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Reviews: Just Kids (11)

Just Kids

A beautiful memoir of two kindred spirits, Smith and Mapplethorpe, and their intense and loving friendship. Even if you have never heard of them, it’s a wonderful read about hopes and dreams written in Smith’s beautiful prose. Highly recommended!
Paperback edition
13th February 2018
Helpful? Upvote 120

a book to discover Patti the artist

Biographical books rarely start better than this: intimate and honest; moving and involving; poetic in rhythm and content.

Chapter one, Monday's Children, whisks the reader off to a childhood environment, studded with meaningful observations and subtle, tantalising indications of what destiny may have in store. The second chapter, Just Kids, proudly and successfully forms the core of the book, centred around that accidental - yet in so many ways unavoidably inevitable - meeting of two artistic minds and souls. Amidst the affection, tenderness and natural coupling is a deep seated respect for each other's talents and ambitions.

However, after diving expectantly into the Hotel Chelsea chapter, I noticed the narrative style had changed, the magic lost. As they gradually drift apart due to work, friends, relationships and circumstances, the book also seems to lose its way, even its sense of purpose. There are glimpses of the earlier magic, but small and fleeting in comparison, little reward in a huge 120 page chapter. There are, of course, many interesting tales to be told and many interesting characters to meet, and it's an important element in understanding the overall story. Yet the altered style and modified voice is more mundane and matter-of-fact, losing its previous beauty and energy. In my imagination it's written at a different time, in a different place and in a different state of mind to the rest of the book.

Happily, the magic reappears in the penultimate chapter, Separate Ways Together, then sparkles magnificently in Holding Hands With God - the final sweet, lyrical chapter awash with tenderness, affection and love. Conclusively demonstrating, when focussed on Patti and Robert, how exceptionally well the prose captures this intensely intimate relationship.

But it's also a book to discover Patti the artist - her drawings, photographs, silk-screens, installations and, of course, poetry - a delightful bonus. Overall this is a simply wonderful book - and an immensely engaging story.
Paperback edition
By David
14th February 2018
Helpful? Upvote 107

Art and Love

Musician/Poet Patti Smith's memoir is a tribute to photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, to their relationship, and to a unique time and place. Most of all, however, this is a tribute to art, and the artist’s commitment.

Smith’s Just Kids focuses on Late 60s/Early 70s NYC Art Scene, and more than a 1970s bohemian rhapsody, it’s one of the best books ever written on becoming an artist -- not the race for online celebrity and corporate sponsorship that often passes for artistic success these days, but the far more powerful, often difficult journey toward the ecstatic experience of capturing radiance of imagination on a page or stage or photographic paper. Mapplethorpe's iconic image of Smith for the cover of "Horses," her landmark 1975 album (see photo), serves as a convenient symbol of both their collaborative relationship and the separate paths they took thereafter: he as one of the last century's most heralded and controversial photographers, she as a performer whose influence still extends through poetry, contemporary music, fashion and the visual arts.

The tone is at once flinty and hilarious, which figures: she’s always been both tough and funny, two real saving graces in an artist this prone to excess. What’s sure to make her account a cornucopia for cultural historians, however, is that the atmosphere, personalities and mores of the time are so astutely observed.

The cast of characters in her book, particularly those that lived in the infamous Hotel Chelsea, reads like a guest list for the party of the decade: Janis Joplin, Bob Neuwirth, Allen Ginsberg, Jimi Hendrix, William Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Lou Reed and the Andy Warhol Factory gang, and many more. Smith herself dated playwright Sam Shephard and rocker poet Jim Carroll, and includes wonderful stories about both.
Most resided in the artistic haven of the Chelsea, living the struggle that becomes a central theme of the book: a commitment to their art. Robert and Patti promised to stick with each other until they could each stand on their own, artistically and personally. It was a vow they stuck to, and Just Kids documents what it took for these kids to do so.

Smith has stated that with Just Kids, she wanted to keep the focus on her early relationship with Mapplethorpe, when both were young, struggling artists finding their way (and each other) in late 60s New York/Greenwich Village. Her story covers primarily the period from 1967-1974, from her arrival in the city and meeting Mapplethorpe, to their split, and the beginning of her fame. Of course, she also addresses the photographer’s 1989 death, which, Smith says, was the catalyst for writing this heartfelt memoir.

