personalzine

English

Etymology

personal + zine

Noun

personalzine (plural personalzines)

  1. (fandom slang) A fanzine produced by a single person, often covering that person's own interests and activities.
    • 1986 November, Ted White, “The Purple Fields of Fanac”, in Science-Fiction Five-Yearly, number 8, page 21:
      Vegas put out VAGUE, a fanzine that had started out as a personalzine -- hell, a letter-substitute, one or two sheets. But he put it out so frequently, sometimes three or four a month, that it had generated its own momentum. Soon he was printing letters, and it was a dozen pages. Some of the letters were thinly disguised articles -- fans quickly learned the kinds of letters Don liked to print -- and from there it was an easy step to the monthly genzine of 20 pages which VAGUE became: an inevitable evolution.
    • 1992 October, Eric Lindsay, Gegenschein, number 65:
      Gegenschein is a personalzine, so I don't accept reader's contributions ... however, when an Elder Ghod of fandom unexpectedly sends me an article, I can easily be persuaded to make an exception.
    • 2002, Aaron Cometbus, Despite Everything: A Cometbus Omnibus, page 133:
      [] MUSICZINES, PERSONALZINES, PUNKZINES, COMICZINES OR SOMETHING TO THAT EFFECT.

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