections, a work that fans out into the musical, shape-shifting territories reminiscent of the mid-century Spanish-language poets."  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Millar, Joseph .

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Tavern Books,2010.

        <br/>Price: $10.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Archeology. - Louis, Adrian C.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18508"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a78</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo., 22 pp., saddle-stitched wraps. New from the publisher. Tavern Books is an essential Portland-based publishing project led by Mike McGriff and Carl Adamshick which revives out-of-print books and modern works in translation. "These 8 new poems by the noted poet, story writer, and novelist, Adrian C. Louis, offer a glimpse into an existence that is hard-wired to truth, witness, and the many paradoxes of contemporary American life." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Louis, Adrian C.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Tavern Books,2011.

        <br/>Price: $10.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	From Hauptbahnhof I Took a Train. - Ayden, Erje.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18570"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a79</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo, wraps. Inscribed by Ayden in a rather humorous fashion; it appears the book was originally inscribed to a "Jeff", but a piece of paper has been pasted down over the original name, and replaced with the name "Alan" in Ayden's hand, and signed. Underground cult classic, this frankly erotic novel was dedicated to Frank O'Hara. Paper toned and brittle, some fading to wraps else very good.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Ayden, Erje.

        
        <br/>New York:Candy Stripe Productions,1966.

        <br/>Price: $50.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	More I Remember More. - Brainard, Joe.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18616"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a80</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to, offset printed, saddle-stapled wraps. First edition, one of 700 copies. Near fine with a light crease to head of spine.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Brainard, Joe.

        
        <br/>New York:Angel Hair Books,1973.

        <br/>Price: $50.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Home Burial. - McGriff, Michael.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18620"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a81</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		New from the Publisher. "The poems in Michael McGriffÕs second full-length collection, Home Burial, reverberate as they pass through a landscape of old-growth forest, ramshackle farms, moonlit water, lumberyards, and mini-marts. Home Burial captures the elemental slow ravage of rural communities and the voices of those who persist through the hardship, loss, and even death. All the while, flashes of light intercede, filling a pint glass or revivifying the deadpan voices of bored girls. As the New York Times Book Review wrote of the people in these poems, "In the hands of a less capable poet, their fates would feel almost too grim to bear, but McGriff chronicles their dissolution - and the dissolution of the landscape they come from - with language that manages to be simultaneously spare, cinematic and tactile. ItÕs that language that keeps you reading along, transfixed.Ó" Come hear Michael McGriff read here at Division Leap November 8th with Zachary Schomburg and Erin Perry.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>McGriff, Michael.

        
        <br/>Port Townsend, WA:Copper Canyon Press,2012.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Le Luxe. - Ethridge, Roe.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18697"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a82</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to, 206 pp., bound in full cloth; no dust jacket as issued. Second edition. New from the publisher, and still sealed in the publisher's shrink wrap. "American artist Roe Ethridge's latest book takes its title from the French "C'est pas du luxe", an ironic phrase which alludes to the superfluous nature of luxury whilst proclaiming how essential it is to existence. Such paradoxes are fluently woven through Ethridge's oeuvre and Le Luxe encompasses his practice from the past decade, without ever slipping into the moribund gravitas of a retrospective.Plumbing his diverse image inventories, from personal images and magazine commissions to an archive of online screen shots, the book continues his exploration of picture-making that disavows the potential for creating a finished work. Ethridge para-phrases Eggleston when he states that he is "at war with the finished" in an era of digital photography straining towards idealisation. The pristine conditions of photography are undermined in the book's design and riff on Henri Matisse's apposite aphorism "exactitude is not truth" (Matisse titled two of his paintings Le Luxe).Composed in three parts, Le Luxe contains an unusual backdrop, the everyday of the artist, who worked from November 2005 to January 2010 on one commission documenting a building in downtown Manhattan on a site adjacent to the World Trade Centre. This narrative offers an uneasy balance to the fissures between analogue and digital and Ethridge's consistent undermining of his own certainties.Roe Ethridge was born in 1969 in Miami and received a BFA in Photography at The College of Art in Atlanta, GA. Ethridge's images emanate from his direct experience of the world. His focus is multiple and restless as he works to capture the vivid and intimate details of his various locales. In doing so, he moves freely among the classic genres of the photographic medium - portrait, landscape, and still life." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Ethridge, Roe.