Readers familiar with Patti Smith’s music and poetry will not be surprised at the easy Rimbaudian beauty of her prose. She renders the most mundane details both thought-provoking and a pleasure to read: one of the more endearing aspects of Just Kids is the portrayal of a relatively innocent, teenaged Jersey girl fresh on the streets of New York City. It’s difficult to think of Patti Smith, the wild-haired punk performing "My Generation" on SNL in 1975, author of “Piss Factory” and “Rock ‘n’ Roll Nigger,” and apply the word innocent. But in these early years she was the straight one amidst her peers; she didn’t drink, smoke or do drugs. Art was her everything. Art and Mapplethorpe.
Hardback edition
13th February 2018
Helpful? Upvote 106

Passionate, poetic and pure

Passionate, poetic and pure!

Patti Smith's memoir of her time at the Chelsea Hotel, New York in the Sixties is the only coming-of-age story that has entirely changed my outlook on life and society.

My only wish is that I had read it sooner.
Paperback edition
8th March 2019
Helpful? Upvote 25

Excellent

Beautiful, encapturing, honest about kindred spirits.
Leaving home and your parents , their rules, finding your way, finding life and love, about art and music and finding your way, your place in god world, and the people you find and meet that affect you and change you and help you along who way .
A riveting read
Paperback edition
6th February 2018
Helpful? Upvote 22

All time favourite read

Just Kids is a love story that spans a lifelong friendship. It's spiritual and poetic lens of struggling Art and Rock in 1970s/1960s New York transports you to a time that, while sad that it no longer exists, provides a form of escapism that is rare to find. Through chance meetings, sleeping in Central Park and stoops to the Chelsea Hotel, Smith's lyricism and photographs draw you in and never quite leave you once you finish. It's been a year since I first read it and I think about it non stop.
Paperback edition
14th June 2024
Helpful? Upvote 9

Beautiful, passionate and poetic

One of the most beautiful books I've read... I wish I discovered it much sooner.
Patti Smith invites us into her life growing up an artist in New York. It's a beautiful and harshly honest insight into her early life and the struggles of making it as an artist.

It mainly focuses on her relationship and friendship with artist Robert Mappelthorpe, with their deep respect and ambition for each other and their work. She lyrically writes and documents their connection and pure committment for each other, through the chaos and struggles.
Also dotted throughout are some of Smith's and other artists photography, adding to the beauty of the writing.

It was an absolutely magical and enthralling book to read. I didn't want it to end!
Paperback edition
25th April 2024
Helpful? Upvote 9

love it

amazing book
Paperback edition
3rd August 2021
Helpful? Upvote 9

Just Kids, a poetic and raw capture on love, friendship and art.

Smiths memoir is honest, pure, filled with love, lost and passion for expressing one another’s identity through art. I felt transformed after reading this book, it truly is an elevating masterpiece that focuses on two innovative souls that come together and become whole. Smith expresses the contradictions of youth in the sixties. I feel fortunate for Smith sharing with the reader an intimate friendship and love with Mapplethorpe. After reading, I feel inspired again to go back to what I’m good at. Writing and producing art through my words and imagery so thank you Smith and Mapplethorpe, I wish I had read this book sooner.
Paperback edition
3rd August 2022
Helpful? Upvote 8

Beautifully real.

Paddy Smith gives a real account of the struggles in New York without romanticising. How she falls in love with a Robert. Their pure and strong connection though they drifted apart would always stay strong.

Loved reading the book. What I would given to read it for the first time again.
Paperback edition
26th May 2020
Helpful? Upvote 6

Unconditional love

The books filled with unconventional love at times, unconventional love and a friendship stronger than life.
As someone only Familia with Patti Smith songs this has been an interesting insight into who Patti really is and her story.
Thoroughly enjoyed this book.
Paperback edition
30th January 2021
Helpful? Upvote 2
Just Kids (Paperback)
Just Kids (Paperback) Patti Smith
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