Monthly Archive for December, 2025

01/16 Keep Your Ear to the Ground: Conversation with John R. Davis

Jan
16
6:30 pm

Keep Your Ear to the Ground: A History of DC Punk Fanzines
John Davis in Conversation with Liz Mason
Friday, January 16th, 2026 –  6:30-8:30pm
in-person at Quimby’s Bookstore: 1854 W. North Ave, Chicago IL: 60622

Register for the Event

Keep Your Ear to the Ground is the first history of the fanzines that emerged from Washington, DC’s highly influential punk community.

DIY culture has always been at the heart of DC’s thriving punk community. As Washington, DC’s punk scene emerged in the mid-1970s, so did the “fanzines” that celebrated it. Before the rise of the internet, fanzines were a potent way for fans to communicate and to revel in the joy of fandom. More than just publications; they were a distillation of punk’s allure, connecting the city to the broader punk community. Fanzines remain a meaningful, tactile, creative medium for punk fans to connect with like-minded people outside the corporate-controlled world.

In Keep Your Ear to the Ground, the archivist and musician John R. Davis unveils the development of punk fanzines and their role in supporting DC’s hardcore and punk scene from the 1970s into the twenty-first century. He sheds new light on DC’s scene and highlights some of its key personalities, including many who are often left out of punk history, with high-quality images of rare zines and insights from numerous interviews with zine creators and musicians. This book vividly weaves together the origin of zines and their importance in underground communities.

For punk enthusiasts, zine creators, American studies scholars, and anyone who has ever felt like an outsider, Keep Your Ear to the Ground traces how the unique environment of Washington, DC, helped zines thrive.

–.- ..- .. — -… -.– .—-. …

John R. Davis is the curator of Special Collections in Performing Arts at the University of Maryland’s Michelle Smith Performing Arts Library. His articles and commentary appear in the Washington Post, NPR, Notes: The Journal of the Music Library Association, The Journal of Popular Culture, and Post & Post-Punk. He is a longtime participant in the Washington, D.C. punk community as a fanzine creator and as a musician in bands like Q And Not U, Georgie James, Corm, and Title Tracks.

John will in be conversation with Quimby’s Dean Emeritus Liz Mason. Liz has been self-publishing zines for almost three decades. Recent works include Caboose #15 I Was There, Awesome Things #4, Cul-de-sac #9 and The Most Unwanted Zine. Her work has also been published in such publications as The Chicago Tribune, Broken Pencil, Punk Planet, The Zine Yearbook, Third Coast Review and more. She managed Quimby’s Bookstore, home of wild and weird reading material in Chicago, for two and a half decades. In January 2025 she enrolled in the Master of Science in Library & Information Science program with a specialization in Archives and Records Management at Chicago State University. Catch her on 107.1 FM CHIRP Radio in Chicago, Wednesday mornings 6-9AM CT or co-hosting the podcast Rough Draft with Keidra and Liz.

–.- ..- .. — -… -.– .—-. …

Register for the Event

Your generous donation directly supports artist honorariums and ensures the continuation of this program. We are so grateful for your support of local creators, Quimby’s Bookstore, and DIY culture—we truly couldn’t do it without you!

Pay what you can afford in person or via Venmo.
Suggested: $10
Venmo: @quimbysbookstore
Please include “Keep You Ear To the Ground” in the note!

Your generous donation directly supports artist honorariums and ensures the continuation of this program. We are so grateful for your support of local authors, publishers, creators, Quimby’s Bookstore, and DIY culture—we truly couldn’t do it without you!

01/12 Sketch/Book: Salon

Jan
12
6:00 pm

Sketch / Book: a Wicker Park Reading and Drawing Salon
A collaboration between LMN Wedge Studio and Quimby’s
Monday, January 12th, 2026 –  6:00-8:30pm

Meet in-person at Quimby’s Bookstore: 1854 W. North Ave, Chicago IL: 60622
At 6:30 walk 2 blocks to LMN Wedge Studio 1579 N Milwaukee Ave Suite 206, Chicago, IL 60622

Cost: $40 – comes with a free zine or comic of your choice ($15 value or less) at Quimby’s Bookstore and tea and light refreshments at LMN Wedge. Funds go directly to support these vital Wicker Park artist run spaces.

Capacity: A cozy and mystical gathering of 13!

Sketch / Book is a social salon and creative meetup centered on reading and/or drawing, hosted by LMN Wedge Studio and Quimby’s Bookstore. Guests begin the session at Quimby’s to select a free zine. After browsing, and getting aquinted we’ll head over to the Flatiron Arts Building to read or sketch within the eclectic comfort of LMN Wedge Studio and Gallery. This is an opportunity to read a zine book or comic in a social setting, practice sketching people from observation, or simply journal and mark-make in your sketchbook within a social, supportive setting.

A time for round-robin sharing and networking is built into the schedule.

