American avatars: the devil and Mr. Lyman
02/18/2010 · Alexander Keefe

VOL. 1 - NO. 1 JUNE 9 - 22, '67 BOSTON, MASS. 25¢/35¢ OUT OF BOSTON

I am going to burn down the world
I am going to tear down everything that cannot stand alone

There were so many American avatars before Cameron’s. Among them: the biweekly underground zine/mouthpiece of the banjo-playing acid-folk pioneer and charismatic hippie cult leader Mel Lyman, self-published between 1967 and 1969 in Boston.

Back Cover of Vol. 1, No. 1 JUNE 9 - 22, '67

I am going to shove hope up your ass
I am going to turn ideals to shit

The “shadow-Dylan” Lyman was many things, but he was no Indophile: his notion of the avatar comes via many layers of mediation, as part of our shared inheritance that is the Great American Weird, a sepulchral gift from Emerson perhaps. Ultimately, for Lyman and his followers the wisdom of the East was the “Eastern cop-out,” no better than the other “false resolutions,” no different from what they called the Christian cop-out, the African cop-out, the Humanist cop-out… Lyman’s revelations were meant to be as American as acid and Frankie Valli and Benjamin Franklin. It all reminds me of Nietzche, in his final, lunatic days, signing his letters alternately “Dionysus” and “the Crucified One,” no longer able to keep them apart. Lyman wanted to be the Avatar of a Bacchic Christ, not of a Krishna.

I am going to reduce everything that stands to rubble
and then I am going to burn the rubble
and then I am going to scatter the ashes
and then maybe someone will be able to see something as it really is

Echt post-Orientalist psychedelia from a megalomaniacal, hipster madman and his maenads:

NO. 9 EASTCOAST UNITED FREE PRESS SEPT 29 OCT 12 WESTCOAST 30 CENTS 25¢

VOL. 1 - NO. 4 July 21 - Aug 4 BOSTON 25¢ EVERYWHERE 1967

Satyajit Ray’s Graphic & Typographic Works III
03/03/2009 · Mansi Shah

Covers for literary & cultural journal Ekshan:

10sray8

10sray7

10sray6

10sray5

10sray4

10sray3

10sray2

10sray1

Shantaram Pawar – Chitra Dokyane Kadha
02/21/2009 · Mansi Shah


Ka.vi. – A collection of poems by Sridhar Tilwe


Alochana Journal


Cover for Girish Karnad’s epochal play, Tughlaq


Akshar Magazine


Ravin Thatte – Mee Hindu Jhalo (I Became A Hindu)


Compilation of essays on the literary genre, Geet-Kavya (Song-Poems)


Dinank Magazine


Dalit Vidroh – A collection of articles about Dalit rising


Vinda – Tribute to the Marathi poet, Vinda Karandikar

Chitra Dokyane Kadha, Marathi for think and draw.

A prolific book cover designer, Shantaram Pawar was a student then teacher at Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy School of Art in Mumbai. Not a single element enters his work except as an intergral part of a well-wrought whole, which is at once palpable yet transcendental.

محفل – MAHFIL
02/19/2009 · Mansi Shah

MAHFIL, which is the Urdu word for a gathering, was a quarterly of South Asian literature published by the Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University. Now known as Journal of South Asian Literature, you can read fully archived issues at DSAL.