The Bruce Springsteen Special Collection at the Asbury Park Public Library

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PREVIOUS DONOR NEWS STORIES

4,000th Donation Fills A Historic Gap
Donor Thanks [Various Dates]
Springsteen Fans Keep Giving To Asbury Collection
Two Rare Magazines Donated To The Springsteen Special Collection

4000th Donation Fills A Historic Gap

In September of 1975, a month after the release of Born To Run and a month before the simultaneous Time and Newsweek covers, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band found themselves in the American heartland--Iowa, to be precise; the Hawkeye state where, as the state song has it, "fields of tasseled corn" and "wondrous prairies shine/To yonder sunset's purpling line."

One barnstorming stop in particular might never have been happened, especially on the Born To Run tour, except for two facts. Grinnell, the 25th largest city (population 8,400) in the nation's 20th smallest state, had a college. And in March of 1974, 20 months prior to the tour, a Grinnell College official had been persuaded to book the band--despite the fact that Springsteen's first two albums had been commercial flops.

Springsteen at Grinnell College, IA, 1975
Photo: Grinnell College, Jonathan Daen

Down through the years, very little has been written about the Sept. 20, 1975 show in tiny Darby Gym on the Grinnell campus. But that changed in a major way recently when The Grinnell Magazine, a quarterly for alumni, faculty, students and friends of the College, published "The East Street Shuffle, 30 Years After the 'Springsteen Invasion'" as the cover story for its Fall 2005 issue. The issue, donated to the Springsteen Special Collection by editor Jacqueline Hartling Stolze, who also wrote the cover article, is the 4,000th publication to join the Springsteen Special Collection.

Stolze's article, told through the eyes of people who were lucky enough to be there, documents a fascinating day replete with fears, tensions, and exhilarating rock and roll.

The fears started early. In Iowa, fanatical rock travelers are not an every day occurrence and as the concert approached, college administrators were worried about rumors that the concert would be overrun by crazed fans "from the East." Students, Stolze wrote, "were advised to be particularly cautious, and to carry their IDs and lock their doors and windows. It was practically a Red Alert for this small Iowa town." Pinkerton guards were hired to put down rioting in case things got out of hand once the 200 tickets set aside for the invading hordes had been snapped up.

For Bruce and the band, the day began quietly enough with breakfast at the Silhouette Restaurant (Bruce had oatmeal, eggs and a milkshake, according to a waitress), and ended late with an after-show party where, according to the calculations of a Grinnell student, Bruce went broke buying pizza. In between:

Thirty years later, during a visit to Grinnell, Max Weinberg looked back fondly on the experience. "It was wild," Weinberg told The Grinnell Magazine recently. "I only spent one Saturday night in Grinnell, but it was wild." And while there may be more tasseled corn in Iowa than there is in New Jersey, Max said the heartland "was an area of the country that really responded to [Bruce's music] early and hard ... We were thankful for the support we got from our Midwest fans."

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Donor Thanks [various dates, most recent first]

Brian Magid, Burtonsville MD, for 114 magazines, 15 fanzines and 61 newspapers – one of the largest collections ever donated to the Special Collection
Author and professor Louis P. Masur of Highland Park, NJ., for the Glory Days Symposium articles which fill Vol. 9, No. 1 of Interdisciplinary Literary Studies, along with his Born to Run 30th anniversary piece in the Chicago Tribune
Pastors Morris Brown and Mike Moran, for their four part series of sermons entitled “The Gospel According to Bruce Springsteen” delivered during April at the Grace Church - United Methodist in Greensboro, NC.
Sandy Wells of Little Silver, NJ for a great series of recent newspaper articles
Francesco Magni from Switzerland, for two publications distributed to fans in Milan last June
Michele Hovan of Flemington, NJ, who donated the March 25, 1992 issue of East Coast Rocker, thereby reducing the Want List by one more

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Michael Glaser of Sondershausen, Germany, for a big box of German magazines
Anne Noss of Florham Park, NJ for five publications, including the programs for the New Jersey Hall of Fame induction ceremony and the Count Basie Theatre benefit concert
Tom McCormack of Dublin for a great batch of Irish newspaper and magazine articles documenting the three Dublin dates
Phil Bracken of Bolton, UK, for three issues of The Ties That Bind newsletter
Mark Uzzo of Mount Vernon, NY for a Newsday clipping looking back at Springsteen’s first show on Long Island

