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Jeff Miller | |
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Born | 1979 (age 42–43) Ottawa, Canada |
Occupation | Writer |
Language | English |
Alma mater | Concordia University |
Period | 1996-Present |
Notable works | Otaku (1996-1999) Ghost Pine (zine, 1999-Present) Ghost Pine (book, 2010) |
Notable awards | Expozine Alternative Press Award (Best English Book) 2010 Ghost Pine: All Stories True [1] |
Website | |
ghostpine |
Jeff Miller is a zine publisher and writer. He began writing in 1996 with an Ottawa zine called Otaku, which later changed its name to Ghost Pine following his move to Montreal in 1999.[ citation needed ] It has sold nearly 10,000 copies, which is relatively high for underground publishing in Canada. [2] He writes largely about punk and other sub-cultures.
The best of his works were compiled into a book, Ghost Pine: All Stories True by Invisible Publishing in 2010. It was on the Montreal Gazette's top-10 bestseller's list for three weeks, and won the Best Book category at Montreal's 2010 Expozine Alternative Press Awards. [3] [4]
Miller was born and grew up in Ottawa, where he began writing on the hardcore punk scene in the mid-90s. He lived in Montreal on and off from 1999 to the late 2000s and currently resides on Nova Scotia's Eastern Shore. [5]
His work has been included in anthologies like The Art of Trespassing, [6] and he has embarked upon small US and Canadian reading tours with celebrated zine writers Cindy Crabb (Doris zine), Erica Lyle (SCAM zine), and Aaron Cometbus. He is also involved in the writing workshop Soulgazers and speaks at events like Expozine, an annual fair for that brings together about 300 creators linked to small presses, comics and zines. Miller has spoken about the future of paper-print publishing. [7]
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The winners of the 2010 Expozine Alternative Press Awards were announced on Sunday at a ceremony in Montreal. Jeff Miller’s Ghost Pine: All Stories True (Invisible Publishing) won for best English book.
Jeff Miller is the author of Ghost Pine: All Stories True (Invisible Publishing). He has written and published the autobiographical zine Ghost Pine since 1996. His stories have appeared in several anthologies and he frequently publishes cultural journalism. He recently moved from Montreal to Nova Scotia’s Eastern Shore.
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