Dear Mr. Fallon,

Thanks for starting a Bern Porter web page. The world could use one for sure.
I checked it out, such as it is now, and it prompted me to revise my files a bit (one had awful formating). There are a few things to clarify that may help people find my Porter reviews and some of Porter's books. So here goes:

Here are the direct links to my Porter files, which will be better than starting at the beginning of my web page.:

http://www.phys.psu.edu/~endwar/porter.html
-- this is my review of Schevill's biography and Porter's _Less
Than Overweight_, which was published in somewhat modified form in an issue of _TapRoot Reviews_ (Number 5/6, i think -- a double issue), with someone else's reviews of a couple chapbook collaborations with Malok tacked onto the end. On this file i updated the link to the Plaster Cramp Press web page, which i will give below.

http://www.phys.psu.edu/~endwar/porter2.html
--here's my review/summary of _I've Left_. This one is now in readable paragraph form, if still in primitive text format
(i.e. courier font).

Also note that these pages are mine, or my responsibility and aren't official pages of the Penn State Physics Department per se. Your write up give the impression that my porter reviews are a departmental effort, and they aren't, really.

Also, concerning your links at the bottom of the page, i'm at the
Pennsylavania State University in University Park (State College),
_not_ the U of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

Here's the updated Plaster Cramp Press website -- basically one long page, with a little information about _Less than Overweight_ near the beginning, and the ordering information closer to the bottom. Seth still has copies of the book for $28 postpaid. You can also send $3.20 (with the postal rate increase) and get two pounds of old PCP goodies. (I got one and it was quite a package!). So here it is:
http://www.cs.nwu.edu/~tisue/pcp/
(The difference is that the old link went to pcp.html, this goes to a directory called pcp)

You can also order some Bern Porter books and tapes from Xexoxial Endarchy in Wisconsin. They've published Bern since the mid 80s. The front page is:
http://www.net22.com/dreamtime/xe.html
and if you click on the catalog link you go to
http://www.net22.com/neologisms/xe.html
which has three links: Xexoxial Endarchy for books they publish Xerolage for their Xerox collage zine and Audio Muzixa qet for audio and video tape.
Porter (not surprisingly) is listed under all three places, so click on one and look for the artists' sidebar, scroll down to Porter (under P) and click on "listings" or is name and you'llsee what they have. 4 or 5 books, 1 Xerolage, 4 or 5 audio
tapes, and two videos. Postage is 15% or $1, whichever is larger.

Incidentally, some of my own work is at:
http://www.phys.psu.edu/~endwar/lit.html --
go to the bottom and there are a few links to stories and things. One of those is the poem "With God All Things Are Possible", which was composed using a dictionary semi-randomly. I sent a printed copy to Bern and he copied some for the first issue of the _Bern Porter International_.

Also there is a link to IZEN, which is my micropress.

andrew