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Mark Uzzo of Mount Vernon, NY for the Feb. 27, 2008 cover story in Free Time magazine
Jim Van Horn of Clinton, AK for newspaper articles on the April 13, 2008 show in Dallas
Arnie Zullow of Chicago for a huge collection of newspaper articles
Melanie Paggioli of Oceanport, NJ for a big batch of Jersey Shore newspaper articles and some magazines, too
Leonardo Colombati of Rome, Italy, for his wonderful new book “Bruce Springsteen, Come Un Killer Sotto Il Sole” which takes poetic novel writing to new heights, and for the first 12 issues of The Killer Newsletter
Joanna Mungai of Washington PA for The Columbus Dispatch of March 25, 2008 with a front page photo from Value City Arena
Tom McCormack of Dublin for yet another great batch of Irish newspaper clippings

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Shawn Poole (Philadelphia, PA) for two additions to the comic books section, donated by Shawn in honor of "the late, great Suzy Shaw, who passed away last fall. Suzy was one of the co-conspirators behind the fantastic "Bruce Springstone" parody record and was very interested in depictions of Bruce in comic-book and comic-strip forms."
Jersey Shore author and photographer Chuck Yopp for the revised edition of his book "Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J., A Look At The Local Scene"
Lorraine Mangione of Keene, NH, for the November 2007 issue of Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts, containing the article she co-wrote with Susan Keady entitled "Bruce Springsteen: Spirit In The Night"
Tom McCormack of Dublin, Ireland for a great batch of Irish newspaper articles
Carlos Blanco of San Paulo, Brazil, for the January 2008 issue of Rolling Stone (Brazil)
Michele Hovan of Flemington, NJ for the October 1992 issue of Relix, with a review of Lucky Town and Human Touch.

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Maggie Powell of Hannover, Germany, for three German magazines, including the December 2007 Rolling Stone and January 2008 Rocks with Springsteen cover stories
Anne Noss of Florham Park, NJ, for five publications including the Food Providers, Inc. flier saluting Bruce at the Nov. 15, 2007 show in Albany
Stefano Rizzo of Milan, Italy, for helping us acquire recent issues of all major Italian music magazines

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Tom McCormack of Dublin, Ireland, for a wonderful collection of 39 magazines and newspaper clippings featuring Magic CD and album reviews
Carlos Blanco of San Paulo, Brazil, for a large package of magazines, newspaper articles and internet article printouts
Anne Noss of Florham Park, NJ for the Magic review in Soap Opera Digest.

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George Francy of East Brunswick, NJ, for the UMass Amherst alumni magazine and the October 2007 of Uncut from the UK
Francesco Magni of Ponte Capriasca, Switzerland for the October 2007 Rock Star and November Fedelta del Suono, both with Bruce covers
Cliff Breining of Rancho Santa Fe, CA., for sharing his huge collection of articles, most from the early 1970s
Joanna Mungai of Washington, PA for the November 2007 magazine Whirl with the Bruce cover story and a great series of Pittsburgh Post-Gazette articles
Carl Beams of Howell, NJ for the "Jersey Rocks!" issue of New Jersey Monthly
Fanzine editor Dave Petruski of McKeesport, PA, for two issues of his 'zine Cadillac Ranch
Maggie Powell of Hannover, Germany, for a collection of German music magazines, Magic-era
Lawrence Kirsch of Montreal, Canada, for a copy of his book For You

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Connecticut Governor M. Jodi Rell of Hartford, CT for her proclamation declaring Bruce Springsteen day in the state
Mark Uzzo of Tuckahoe, NY, Dan Toskaner of Scarsdale, NY, Sandy Wells of Little Silver, NJ, Carl Beams of Howell, NJ, and Melanie Paggioli of Oceanport, NJ, for big batches of newspaper articles
Jim Van Horn of Clinton, AK for a Magic review from the Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Francesco Magni of Ponte Capriasca, Switzerland, for the October 2007 issue of the Italian fashion magazine I O Donna
Stacie Tobin of Baltimore, MD for a series of internet articles
Russ Worden and Jan Lawrence of Culver City, CA, for newspaper articles from the Los Angeles shows
Robert Emerson of Glenview, IL for Chicago concert reviews in the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times
Gregg Chadwick of Santa Monica, CA for his excellent blogcritics.org article entitled "Devils and Dust: Bruce Springsteen, Edward Hopper and American Light."

