He also issued fanzines such as Jello Submarine, and ran his own publishing house Rockarkivet.
[4][6] In 1994 he released Vakre damer og blodig død about the history of the Norwegian pocket book, and in 1996 he chronicled the publishing of Norwegian popular magazines in the book Drømmenes marked.
[5] When he died, he worked on a band biography about Motorpsycho, a chronicle on concerts in Oslo as well as an autobiography.
[7][8] After his death, a seminar on popular literature was held at the National Library of Norway.
The collection spanned 2,500 rock albums, 5,000 books and magazines as well as 1,600 other items such as leaflets, posters and postcards.