        
        <br/>London:Mack,2012.

        <br/>Price: $55.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	I Go to Some Hollow. - Cain, Amina.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18707"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a83</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Signed by Amina Cain during her recent reading at Division Leap.  "Fiction. In her debut collection of fifteen short stories, Amina Cain makes ordinary worlds strange and spare and beautiful. A woman carves invisible images onto ice, a pair of black wings appears in front of a house, and a restless teacher sits in a gallery of miniature rooms. As Miranda Mellis describes, "The revelatory pleasure and hope &#91;in these stories] emanate from an artistry driven by ethical desire." "I highly recommend reading I Go To Some Hollow", says Bhanu Kapil, "because of what it teaches you about love, and the relationship between love and writing." I GO TO SOME HOLLOW is published as part of the TrenchArt: Tracer Series, with an Introduction by Bhanu Kapil and collaborative visual art by Ken Erhlich and Susan Simpson."Amina Cain writes stories that revolve quietly around human relationality, landscape, and emptiness. She is also a curator and a teacher of writing/literature. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in publications such as 3rd Bed, DENVER QUARTERLY, La Petite Zine, THE ENCYCLOPEDIA PROJECT, and Action, Yes.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Cain, Amina.

        
        <br/>Los Angeles:Les Figues Press,2009.

        <br/>Price: $15.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Waste Land and Other Poems. - Beer, John.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18708"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a84</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Paperback, 128 pp. Second printing. New from the publisher. "Winner of the 2011 Norma Farber First Book Award from the Poetry Society of America. John Beer's first collection, THE WASTE LAND AND OTHER POEMS, employs the wit of a philosopher and the ear of a poet to stage ways of reading that are political, personal, and theoretical. The speaker of these poems also brings humor to the dissecting table, to prod the legacies of great works of the imagination while balancing irony and affection." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Beer, John.

        
        <br/>Ann Arbor:Canarium Books,2011.

        <br/>Price: $14.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Fra Keeler. - Van Der Vliet der Oloomi, Azareen.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18710"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a85</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Van Der Vliet der Oloomi, Azareen.

        
        <br/>St. Louis:Dorothy, A Publishing Project,2012.

        <br/>Price: $10.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Moleskinexcavation. - Bedient, Delphine.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18734"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a86</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		One of 70 numbered copies. Artist book / zine by Portland artist Delphine Bedient, and one of our favroite recent local artist books. "Moleskinexcavation is a zine that aims to excavate, categorize, and present in an alternative fashion the contents of the most recent finished Moleskine notebook of one Delphine Bedient (also the publisher of this zine). The notebook served as her sketchbook, journal, note-taking device, list receptacle and general mental catch-all and was with her at all times during its use. This retrospective examination results in an unintentional self portrait and a comment on what we find important enough to write down." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Bedient, Delphine.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore:Delphine Bedient,2011.

        <br/>Price: $3.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Ashulia. - Ahmed, Zubair.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18737"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a87</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		12mo, wraps. First edition. New from the publisher.  Tavern Books is an essential Portland-based publishing project led by Mike McGriff and Carl Adamshick which revives out-of-print books and modern works in translation. "The publication of Ashulia, Zubair Ahmed's first book, marks the emergence of a new and exciting voice in American poetry. A unique sensibility and style, a faith in the ethereal, a deep belief in the image - these things reveal a poet of uncommon talents who is determined to exist nowhere but in his own lyrical impulses and complexities. Ashulia is an achievement by any standard." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Ahmed, Zubair.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Tavern Books,2011.

