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Jay Kinney
While I do not believe in reincarnation, I do feel like I've had a series of incarnations in a single lifetime. I grew up in the U.S. Midwest, attended school in New York and ended up living, since 1972 in the Bay Area. I began my creative career as a cartoonist (first published in Bijou Funnies... show more

While I do not believe in reincarnation, I do feel like I've had a series of incarnations in a single lifetime. I grew up in the U.S. Midwest, attended school in New York and ended up living, since 1972 in the Bay Area. I began my creative career as a cartoonist (first published in Bijou Funnies in '68), art directed Greg Shaw's seminal rock zine, Who Put the Bomp, increasingly turned to writing and editing as the '70s progressed, first as editor for CoEvolution Quarterly, writer for the Whole Earth Catalog series, and, ultimately as publisher and editor in chief of Gnosis Magazine (1985-1999). Since the turn of the new century, much of my work has been devoted to Masonic research, culminating in my newest book, The Masonic Myth.
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What I am reading
What I am reading rated it 6 years ago
The first 121 pages follow a clear concept, namely to explore the life of the Core-Beat poets Kerouac, Ginsberg and Burroughs. Those stories are either pretty much focused on their homoerotic sexlife or on the very basics of them moving around a lot while switching from one odd job to the next or ru...
Bright and Shiny Shiny
Bright and Shiny Shiny rated it 13 years ago
My favorite pieces were about Kenneth Patchen & the Beat Chicks. Who knew Louise Fitzhugh illustrated a book about a little Beatnik girl(Suzuki Beane)before she wrote Harriet the Spy.
Bright and Shiny Shiny
Bright and Shiny Shiny rated it 13 years ago
My favorite pieces were about Kenneth Patchen & the Beat Chicks. Who knew Louise Fitzhugh illustrated a book about a little Beatnik girl(Suzuki Beane)before she wrote Harriet the Spy.
grace
grace rated it 13 years ago
The Joyce Brabner story is by far the best; the Jeffrey Lewis one about Tuli Kupferberg is also quite well done. Everything else is so dry ("he spent two years in California but then he returned to New York in July 1958" etc., etc.) that you'd be better off reading the Wikipedia articles. Also, most...
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