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Raggedy Annarchy's Guide to Vegan Baking and the Universe

The cover is red card stock, with the title in bubble letters.  There is an illustration of Raggedy Ann in a kitchen, rolling out dough.
"raggedy annarchy collaborates with the muffin man to bring you over 55 all-bad-for-you vegan recipes and her own personal rants on just about everything."
"first off, i guess i need to say that this project was inspired by some of my very close friends who insisted that i leave them with copies of my recipes before i ditched this joint. since i don't really have any of my recipes written, rather, they are all in my head and pretty much made up as i go along, i knew it was gonna be a pretty sizable project getting these to them. i figured i might as well pass this stuff on to anyone else who might want it too while i'm at it. in addition, i've been really inspired lately by all the little zines being put out here and there by countless creative and discontented life-lovin' people who, whether they like it or not, i believe are one essential part of creating a lovely revolutionary movement..."

Asian American Feminist Antibodies (care in the time of coronavirus)

Title reads "Asian American Feminist Antibodies {care in the time of coronavirus}. There is a cartoon drawing of multiple people with various PPE on. the backdrop is different geometric shapes.
With the COVID-19 pandemic neither behind us or solely ahead of us, this zine
offers a way to make meaning of the coronavirus crisis through long-standing
practices of care that come out of Asian American histories and politics. We bring
together first-hand accounts and analyses from our communities, including
health and service workers and caregivers on the frontlines, students, people
living with chronic illness, journalists, and organizers. Together, this collection of
stories, essays, and artwork shows how we experience, resist, and grapple with
a viral outbreak that has been racialized as Asian, is spoken of in the language of
contagion and invasion, and reveals the places where our collective social safety
net is particularly threadbare.
This moment of precarity and disaster reminds us that we cannot rely on the state
for our wellbeing. The legacies of imperialism, capitalism, and patriarchy undergird
forms of violence that unevenly expose many in our communities to further risk,
rendering people disposable.
Yet, in this moment, we also see how revolutionary love and care can reshape our
world. We see the urgency, necessity, and radical possibilities of decarceration,
language justice, healthcare and housing access, economic redistribution, and
mutual aid. Our dreams, visions, and desires for an alternative world and future can
be realized. We are made of communities with deep collective knowledge on how
to care for each other and the earth around us. Together, we can survive and build
interdependent communities of resistance.
With love,
Salonee Bhaman
Rachel Kuo
Matilda Sabal
Vivian Shaw
Tiffany Diane Tso