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Joe Hurley of Wall, NJ, for a huge box full of early Springsteen newspaper articles and magazines
Francesco Magni of Ponte Capriasca, Switzerland, for the June 2006 issue of the Italian magazine Buscadero
Jim Van Horn of Clinton, AR, for a big batch of newspaper articles, including the Live In Dublin review from the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and great BITUSA concert reviews from Memphis and Dallas

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Melanie Paggioli of Oceanport, NJ., for the Little Steven interview in the November 2006 issue of American Way
Anne Noss of Florham Park, NJ., for the Playbill from "The Music Of Bruce Springsteen at Carnegie Hall"
Anders Martensson for the Swedish edition of his book "Local Heroes Asbury Park, NJ."

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Phil Bracken of Bolton, UK, for the program for Light of Day 6
Paul Limbrick of Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, UK, for numerous publications, including a curious Omaha Rainbow fanzine from 1975 with a Bruce cover, but no inside content whatsoever
Stephen Jump of Badlands for the Snap Galleries brochure for the Eric Meola photo exhibit in Birmingham, UK

Art Masciocchi of Berlin, NJ, whose huge collection will forever be reflected in the Special Collection

Margrit Roepke for the March 27, 1995 Time International with the MTV Unplugged feature, the Seeger Sessions tour review in the Oct. 12, 2006 Hamburger Morgenpost, and for making available other items from her extensive collection

Virginia Tixi of Genova, Italy, for magazines and clippings from the Seeger Sessions Band tour of Italy

Jamie Gillies of Victoria, British Columbia, for the June 9, 1984 Billboard with a full page BITUSA ad

Tom Cunningham, voice of Bruce Brunch on 105.7 The Hawk, for the Winter 2002-03 issue of the University of Dayton Quarterly

Peter Schoefboeck of Vienna, Austria for the May 1995 issue of Rock & Folk containing an extensive interview with Bruce

Tom McCormack, of Dublin, Ireland, and Anne Noss, of Florham Park, NJ, for clips from the Seeger Sessions Band's swing through Ireland (and to Anne, as well, for the Light of Day 7 program)

Scott Haspel, of Rockland County, NY, for the January 1983 Musician containing an interview with Miami Steve

Carl Beams of Howell, NJ., for issue #4 of harmanpro magazine, which details the high-tech details of the Seeger Sessions Band tour, the March 2007 Monmouth Health & Life, and the NJEA Review
Marietta Phillips of Anchorage, AK for the 2007 Grammy Awards program.

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Virginia Tixi of Genova, Italy for an amazing collection of 45 Italian books, clippings and magazines, including a special issue of Tutti Frutti covering the Amnesty International tour
June Lisk of Monroe Township, NJ., for four Seeger Sessions articles
Carl Beams of Howell, NJ., for a copy of the program from the June 19, 1967 Freehold Regional High School graduation ceremony (which Bruce skipped; he picked up his diploma later)
Chris Nierling of Belleview, FL., for magazines, fanzines and clippings from his extensive collection
Chris White of Kent, UK, for multiple links to major UK internet articles
Dari Silverman of Santa Monica, CA., for several great additions to the want list
Tom McCormack of Dublin, Ireland, for large batch of clippings from the Seeger Session tour in Ireland
Paul Limbrick of Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, UK, for the Autumn 1988 Point Blank/Fever Live Tunnel of Love Express Tour fanzine
Christopher Zinsli, editor of Gateway magazine, for the summer 2006 cover story in Gateway on Bruce places in New Jersey
Rock critic Joyce Millman of San Mateo, CA., who has frequently written about Bruce, for a collection of her articles, including the cover story in the Sept. 11, 1984 issue of The Boston Phoenix
Melanie Paggioli of Oceanport, NJ for three publications, including the Sept. 11, 2006 People reporting on Bruce's defense of his marriage to Patti
Emiliano Duroni of Rome, Italy, for the Corriere Della Sera review of the American Land Edition of We Shall Overcome
Kevin Jessop of Toronto, Ontario, for the August 1992 cover story in Music Express
Uwe Schmalz and Alexandra Billhardt of Cologne, Germany, for the May 2006 issue of MusikExpress
Fanzine editors Joan Colet of The Stone Pony (Spain) and Claus Derksen of The Wish (Germany) for their latest issues
Peter Schoefboeck of Vienna, Austria, and Chris Saunders of Southhamption, UK., for the November 2006 of Record Collection, in which they wrote the cover story on the 40 rarest Bruce records
Becky Harris Crowley for the Rock On! 1980 annual.

