Adam Parfrey

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Adam Parfrey (April 12, 1957 – May 10, 2018) was an American journalist, author, editor, and the publisher of Feral House books, whose work in all three capacities frequently centered on unusual, extreme, or "forbidden" topics. Previously, he was the publisher of several magazines, and another publisher, Amok Press. He also wrote for several magazines and wrote, cowrote, or edited several books, among them Apocalypse Culture.

Early life

Parfrey was born in New York City, but during childhood moved to Los Angeles with his parents, actor Woodrow Parfrey and Rosa Ellovich, a stage director of Jewish descent. After graduating high school, he attended the University of California, Santa Cruz,<ref name="roberts">Template:Cite news</ref> and UCLA.<ref name="seattleweekly">Template:Cite news</ref> He wrote for the UCLA's paper, the Daily Bruin, before dropping out.<ref name="seattleweekly" />Template:Sfn

Career

After dropping out of UCLA, Parfrey moved to San Francisco, where he began a short-lived experimental magazine, IDEA, in May 1981.<ref name="seattleweekly" />Template:Sfn That publication folded after two issues.Template:Sfn In 1984, with George Petros, Parfrey launched EXIT magazine, which they described as an "outlaw liberal Fascist Sci-Fi Pop Art magazine".Template:Sfn Topics in this magazine included serial killers, depraved sexuality, and Nazism. The first issue excerpted Jim Jones and Adolf Hitler.Template:Sfn

In 1987, Parfrey and Kenneth Swezey co-founded Amok Press in New York. Amok Press's first title was an English translation by Joachim Neugroschel of the Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels's novel Michael (1929), which was reviewed in the New York Times and The New Republic.Template:Sfn This was followed by Parfrey's Apocalypse Culture, a collection of articles, interviews, and documents that explore various marginal aspects of culture. Apocalypse Culture was Parfrey's most successful book, selling 100,000 copies by 2010.<ref name="seattleweekly" /><ref name="Lemons2000">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Parfrey was one of the members of the Abraxas Foundation, an "occult-fascist" collective made up of Parfrey, Boyd Rice, Nikolas Schreck, and later Michael J. Moynihan.Template:Sfn At this time, introduced by William Grimstad, Parfrey met Keith Stimely, with whom he became friends; Stimely was a Holocaust denier and a former member of the Institute for Historical Review.Template:Sfn

Parfrey moved back to the west coast and while living in Portland, Oregon, founded another imprint, Feral House, in 1989.Template:Sfn The name was suggested by Boyd Rice.Template:Sfn The company's first book was The Satanic Witch by Anton LaVey.<ref name="roberts" /> Parfrey co-wrote many Feral House titles.<ref name="deadline" /> Stimely sent out a press release saying Parfrey and his publisher, Feral House, had signed to his publicity agency.Template:Sfn Parfrey later denied that Stimely had been his publicist and said that he had done so without his permission.Template:Sfn

In 1998 Parfrey was sued over a book, The Oklahoma City Bombing and the Politics of Terror, authored by investigative reporter David Hoffman, alleging government involvement in the Oklahoma City bombing.<ref name="seattleweekly" /><ref name="Lemons2000" /> As a result of the lawsuit (brought by a former FBI official named in the book), Parfrey had to destroy all remaining copies of the book and issue a statement disavowing its allegations.<ref name="roberts" /><ref name="seattleweekly" /><ref name="Lemons2000" />

In 2005, Parfrey co-founded the publishing company Process Media with Jodi Wille of Dilettante Press.<ref name="roberts" />

A 2010 Seattle Weekly profile stated that "what Parfrey does is publish books that explore the marginal aspects of culture. And in many cases—at least back when his interests were almost exclusively transgressive—he sheds light on subjects that society prefers to leave unexplored, carving a niche catering to those of us with an unseemly obsession with life's darkest, most depraved sides."<ref name="seattleweekly" />

Political views

Parfrey described himself as "a pot-smoking libertarian."Template:Sfn He published authors with a wide range of extremist political views, including fascists and neo-Nazis as well as anarchists, leftists, and liberals.Template:Sfn He publicly maintained that he didn't necessarily agree with the viewpoints he published, telling one interviewer in 1995, "Everything the establishment extols as comfortable and right and good makes me sick."<ref name="n997">Template:Cite magazine</ref> In the 1980s he also corresponded with James Mason and other neo-Nazis.Template:Sfn In his letters to Mason, he expressed racist views, portraying the non-right-wing books that he published as ideological camouflage.Template:Sfn Parfrey frequently pointed to his Jewish ancestry to deflect accusations of fascist sympathies.Template:Sfn

Personal life

Parfrey lived in Los Angeles for a time before moving to Port Townsend, Washington, where he lived for the remainder of his life.<ref name='roberts' /> Parfrey first heard of Port Townsend through the Loompanics publishing house, which was based there.<ref name=seattleweekly/> He was married and divorced three times, the last time to his creative collaborator Jodi Wille.<ref name="roberts" />

He died in Seattle on May 10, 2018, following complications from a series of strokes.<ref name="roberts" /><ref name="deadline">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Legacy

Vice Magazine called Feral House a forerunner to 4chan and Reddit.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Feral House books inspired the films Ed Wood, American Hardcore, and Lords of Chaos.<ref name="deadline" /> The conspiracy literature published by Feral House was also an influence on The X-Files.<ref name="deadline" />

Along with his associates Boyd Rice and Michael Moynihan, Parfrey helped popularize James Mason's writings, which found a new audience among neo-Nazis in the 2010s as Siege.Template:Sfn

Awards

  • Winner: Independent Publisher Awards Best History Book of 2012 Silver Medal: Ritual America: Secret Brotherhoods and Their Influence on America Society, by Adam Parfrey and Craig Heimbichner.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Works

Authored

  • End Is Near!: Visions of Apocalypse, Millennium and Utopia by Stephen Jay Gould, Roger Manley, Adam Parfrey and Dalai Lama, foreword by Rebecca Hoffberger (Dilettante Press, 1998, paperback Template:ISBN, 1999, hardcover Template:ISBN)
  • Lexicon Devil: The Fast Times and Short Life of Darby Crash and the Germs by Brendan Mullen, Adam Parfrey and Don Bolles (Feral House, 2002, Template:ISBN)
  • Two Thousand Formulas, Recipes, and Trade Secrets: The Classic Do-It-Yourself Book of Practical Everyday Chemistry by Harry Bennett and Adam Parfrey (Feral House, 2003, Template:ISBN)
  • Sin-a-Rama: Sleaze Sex Paperbacks of the Sixties by B. Astrid Daley, Adam Parfrey and Lydia Lunch (Feral House, 2004, Template:ISBN)
  • Secret Source: The Law of Attraction and Its Hermetic Influence Throughout the Ages by Maja D'Aoust, Adam Parfrey and Jodi Wille (Feral House, 2007, Template:ISBN)
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Edited

Other contributions

Recordings

  • S.W.A.T. – Deep Inside a Cop's Mind: The Soundtrack for the Next Police State (Audio CD, 1994, Label: Amphetamine Reptile Records).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • A Sordid Evening of Sonic Sorrows (Audio CD, 1997, Man's Ruin Records MR-066).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • He has also collaborated with Boyd Rice on his album Hatesville.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • He plays the voice of Lord Jehova in the reading of The Gods on War with Genesis Breyer P-Orridge (The Lord Lucifer), Lydia Lunch (The Lord Satan) and Timothy Wyllie (Transcendence).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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References

Citations

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Works cited

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