Juice Magazine, edited and published by Judy L. Brekke and Stephen S. Morse starting in the middle 1970's in the San Francisco Bay Area. A total of 7 issues were published as print collections, Saddle Stitched, B&W. Many photographs and B&W illustrations and art projects done just for Juice. Many of these small press maverick poets, emerging, and established have gone on to become an active part of late 20th and early 21st century poetry. These writers are direct heirs of Ginsberg, Creeley, W.C Williams etc., revolutionary rethinking of what is possible with poetry. Juice still exists as an online publisher.
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Juice 1 1975. |
Juice II 1976 POETS: Richard Chwedyk Thomas Michael Fisher Nellie Hill William J. Knipping Thomas Martin Peter Payack Clifton Simms, Jr. Dadda Dadio Gustav Hasford Glee Knight Gary Ligi Libbyann Miller Susan Shevat |
Juice III 1977 POETS: Michael Jon Andrews Johnny Baranski Blenn Beaudry GuyBeining Randall Brock Joe Butkie L.P.C Judy Cashell David Citino Stuart Dybek Emilie Glen Taylor Graham Samuel Green Jan E. M. Hass Carol Hamilton William Harrold Errol Miller Kenneth Pobo David Shevin Charles Webb Norman Wold Toni Ortner Zimmerman |
| Juice IV 1977 POETS: Wendy S. Abbiati Bontempi John ditsky David Engel Elaine Equi Ken Fernstrom Ken Fifer Charles Fishman Hugh B. Fox Charles Ghigna Richard Grayson Tom Hawkins Halvard Johnson Vicki Lowther A. McA. Miller Tony Moffeit Nila NorthSun Peter Payack Kirk Robertson Janet Seery David Spicer Michael Turnsen |
Juice 5 1978 POETS: Peter Brett Randall Brock Dadda Dadio Joel Dailey Emilie Glen Phillip Graham NancyGusack Hugh Fox James Jurado Marsha Kash Arthur Knight Ronald Koertge Tony Moffeit Steve rasnic Steve Richmond Susan Fromberg Schaeffer Jared Smith Robert Joe Stout Sal Young |
Juice 6 1978 Judy L. Brekke Stephen S. Morse This issue was the last of the issues made possible by grants from the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines, a funding arm of the National Endowment of the Arts. It was the last issue because of a refusal by the editors to conform to any content guidelines (no matter how well intended) in exchange for government money. “We published an issue that contained only our work because we were told we couldn’t.” Judy Brekke & Stephen Morse |