Saluting some rare and special "limited editions" today - Bill Morgan's publishing venture, Lospecchio Press
We asked Bill to look back on this venture and he generously provided the context:
"The whole idea of creating the Lospecchio Press came about a
year or two before Allen Ginsberg's 60th birthday in 1986. At the time I had already been working
with Allen for several years as his bibliographer and archivist and it seemed to
my wife Judy and me that a milestone birthday like that would be a great
occasion to gather together a collection of tributes from Allen's many
friends. This type of book is
traditionally known as a Festschrift, but
we decided to call it Best Minds in order
to sound a little less academic. We
actually thought that Ginsberg might enjoy such a book more at the age of 60
than later, and I'm glad we did because he didn't live much beyond his 70th
year.
In the course of gathering materials I asked all of
Ginsberg's friends to write something, thinking that I'd be lucky if 50%
responded, but in fact nearly everyone invited was enthusiastic and some wrote
at great length about Allen's importance.
The book became so large, eventually over 300 pages, that I began to
wonder how I could ever afford to publish it. One solution seemed to be that we could defer the cost of
the big book by issuing a smaller companion volume, which we called Kanreki, containing some of the longer
pieces that friends wrote, as well as several of the letters apologizing for
not writing at greater length.
In addition to that I asked Allen if we could publish his
poem "Old Love Story" as a separate chapbook, and he generously
agreed. I knew of the work of
Larry R. Collins, a painter who had lived in New York in the early 1980s and someone
that Allen had met on several occasions.
I felt that his beautiful renderings of the male nude would make a nice
complement to Allen's poem about gay love. We commissioned Jordan Davies who worked at the legendary
Phoenix Bookstore in New York City to set the type and my wife and I tipped in
the reproductions of Collins' paintings and stitched the books together by hand
in a small edition. Its been
thirty years since those publications were issued and we've nearly broken even
on the expenses. Since then we've
published a few other books, one by Lawrence Ferlinghetti entitled The Hopper House At Truro, and one by
Eileen Myles called simply Tow. Printing limited edition poetry has
proven to be fun and expensive!
Bill Morgan, April 2016




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