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Lyn Chevli

Lyn Chevli
Born Marilyn Keith
(1931-12-24)December 24, 1931
Milford, Connecticut
Died October 8, 2016(2016-10-08) (aged 84)
Laguna Beach, California
Nationality American
Area(s) Cartoonist, Writer, Editor, Publisher
Pseudonym(s)
  • Lyn Chevely
  • Chin Lyvely
Notable works

Lyn Chevli – also credited as Lyn Chevely and Chin Lyvely – (December 24, 1931 – October 8, 2016) was an American cartoonist who participated in the underground comix movement. With Joyce Farmer, she created the feminist comic-book anthology series Tits & Clits Comix (1972–1987) and Abortion Eve (1973), an educational comic book about women's newly-guaranteed reproductive rights.

Lyn Chevli was born in Milford, Connecticut, on December 31, 1931, as Marilyn Keith. She graduated from Skidmore College in New York and exhibited at the International Festival of Arts and Sawdust Festival as a silversmith and then sculptor. She moved to California with her mother in 1961. She ran Fahrenheit 451 Books with her husband Dennis Madison in Dana Point, and then from Laguna Beach from 1968. The store specialized in new age literature. Chevli was the designated owner of the store because she already had a reseller license in California.

Fahrenheit 451 carried the new underground comix, which impressed Chevli with their anarchic spirit, but she was concerned with their male-centered content. She sold the book store in 1972, and she and Joyce Farmer founded Nanny Goat Productions as a feminist publishing company, with the goal of giving a voice to female creators in the male-dominated and often misogynist underground comix movement. They published all-female Tits & Clits Comix in July 1972, preceding Wimmen's Comix by a few weeks. Its first printing of 20,000 copies sold out by the next year. Because the series' title limited its exposure, the second issue appeared in 1973 under the title Pandoras Box Comix [sic]. Around this time, sellers of underground comix faced prosecution for selling obscene material, and the new owners of Fahrenheit 451 were arrested, though the charges were later dropped with help from the American Civil Liberties Union. The series returned to its original title in 1976, with a new issue #2, and continued until its seventh issue in 1987; Chevli stopped contributing after the third issue, but continued as co-editor through the sixth.


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Wikipedia

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