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Monmouth Medical Center and Carl Beams for the March 2006 issue of Monmouth Health & Life, and Carl for the May 2006 issue of Men's Fitness.
Melanie Paggioli for the Dec. 30, 2005 issue of Entertainment Weekly, the Jan. 23, 2006 issue of US, and the November 2005 issue of New Jersey Life.
Jennifer Walter of Langley, British Columbia, for her paper "The Boss and The Bible" presented at the Glory Days Symposium.
Kathleen Keegan from Freehold High School in Freehold, NJ, for helping us complete our collection of yearbooks from Bruce's high school years.
Richard Miller of Germantown, MD for the Marquette University Law School Legal Studies Research Paper Series entitled "Crime, Lawbreaking, and Counterhegemonic Humanism in the Songs of Bruce Springsteen."
Susan Edwards of Colts Neck, NJ., for the April 17, 2006 issue of The New Yorker containing the Pete Seeger profile.
Deborah Robinson of Baltimore, MD for the April 21, 2006 Seeger Sessions review on Slate.com.
Leannah Harding of Arlington, VA., who moderates the BruceGrrlsDC group, for many, many links.
Marco Bulgheroni for two wonderful issues of Mucchio Selvaggio.

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Michelle Maiatico of New Market, MD, for 21 issues of the fanzine The Fever, 32 issues of the fanzine The Fever: Bruce Monthly, and individual issues of Rock Espezial and Ciao 2001.
Gerald Sommerer of Langenfeld, Germany for his third donation to the Collection, consisting of 18 publications including three issues of the Swiss fanzine Drive All Night, four issues of the Norwegian and Swedish fanzine Factory, and a fantastic issue by the German publication Popstar devoted entirely to Bruce, detailing his career through "Born In The USA."
Mori Alessio of Bra, Italy, for the book "Bruce Springsteen, Trent' Anni Da Boss."
Miguel Jancich of Buenos Aires, Argentina, for three donations, including the Collection's first issue of the Argentine fanzine Streets of Fire.
Francesco Benevento of Milan, Italy, for the all-Bruce magazine Rock Show and two Italian books, including "Terra di Zucchero," documenting Bruce's career from 1972 to 1990.
Christy Blanchette of Vllaey Cottage, NY for a large and generous donation of fanzines and other publications.
Carlos Blanco of Sao Paulo, Brazil, for the 100 greatest shows in Brazil issue of Bizz
Joe Gervais of Fremont, CA for the August 1988 Penthouse
Matthias Buckpesch of Hamburg, Germany, for the August 2005 Music Express and the July 2005 Rolling Stone from Germany
Muriel Kleisterlee and Jos Westenberg of Utrecht, The Netherlands, for their book "Rising High" and for six issues of the Belgium fanzine Thunder Road
Astrid Ewen of Billerbeck Germany for nine magazines including the Bruce cover issue (#4 2005) of Good Times
Jim McKelly, of Auburn, Alabama, for the March 1981 issue of the St. Louis publication Metro The Tabloid
Kristina Pfützner, a German fan living and working in Mexico, who reviewed Devils & Dust in the Mexican magazine Compas
Jeffrey and Anne Noss of Florham Park, NJ, for the Playbill for the performance of Anytown at the Joyce Theater
Francesco Magni of Lugano, Switzerland for the January 2006 MOJO, the December 2005 Mucchio Selvaggio, and volume 1 number 1 of the new Italian magazine MUZ from January 2006, all with Bruce cover stories

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Gail Haltiwantger of Jacksonville, FL., Guillaume Augias of Paris, Joan Colet of Barcelona, Gerri Sommerer of Langenfeld, Germany, Sal Trepat of Barcelona, Midge Botten of Kent, UK, Tramps Like Us members from Paris, and Jean-Louis Valdeyron of Montpellier, France for making significant recent contributions to the Collection.

Special thanks also go to Francesco Magni of Manno Switzerland, for his donation of 40 issues and supplements of the Italian fanzine The River, and to Sue Thomason of Alsager, Cheshire, UK, for donating the first five issues of the UK fanzine Ragamuffin Gunner.

