Fonograf Editions

Established in 2016, Fonograf Editions is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit press and literary record label based in Portland, OR. Places like The Paris Review Daily and Poets & Writers have previously written about our creation and development and our books and records have been featured and reviewed at places like The New York Times, Artforum, The New York Times Book Review, Harper’s, and The London Review of Books.

Fonograf Ed. is distributed physically and digitally by Burnside Distribution Corporation and Small Press Distribution (SPD). Contact: info-at-fonografeditions-dot-com

We are a proud member of the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses (CLMP).

Our mission

Fonograf Editions exists to take risks that push the boundaries of sound, text, and genre. We value the interdisciplinary, experimental, and unclassifiable, and we strive to bring to life works that resist, bend, and break expectations. We prioritize public access by making a component of each of our releases available for free to the public (such as streaming audio online) and by hosting multiple free community events each year.

Editors:

Jeff Alessandrelli is a writer living in Portland, OR.

Adie B. Steckel (they & she) is a writer living in Portland, OR. They work for a nonprofit HIV/AIDS and LGBTQ+ health and social services organization and write indexes for academic texts.

Designer:

Mike Corrao is a multimedia artist and author living in Minneapolis, MN.

Board of Directors:

Gabrielle Civil is a Black feminist performance artist, poet, and writer, originally from Detroit, MI. Her latest performance memoirs include (ghost gestures) (2021) and the deja vu (2022).

Allison Cobb (pronouns she/her) is the author of four books: Plastic: an AutobiographyGreen-WoodAfter We All Died and Born2. Cobb’s work has appeared in Best American Poetry, Denver Quarterly, Colorado Review, and many other journals. She was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award and National Poetry Series; has been a resident artist at Djerassi and Playa; and received fellowships from the Oregon Arts Commission, the Regional Arts and Culture Council, and the New York Foundation for the Arts. Allison works for Environmental Defense Fund and lives in Portland, Oregon.

Shayla Lawson is the author of This Is Major: Notes on Diana Ross, Dark Girls, and Being Dope (Harper Perennial, 2020) and three poetry collections: I Think I’m Ready To See Frank Ocean (Saturnalia, 2018), PANTONE (Miel Books, 2016), and A Speed Education in Human Being (Sawyer House Press, 2013). She is a regular contributor at Bustle magazine and a 2020 National Book Critics Circle Finalist.

Lex Orgera is the author of the fragmented memoir, Head Case: My Father, Alzheimer’s & Other Brainstorms (Kore Press, 2021), and two poetry collections, How Like Foreign Objects and Dust Jacket. She is additionally a book editor, publisher, and plant lover living in North Carolina.

Nick Twemlow is the author of the poetry books Palm Trees (Green Lantern Press, 2012) and Attributed to the Harrow Painter (University of Iowa Press, 2017) and his short films have played Tribeca, SXSW, Slamdance, and other film festivals. He co-edits Canarium Books, and is responsible for literary and poetry collection development at the Rose Library at Emory University.

Knox Gardner is the publisher and editor of Entre Ríos Books, a poetry press based in Seattle— gay-owned & queerly run. His interest is primarily in collaborations. His debut collection Woodland with music by Aaron Otheim was a CLMP Firecracker Award finalist in 2019. A believer in community play, he organized a three-mile hopscotch across his neighborhood, started the Jackson Street Jazz Walk, and swaps soup when he can.

The founder of Fonograf and its Executive Director and Publisher, Jeff Alessandrelli is a writer based in Portland, OR.