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Queer Comix from prison depict incarcerated life

Courtesy of A.B.O. Comix

Casper Cendre started writing letters to queer people in prison when they were in high school. Cendre wanted to know what queer life was like from the inside. Since then, he’s received thousands of letters and artwork. 

Ten years later, Cendre directs A.B.O. Comix, a non-profit collective of artists and activists dedicated to providing community and healing. Through selling anthologies of artwork created by incarcerated contributors, A.B.O. has raised over $43,000 in mutual aid to help queer prisoners buy commissary items and pay for medical bills. When and if they are released, A.B.O. also provides a few hundred dollars.

A.B.O. receives hundreds of letters each month from LGBTQ people all over the United States. The collective recently released its latest anthology about what it’s like to be in prison during the COVID pandemic. William Duclos writes from Massachusetts and describes dinner during the lockdown:

A.B.O. Comix works to amplify queer voices and strives towards abolition of prisons. Cendre is calling for compassion over punitive systems, which he says “isn't working for our communities and our families, so we have to try something new.”

A.B.O. Comixwelcomes volunteers, pen pals, and donations to help people on the inside buy food, gender-affirming items and more.

Hear more Out in the Bay features at OutintheBay.org: Out In The Bay – Queer Radio from San Francisco