advertise Have you ever heard of William Upski Wimsatt? If you have, good job. If not, don't worry about it, most people haven't. He’s the 25-year-old college drop out who has spoken at Yale and Harvard among many other colleges. He's the author of No More Prisons and Bomb The Suburbs, a book he published independently at the age of 21, which received critical acclaim and sold over 23 000 copies, a number unheard of for an independent book. Yeah, yeah, so what's the big deal The kid's a good writer, so are a million other folks out there. Have you ever been interested in Hip Hop? What about hitchhiking? Train hopping? Journalism? Urban life? City planning? Home schooling? The Art of Philanthropy? Fuck it, | could keep going but | think you're starting to get the picture. This guy actually cares about these subjects; he comes at them with a fresh perspective and chal- lenges the reader to prove him wrong. Upski is writing these books from an insid- ers’ perspective, he doesn't just research what he writes about, he lives it. These books are the stories of his life, his experiences and his realizations that come from growing up as a loud mouth white kid in Chicago that got along better with all the black kids from the neighbouring ghetto than anybody else. They’re about growing up in hip hop, what it’s really all about, what its done for so many people, and what you do with it when you get older. What you do when at 21 you find out your parents are loaded, yet all your friends still live in the ghetto. Don’t get me wrong this book isn’t written for a hip hop audience; (to quote Upski cause | really can't do him justice), Advertising your service, product, event, or organization to 5,000 creators and consumers of culture. "First there’s the old schoolers who want to break away from what has become hip hop. Then there’s the hitchhikers who have the patience to organize a political movement; middle class white kids who want to move to the ghetto; ghetto kids who think rap is too stupid; graffiti writers who think graffiti is too boring; journal- ists who are disgusted with journalism; political activists who are sick of politics; freight hoppers who give a damn about morality; business stiffs who don't give a some magazine (formerly influx, and planet of the arts) is in its 17th year damn about money or fashion; scholars who think books are dull, and street kids of publication, have you considered advertising with us? who think T.V. won't teach them anything they care to know. | belong to all of these audiences and | want Bomb the Suburbs to speak to all of them at once." some magazine features writing on contemporary issues and happenings in the field of visual arts & culture. We distribute to select shops, cinemas, and cafes in greater Vancouver, and to all branches of the Vancouver Public Library. Bomb The Suburb contact: i eg Kion Tannahill "The best book | read in prison." — Tupac Shakur advertising coordinator 604.315.6155 "One of the most unique, daring, visionary critiques of race relations ever pub- lished." — Carl Upchurch, Organizer, National Gang Peace Summit No More Prisons "Chuck D called it one of the best hip hop books ever. He was wrong. It is the best hip hop book ever." — Jeff Chang, San Francisco Bay Guardian Just read them. They changed my life and countless others as well. RM140.North building 1399 Johnston Street Vancouver BC V6H 3R9 canada magazine ph.844.3861 fx844.3801 some@eciad.bc.ca