Human touch

Luna Moth Zine Fest champions DIY spirit

Three years on, Luna Moth Zine Fest is back and bigger than ever. There are more vendors (“tablers” in the parlance), and workshops covering storytelling, crowdfunding, game drawing and community care. The festival also has its first group of paid sponsors, plus a new and larger location in Manchester, after two years in Salem.

It’s a big leap for an event that began when cartoonist April Landry grew frustrated with long drives to similar events, so she decided to do one in her home state. Landry named the festival after a species of moth that’s native to the region and found in the wild, seemingly in defiance of nature.

“It’s very strange that something that vibrant and almost tropical-looking lives in New England,” she said. “It’s a magical-looking thing, a little mythical, so it’s a way to say New England-based and New Hampshire-based while also giving it this ethereal vibe. It’s a little special.”

For anyone wondering, zines are small circulation booklets — comics, word art, ephemera, covering all manner of topics. They’re self published, rather than commercially, and exist “for self expression, art, storytelling, information sharing and pure creative joy … passion projects for humans, by humans,” according to a festival press release.

“The great thing about zines is that anybody can make a zine, and anybody can put whatever they want in a zine,” Landry said. “There’s no publisher telling you, ‘you can’t do that’ and no editor telling you can’t do anything. There’s literally no barrier between your idea and getting it out into the world with zines.”

Landry entered the zine world after she designed a Dungeons & Dragons world to play with friends. “Once the game night was over, I felt like the work was wasted, so I figured out a way to put it in a book … facts about different monsters, their hit points, where to find them, things like that.” She called her first-ever zine Things to Fight and Places to Fight Them.

Artists are often drawn to zines as an extension of their other forms of self-expression, or as a way to distribute their work.

“It’s very liberatory,” Landry said. “There are people who are making art all the time and don’t know what to do with it, or don’t have a way to get it out there. Finding zines and making zines is typically a way to do that.”

For others, they’re a tool. One person told Landry they fold a zine together on Sunday, then write in it like a diary for the week. “When they’re done, they don’t print it, they don’t make copies, they just put it on the shelf,” she said. “It’s just a way for them to get thoughts out of their heads … something that’s both outward and inward.”

There are more than 70 tablers showing their wares at this year’s event. Katherine Leung, based in Vermont, is doing Zine Fest for the first time. Leung’s Canto Cutie zine explores the experience of Cantonese people living in America. Like many other vendors, Leung’s table will offer other art products like prints and enamel pins.

“The unifying factor is that in some way, shape or form, they make zines,” Landry said. “One vendor’s zines are about learning how to knit, and there’s someone who makes coloring books … it’s a mix across the board, but in some shape or form these people are writing or publishing something themselves that they want other people to read and look at.”

Another new vendor is Silas Denver, who works using the name Sweater Muppets. “They are only now just getting into zine making, and all the stuff they’ve been putting out is cutting-edge and incredible stuff,” Landry said. “It feels really vital, and I’m so excited to have them.”

Landry said Zine Fest’s “four amazing sponsors” are Goosepoop, a Portland, Maine, game studio whose work includes the RPG Laundry Punks; Wrong Brain, a Seacoast collective celebrating “unconventional, under-represented & emerging arts”; the Boston Comics Foundation and Xomik Bük, a comic book collective.

Come with an open mind and eagerness to engage at the all-ages event, Landry urged. “What makes Luna … so popular with people is the culture there and the vibes. It’s one of these places where you can go and talk to interesting people who have like-minded interests, and they’re approachable.”

Luna Moth Zine Fest
When: Saturday, April 18, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Where: YWCA, 72 Concord St., Manchester
More: lunamothzinefest.bsky.social

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

This Week 26/04/16

Thursday, April 16

The Manchester Garden Club will discuss “Dahlias” with presenter Valerie O’Reily at its monthly meeting today at 12:30 p.m. at St. Hedwig Church, 147 Walnut St. in Manchester, according to a press release. See manchesternhgardenclub.weebly.com.

Friday, April 17

Catch comedian Jenny Zigrino tonight at 6:30 p.m. at this show presented by Wicked Joyful at the new Queen City Center, 215 Canal St. in Manchester. See wickedjoyful.com for tickets and find a story about the new venue and a discussion with Zigrino in last week’s issue of the Hippo. Find the April 9 issue in the digital library at hippopress.com. The cover story on local comedy starts on page 8.