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Special thanks to the following for recent significant donations: Daiichiro Eguchi of Tokyo for multiple issues of Be Street, early Japanese fanzine; Astrid Ewen of Billerbeck, Germany, for the May 2003 cover story in the German issue of Rolling Stone and the #23/24 double issue of The WishHans Christian Færden of Borgen, Norway for a complete run of the Norwegian fanzine RocksyPhilipp Nyffenegger of Zurich, Switzerland for multiple issues of the Swiss fanzine Drive All Night; Mike Saunders of London for publications documenting the Tom Joad tour of the UK and Bruce's appearance in the High Court of London in 1998; and Spirits In The Night, the Bruce Club at Holmdel High School in New Jersey, for donating a copy of Richard Neer's excellent book "FM." We are grateful to them all.

[Note: not all of our donor announcements remain available for this page. The Donors List on Donors &Friends honors the many generous people who have contributed to this Collection.]

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Springsteen Fans Keep Giving To Asbury Collection

(Press Release)

Asbury Park's collection of books and magazines devoted to the lives and careers of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band has doubled in size in two years, topping 2,000 items with the donation of a 17-year-old fan magazine from Great Britain.

From an original series of donations totaling nearly 1,000 items in December 2001, the Springsteen Special Collection, housed at the Asbury Park Public Library, has steadily grown into the largest publicly accessible collection of Springsteen-related publications.

Dan French
MILESTONE DONATION: Dan French's donation of "Point Blank" issue No. 9, which he edited and published in 1986, was the 2,000th item to enter the Springsteen Special Collection of books and magazines at the Asbury Park Public Library. French, administrator of a medical charity in London, gave 70 publications to the collection which contains items donated by Springsteen fans here and abroad. The collection contains publications from 30 countries.

The 2,000th donation to arrive at the Collection was issue No. 9 of "Point Blank," one of Great Britain's earliest Springsteen fan magazines. It was the donation of "Point Blank" editor and publisher Dan French, 45, of Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex, now an administrator for a medical charity in London.

"Asbury Park gave me one of the greatest musical experiences of my life," French said in a letter accompanying the donation, "an unscheduled performance by Springsteen on Oct. 3, 1982 at the Stone Pony. That night will always hold a special place in my heart, so it's a privilege to be able to give even a small something back."

Special Collections are found at many public, academic, and technical libraries. They organize and preserve significant source materials for research purposes, but are not part of the library's circulating collection.

Doris Carroll, president of the Library's Board of Trustees, said the arrival of the 2,000th donation marks the "very first special event in the Library's 125th anniversary celebration." The Library, which traces its history to Nov. 23, 1878, "greatly appreciates the interest in and support of the Special Collection by Springsteen fans everywhere," she said, and is working with volunteers to expand the availability of material from the Collection on the Internet.

The Springsteen Special Collection, organized by editors and readers of "Backstreets" magazine, was a gift to the Asbury Park Library from Springsteen fans around the world. The Collection has received donated items published in 30 countries: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, China, Croatia, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, UK, USA and Yugoslavia. Members of Save Tillie, the preservation group working to save Asbury Park's historic Palace amusements complex, provide staff and web services to the Collection.

"This Collection expresses the fan community's support for Asbury Park and for our belief that Asbury's music history is also a sign-post to the future," said Christopher Phillips, editor and publisher of the Washington D.C.-based "Backstreets." "As a small magazine that has been publishing for nearly 25 years, there is a love of print that's reflected here too, and the desire for its preservation. The Collection gathers so many rare pieces, from the early 1970s to the present, for the use of music fans, scholars, authors -- anyone with a serious interest in Bruce Springsteen's life and career."

"Point Blank" No. 9, published in 1986, was part of a 70-item donation by French which included fan magazines from Spain, Germany, Italy, France, Holland, Japan, Finland and Sweden, along with other publications from Ireland, Canada, England and the US. UK author Mike Saunders of Hove, Sussex, added a hard-to-find issue of "Point Blank" No. 8 to French's donation, giving the Collection a full set of the magazine's 10 issues.

Although books and general circulation magazines make up most of the Asbury Park collection, fan magazines occupy a special niche, favored for detailed reportage and rare photography. Many of the more than three dozen Springsteen fanzines originated as a forum for fans, French said, as well as a way "of thanking Bruce for his music."

