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Given the recent discussions (on the SOS email list) re: previous drug/alcohol ab/use, I would
recommend a book I recently finished reading. "Go Now" is by Richard Hell, who
is perhaps best known as leader of the group Richard Hell and the Voidoids. Their 1977 (I
think) album "Blank Generation" stands as a testimony to the notion that New
York City, NOT London, was where the Punk/New Wave scene had its most interesting roots
(Hell worked with Tom Verlaine's group Television before forming his own band).
"Go Now" is the story of Billy Mud, a
poet/musician/junky, on a road trip from LA back to NYC with a photographer. She is also
his sometimes lover; the two of them have been given a stipend to make the trip and
document their experience, he with words, she with pictures. In this short novel, Hell
describes with astonishing clarity the machinations and contortions familiar to anyone who
has had contact with their own or another's addiction. One section of the book, where
Billy Mud is struggling hard to kick his heroin habit, is as profound a description of the
withdrawal process and early sobriety as I have ever encountered, in life or print. This
is a picture of a person whose struggle to understand and communicate about the world and
his own emotions has led him to a life in which drugs are an essential, perhaps the most
meaningful component. It is a courageous and honest picture and Hell is far too
intelligent to resort to romanticizing anything about this life. As one would expect and
perhaps hope, there are no easy answers here or in "Go Now".
The book contains, as might well be imagined, some very
graphic language and sex, so......whatever.
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