Friday, April 17

The Nossrat Yassini Poetry Festival will take place at the University of New Hampshire, Hamilton Smith Hall in Durham, today and Saturday, April 18, when there will be a small press fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tonight, the Nossrat Yassini Book Prize Reading will feature Diannely Antigua, Cornelius Eady, JeFF Stumpo and Adedayo Agarau followed by a “4X4 Team Slam,” all starting at 7 p.m., according unhpoetry.com. On Saturday, programming will run from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. and include panels, workshops, readings, a pop-up art and Cafe Mania, an evening of live poetry at Freedom Cafe from 9 to 11 p.m., according to the schedule on the website.

Saturday, April 18

It’s a good weekend for classical music. “Antonio Vivaldi, Four Seasons and Ralph Vaughan Williams Symphony No. 5” with special guest soloist David Kim from The Philadelphia Orchestra” will be presented by the New Hampshire Philharmonic Orchestra today and Sunday, April 19, at 2 p.m. at the Seifert Performing Arts Center in Salem, according to nhphil.org, where you can purchase tickets.

Saturday, April 18

Today is Record Store Day, a celebration of your local vinyl purveyors with special releases and limited-edition albums. See recordstoreday.com to find a participating store. At Pitchfork Records in Concord, they plan to open at 8 a.m., according to pitchforkrecordsconcord.com. Metro City Records, 691 Somerville St. in Manchester, will be open 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. See recordstoreday.com for more local participating record stores, including area Newbury Comics and Bull Moose shops.

Saturday, April 18

And “New Hampshire Passions” ispresented bySymphony NH music director finalist Tianhui Ng tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Keefe Auditorium, 117 Elm St. in Nashua, in a show that will feature a collaboration with Black Hole Symphony as well as a pre-show talk at 6:30 p.m., according to symphonynh.org, where you can purchase tickets.

Sunday, April 19

Check out “Chromatic Flow,” a new exhibition featuring the art of Adam Krauss and Dave Robb, at See Saw Art, a gallery space inside Mosaic Art Collective at 66 Hanover St., Suite 201, in Manchester, according to seesaw.gallery. The exhibit is on display through Sunday, April 26, and today’s open hours are from 1 to 4 p.m., according to the website, where you can find upcoming open hours for the gallery.

Tuesday, April 22

Author Kathleen Bailey will discuss her book, A History Lover’s Guide to New Hampshire, tonight at 6 p.m. in the George H. Bixby Memorial Library in Francestown. The event is free; see francestownnh.org/1201/Library.

Save the Date! Friday, May 1
The Community Players of Concord will present To Kill a Mockingbird Friday, May 1, and Saturday, May 2, at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, May 3, at 2 p.m. at Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St. in Concord. Tickets cost $20 for adults and $20 for 65+ and 17 and under. See communityplayersofconcord.org.

Featured photo: Record store day.

The week that was

The Big Story (a three-way tie): The most immediate was Rory McIlroy winning his second straight Masters despite blowing a huge lead after setting a two-day record of -12. He hung on to grab the lead down the stretch and win at -12, one shot ahead of Scottie Scheffler.

Then there’s the start of the NBA play-in tourney. Not sure who the C’s eventually will play, but after seamlessly bringing Jayson Tatum back into the lineup by going 13-3 in games he played since returning on March 6 they look like the favorite to come out of the East.

Finally, the NFL Draft comes your way this weekend starting with Round 1 on Thursday night. The Pats pick 31st at the moment. But stay tuned, as I feel a trade up or down or a big deal coming.

Sports 101: Name the only team since the NFL and AFL began drafting in the same year in 1960 to draft a QB in both the first and second rounds in the same draft.

News Item – Red Sox Update

Going into the series with St. Louis four Red Sox starters were hitting under .200.

Ceddanne Rafaela has the second highest chase (out of the strike zone) rate in the majors according to Boston Globe analytics wonk Alex Speier. Which is supposed to be bad. Yet he’s hitting .326 with a second best of the starters .396 OBP.

Garrett Crochet is 2-1 while striking out 11.4 batters every nine innings.

Nice return to St. Louis for Willson Contreras by going six for 13 with a double, a homer and six RBI.

In case you missed it, my No. 1 free agent target, Pete Alonso, hit .188 with one homer and three RBI with 15 k’s in his first 50 Orioles at-bats. For Alex Bregman it’s .213 with 6 RBI in 69 at-bats.

News Item – Pre-Draft Notes

Notre Dame has never had two RB’s taken in Round I in the same year. But Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price have a chance to become the fourth RB teammates to do that.