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Two Rare Magazines Donated To The Springsteen Special Collection

Magazines containing Bruce Springsteen's first published writings and his first photograph as a member of a rock and roll band have entered The Bruce Springsteen Special Collection at the Asbury Park Public Library by way of two donations.

The January 1969 issue of Seascape, the literary magazine of Ocean County College, and the July 1966 issue of the New Jersey Shore music magazine Mod, gave readers their earliest glimpse of the talent that was to evolve into a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame singer-songwriter career.

During Springsteen's brief enrollment at the two-year community college, he penned a metaphorical paragraph entitled "My Lady" and an untitled 16-line poem divided into four stanzas. Accepted for publication more than four years in advance of the recording of his first album, both poems were erroneously attributed in print to "Bruce Sprengsteen."

Two and a half years earlier, Springsteen's photo had appeared for the first time ever in a magazine, as a member of The Castiles. Springsteen joined The Castiles in late spring 1964 after a brief apprenticeship with The Rogues, and performed primarily as lead guitarist and vocalist until the band dissolved in early 1968.

Photo of Stacie Tobin displaying Seascape
Photo of Stacie Tobin displaying '"Seascape".

Seascape was the donation of Stacie Tobin, a partner at the Piper Rudnick LLP law firm in Baltimore. Michael Gilfillan, president of the Newark-based Brick City Sports Capital, LLC, and co-chairman of YankeeNets LLC, a sports and entertainment holding company, donated Mod. Both are long-time Springsteen fans.

"Either of these rare publications would be a cornerstone for any Springsteen collection," said Christopher Phillips, president of The Friends of the Bruce Springsteen Special Collection. "To have them both not only further cements the comprehensive scope of the Springsteen Special Collection, but also furthers our goal of preserving those rare documents that trace Springsteen's life and career which might otherwise be scattered, damaged, or lost."

"We are absolutely thrilled that Tobin and Gilfillan feel that the Special Collection at the Asbury Park Public Library is the best home for these rarities, and their generosity is yet another example of the enthusiasm with which the Collection has been met by Springsteen fans around the globe," Phillips said.

Only a few issues of these publications are known to exist, said Phillips. Most fans have seen Springsteen's poems in Seascape only under glass at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum in Cleveland.

In "My Lady," Springsteen wrote: "I thought 'Surely she will come, she often comes on days as beautiful as this.' Just a year ago last week she had visited my mother and comforted her from the pain she had so long endured." The untitled poem opens:

"Earth children turn their new eyes upward,
As the rain falls into outstretched arms.
The world moves with beauty beneath their bodies.
The frenzied sea crys upon the shore."
'My Lady' by Bruce Springsteen Photo of the Untitled Poem
Photo of "My Lady". Photo of the untitled poem.

"These two works show that Springsteen was not just a kid with a guitar who wanted to be a rock star," Tobin said. "They reveal a young writer trying to convey simple beauties and human dignity, the very themes that have come to define his work as a songwriter. There can be no doubt that time and maturity have improved his skill for expression, but this little magazine can stand on its own to show that even as a young man, he was devoted to expressing the beauty of the world around him and his sorrow at human cruelties. Anyone familiar with the lyrical style of Greetings from Asbury Park will see that these works are the early stages of Springsteen trying to find his voice as a poet for a later time."

The Castiles photo covers 4.5 inches by 6 inches at the top of page 16 of the teen-oriented magazine. "This issue provides valuable insight into the formative phase of Bruce Springsteen's music career," Gilfillan said. "You see Bruce and his Castiles bandmates -- five young dreamers, looking like latter-day mop tops ready to challenge the world. No definitive collection of Springsteen publications can be complete without it, and thankfully, this one, in excellent condition for a magazine published in 1966, is now in the Springsteen Special Collection."

Photo of The Castiles from Mod magazine
Photo of The Castiles from Mod magazine

The donations are the 3113th and 3114th items accepted into the three-year-old Collection which is devoted to preserving the writing history and cultural legacy of Bruce Springsteen and members of the E Street Band. The Collection is managed by The Friends of the Bruce Springsteen Special Collection in cooperation with staff at the Asbury Park Public Library. Recent donations will be available for public inspection once new storage space is provided to the Collection by the Library.

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