Synopses & Reviews
Review
"Outstanding." The Stranger
"The Minus Times is the only magazine that I would pay to appear in." Mark Richard
"The finest almanac to appear in print since Ben Franklin brought forth Poor Richards Almanac back in 1732." Copper Press
"More, please." Tom Frank, editor of The Baffler
Synopsis
Begun as an open letter to strangers and fellow misfits,
The Minus Times grew to become a hand-typed literary magazine that showcased the next generation of American fiction. Contributors include Sam Lipsyte, David Berman, Patrick DeWitt, and Wells Tower, with illustrations by David Eggers and Brad Neely as well as interviews with Dan Clowes, Barry Hannah, and a yet-to-be-famous Stephen Colbert. With sly humor and striking illustrations,
The Minus Times has earned a fervent following as much for its lack of literary pretension as its sporadic appearances on the newsstand. All thirty of the nearly-impossible-to-find issues of this improvised literary almanac are now assembled for the first time, typos and all.
About the Author
Hunter Kennedy graduated from the University of Virginia in 1992, the same year he began publishing
The Minus Times. Over the past 20 years, he has worked in cabinetry shops, magazines, architecture firms and a foundry to pay for typing ribbons. His writing has appeared in
Open City, The Baffler, Vice, T Magazine, Garden and Gun, and
J&L Illustrated #1. Kennedy lives on the fringes of a popular lifestyle community in South Carolina.