Another reason to like Fernando Mendoza: The expected first overall will watch the draft with family/friends at home in Miami instead of preening for the cameras at the draft when he gets picked.

The Patriots have 11 picks in this draft including their own at 1, 2, 3 and 5 along with several others below the fifth round.

The Numbers:

2 –despite the Red Sox Nation pearl-clutching during their awful 6-9 start, games out of first place in the AL East for Boston.

5.43 – MLB’s all-time high average salary in millions.

69.4 – million bucks earned by NCAA Basketball champion Michigan.

Of the Week Awards

Thumbs Up – Joe Mazzulla: Hate his game coaching and resting policies. But no one expected 56 wins without Tatum. He got them to play hard and brought along/trusted young players better than any Celtics coach I remember.

Thumbs Down NBA on Prime Video: Yet another reason to dislike Jeff Bezos and the ever greedy NBA was being unable to watch the Knicks-Celtics last week unless you’re a subscriber. Boooo!

Those are the Breaks’ Award – Ichiro Statue: Nice to see the great hitter see the humor of the bat his statue was holding break in half when unveiled last week by saying, “I didn’t think Mariano [Rivera] would come out here and break the bat.”

Trade of the Week – Angel Reese: The thoroughly unlikable petulant WNBA big will take her toxic personality and petty jealousy of Caitlin Clark to Atlanta after Chicago got two first draft picks.

Random Thoughts:

The Masters – it’s just a nice golf course. Not St. Patrick’s Cathedral like so many suck-ups act like it is.

I got SGA, The Joker and Jaylen Brown 1, 2, 3 in the MVP race.

Sports 101 Answer: The 1965 NY Jets drafted Joe Namath first and then took 1964 Heisman winner John Huarte in Round 2.

A Little History – John Huarte: Came out of nowhere to win the 1964 Heisman while leading Notre Dame to a shocking 9-0-1 season and a national title. Shocking because ND had been struggling for a decade. But the pro career was a different story, as Huarte lasted just two seasons in NYC and six overall in the NFL, where he completed just 39.1 percent of his 58 passes for one TD.

Final Thought – The Caitlin Clark Effect: Hope those jealous crybabies in the WNBA noticed that the rating for the Women’s NCAA title game between South Carolina and UCLA was a 9.8 share as compared to the record 18.87 recorded in Clark’s final year of 2024. That was the only year the women have beaten the men, let alone been within solar systems of the men’s ratings. This year the UM-UConn Men’s Final had a 20.4 share.Conclusion: Wake up, WNBA, Clark is your meal ticket to higher ratings and ticket sales, which leads to more money for you.

Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

Quality of Life 26/04/16

Rowing for a cause

A New Hampshire woman has raised money for trauma recovery programs by solo-rowing more than 3,000 miles across the Atlantic, WMUR reported in an April 9 online article. “Renee Blacken [who live in Bethlehem] began the journey in January, rowing from the Canary Islands to Antigua,” WMUR reported. After 65 days alone at sea, she made history as the first woman to row solo in the Atlantic Dash, the report said.

QOL score: +1

Comment: “Blacken raised nearly $20,000 during her journey for the nonprofit Outdoor Adventuring for Good, which supports trauma recovery programs,” WMUR reported in an April 12 article. Seeatlanticdash.com for more on the event.

Thanks a lot, ticks!

“A tick-borne illness that can leave people severely allergic to meat and dairy is becoming a growing concern in New Hampshire,” Patch.com reported in an April 10 online article. The allergy, known as Alpha-gal syndrome, can induce an extreme allergic sensitivity to meat in previously unaffected patients and can be contracted through a tick bite. “The illness is carried most commonly by the Lone Star tick,” the article read. “Alpha-gal syndrome is becoming more frequent in New England as ticks move farther north, some say, due to climate change.”

QOL score: -1

Comment: Patch.com reported that “the CDC says the condition differs from typical food allergies because symptoms are often delayed by two hours or more after exposure and can appear suddenly after years of eating meat without problems.”

An old battery can still cause problems

According to an April 6 online article in the Concord Monitor, the batteries of an electric car that had been involved in a March 31 crash at the Bedford tolls spontaneously re-ignited in Merrimack days later. The Monitor article quoted Jim Bailey Sr., owner of Bailey’s Towing and Auto Body in Merrimack, who removed the car from the original accident site: “‘[T]his morning, I moved the car carefully to a different location. Within 15 minutes, the batteries shorted out and it went into thermal runaway,” the article quoted Bailey.