        <br/>Price: $10.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Maniac Box: Twenty-Seven Film Treatments. - Putnam, C. E.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18747"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a88</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Second edition. New from the publisher, and hand-delivered by Putnam during his recent reading at Division Leap. "In the year 2000, the author wrote twenty-seven film treatments and sent them to every movie studio he could think of foreign and domestic. Despite his tenacity, the project was, from all accounts, a complete failure, and lead to a minor personal and financial breakdown. Originally published in 2001 as a limited edition chapbook, this newly revised Maniac Box is printed in lurid color and features movie posters for each of the twenty-seven film treatments." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Putnam, C. E.

        
        <br/>Np:P.I.S.O.R. Publications,2012.

        <br/>Price: $18.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Transmissions from the Institute. - Putnam, C. E.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18748"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a89</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Second edition. New from the publisher, and hand-delivered by Putnam during his recent reading at Division Leap. "In 1999, the author moved into an old apartment building in Seattle, Washington that once served as a bank during the Alaskan Gold Rush. Soon he began to hear strange sounds and voices coming out of mysterious pipes in the subterranean bank vault. Though he never discovered the true source of these sounds, he was able to record and transcribe them through some D.I.Y. electronic wizardry. He then wrote and recorded transmission responses of his own, sending them back out into the world. This book is a written record of these response transmissions."  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Putnam, C. E.

        
        <br/>Np:P.I.S.O.R. Publications,2012.

        <br/>Price: $16.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Things Keep Happening. - Putnam, C. E.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18749"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a90</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Second edition. New from the publisher, and hand-delivered by Putnam during his recent reading at Division Leap. "The long, book-ending title poem, ÒThings Keep HappeningÓ was published as a 100 copy handmade chapbook in 2003. Collected here for the first time with two sections of connected shorter poems, the book traces a set of figures including a space commander, a dying grandfather, an airline attendant, a old west sheriff, an antelope, and a disconnected narrator, as they interact in a landscape of fragmented language, dreams, and memory. The collision and compression of these voices combine to create a portrait of personal and public loss that unfolds and builds through the course of the volume." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Putnam, C. E.

        
        <br/>Np:P.I.S.O.R. Publications,2012.

        <br/>Price: $16.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Papier-M‰chŽ Taj Mahal. - Putnam, C. E.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18750"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a91</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Second edition. New from the publisher, and hand-delivered by Putnam during his recent reading at Division Leap. "C.E. PutnamÕs first book. Contains the poems: ÒYoung CaedmonÓ, ÒOregonÓ, ÒDad is Two HeroesÓ, ÒWhat Ever Happened to Uncle Wayne?Ó, ÒSelected Mediterranean Diaries from a Day in JulyÓ, ÒPushed Forward, Not NebraskaÓ, and many more." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Putnam, C. E.

        
        <br/>Np:P.I.S.O.R. Publications,2012.

        <br/>Price: $16.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Spaces Where Spaces Are. - Putnam, C. E.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18751"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a92</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Second edition. New from the publisher, and hand-delivered by Putnam during his recent reading at Division Leap. "Many of the poems in C.E. PutnamÕs third book got their start in stolen work moments from 1997-1998 whilst working various jobs in the Washington D.C. metropolitan area. Spaces Where Spaces Are also includes the sixteen part post-apocalyptic diary poem, ÒPeriodic Zone: Log,Ó and the text/poem companion for the art opening ÒRecent in Origin: A visual anthem for the wet frontierÓ as well as twenty never before published handbills promoting the show." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Putnam, C. E.

        
        <br/>Np:P.I.S.O.R. Publications,2012.

