Books
Victor Bockris

Beat Punks

The “poet laureate of the New York underground scene” chronicles three decades of electrifying artistic expression
Once dominated by Beat Generation writers like Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, by the 1970s and ’80s, New York City’s creative scene had given way to a punk rock–era defined by figures like Debbie Harry and Richard Hell. While the aesthetics of these two movements seem different on the surface, author and prolific interviewer Victor Bockris—who witnessed it all—argues that the punks borrowed from the ideology and style of the beats, and that the beats were reenergized by the emergence of punk.
In intimate conversation, Bockris’s close friends—including celebrities from both periods, such as William Burroughs, Andy Warhol, Joey Ramone, and Patti Smith—reveal more about themselves and their art to him than to any other interviewer. Along with dozens of rare photos, Bockris’s interviews and essays capture the energy of this unique time.
375 printed pages
Original publication
2016
Publication year
2016
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Quotes

  • pink pimphas quoted3 years ago
    It was the first time I had ever seen anybody do that, and I was fascinated, the way a passing driver is fascinated by a car crash.
  • pink pimphas quoted3 years ago
    Drugs did not make Bill go away, when I knew him; for the most part, they made him more present.
  • pink pimphas quoted3 years ago
    “It is necessary to travel,” he said, “it is not necessary to live,” meaning that a life without travel of the spiritual, psychic, intellectual kind is not worth living.
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