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In 2005, Feral House published When Sex Was Dirty. In 2006, I, Goldstein: My Screwed Life (with Al Goldstein) was released by Thunder's Mouth Press. In 2007, Feral House reissued Tales of Times Square in an expanded edition.
Feral House is an American book publisher founded in 1989 by Adam Parfrey and based in Port Townsend, Washington. [ 1 ] Following the death of the founder Adam Parfrey in 2018, [ 2 ] Feral House continues to be run by Parfrey's sister, Jessica Parfrey and Christina Ward .
Parfrey was born in New York City, but during childhood moved to Los Angeles with his parents, actor Woodrow Parfrey and Rosa Ellovich, a stage director of Jewish descent. . After graduating high school, he attended the University of California, Santa Cruz, [2] and UCLA, before dropping out [1] to move to San Francisco, where he began a short-lived experimental magazine, IDEA.
It was the last time The Gits would ever play in Los Angeles. ... Moriarty’s book, which was published by Feral House, pays homage to Zapata by focusing on the artistry and creative genius of ...
About 100 workers were in the Los Angeles Times building at 1:07 a.m. Oct. 1, 1910. Then 16 sticks of dynamite exploded at the anti-union newspaper, and people began dying.
American Hardcore: A Tribal History is a book written by Steven Blush that relates the history of the hardcore punk movement that took place in Northern America between 1980 and 1986. It was first published by Feral House in October 2001. The book was the basis of the documentary film American Hardcore (2006), directed by Paul Rachman.
What: Actor, author and "Reading Rainbow" founder LeVar Burton joins the L.A. Times Book Club to discuss the State of Banned Books with Times editor Steve Padilla. When: May 24 at 7 p.m. Pacific .
In 2009 Feral House released an updated version of Hoghire's book Opium for the Masses. [3] [4] One of Hogshire's better known short stories "The Electric Cough-Syrup Acid Test" was excerpted by Harper's and has also appeared in the book White Rabbit, and a book about zines. The story first appeared in Hogshire's zine, Pills-a-Go-Go. [5]