        <br/>Price: $14.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	XX Elegies. - Putnam, C. E.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18752"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a93</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Second edition. New from the publisher, and hand-delivered by Putnam during his recent reading at Division Leap. "XX Elegies is a broken-lyric re-versioning of John DonneÕs Elegies, DonneÕs fabulously strange and disturbed poem series of sex and death, longing and loss. It is presented here for the first time with DonneÕs original text and includes letters of correspondence between the two authors regarding their collaboration." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Putnam, C. E.

        
        <br/>Np:P.I.S.O.R. Publications,2012.

        <br/>Price: $16.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	1981 & 2011. - Graham, Paul.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18846"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a94</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to, &#91;104] pp., bound in full blue embossed cloth. New from the publisher. "Paul Graham, winner of the 2012 Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography, is a vital figure in contemporary photography, working for over thirty years and continually challenging different genres of photographic practice. His work has been widely embraced, with exhibitions at the Tate and the Museum of Modern Art, and published in more than 12 monographs. The Hasselblad Award is considered photography's highest prize for lifetime achievement and the list of past winners is a roll call of photography's greatest masters.In honour of the 2012 award, the Hasselblad Centre in Gothenburg, Sweden is showing an exhibition, together with this book 1981 & 2011, which unites GrahamÕs first published work A1 - The Great North Road (1981) and his latest The Present (2011). Edited by Paul Graham in collaboration with Dragana Vujanovic and Louise Wolthers from The Hasselblad Foundation, the book links this thirty-year span, together with an essay written by David Campany, author, curator and artist.At the beginning of the 1980Õs Graham was among the first photographers to unite contemporary colour practice with the classic Ôsocial documentaryÕ genre. In 1981/2 he completed A1 Ð The Great North Road, a series of colour photographs from the length of the British A1 road, which forged a dramatic challenge to the black and white tradition that dominated British photography to that point. This work, along with his other photographs of the 1980Õs, were pivotal in reinvigorating and transforming photographic practice in the UK and abroad.In 2011 Paul Graham released The Present, which embraces street photography, a genre unique to photography where the artist works with the ceaseless flow of life. These images break with the traditional approach of locking the world into frozen instants and instead brings us each scene together with its double, the briefest fraction of time apart, so that we glimpse the continuum, the before/after and coming/ going of life's dazzling dance.Designed by Paul Graham and MACK, printed in colour throughout, 1981 & 2011 aligns these two bodies of Graham's work across the 3 decades spanning his career. With David Campany's incisive essay, we can piece together and explore the concerns that link and bind an artist over the years making this a salient book on the passage of creativity in the observable world." 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Graham, Paul.

        
        <br/>London:MACK,2012.

        <br/>Price: $55.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Front Edition 2: Vitus. - Ross, Danielle & Noelle Stiles, Tahni Holt, Robert Tyree.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18860"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a95</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Elephant folio, tabloid format, offset printed on newsprint. New from the publisher. The second installment of this excellent artists' periodical dedicated to dance.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Ross, Danielle & Noelle Stiles, Tahni Holt, Robert Tyree.

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Front,2012.

        <br/>Price: $4.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	The Rat Can't Resist. . . - Buson, Yosa &#91;Franz Wright].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18907"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a96</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		5 1/2 x 8 1/2" broadside, printed in two colors. One of 50 copies printed by Tavern Books. A haiku by Buson translated from the Japanese by Franz Wright. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Buson, Yosa &#91;Franz Wright].

        
        <br/>Portland, Ore.:Tavern Books,2011.

