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Cannonball Read III - Summer Reads: Just Kids by Patti Smith

By xoxoxo e | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (19)



patti_&_robert.jpg

Just Kids, Patti Smith’s beautiful book about her youth with Robert Mapplethorpe, who she calls “the artist of my life” is a celebration, an elegy, a memoir, and a fascinating slice of life of New York City from the late sixties and seventies. It’s also a study of two very different artists, with very different sensibilities.

Patti was very bohemian. She came from a poor background, with a loving family. She never finished college, but was well-read, especially in Symbolist poetry and her hero, Arthur Rimbaud. Patti spent most of her twenties trying to find herself. She wasn’t focused on being a star, but an artist. Generous of spirit, she wanted at first be a muse, then an artist in her own right. Seemingly having little or no ego, she wanted everyone she met to succeed. She must have had a healthy ego to become a rock star, but it never seems to be of a competitive nature. She was the quintessential hippie.

Robert, on the other hand, was obsessed with becoming a successful artist, a star, from the get-go. He was also willing to do whatever it would take to make the big time—hanging out at the right places, hustling, befriending the rich and famous. He wanted to be as big, or bigger, than Andy Warhol. When Patti met him he was already a serious artist, with a strong work ethic, secure in his own sensibility and the themes he wanted to explore. He was less secure in his persona, his sexuality, and how he presented himself to the world. Or maybe it wasn’t that he was less secure, but he was just less forthright.

Both kids grew up with fairly strict religious backgrounds, but their experiences with the church had different effects on their lives and work. In Patti it seemed to deepen her work and give her a place to start from—especially when she could pray her own way, “I was relived when I no longer had to mouth the words If I die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take and could instead say what was in my heart. Thus freed, I would lie in my bed … mouthing long letters to God.” Mapplethorpe may never had made peace with his Catholicism, which was partially responsible for his at-first hidden sexuality. “His dual nature troubled me, mostly because I feared it troubled him. … His Catholic preoccupation with good and evil reasserted itself, as if he had to choose one over the other. He had broken from the Church, now it was breaking within him.”

Robert was the perfect boyfriend and lover for Patti—for a short time. She may not have cottoned on for a while to why they drifted apart physically, but he did encourage her creatively, and while maybe not her true love(r), he was undoubtedly her soul mate. Patti slept on stoops and in Washington Square Park when she first arrived without a cent in New York city in the mid-60s. She experienced first-hand the effect drugs had on her friends and idols. She was in the middle of a whirlwind of unrest and change, but she was still a naive kid from the suburbs. The early deaths of 60s musical superstars and the more public emergence of gay literary and cultural figures like William S. Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg were a part of her day-to-day life. Patti was young and naive, but she was also a part of her time. She might not have been so oblivious to Robert’s sexual orientation or as pure in her artistic pursuits if her story took place twenty years later. Patti’s was a different time and a different New York than today, but many young people did and still do have the New York experience Robert did. Willing to do anything in order to become a star in whatever art form they are pursuing—painting, music, acting.

The Chelsea Hotel was their Montmartre, their source and hotbed of creativity. For every young artist, young person, there is a time and place that is almost sacred. It’s where and when they found their true peers, had their first deep personal and artistic experiences, were independent. For Patti it was the Chelsea Hotel. While she lived there with Robert she met her idols (Janis Joplin, William S. Burroughs), contemporaries (Sam Shepherd, Todd Rundgren) and really felt a part of something. She watched from afar so many of her idols die—Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Brian Jones, Jim Morrison. No matter how many deaths of young artists sent her in a tailspin and reminded her of her hero Rimbaud, she and Robert never considered it could happen to one of them.

Patti brings that time and her experience of being a young artist in the late 60s and 70s to life. She has a real sense of New York history, and when she mentions that she went to a club to do a reading of her poetry, she also mentions that the building was once a saloon frequented by Lillian Russell and Diamond Jim Brady, or some other historical figure and anecdote. As much as things change in the city, its history is constant and pervades.

Patti may not have wanted to acknowledge how her relationship with Robert had changed, or even how others perceived their relationship, but she was the first to realize that she needed something else, something more. No matter how different Robert’s goals were, or how far they drifted apart, Patti never judges, she just loves. And you get a sense that Robert, even if he was a little jealous or disapproving of her latest boyfriend, also never judged her. They encouraged each other, egged each other on. She told him, “You should take your own pictures,” when he complained that images he cut out of men’s magazines just weren’t right for his latest collage. He told her that she should sing songs, not just write and read her poetry. They are true to each other. Peas in a pod. They practically lived in each other’s pockets for eight years.

They eventually must grow apart, their art and their lives diverging. Patti started to find success with her band and went on tour. Back in New York, with the help of a wealthy lover and patron, Robert concentrated fully on his photography, and imbued all his subject matter, whether it was a stunning flower, socialite, or naked male torso, with an exacting, brutal elegance. Patti may not always have related to his subject matter, but she understood and appreciated why he did. “Robert was not a voyeur … he wasn’t taking pictures for the sake of sensationalism … he never felt his underground world was for everybody.”

The book ends with their last days and conversations, as Mapplethorpe died of AIDs in 1989. It’s clear that he will always be important for Smith. She took a vow to protect him when they were just kids and she is still taking care of him, eloquently sharing his legacy through her evocative memories and stories.


