The Christian Science Monitor has a nice article about the endurance of print zines that quotes zine friends, librarian friends, friend friends, zine acquaintances, and me. "Wanted: pen, plain old paper, imagination," by Danielle Dreilinger.
This was the rare interview where I didn't totally cringe at something attributed to me. I might have modified this sentence, "Zines come out of the independent press movement but truly busted out in the early 1990s" to say that "the current incarnation truly busted out," but that's minor compared to some of the nonsense I've been quoted as saying.
I appreciated this article for the variety of people it quoted--zinesters, artists, zine librarians, art show curators, art instructors.
I also love Elsie Sampson's distinction between art zines and artist books, "For instance, the zine "Kimagure na Dowa no Hon" is based on travel sketchbooks. Sampson divides her work into zines or artist books depending, her Website says, on whether or not she cares if you understand her."