        <br/>Price: $4.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Caveman January Friday 13, 1978. - &#91;Mimeograph Revolution] Schucat, Simon, ed.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/18942"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a97</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		Foolscap format, &#91;8] pp. &#91;including covers] Mimeographed, side-stapled sheets. Folded once, with some marginal toning and some minor indenting from Mimeo Stack, but near fine. Single issue of this ephemeral and scarce New York School little magazine  / newsletter issued at the cusp of the eighties, and, like Sinking Bear &#91;item ] exemplifying some of the best gossip-as-art aspects of the New York School. The highlight of this issue is a list of Non-Sexist Poets, chosen by a committee consisting of Eileen Myles, Alice Notley, and Ted Berrigan. Also included are poems attributed to Alice Notley, Peter Schejldahl, Kathie Gibboney, and Greg Masters. Jim Anger contributes a piece on the St. Mark's Babylon, attributing a variety of odd sexual predilections to Ted Berrigan, Kenward Elmslie, Padgett, Rene Ricard, Larry Fagin, Anne Waldman, Jim Carroll, and many more. Also included are send-ups of James Tate and Jim Carroll's The Basketball Diaries, John Ashbery, etc. An unknown number of these newsletters were published between 1977-1981. Scarce. &#91;Clay & Phillips p. 268] 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>&#91;Mimeograph Revolution] Schucat, Simon, ed.

        
        <br/>New York:Caveman,1978.

        <br/>Price: $125.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Strange Faeces 6: Larry Fagin Issue. - Fagin, Larry &#91;Opal & Ellen Nations, eds].
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/19035"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a98</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8 1/2 x 14", mimeographed from typescript; stab-stapled in card covers. One of a limited edition of 200 copies. Near fine with some minor soiling to covers. A scarce issue of the little magazine, devoted entirely to the work of Larry Fagin and including some great work, one of his best and scarcest collections. Some minor indenting around staples from mimeo stack, upper left hand corner bumped, thin, almost mperceptible strip of tidemarking to lower tip of first couple pages, still a very good copy.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Fagin, Larry &#91;Opal & Ellen Nations, eds].

        
        <br/>London:Strange Faeces Press,1971.

        <br/>Price: $75.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Snoring in New York. - Denby, Edwin.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/19287"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a99</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		8vo, saddle-stapled wraps. One of 750 copies. One of the best collections of poetry to come out in the 70's, with a striking cover incorporating a photograph by Denby's longtime friend Rudy Burckhardt. Recommended. Near fine with a touch of rubbing to extremities.  
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>Denby, Edwin.

        
        <br/>New York:Angel Hair / Adventures in Poetry,1974.

        <br/>Price: $20.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>

 <entry>
   <title>
	<![CDATA[
	Mag City Nos 1-14 &#91;All Published]. - &#91;Artist Periodicals] Masters, Greg & Gary Lenhart, Michael Scholnick, editors.
	]]>	
   </title>
   <link href="http://www.divisionleap.com/cgi-bin/akd/19315"/>
   <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a100</id>
   <updated>2013-05-18T12:28:37Z</updated>
   <summary type="html">
      
	<![CDATA[ 
		4to, mimeographed and stab-stapled in illustrated card covers; final number offset printed and saddle-stapled. Varying degrees of light soiling and toning, occasional creasing, no. 12 with some light tidemarks to cover, else generally clean and very good. All issues published of one of the longest lived and most influential third generation New York School magazines, issued from a cold water flat on 12th street. With contributions from Eileen Myles, Alice Notley, Ed Sanders, Ted Berrigan, Bernadette Mayer, Lewis Warsh, Allen Ginsberg, Tim Dlugos, Larry Fagin, Ron Padgett, Amiri Baraka, James Schuyler, Gary Burckhardt, Paul Violi et al. The final number was dedicated to the great Edwin Denby, and printed two plays by him, along with an interview. "Mag City was a party in print. It was started to give form to a literary scene that existed in the East Village, disenchanted with mainstream values." - Greg Masters, in Clay & Phillips &#91;Clay & Phillips pp. 232-3]. 
	]]>
   </summary>
   <content type="html">
    
       <![CDATA[ 
		
     <br/>&#91;Artist Periodicals] Masters, Greg & Gary Lenhart, Michael Scholnick, editors.

        
        <br/>New York:Mag City,1977-1983.

        <br/>Price: $950.00
       
	]]>
   </content>
 </entry>
 
</feed>