For more of xoxoxo e’s reviews, check out her self-titled blog.

This review is part of Cannonball Read III. For more information, click here. For more Summer Reads recommendations, click here.









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Comments

I loved loved loved loved loved this book. What a great review. Also, I love cannonball read in general. Much Friday love to Patti Smith, xoxoxo e and Tamatha.

Read a book this weekend, brioches.

Posted by: coveredinbees at July 1, 2011 10:15 AM

Excellent review! I haven't got a book to read over this long weekend since I tore through the latest Sookie Stackhouse in an afternoon. But I have Miss Peregrine's Home For Peculiar Children on hold and the rest of the A Song of Ice and Fire books available now coming next week!

Posted by: Pinky McLadybits at July 1, 2011 10:30 AM

Great review!

Posted by: Mrs. Julien at July 1, 2011 10:34 AM

Nice review. I'm not usually one for biographies, but Smith had such a huge influence on so many musicians that I love--I've always wanted to read about her.

Posted by: Cindy at July 1, 2011 10:39 AM

I usually don't like biographies either, Cindy, but Smith's was fascinating. And she's a great writer. It's not like it's salacious, but it's really compelling. Oh and pinky, I think this weekend is a perfect time for me to start Song of Ice and Fire. Yay books!

Posted by: coveredinbees at July 1, 2011 10:43 AM

Thanks everyone for the kind words. I loved this book, as you can probably tell. I now want to read her poetry, too. My Cannonball to-read stack is already so high, but I guess it can get a little higher. I'm about 1/2 way through the first Song of Ice and Fire book, A Game of Thrones, but I think I'll stop there. Not sure I want to read ahead before the show starts up again. Not sure I can hold out that long, either ...

Posted by: xoxoxoe at July 1, 2011 10:56 AM

Caveat: If you, like me, are reading this at work and you, like me, thought, "hey, I can only remember a couple of Mapplethorpe photos, maybe I should look him up on Google and Wikipedia," I strongly suggest you stick to the latter. I went to Google images and discovered -

1. I still find a lot of Mapplethorpe's photos graphic and shocking, but maybe not as much so as I did when I was 21 and there was no Internet yet.

2. Mapplethorpe is extraordinarily NSFW and if you, like me, work for a company that can track these things, then you, like me, should not look up his pictures.

Now I need a silkwood scrub down and then I plan to look at photos of kittens for the balance of my workday.

Posted by: Mrs. Julien at July 1, 2011 11:07 AM

See now I just want to look, Mrs. J.. From my bookshop days, I remember there being a lot of naked boy action.

Posted by: coveredinbees at July 1, 2011 11:20 AM

Naked I can handle. Naked acting out of certain predilections is too much for my delicate and extremely vanilla sensibilities.

Posted by: Mrs. Julien at July 1, 2011 11:28 AM

Damn, that was a great review. Puts mine to shame!

This weekend I'm re-reading Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff by Christopher Moore, as I needed something funny after the depress-o-fest that was Clash of Kings. I would jump right into A Storm of Swords but stupid Amazon hasn't delivered my box-set yet. Hurry the hell up, Amazon.

Posted by: Figgy at July 1, 2011 11:34 AM

Oooooh, I've heard *such* great things about this book but never got around to picking it up. Now you've just pushed me over the edge to actually going and getting it. Thanks for the great review!

Posted by: Katers at July 1, 2011 11:40 AM

This was a fantastic read and while I loved Smith's and Mapplethorpe's story, my favorite character was the Chelsea Hotel. I love buildings and doors.

Posted by: kirbyjay at July 1, 2011 11:48 AM

figgy, I love Lamb! My second favorite Moore after Fool. Have you read that one yet?

Posted by: coveredinbees at July 1, 2011 11:58 AM

Great review! This book looks really interesting, but my to-read stack is miles high and I'm not allowed to get more books until I remove some.

Long weekend reading: Finishing Sarah Vowell's The Wordy Shipmates and starting Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.

Posted by: Melody at July 1, 2011 12:44 PM

This book was perfectly-rendered. Smith is just gifted on all fronts and her writing is just as strong as her other prodigious talents. This put all of those shit memoirs out there to shame - absolutely brilliant and compelling.

Posted by: samantha t at July 1, 2011 12:58 PM

Mrs. Julien, maybe next time Google Mapplethorpe flowers and avoid the rougher trade - his flowers and some of his portraits are beyond beautiful. He was an artist of extremes - definitely NSFW and many other instances. His self portrait with bullwhip was too much for me - it was amazing to learn from PS's book that he actually used it as an invitation to his art opening. Different times ...

Posted by: xoxoxoe at July 1, 2011 1:00 PM

Oh wow. I've always been curious about Mapplethorpe, this sounds completely fascinating. Great review!

Also: Lamb is the tits. I'm currently re-reading Moore's The Stupidest Angel.

Posted by: Julie at July 1, 2011 1:04 PM

I love any of the Moore books with Theo Crowe. And also all of the other books Moore writes!

Posted by: Pinky McLadybits at July 1, 2011 2:02 PM

I loved this book so much. Easily one of the very best I've read in a long time.

Posted by: Sara H at July 1, 2011 6:17 PM