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Blind Date was a poetry zine from California that had 2 separate lives.

History[]

Blind Date Magazine (BDM) was an 8.5 x 11” literary magazine edited by novelist and poet Owen Hill. BDM printed poetry, short fiction, journal excerpts, and featured an interview with a poet in each issue.

BDM emerged from a workshop taught by Tom Clark at the University of California, Berkeley Extension in 1986. The mimeo publications of the 1960’s and 1970’s were the guiding example BDM printed new work by many of the same poets: Clark, Jim Carroll, Bill Berkson, Eileen Myles. Many contributors could be traced to the New College of California poetics program, both instructors and students: Clark again, Gloria Frym, David Meltzer, Adam Cornford, and others. A few poets saw their work appear publicly here before going on to more visible careers: Jules Mann, now director of the Poetry Society in London; Kevin Opstedal, editor of GAS Magazine; and Oakland artist Maria Porges all debuted in BDM.

After 6 issues of BDM, New Blind Date (NBD) was born as a limited edition newsletter, also edited by Hill. NBD was a no holds-barred treatment of the contemporary poetry scene, featuring reviews, gossip, satirical fictional interviews, and the occasional poem or story. Alice Notley, Andrew Schelling, Jonathan Lethem, Fielding Dawson and FA Nettelbeck all appeared in its pages.

Readership and subscriptions expanded with each issue, but peaked at around 150 in a given run.

Physically, BDM and NBD were products of the availability of personal computers, local copy shops, and the emergence of email as a means of communication. Covers were either ‘made-to-order,’ or reproduced drawings and collages by the same poets who appeared within.

Recognition[]

The Blind Date archives are housed in the Beinecke Library at Yale University.

See also[]

Original Penny's Poetry Pages article, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0.