Thirty-five years of Temporary Culture


TEMPORARY CULTURE started with a photocopy ’zine at the end of June 1988, The Newsletter of Temporary Culture, the title from a dream-memory, and the form and content being a confluence of available technology and literary urges in the post-industrial not-quite-gentrified Hudson river littoral in Paulus Hoek (five minutes’ walk from downtown Jersey City). With the fifth issue the word newsletter fell away from the title and the seventh issue introduced the sumac logo and marked an end to a rainbow of ’zines (the eighth issue never made it to the copy machine).

the cover of the first issue, light blue, was a rubbing of a coal chute cover in front of a house on Van Voorst Park in Jersey City

And then the world changed.

Temporary Culture evolved with the newly available technology just as my interest in Avram Davidson ripened to the point of publication, and a friend said, you don’t really want a database, let’s make a website. An electronic newsletter followed, but the itch to produce printed things resurfaced before long, first with the publications of the Avram Davidson Society, and then from 2003 a steady series of books, including Another green world, When They Came by Don Webb,  Hope-in-the-Mist by Michael Swanwick, and the specially bound copies of A Conversation larger than the Universe. (In retrospect, it would have been cool to accept the hand press and founts of type offered to me in late 1992 or early 1993, but at the time I had nowhere to house them and so a different path was chosen.) The most important book published by Temporary Culture is without a doubt Sexual Stealing by Wendy Walker; the most elegant is the hand printed edition of Naples by Avram Davidson. Of each one of these (and of each of the books of Temporary Culture) I can assert that without my energies these books would not have come into being. A checklist of the publications of Temporary Culture is in preparation. There will probably be a few more books before it’s over.
The latest publications of Temporary Culture are new editions of Sexual Stealing by Wendy Walker, first published as an artist book in 2021, and now available as an equally beautiful trade paperback, printed and distributed by the workers cooperative Levellers Press, and as a full color e-book (in pdf format) distributed by Weightless Books. It is exciting to be able to offer Wendy Walker’s work to a wider audience.

Temporary Culture sale list January 2023

happy new year 2023 from Temporary Culture which started out as a photocopy ’zine in 1988(!). The January sale list features more than 100 items in all areas (all at discounts of 20 percent or more). Buy a book or two or three . . .

https://temporary-culture.com/book-category/sale-list-january-2023/

[through 31 January, sale prices net to all (postpaid in U.S.A.). Institutions may request deferred payment terms.]

Nostalgia

We all get nostalgic at times.

Here’s a double dose, remembering a nice book from the Library of Janis Ian, now at the John Hay Library, Brown University: with the inscription above, George R. R. Martin presents a volume in his Game of Thrones series to Janis Ian and Pat Snyder, recalling their wedding at City Hall in Toronto on 27 August 2003, before same-sex marriage was legal in the United States. Martin was best man at the wedding, which was reported in the New York Times. It was Martin’s first appearance in the paper.

MARTIN, George R. R. A Dance with Dragons. Book Five of A Song of Ice and Fire. 8vo, New York: Bantam Books, [2011]. First edition. Boards. As new in dust jacket. Inscribed by the author on the half title. ¶¶ Inscribed by the author to Janis Ian: “To Janis & Pat who got me in The New York Times, Fly high, burn brightly, Love, George”.