QOL score: -1

Comment: According to the Monitor article, “the resulting [second] fire took hours to put out with some 60,000 gallons of water.” For more on battery fires and the safe disposal of batteries, visit nhrecycles.org/recyclerightcampaign/how-properly-dispose-batteries.

QOL score last week: 45

Net change: -1

QOL this week: 44

What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire?

Let us know at news@hippopress.com.

News & Notes 26/04/16

Egg update

The peregrine falcon nest at the Brady Sullivan Tower in Manchester now has a clutch of four eggs as of April 14, which you can see via nhaudubon.org/education/birds-and-birding/peregrine-cam. According to the daily log on the YouTube page for Feed 1 (there are three feeds, each offering a different angle on the nest), a second egg was laid on April 8 (about 14 days after the first egg on March 25), a third egg was laid on April 11 and the fourth on April 14. According to the log, a message from biologist Chris Martin posted on April 11 said, “Third egg — that’s great! A good chance to see 1-2 more eggs between 13-17th April. Not much chance first egg will survive.” According to the log, “Peregrines have a body temp of 103-106F; Eggs need steady incubation temps of 99-100.5F to develop properly and hatch; Both males and females develop brood patches to transfer their heat to the eggs.” The cam offers livestreaming video of the nest via NH Audubon and the support of Peregrine Networks and Brady Sullivan Properties, according to the website. Last year the nest produced five eggs, of which three hatched.

Trades

Bring Back the Trades will hold a Skills Expo Saturday, April 18, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Londonderry High School (295 Mammoth Road in Londonderry) featuring local trades organizations, according to bringbackthetrades.org, which describes the trades as “career paths requiring hands-on work and specialty knowledge.” Trade careers described on the website include plumbing, HVAC, electrical work, construction, culinary careers, EMT and other medical careers, hairstylist, child care, manufacturing, welding, transportation careers and more. The event is free to attend and will also feature information on scholarships and internships, the website said.

Spring cleaning

It’s outdoor cleanup season.

Beautify Hooksett Day will be held Saturday, April 18, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Find details and sign up via the Hooksett Chamber of Commerce’s Facebook page.

SEE Science Center in Manchester is part of Park2Park, which will hold a cleanup on Monday, April 20, from 3 to 5 p.m. at parks in Manchester, according to see-sciencecenter.org, where you can find information on signing up to volunteer.

New Hampshire State Parks will hold a Bear Brook State Park cleanup day on Sunday, April 26, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., according to the State Parks Facebook page. Volunteers are asked to meet at Hayes Field off Podunk Road in Allenstown — “Grab a drink, snack and some free swag then head out on the trails to help us clean up from winter storms. Bring gloves and hand saws. We will have some tools and gloves available for those who need some,” the post said.

Squam Lakes Association and the Lakes Region Conservation Corps will hold “Volunteer: Spring Work Day” on Saturday, May 2, from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Holderness. “Help clear trails, rake campsites, and install swim lines to prepare for summer. Afterward, celebrate with a BBQ back on campus,” according to squamlakes.org, where you can register to volunteer.

The Hall Street Wastewater Facility, 125 Hall St. in Concord, will hold daily public tours from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. through Friday, April 17, to celebrate New Hampshire Clean Water Week, which runs April 12-18, according to the Concord General Services General Gazette newsletter. “See the science in action and find out how we protect the river from pollution and why wastewater treatment is essential for a healthy environment,” the newsletter said.

The Mosaic Art Collective, 66 Hanover St. in Manchester, will hold a movie in the gallery on Thursday, April 23, according to a post on its Facebook page. Doors open at 5:45 p.m., and an art movie starts at 6 p.m., the post said. Previous attendees vote on the next movie, the post said.

The 7th Evolution Expo, an event that “brings together a powerful collective of holistic practitioners, wellness businesses and conscious community members from across the region,” will take place Sunday, April 19, from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Grappone Conference Center in Concord featuring 50+ vendors and exhibitors as well as workshops, presentations and live demonstrations, according to a press release. Admission costs $10 at the door or get free admission with advance registration at holisticnh.org/evolution-expo, where you can also see a list of vendors.

The Woman’s Service Club of Windham will hold its Spring Craft Fair on Saturday, April 18, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Golden Brook School, 112B Lowell Road in Windham, according to womansserviceclubofwindham.org.

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