Register for the event

01/09 Conor Stechschulte: Closing

Jan
9
5:00 pm

Crepusculine Exhibition Closing Reception
with
Conor Stechschulte
Friday, January 9th, 2026 –  5:00-7:00pm

in-person at Quimby’s Bookstore: 1854 W. North Ave, Chicago IL: 60622

Join Conor Stechschulte  for the closing reception of original art related to the process and thinking behind his new comic, “Crepusculine 2.”

Conor Stechschulte is an Eisner-Nominated cartoonist, artist, screenwriter and educator. He is the author of the graphic novels The Amateurs and Ultrasound. His work has been translated into five languages and adapted for film. He teaches classes in comics, printmaking, and self-publishing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Register for the event!

*** January Upcoming Events ***

Jan ’25
9
5:00 pm

All events are at Quimby’s Bookstore (unless otherwise noted)
1854 W. North Ave Chicago IL 60622

JANUARY

Friday, 1/9:  5:00-7:00 | Crepusculine Exhibition by Conor Stechschulte, Closing Reception

*********

Monday, 1/12:  6:00-8:30 | Sketch / Book a Wicker Park Reading and Drawing Salon

*********

Friday, 1/16: 6:30-8:30 | Keep Your Ear to the Ground: in Conversation with John Davis

*********

  • Friday, 1/23: 6:30-8:30| Blonde Bombastic Exhibition by Frankie Lyne and Show and Tell Artist Talk and Reading
  • Thursday, 1/29 6:30-8:30| After Hours – General Things Press
  • Saturday, 1/31 6:30-8:30| Christopher Goblin Comics Reading

FEBRUARY

  • Saturday, 2/7 6:30-8:30 | Peerology – Peer Learning Workshop and Reading with Charlie Danoff
  • Thursday, 2/26 6:30-8:30| After Hours – Local Lit. Mag Reading Series, details forthcoming

12/18 After Hours: Match Factory Editions

Dec ’25
18
6:00 pm

Quimby’s After Hours Reading with readers from Match Factory Editions; Paul Martínez Pompa, Carma Lynn Park, Dawn Tefft, & Snežana Žabi?! Hosted By Taylor Thornburg

In person at Quimby’s Bookstore
1854 W. North Ave, Chicago

Match Factory Editions is a brand new small press out of Chicago and LA. By the downwardly mobile for the downwardly mobile, our press champions fabulous stories that tell a deeper truth. We are a place for all who missed the gravy train or were never offered the fare.

Paul Martínez Pompa is a papa and poet whose first book, My Kill Adore Him (University of Notre Dame Press), was selected for the Andres Montoya Poetry Prize by Martín Espada. Match Factory Editions is publishing his most recent book, Domestic Corpse. Martínez Pompa’s work has been widely anthologized, including in What Saves Us: Poems of Empathy and Outrage in the Trump Era, and The Breakbeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop. His poetry was commissioned for a Chicago Public Radio project called In Verse, which aimed to explore the emotional weight of gun violence. He is currently on the editorial board at Packingtown Review.

Chicago-based writer, poet, and photographer Carma Lynn Park is the author of Through the Bronze Mirror: Speculative Poems and Stories, forthcoming from Match Factory Editions in 2026. Her mother passed on a love of writing, and her father gave her a taste for fantasy and science fiction. She fondly remembers sitting on the cold linoleum floor of the back porch surrounded by cardboard boxes of speculative fiction magazines.

Dawn Tefft’s poems appear in Denver Quarterly, Fence, and Witness. Her chapbooks include Gosling (Anhinga Press), Fist (Dancing Girl Press), and Field Trip to My Mother and Other Exotic Locations (Mudlark). Her debut collection Once Upon a Riot (Match Factory Editions, 2025) insists upon the necessity of resisting forms of oppression such as fascism and economic exploitation, while exploring both the challenges and the moments of beauty in raising a young child in our current political moment. Tefft volunteers as an editor for Packingtown Review and works as a union representative in Chicago, where she raises the most wonderful child and enjoys life-affirming friendships.

Chicago-based transnational writer and musician Snežana Žabi? is a co-founder of Match Factory Editions and the author of several books of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, including her latest poetry collection Concrete Is More Beautiful Disfigured and Stained (Match Factory Editions, 2025). She plays guitar, writes songs, and sings in Rent Party, everyone’s favorite feminist garage folk band. She teaches writing and literature as a part of the contingent academic workforce and has been a proud union member of UIC GEO, SEIU Faculty Forward, and UIC United Faculty.

Register for the event!

–.- ..- .. — -… -.– .—-. …

Your generous donation directly supports artist honorariums and ensures the continuation of this program. We are so grateful for your support of local creators, Quimby’s Bookstore, and DIY culture—we truly couldn’t do it without you!

Pay what you can afford. Suggested $10+
Venmo or PayPal (Please include “After Hours” in the note) or make a Credit Card or Cash donation in person at the register the night of the event!

Your generous donation directly supports artist honorariums and ensures the continuation of this program. We are so grateful for your support of local authors, publishers, creators, Quimby’s Bookstore, and DIY culture—we truly couldn’t do it without you!