
US: A Paperback Magazine #1
More info (and videos showing all interior spreads for the three-issue run of US) on the AIGA blog today

US: A Paperback Magazine #1
More info (and videos showing all interior spreads for the three-issue run of US) on the AIGA blog today
Throughout this week, Project Projects will be posting Electric Information Age Book outtakes and extras on the AIGA’s blog:
In 1966, media theorist Marshall McLuhan, designer Quentin Fiore and producer Jerome Agel set the scene for a new publishing genre with the release of The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects. Utilizing collaged, cinematic combinations of text and image, Massage and the subsequent “non-book” titles produced in the following decade were made to appeal to the short attention spans of the television (or electric information) age. Though now nearly half a century old, this short-lived set of experimental books provides a set of possibilities for counteracting anxieties on the role of print in today’s media landscape of socially-networked, data-saturated prosumers.
The books are a core inspiration for the Inventory Books series (edited and designed by Project Projects co-founder Adam Michaels), and are the subject matter of the most recent series release, The Electric Information Age Book. Drawing upon research and visuals that couldn’t fit into the book, this week we’ll be showing some highlights of the genre.
We’ll begin, fittingly, with a book by Agel—an all-around enabler, writer, editor, designer, advertiser, producer and packager for whom a book was considered both a business and a media event. Published in 1972, Is Today Tomorrow? A Synergistic Collage of Alternative Futures combines a mosaic of quotations and a school curriculum on futurology; bits of wisdom from the likes of Guy Debord, Claude Levi-Strauss, Lewis Mumford and others; clippings of Peanuts and other comic strips; pagination and running headers that remain scattershot until the final section; immersive full-bleed imagery; and several Hitchcockian photo references pointing to Agel, the producer behind it all.
thanks for the EIAB shout-out, david!
& nice to see more of Is Today Tomorrow? online
some spreads from Is Today Tomorrow?
For more info on this genre of experimental paperbacks, check out this new book: The electric information age book : McLuhan/Agel/Fiore and the experimental paperback -ds
Richard Hollis exhibition, curated by Emily King, at Gallery Libby Sellers in London
Rick Poynor write-up here, and Mark Thomson write-up here
(photo from Eye magazine)
The Electric Information Age Book, featured on Manystuff

The Electric Information Age Book: McLuhan/Agel/Fiore and the Experimental Paperback, by Jeffrey T. Schnapp and myself (Adam Michaels), with an Introduction by Steven Heller and an Afterword by Andrew Blauvelt, is the third and most recent volume of Inventory Books, a paperback series that I edit and design (published by Princeton Architectural Press).
I’ll post more here about the book in the coming weeks; for now, please see the great write-up posted today by Maria Popova at Brain Pickings, as well as Steven Heller’s post on The Atlantic.
And while I’d encourage purchasing from your local bookstore, the book can be bought online from Amazon.

©1965 / Design: Quentin Fiore
jean christophe-verlag, zürich, 1937
printer: genossenschaftsdruckerei zürich
size: 21 x 13 cm
designer: richard paul lohse
(from my favorite online book design resource: felix - books • roland holst-van der schalk: rosa luxemburg • wiedler.ch)